Pod Save America - “The RNC: Now, With 5x More Trump!”
Episode Date: August 24, 2020The Republican National Convention lineup is heavy on Trump and light on policy, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris see their favorability rise after last week’s convention, Trump touts another unproven Co...vid treatment, and Postmaster General Louis DeJoy testifies before Congress. Then New York Times reporter Kevin Roose talks to Tommy about Trump’s embrace of the QAnon cult.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Levitt.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
On today's pod, Kevin Roos of the New York Times talks to Tommy about Trump's embrace of the QAnon cult.
Before that, we'll talk about what's in store for this week's Republican National Convention,
how the public reacted to last week's Democratic Convention, and the latest on the postal service
crisis. But first, Levitt, how was the show this weekend? We had a great convention special.
Senator Brian Schatz, Emily Heller, Naomi Ekperigen, Josh Barrow. We had a great convention special. Senator Brian Schatz, Emily Heller, Naomi
Ekperigen, Josh Barrow. We had a good time. We broke down the speeches. That's all you
really need to know.
Fantastic. Fantastic. Also, tomorrow is Tuesday, which means there's a brand new episode of
Missing America out. Ben talks to an anonymous activist about the daily marches and protests
taking place in Hong Kong, and they sound the alarm on the dangers of a growing authoritarian power.
So check it out wherever you get your podcasts.
Also, if you want to hate watch the RNC with us, we will be on our group thread each night this week, starting at 6 p.m. Pacific, 9 p.m. Eastern.
Watch with us at Crooked.com slash convention and subscribe to our YouTube channel
at youtube.com slash cricket media.
A lot of content this week, boys.
A lot of content.
A lot of content.
All right.
The Republican National Convention
lineup has been announced
and it's real who's who
of Trump staff and family members.
On Monday,
we got Donald Trump Jr.,
Donald Trump Jr.'s girlfriend, Kim Guilfoyle,
and Donald Trump.
Tuesday night, we got Melania Trump,
Eric Trump, Tiffany Trump, and Donald Trump again.
Wednesday night, we got Lara Trump and Donald Trump again.
Thursday night, Ivanka Trump,
and one more time, Donald Trump.
The Republican Party also announced
that they will not be releasing any policy platform
other than to reassert, quote,
the party's strong support for President Donald Trump and his administration.
Meanwhile, Trump has released a second term agenda that includes bullets like, quote,
teach American exceptionalism, drain the globalist swamp and return to normal in 2021.
Love it. I'm not really getting a not me us vibe from this convention. What about you? Yeah, I mean, look, he already started this morning. He went to the podium already today
for his uplifting convention and spent the whole time railing against the scourge of people voting.
So it's already off to a great start. They already also did their roll call. And we had
people all across the country in these magnificent vistas showing the
best of America. And it was just white head after white head, just being like, we hate Joe Biden
and we're sending Kentucky's votes to Donald Trump. So they're already kind of failing to
meet the expectations set over the weekend. Love it. I can't believe you would be this hard
on a good step and repeat.
It looked gorgeous.
Yeah, it looks like they're on their way
into a Dinesh D'Souza documentary.
But the other, this is stupid and this is small.
American exceptionalism is not something you claim to teach.
It's an insult at people who
believe America is exceptional. It was coined by Joseph Stalin. If you say, I think the Yankees
are the best team, you don't say I'm a Yankees exceptionalist. You think the Yankees are the
best. Other people think you're stupid and don't notice what's wrong with the Yankees.
If you love America and
think America is the best, it's not because you believe in America and exceptionalism. It's
because that's your evaluation of countries. See what I'm saying? Do you see why it's stupid?
I mean, look, I'm glad that bothered you. I do think the fact that they have decided to
forego a policy platform this year. No, this is a small note.
For whatever dear leader wants.
That's also one of two things in the that's their education platform, which is absolutely
incredible. Also, one thing I noticed in the platform is repealing Obamacare, not high on his
on his agenda anymore. That's gone. That's out of there. So I wonder I wonder I wonder how they're
explaining that to themselves. Tommy, what are the what are the potential downsides of having this much Trump?
You guys notice they've been calling him the talent in chief.
That's a cute little thing there.
So it's not totally clear what his role is every night.
Jason Miller is out today saying he might just be appearing and not speaking every night.
But I don't believe him.
I think it's very hard to drag Trump in front of a microphone and not have him speak. So like on a basic level, his approval rating is 41, 42%,
which means your message every night is going to be carried by someone who's deeply unpopular.
Yes, there are other speakers, but he's going to lead the news coverage. He's going to lead
everything that spins out of this event every night. So I don't know that that's ideal.
Normally, conventions are structured to let validators carry the message for you and tell
your story because they can often make the case better than you can. And so, you know,
look at Michelle Obama's speech, right? She comes into that. She's a 60% approval rating. She's a
91% approval rating among Democrats. She makes a case for Biden's character. She presents this
devastating critique of Trump that makes news in all these different ways and appeals to different audiences.
And I think that's more beneficial. I just wonder if this is going to be too much Trump, right? I
mean, it's not the same as the daily coronavirus briefing because he's giving a speech. It's not
a Q&A, but that did hurt him politically. I also just wonder if it's going to get boring. I mean, he spoke for 45 minutes already this morning. I mean, it feels like too much. So potential upsides. Right. I mean, he has commanded the political debate over the last four years, unlike any president we've ever seen.
will be hopeful. My guess is that Trump is just going to end the night every night with another broadside against Joe Biden. And that can add up another upside for them, I guess, if we're being
honest, is it's not like they've got a ton of great options, right? And most of the keynote
speakers are named Trump. They're just shittier versions of him. It's not like Matt Geitz or Jim
Jordan, who have no name ID are going to carry the message. Well, like drunk ass Rudy Giuliani,
an assortment of
White House staffers. It's slim picking. So none of this is to say it won't be a successful RNC.
It might be. I just imagine it's just going to be a sustained negative assault on Joe Biden.
I saw one run of show that said Jim Traffickant, parens, if alive.
parens, if alive.
Look, I do very much enjoy watching the best laid plans
of the fucking goobers
who work for Donald Trump
instantly meet reality
on the first morning of the convention.
Like their job right now
is to turn this election
into a choice between Joe Biden
and Donald Trump
and to move it away from a referendum on Donald Trump and his leadership.
That's what they're trying to do.
So that's why you got Miller out there and Kellyanne Conway and all the rest of them talking about this hopeful, optimistic convention versus the Democrats' dark, scary convention.
Right. Which is like bullshit already.
And then they're talking about like it won't be.
And then they were talking about like, it won't be.
Ronna McDaniel, the Republican National Committee chairwoman actually said, it's not going to be Trump centric like the Democratic Convention is.
It's going to be about real people who've benefited.
It's like they know that their strategic imperative is to do that, is to turn into a choice between Trump and Biden and to try to defend Donald Trump's record and talk about the second term.
Like they know this is what they need to do. And then about an hour into the convention on Monday morning, Donald Trump storms in, gives a speech longer than Joe Biden's acceptance speech,
where he just rambles on, accuses Democrats of stealing the election, talks about Spygate,
talks about Barack Obama, goes off on this thing. And it's just like, it's always about him.
And he makes it about him all the time.
I would say in what Trump said today.
So there's whatever they'll claim about the message.
You know, Kellyanne Conway will take a break from Trust Falls with Claudia and George to
like, let us know what the message is going to be.
Can I say that?
It's fine.
And like, Ronna Romney McDaniel will say whatever she wants
to say. Um, but like Trump today, this morning, I think actually says what the message will be
because you can't put bounds on what he'll do. He'll say what it is. And really what he said
today is if it wasn't for me, the virus would have killed millions. Uh, if it wasn't for me,
everything would have been worse. I shut down travel from Europe. I shut down travel from China.
Everyone told me that that was stupid.
None of this is true.
And if you give Joe Biden the reins, America won't come back.
He's going to shut it down.
Things will be worse than ever before.
And so in a way, I think what he's trying to basically do is he's trying to declare bankruptcy.
He's trying to say, all right, let's go back to zero.
Let's cancel all the old debts.
None of that was my fault.
I'm not paying for any of it.
We're back at zero because that's what he knows how to do.
And his hope is that he can spend a week basically terrifying people about Joe Biden,
claiming that America won't come back if Joe Biden is president.
I mean, their optimistic message is an apocalyptic message.
I mean, normally an optimistic message means painting a better future for you and me.
Here's my plan for that vision,
or here's my plan for that future.
Like, here's my vision.
There was some hand-wringing at the DNC
because Biden didn't spend enough time,
some people think, talking about his economic plans.
Maybe that's right.
Maybe I don't know,
but Trump's second term agenda so far is 50 bullet points.
I mean, if that's all they've got, they have to fill in the rest with just attacks on Biden.
Well, also, does anyone think that if asked, Trump would be able to repeat any of those bullet points?
I mean, he was on Fox News Sunday night and the host asked him about his second term agenda and what he would do.
And he said, quote, I would strengthen what we've done and I would do
new things. He's whipped on that question on Fox four times, literally four times. It's amazing.
And that's Fox. That's Fox. It's amazing. What else is it? All right. Let's talk about how last
week's Democratic National Convention has been received by the public so far. In a few new polls
conducted over the weekend, Joe Biden maintained or just slightly increased his lead over Donald
Trump, which is now an average of nine points. But a number of polls have also shown that the favorability ratings for Joe Biden and
Kamala Harris have risen by a decent margin, especially among independents, black voters,
and Democrats, more of whom now say they're very enthusiastic about voting for Biden.
Tommy, what do you think this says about the success of the Democratic convention
and how much the convention matters to the overall race? I mean, I think there's this silly
discussion about whether or not people get a convention bump that is actually kind of dated.
I think the average convention bump since 2004 is about two points. So I think if you look inside
those polls, there actually was good news. I think the one you mentioned, you know, there's two that
I saw, John. Axios and SurveyMonkey. They showed a 14 point improvement in Biden's net favorable rating
with independents. And Biden and Kamala Harris got a five point bump in their favorability with
Democrats. And then CBS did a poll where they said to voters, they asked voters why you were
voting for Joe Biden. And the percentage of people who said, because I like Joe Biden,
went from 29 percent pre-convention to 38% post-convention.
So that makes it seem like they did do an effective job of explaining to people who Joe Biden is,
his values, his character, the things he would do for them as president, which I would view as a
success. Love it. What do you think? Yeah, that was the number that I sort of stood out to me.
It was what we talked about. Actually, Dan, I think actually on the pod set a marker down saying he wanted to see a change in the number of people who were
supporting Biden to support Biden versus supporting Biden to oppose Trump. And that 9% shift, I think,
is really important. You know, one thing that has just become clear is that with each passing
convention, the number of persuadable people watching goes down. That's just the nature of
polarization. And one of the hardest jobs is to reach the kind of people you could persuade but might not be paying attention. Yeah. And I
think that has been the trend, as you both point out, generally over time. I also think that this
election in particular so far has been incredibly stable despite all that's happened. Right. Like
the margin between Trump and Biden has not, has been fairly
stable. And I think more people have already made up their minds in this election, certainly than
in 2016. I think that the Morning Consult poll showed that, you know, Biden didn't get a huge
bounce so far and neither did, and Hillary got a few points after 2016. But after 2016, I think
Morning Consult found the race like
44-40 Hillary over Trump, right, which means there's a lot of undecided voters. Now it's like
51-52-43, which means that Biden's over 50, meaning that a lot more people have made up
their minds and a lot of other polls have shown that. So I think what that means for both
the Democratic convention and what we're about to see this week is that we may not see a big bump for either Biden or Donald Trump.
But I think what the Biden campaign has wanted is a lot of Biden's lead comes from sort of voters who are softer in their support.
So they're voting for Joe Biden because they really just don't like Donald Trump.
because they really just don't like Donald Trump.
If those people, after a week of the Democratic convention,
decide that they like Joe Biden a lot more,
they're going to be firmer in their support for Joe Biden. And that's going to harden that margin that we've already seen build over the last couple months, hopefully.
We'll see what the Republican National Convention does to that lead this week.
So in addition to whatever Trump does at the RNC, he will also continue to make use of
his primary strategy in winning reelection, which is abusing the power of his office.
He called a press conference on Sunday night to announce that the FDA has issued an emergency
authorization for blood plasma. Plasma, as he said. Why can't he say fucking plasma? Plasma.
Blood plasma infusions as therapeutic treatment for coronavirus
patients even though fda scientists voiced objections to politico that the plasma has not
been quote proven as an effective treatment axios reports that trump administration officials have
been putting pressure on the fda just last week trade advisor peter navarro said to officials at
the fda quote you are all deep state and you need to get on Trump time.
So, Tommy, Trump and his strategists clearly think that any kind of announcements around
COVID treatments and vaccines help him politically, which obviously has horrifying implications.
But do you even think that's true?
I struggle with this one.
I mean, is the average voter happy about Trump's handling of the coronavirus if they're still
stuck at home or if their kids can't go to school or if you're one of like 30 million people out of work? My
guess is probably not. I mean, we shouldn't underestimate his ability to bullshit his base
into just magically thinking things are better. We saw that with the economy, but I have a harder
time believing it applies here. Like, are you really going to be like 175,000 people are dead?
The economy is decimated.
But I just overheard some moron on Fox and Friends talking about plasma.
So now we're good to go.
I don't know.
I struggle with that one.
Love it.
What do you think?
I mean, some people thought that there was a story in the Financial Times that it wasn't
going to be the plasma thing, that it was going to be that in October
they're going to do an emergency use authorization for the Oxford vaccine potentially so that
Trump can announce there'll be a vaccine before the election.
Like, do you think this kind of thing can work?
What do you think?
I don't know.
I would say that people at this point are used to Donald Trump saying things that don't
turn out to be true,
that is then dismissed by the vast majority of people and embraced as a kind of proof of how
good he is because he's so good at playing the media by his base who are so smart that they
know when he's honest and know when he's not. To me, the thing that makes me nervous is not
like basically what amounts to kind of bigging up a incremental advance.
What makes me nervous is more of a Donald Trump taking credit for something.
And then actually there is follow up of a,
because once there is a vaccine that goes into production,
it becomes, you know, the biggest story in politics and in the news.
And then we are following every single day,
the debates about distribution, the debates about who gets it first. Will it go to nurses
and healthcare professionals? Will it go to seniors? Will it go to teachers? That becomes
an all-consuming debate that he's very much a part of and taking credit for. So that makes me nervous,
sincerely. But I don't know that in October, he'll be in a position to start that conversation.
What matters to me is less Donald Trump going to a podium and making a claim and more the kind of follow on news stories that
make it seem true. Yeah, I will say, you know, we have the folks at Navigator have done a lot
of polling on people's opinions around the pandemic and Trump and on their last poll,
people's opinions around the pandemic and Trump.
And on their last poll,
even among people who are in high infection states,
57% say they are more concerned about going too far and pushing to develop a vaccine quickly
rather than being too cautious and slow.
So I think, A, there's that when you hear Donald Trump
just like touting a new treatment or vaccine.
B, I also find it weird that like,
so what is Trump's argument here come October?
Like, vote for me and you'll get a vaccine.
Vote for Joe Biden.
And I'm taking the vaccine with me.
Is he going to hold up the secret recipe with a lighter?
Like, what is the what's the pitch?
I just don't get why that's a real why that's a big reelection argument, like why that's
the big October surprise.
I would say right, right.
If you're going to answer the question, it's, I think it's more about Trump saying something
along the lines of, if it weren't for me, this vaccine would be months off because I
pushed these dumb, deep state, namby-pamby government insiders who are too slow and too
cautious and too worried about how it looks.
And I pushed them and I pushed them and I got this vaccine done faster. And so because of me, I stopped the virus. I stopped. He'll say I
stopped the China virus by keeping people out of the U.S. and then I'm stopping the virus by getting
the vaccine done early. And that, I think, is the case I'll make. Yeah. So that's like stick with me
and we get this vaccine that I push for and the economy's back open, you go with Sleepy Joe and he probably gums up
the works again on the vaccine
and shuts the whole country down.
He just only gives it
to Elon Omar and Antifa.
Nobody else gets it.
Becomes a Muslim-only vaccine.
We're joking about this now
in October.
That line will probably
come out of his mouth.
He'll fall asleep
during the meeting about it
or something, yeah.
So on that note, you know, Trump and other Republicans are also attacking Joe Biden for saying he'll follow the advice of public health experts if he's elected.
In response to a question from ABC's David Muir about what he would do if scientists
recommended another shutdown, Biden said, quote, I would shut it down. I would listen to the scientists. We're
going to do whatever it takes to save lives. In response, Donald Trump tweeted, despite biggest
ever job gains and a V-shaped recovery, Joe Biden said, I would shut it down, referring to our
country. He has no clue. Tommy, Trump and the Republicans are very excited about this line
of attack. Is it smart? We just had this debate.
We just had this debate.
Politicians who took the coronavirus seriously, who listened to scientists, saw their approval
ratings go up.
Those who didn't were hurt politically.
It's not like a federal thing.
It's look at the governors.
Governors in Arizona, Texas, and Florida all saw their numbers tank.
But Roy Cooper in North Carolina, who took all kinds of shit
from Trump because he wouldn't let the RNC happen in Charlotte without social distancing and masks
and other health protocols, he his approval rating was almost at 60 percent. Like, look,
I can't predict the future. Maybe people are sick of lockdowns and the context has changed. But
I still think the safest political ground for Biden or Trump or anybody is to show that you
will follow
the scientists and do what they say, because I don't think anyone wants like a chop shop vaccine
from Putin in Russia or, you know, to keep the economy open when people are getting really sick.
It's like this seems so obvious to me. Love it. I mean, I've been very pleasantly surprised
at how patient most of the public has been about this, because, you know, we've now gone through this, as Tommy pointed out, many times where Trump says Democrats want to shut the country down and I don't.
And every time it turns out, you know, there's some people who think, oh, that's going to be a political winner for him.
And then it turns out people are much more patient because they are scared about opening up the country without a vaccine or without having
gotten the virus under control. But what do you think about that? Does that surprise you? Or do
you think that people could finally be sick of it now? This was one where it's beyond Trump. There
was a bunch of Republican strategists. Some of the more right-leaning reporters were tweeting this.
We'll probably hear this all week at the convention, I'm sure.
Yeah, no. So I think Biden is on the best ground when he says you can't actually choose
between the economy and your health. The only way the economy comes back is if we take care of
people's health. That to me is is incredibly like sort of clear, like popular, obvious.
I also do understand why he's saying what he's saying. And I think it's admirable that he's
letting the science lead and really kind of delivering a maximal position, right? You know, I will do
what the scientists say. If they say shut it down, I will shut it down. I get that. I also, I also
agree that the polls have been incredibly heartening about how patient people and generous
people are about this, even now to this day, right? Even as parents are now experiencing the
hardship of what happens when schools either have to open and shut or can't open or are partially open. And it's an entire mess. There's the polls have shifted to parents
wanting to make sure schools don't open. Right. They understand the stakes of the virus. That said,
you know, Donald Trump has made his career on telling people, basically getting people to
forget what their minds know is true, to go with something easy, to go with something that feels good. And even as people know
instinctively that opening up might be wrong, that Biden's positions are correct,
there's something appealing about a guy going up there and saying, elect me, it's Mardi Gras,
right? It's just, you know, give in. It'll all be okay. It's fine. Everything's fine. Don't worry
about it. Don't listen to these naysayers. So
like I think he's saying the right things, but I do think there's a head heart issue.
It's a little foamy once, though, you know, like you can say that the first time and then
we you know, the restaurants all open up and the schools open up and suddenly cases are
shooting through the roof. Right. Like I just, I think that the other part of this is that Biden,
the question to Biden was
if the scientists say this, right?
And so I think Biden is on the best,
the firmest ground, as you said,
making sure he continues to repeat,
I will follow the guidance of scientists.
So like, hopefully Joe Biden wins
and there's a vaccine
or there's a vaccine in development.
It's very close.
But like, if it's a choice between
do you want to fucking stumble through 2021 like we stumbled through 2020 where we just have these
like outbreaks and flare-ups because everyone opens then we have to shut down again or do you
want to do four weeks of a real solid shutdown and then actually tamp the virus down so then we can
open up for the rest of the year obviously you'd choose the latter but um you just have to make
that clear and say that you're going to follow scientists. And obviously, Donald Trump.
John, it's really unfair of you to say this. The 50 bullet policy plan they rolled out clearly says
return to normal in 2021 in the COVID section. Please don't lie about his record or his plan.
Can you imagine a Donald Trump reelection slogan is return to normal 2021?
Just vote for Donald Trump to return to normal.
I want to make one more point too,
which is they're going around saying
that they are responsible
for the biggest job gains in history.
And it is one of the most idiotic claims.
If you, what's actually happening
is you have the most precipitous job drop in history
and a tiny little recovery, like just a dead cat bounce, this like tiny bit of increase.
And the idea that they're going to campaign on the fact that it went from having lost, what,
50 million jobs to 45 million jobs is astounding. I can't believe they think they can get away with that.
Yeah, it's wild. All right, let's talk about the latest developments in the great post office
crisis of 2020. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is testifying before the House today. He was in
front of the Senate on Friday where he said, quote, there has been no changes to any policies
with regard to election mail. The Postal Service is fully capable and committed to delivering the nation's election mail fully on time. He said he's pausing any additional changes
in advance of the election, but he refused to reverse changes he's already made, like removing
mailboxes and sorting machines. House Democrats also passed a bill with the help of 26 Republicans
that would provide $25 billion to the post office and, according to Roll Call, prevent it from
taking any action that would reduce services or impede timely delivery during the pandemic. So, Lovett, McConnell and Trump have refused to support this bill.
Trump was tweeting, you know, voter fraud conspiracies again this morning.
He was talking about the convention already. How useful do you think this vote by Democrats in these hearings were? someone like DeJoy is to shame and ordinary politics. But I will say that some of the
moments that have broken out from the hearings today, we're recording this Monday, and there
may be more and we may have missed some stuff. It's happening in real time. But I thought the
two most interesting things that came out of the hearing were, one, DeJoy basically flat out denied that there were overtime that he was responsible for
the overtime cuts and and some of the some of the other changes in policy that caused the delay,
even though there is just like documentary evidence, just physical evidence that he
actually did, which tells you he's really nervous about this and trying to evade responsibility for some of these changes. And the other thing was Ro Khanna pushed DeJoy on the elimination of some
of these sorting machines and whether they could come back on. And it got a little bit tense.
And DeJoy said, give me a billion dollars and I'll set them back up, basically. So it tells you that
this has gotten to DeJoy. and it tells you that getting them the money
removes a key argument that DeJoy and his allies are making about why these service
changes were necessary.
Tommy, do you have any big takeaways from the hearing?
And do you think we should be relieved that DeJoy has agreed not to make any more changes?
I'm not relieved.
I mean, look, you know, being out of power sucks.
Good for Pelosi and the House Democrats for holding this hearing. Good for
them for passing a bill. I think people are much more aware of what was happening with the Postal
Service than they were before. I think that 26 Republicans voting with Democrats is a big deal.
It's a big crossover. And hopefully it creates even more pressure on Republicans in the Senate
who are up for reelection. I think bigger picture Democrats can argue and should argue, we're here doing our jobs.
We passed a major bill to bail out the post office so that veterans can get their medications.
We passed a major COVID relief bill.
Where the hell are you?
Where is Mitch McConnell?
Because a few weeks later, we now know that Trump's bullshit stimulus EO is not working. One or
two states are actually paying the $300 stimulus. The rest are caught up in bureaucracy. You're not
going to do it or who knows. But consumer spending is now collapsing. That will lead to more job
losses. States are broke. They're going to lay off people. We're in a historic crisis.
Everything is getting worse. It does allow Pelosi and the
Democrats to put pressure on Republicans to come together and do something. I'm not saying it's
going to work because the Republican Party is broken, but like they're doing the right things
to position themselves to have that chance. Yeah, I think that the hearings are probably
more useful than I even thought they would be because it does seem like they're doing everything they can to hold DeJoy accountable.
They're saying come back with a plan and exactly how you're going to make sure that you can process all this election mail.
They got DeJoy to say that he was going to like send out a letter to every American in September to talk about like election deadlines and when they should be getting their ballots in and all this kind of stuff. So if they can keep up the pressure on DeJoy and haul his ass back in there in a couple of weeks, if things
haven't changed or things are still bad, then like I do think that can have some effect. But I do
think the biggest effect of the entire all these hearings and, you know, bringing Congress back
from recess to do the vote, if nothing else, if it just lets people know to vote early, to request your
ballot early, to get it back in as early as possible, that there is potentially some problems
with the postal service, that they're delivering mail too late, that there are delays, that there
is reduction in service. If everyone, if more people in the country are aware of this and can
act accordingly to get their ballots in as early as possible, then that, I think, will be a win.
Because we've had Mark Elias on.
There's plenty of lawsuits out there.
It doesn't seem like legislation is going to happen.
It doesn't seem like Trump is going to do anything about this.
So the only option we have is to request your ballot early and drop it off early.
That is the most important thing we can do right now.
All right, when we come back,
we will have Tommy's interview
with the New York Times' Kevin Roos about QAnon.
I'm so excited to talk to our guest today.
He's a New York Times technology columnist and the host
of the podcast Rabbit Hole, which I binged as fast as one can binge anything. Kevin Roos,
thank you so much for coming on the show. Thanks for having me.
So we are here, unfortunately, today to mostly talk about QAnon. I wish that was not the case.
I feel like I've been watching and reading about the growth of QAnon for several years now.
But if you ask me to explain it to someone for the first time, still, I don't know how to summarize it quickly.
Can you recreate for me the moment when you had to describe QAnon to some big shot editor at The New York Times and why this was worthy of going in the newspaper?
big shot editor at the New York Times and why this was worthy of going in the newspaper?
Yeah, if only it were one singular moment. I feel like I've spent most of the past year trying to explain QAnon to just befuddled editors and other people. But the basic nuts and bolts
is this, right? QAnon started as a 4chan post in 2017 by someone calling themselves QClearancePatriot, who claimed to be a high level insider in the Trump administration with access to classified information about this secret battle between Donald Trump and this global cabal of elite pedophiles. So that is Q. And Q has continued posting almost
5,000 times at this point. And over the course of those posts has unspooled this big, sprawling
conspiracy theory about how Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Ellen DeGeneres, Tom Hanks, Oprah
Winfrey, Pope Francis, the Dalai Lama, all of these people are
in on this global conspiracy. Usual suspects, yeah. Yeah, exactly. Who you think of when you
think of evildoers in this country, who are all not only part of this global sex trafficking ring
where they're trading children and molesting them and things like that, but they're also
cannibals. They are literally eating the children
in order to extract this supposedly life-extending chemical
from their blood.
So that's the sort of nuts and bolts of the conspiracy theory.
I call QAnon the Swiss army knife of conspiracy theories
because it's got a lot in there.
Like it's got a piece about aliens and the JFK assassination.
And it basically encompasses every major conspiracy theory of the last 50 years.
But the piece that is sort of the most agreed upon piece is this global cabal of elite pedophiles that Donald Trump in their telling is about to put a stop to.
And we are we are laughing because it's easier than crying on a podcast,
but we'll get to the serious part in a bit. So one thing that confuses me a little bit,
so my understanding is that QAnon was not the first Anon poster on 4chan. There was CIA Anon,
there was FBI Anon, I think there were others. But what's interesting or surprising maybe is
that QAnon has persisted. It's grown enormously to the point where QAnon protests were marching in dozens of cities over the weekend. There were people marching a
couple of miles from my house in Los Angeles, despite Q constantly getting things wrong,
right? He predicted Hillary Clinton would be arrested in October of 2017. Clearly that did
not happen. Why do you think the QAnon theory took off? And how has it persisted in the face of not coming close to being accurate?
Well, those are two interesting questions.
Well, let's take them one at a time.
So first, why has QAnon taken off?
You're right.
There have been other Anons posting on 4chan.
I think part of why this took off is that there's sort of a growing conspiratorial minded view in America more
generally. I mean, we have, you know, political leaders who believe in conspiracy theories. We
have, you know, lots of people getting their news from alternative sources, from social media,
things like that, you know, distrust in mainstream institutions. But I also think there's a technical piece of it, which is that in 2018, just after the first Q posts started appearing, Facebook changed its
algorithm to promote groups. I don't know if you remember, but there was this period after the 2016
election where they were putting up all these like billboards and signs in the subway and stuff that
were talking about Facebook groups and how you could,
you know, build a community and find people with similar interests. And so they started
ratcheting up the spread of groups in the algorithm for News Feed. And that coincided
with the formation of all these QAnon Facebook groups. And what Facebook was trying to do was
to promote like healthy and vibrant communities where people with similar interests would talk about their shared experiences.
But that also promoted QAnon because in these QAnon groups, there was social interaction
taking place.
People were trading tips and trying to decode these mysterious posts together.
It looked to the algorithm like genuine social
interaction, and it was. And so they got promoted and promoted and promoted.
Yeah. I want to talk more about this social media element of this because
it's so important. It's also dovetails with some other things you covered in Rabbit Hole. But
before we get there, I mean, so there's the funny part of this, right? They're like,
look, people think JFK Jr. faked his death to join Trump's secret evil fighting organization and today is posting as QAnon.
That is insane.
Other parts are not so funny.
Like the FBI has warned that conspiracy theory driven domestic extremists are a growing threat.
And they specifically mentioned QAnon.
Can you talk a little bit about why the FBI and others led to this?
What led to this warning?
Were there specific incidents?
Was it a collection of things?
Yeah, there have been a number of incidents over the past couple of years that I think
have really sort of made law enforcement wary of QAnon as a movement.
There was an armed standoff on the Hoover Dam Bridge between a QAnon supporter and
law enforcement. There have been at least a couple murders alleged by QAnon, people who
believed in QAnon and sort of carried out these killings in Q's name. There have been abductions,
there have been vandalism, there have been any number of sort of crimes committed by people pledging their support for QAnon.
Someone was arrested with knives in their car saying that they were going to go take out Joe Biden because Q had sort of had turned this person against Joe Biden.
So it's really it's it sounds funny when you first hear about it.
And I think a lot of people have sort of dismissed it as like,
you know, ha ha, can you believe?
It's like almost like a lizard people kind of thing.
But this is creating real extremist energy in the country.
And it's turning violent in a lot of cases.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so even more disconcerting is I don't
know when QAnon went mainstream, so to speak, but it has now been fully embraced by the Republican
Party. So, you know, last week, Trump was asked about QAnon at a press conference and far from
denouncing it, he just fully embraced the theory and and his role in it as some sort of savior of
the world, savior of our children. And he said that QAnon adherents love our country. Before that, he had retweeted QAnon accounts hundreds of times.
On top of the Trump administration, the Washington Post counted 11 candidates running for Congress
who expressed belief in or support for QAnon. There's been a subsequent surge of news coverage
about the theory. What do you think the impact is of this political embrace
and sudden attention to the theory? Does it help it grow?
I think it probably does. I mean, it's emboldening QAnon supporters after Trump's
press conference last week when he basically declined to denounce the QAnon movement.
I went into some of the QAnon groups that I lurk in and they were celebrating. I mean,
this was a big moment for them that they seem to have gotten the endorsement of the president.
And I think just in general, I mean, I've spoken to a lot of historians over the past couple of
weeks talking about previous conspiratorial forces in American politics, things like the
John Birch Society. But with the John Birch Society, you had prominent conservatives
denouncing them and pushing them, trying to push them out of the movement. And now what we see is
that QAnon is being embraced by people who are part of the mainstream conservative movement,
who are maybe not on board with all of the facets of QAnon, but who don't want to
detract from the energy, the groundswell of sort of pro-Trump support that these people
are offering? Yeah. So I'm glad you mentioned John Birch. So, you know, looming large here,
obviously, is the role that social media companies play in the spread of this stuff because,
but, you know, QAnon is also not the first conspiracy theory. I mean, when I read about it,
it sounds very similar in some ways to me, to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion,
which is a vile anti-Semitic text that purported to detail Jewish plans for world domination.
And it included details about Christian children being sacrificed at Passover dinners, right? Like
very similar stuff. It was a total fabrication written by anti-Semitic secret police in Tsarist
Russia. It has been discredited. In fact,
big chunks of it were just plagiarized. But the thing spread like crazy, right? Especially with,
I think, individuals predisposed to have anti-Semitic views. For example,
Henry Ford had a half a million copies printed here in the US. Thanks for that, Henry.
So, you know, I guess my question is, QAnon doesn't exist without 4chan where it originated. But when you look at,
you know, the Facebook groups, the YouTube algorithm, like how key do you think those
elements were to spreading this theory? They were absolutely critical to it. I mean,
I don't think QAnon becomes a mainstream phenomenon or anything close to it without
mainstream social networks promoting it. I mean, your average Facebook user is not going to wade into the depths of 4chan to like,
go look for the latest Q post, but they will join a Facebook group, they will subscribe to a YouTube
channel, they will, you know, follow people on Twitter who are QAnon influencers. So these
platforms have been absolutely essential to the growth of QAnon. And not only because they sort of give it a platform, but because for a while now, they've been actively recommending QAnon content to because they went looking for it, but because they were in, you know, a parenting Facebook group or a natural health Facebook group, or because they subscribed
to, you know, some person on YouTube who they thought was just talking about economics, but
it turned into a thing about QAnon. So they've been very good at kind of creating these
algorithmic on-ramps to QAnon that I think are drawing in a lot of
people who otherwise never would have found it. I just sort of assume that someone is making
a bunch of money off of this theory. Is there any evidence of who or if anyone is making money off
of QAnon? There is money being made, certainly. I mean, you can buy Q merchandise. I went to a
Certainly, I mean, you can buy Q merchandise. I went to a Trump rally late last year in Florida, and the people, you know, selling Trump merchandise also had their Q merchandise right next to it on the table. And in a lot of cases, the it's not commercialized in the same way that other, I think, political movements have been.
I don't know.
We obviously don't know who Q is or what their stake in this is, but clearly it's something, is sort of bigger than Q at this point. I mean, there's an entire media universe of people, you know, with YouTube shows and Discord servers and Facebook groups, all of which are generating just a ton of engagement and
probably some money, too.
Yeah.
So you had this fantastic podcast that came out a couple months ago, six months ago.
Yeah.
Time is a flat circle it
explores all the ways people can get pulled into social media platforms and fed uh increasingly
radical content especially racist right-wing content it's called rabbit hole everybody should
listen you looked at four years of youtube search history of a guy named caleb kane uh god bless you
for doing that can you tell us about that experience
and like what did you learn from that history
and about how these algorithms work?
Well, I should mention that I did not look
through his four years of history on my own.
We had a great production team of people
who helped me come through that.
That's more than any one person can take on.
But we went back through four years
of Caleb Kane's YouTube history.
He provided it to us. He was someone who had started off as a pro-Obama liberal and then kind of through his YouTube recommendations got increasingly served more and more extreme right wing content, ended up sort of sympathizing with the alt-right and then kind of had this weird thing happen where he kind of came back to sort of the far left. So we just wanted to figure out like what the heck is happening here
and what role is YouTube playing in this? So it's really interesting when you start looking at
someone's actual YouTube history and doing a kind of a forensic analysis. It's not at all
straightforward, but there are these kind of gateways, these people who talk about, you know, things on their YouTube channels that are not politics, that are not extreme right wing. They talk about, you know, positive psychology or they do self-help or they talk about, you know, cryptocurrency or something. And then they start transitioning into kind of more extreme right wing politics and they kind of bring their audience with them on that journey. And that's kind of what happened to Caleb Kane. He got very into this YouTuber named Stefan Molyneux, who was helping
him with, you know, depression and was talking about all these issues that were important to him.
And then he kind of veered off and became a far right influencer. And Caleb went with him.
So you see these periodic announcements from Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, where they'll ban InfoWars content, or you'll see these periodic announcements about efforts to crack down on QAnon content. Are those working, do you think? And I know that's a big question, a lot of different pieces, but do those sort of bans and deplatforming, does that work in your view?
But do those sort of bans and deplatforming, does that work in your view?
It depends what you mean by work.
I mean, does it decrease to zero the amount of extremist content
flowing through these pipes?
No, but it can slow the growth for sure.
I mean, just taking QAnon content out of recommendations
is a step that I think could slow the growth.
It's not going to make the people who currently believe in QAnon stop believing in it, but it could sort of make their recruitment
and growth harder. I do think deplatforming works in certain cases. I mean, when was the last time
you heard from Alex Jones? But I think it can also, for certain people, sort of, you know, embolden them. Obviously, we just saw Laura Loomer win a Republican primary for Congress in Florida. Laura Loomer, of course, is she calls herself the most banned person on the Internet. She's been banned by like every major platform, including some that aren't even like Teespring banned her, which I didn't even know it was possible to get banned from Teespring. So that's a case in which I think that ban, you know,
those bans have been worn as kind of a badge of honor. But I think in a lot of cases,
people just kind of disappear. So just stepping back on the tech platforms, I mean, I lived in
San Francisco for a couple of years. I worked with and around a bunch of tech companies. The majority of people I met were great, like well-meaning,
often brilliant. But I was always a little weirded out by the pervasive myth-making around these
companies, right? Like every company had to be mission-driven for some reason. The narrative
is always about the world being a better place. It's not like ride sharing because drunk driving is bad.
You know what I mean?
Let's eliminate it, right?
Like there's some of these simple messages.
Facebook and Twitter were big in that space.
They were big on connecting people.
There was some truth to it, right?
Like the Arab Spring is the example
that Twitter folks always point to.
But they always talked about connecting human beings
as like it's some unequivocally good thing,
forgetting all the awful
things we do to each other, the world wars, the bigotry. How much blame or rather, how much
rethinking do you think they are doing about maybe the naivete early on and the downside of creating
ways for humans to spread lies, harass each other, like without any guardrails whatsoever?
I think they're doing some rethinking of this.
I think obviously it's kind of core to their business model that people should be able
to share whatever they want with, you know, basically whoever they want at any time.
So that's not going away.
But I think they've gotten a little savvier about the ways in which their platforms can
be misused. And I think there's
a problem of naivete still, but I also think there's, I like to think of it as kind of a
problem of empathy. With something like QAnon, for example, I've talked to a number of people who
believe in the theory, whose family members and friends believe in the theory. And it always
seems to stem from a place of social isolation and from
material deprivation from people who are down on their luck. They're not having a ton of, you know,
things go right in their lives. They're alone. They're spending all their time on the internet.
And then QAnon comes along and promises to fix that for them. It gives them, you know, a group
of friends to hang out with on the internet. It gives them a mission. It gives them hope that maybe the good guys are going to win. And it
fills a void in their social and material conditions. And I don't think the tech companies
properly appreciated that under the right conditions, something like QAnon could become
genuinely important to people. That if you think about what's important to someone who's living in Silicon Valley
and has a great life and a great family and things are going right for them,
they're obviously not going to be attracted to something like QAnon.
But I think if what you're measuring and what you're optimizing for
is something like engagement or even something
like social interaction, trying to get people to connect more, I think it's a failure of empathy to
not be able to understand the various things that could fill that need for people under the right
conditions. Yeah, well said. So last question for you. I mean, rabbit hole is hopeful in that you
talk about some ways that people could be,
you know, de-radicalized, de-programmed, whatever you want to call it. But I'd say when I look at
QAnon, I feel like the horse is out of the barn and has been for a while. It's here to stay. Trump
is embracing it. Q followers seem to find a way to explain away every post that doesn't come to
fruition, every prediction Q mix.
So I guess I'd find myself increasingly worried about the potential for people in these groups
to do violent things or act in the real world.
Like you said earlier, COVID is making us all more isolated and seemingly more susceptible
to this stuff.
Have you seen any successful examples of people walking away from QAnon being convinced that it is wrong,
that maybe we can learn from and maybe learn a better way to approach people who believe it
rather than, I don't know, my default is to mock them probably.
Yeah. I mean, we spoke to one former QAnon believer for the podcast in the last episode,
former QAnon believer for the podcast in the last episode. And she had had sort of an interesting experience of sort of basically seeing a Q post that had a Bible verse in it and sort of being
sort of snapping out of it. It's kind of saying like, wait a minute, like, is this a,
you know, marketing scheme? Is this someone trying to like bring Christians into QAnon?
So I wouldn't say that's a typical experience. But it certainly
is the case that some people just kind of de-radicalize themselves kind of on a fluke.
But I think more cases are harder. I mean, you don't get through to people by telling them about
all the failed predictions that Q has made or the various, you know, things that they believe that quite obviously aren't true.
I think it comes from sort of personal interaction. I think it comes from engaging with people,
trying to be empathetic to the role that QAnon or something like it is filling in their lives,
and then trying to figure out healthier ways to meet those needs, whether it's,
you know, giving someone more social support, whether it's, you know, giving someone more social support, whether it's,
you know, getting them off their computer and out into the, you know, physical world somehow,
strengthening their ties to community organizations. It really, I think we've, we imagine
that we can just debate something like QAnon out of existence, but I think we've proven that that's
just not true and that we actually have to take a much different approach to something like it.
Yeah.
Well, again, well said.
Kevin, thank you so much for doing the show today.
Everybody should follow you on Twitter.
Read everything you are writing at The New York Times and subscribe to Rabbit Hole because
it is a truly great podcast that helped me better understand how all this shit is spreading
online because I don't think people
get it and it's a little scary and i'm glad we have experts to turn to like you thanks for having
me thanks to kevin ruse for joining us today and uh we'll see you on group thread tonight
and we'll see you on the pod on thursday and then we're gonna we're just gonna have another big we're
just gonna never stop streaming.
One of the things we didn't talk about
is that there's kind of a QAnon bullet in his agenda.
What is it?
In his 2021.
It's the one where he said,
yeah, take on the international organizations
that hurt Americans and drain the globalist swamp.
There's a real, there's a QAnon vibe on those bullets.
There's, I talked about this with kevin a little bit
i know we're in the outro but you know hey congrats you stuck around who cares but like hey
we got some time it's free it's free turn us off if you want there's everything we do for you is
free there's some real like historical echoes going back to like the protocols of the elders
of zion that gets wrapped into these q anon like the roth child like it's this is some dark dark
shit are you saying this is not the optimistic hopeful message that we were promised where we
go when we go all yeah you're right it's really exciting we're united can't wait for that this
sucks all right everyone we'll see you on the group thread pod save Save America is a Crooked Media production.
The executive producer
is Michael Martinez.
Our associate 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 Rustin,
and Elisa Gutierrez
for production support.
And to our digital team,
Elijah Cohn,
Nar Melkonian,
Yale Freed,
and Milo Kim,
who film and upload these episodes as videos every week.