Pod Save America - Trump's TikTok Dance
Episode Date: March 13, 2024Jon Favreau and guest host Jane Coaston discuss why Robert Hur's Capitol Hill testimony infuriated both Republicans and Democrats, the potential TikTok ban that Donald Trump no longer supports, RFK Jr.... reportedly considering Aaron Rodgers as his running mate, and whether Republican politicians are too online to win this election.Support abortion freedom! Shop Crooked’s new No Trespassing Collection: crooked.com/store. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
And I'm Jane Koston.
Jane, so great to have you.
Hello. It's wonderful to be here.
It's good to see you.
New York Times and CNN contributor Jane Koston, guest host today.
This is fantastic. It's good to have you back here.
I could not be more excited.
So on today's show, we are going to talk about the Republican House
just passed a potential TikTok ban that Donald Trump no longer supports.
RFK Jr. has reportedly chosen his running mate, and it could be Aaron Rodgers or Jesse Ventura.
And we're going to talk about whether Republican politicians are too terminally online to win.
But first, you might remember that last month, the special counsel who investigated President Biden's handling of classified information
concluded in his report that there was insufficient evidence to bring charges,
but then swerved out of the way to call Biden, quote, a well-meaning elderly man with poor memory.
Well, House Republicans called Robert Herr to testify yesterday so they could yell at him for not indicting Biden and generate some content for campaign ads.
Here's an example from Republican Representative Tom Tiffany.
So I want to thank you for the work that you did as far as you could.
But unfortunately, you are part of the Praetorian Guard that guards the swamp out here in Washington, D.C., protecting the elites.
And Joe Biden is part of that company of the elites.
You are part of the guard who defends the swamp.
Unfortunately, it was very polite the way he said it.
Just before the hearing, House Democrats released the full transcript of her interview with Biden,
which at one point showed the special counsel contradicting his own characterization of Biden's memory.
Let's listen.
I now want to turn you to the transcript and day
one, page 47. You said to President Biden, you have appear to have a photographic understanding
and recall of the House. Did you say that to President Biden?
Those words do appear on page 47 of the transcript.
Photographic is what you said. Is that right?
That word does appear on page 47 of the transcript.
Never appeared in your report, though. Is that correct?
The word photographic?
That does not appear in my report.
Attorney Herr, Webster's dictionary defines senile as exhibiting a decline of cognitive ability, such as memory associated with old age.
Mr. Herr, based on your report, did you find that the president was senile?
I did not. That conclusion does not appear in my report, Congressman.
Democrats also used the hearing to remind everyone that Trump is much worse at both handling classified information and remembering important things.
Let's listen.
Unlike President Biden, Trump did not alert the National Archives or DOJ of the documents, nor did he turn over all the classified materials in his possession.
He did not agree to sit down for a voluntary interview with the special counsel.
He never consented to a search of his home. On the contrary, Trump suggested that his attorney
hide or destroy evidence requested by the FBI and the grand jury.
Trump carefully instructed his aide to move boxes of classified documents
to hide them from the FBI.
Trump tried to delete incriminating security tape footage from Mar-a-Lago,
and he got his attorney to provide a false certification
to the FBI saying he had produced
all the documents in his possession.
I'd have to get the exact dates for you.
I can do that.
Am I correct that you married your current wife
in January 2005?
I don't know relative to that date.
In what years were you the owner of the Paz Hotel?
I don't know the years.
James Webb.
I don't remember the names. Don't remember the name. So you don't remember saying you the owner of the Paz Hotel? I don't know the years. James Webb. I don't remember the names.
I don't remember the name. So you don't remember
saying you have one of the best memories? I don't remember that.
I remember
you telling me, but
I don't know that I said. Tough that
he doesn't remember his anniversary.
I mean... I guess when
you've had a couple wives, it's sort of...
It's not surprising, exactly.
I think that
at the very 30,000 sort of, it's not surprising. Exactly. I think that like at,
at, at the very, you know, 30,000 foot view, it is not ideal that we now have dueling depositions
of two presidential candidates and two presidents. Um, that's not good. I will say as a side note,
if I ever could win anything, I would like to win the chance to depose someone.
Deposing someone just sounds super fun.
Just being like, did you say this?
And the person being like, apparently I did.
That sounds great.
I would go to law school just to depose people.
That's all I want to do.
And of course, like when you're getting deposed, you are advised by your lawyers, any good lawyer, to say that you don't recall if you're not absolutely sure because otherwise you could have perjury charges slapped on you.
It's another classic example of how the good thing to do doesn't sound good.
Right.
If you are arrested, you should not say anything to the police.
If you are arrested, you should not say anything to the police.
However, the police, when they do your Dateline episode, will be like, yeah, she lawyered up right away, didn't say anything, which is the right thing to do. But when you're watching Dateline later, you're going to be like, she killed all those people.
And that's what we're watching right now.
Dateline.
That is what politics has become.
line. That is what politics has become. I'm glad you're here to talk about this because when we spoke yesterday, you said you hadn't been following every detail of the hearing or the her investigation,
which, you know what, makes you just like most voters. So now that you're all read up on
everything, what do you think? I think that it is March of an election year. And so the relevance
of these particular events remain to be seen. I know that's not a very satisfying answer,
but I've been taking a break from social media for Lent,
which has been great.
It just also means that I am not plugged in.
Quite literally.
But I am not plugged in to literally everything that's taking place.
And so after going through the transcript of the hearing
and reading a bunch of write ups from actual news outlets, my my main takeaway is, wow, everyone hates each other.
Because you had Republicans yelling at her about how he's the praetorian guard for Biden, which he is not.
And also, I don't know how the praetorian guard got involved here.
Me neither.
I don't know how the Praetorian Guard got involved here.
Me neither.
Yeah.
But then you had Democrats yelling at her that he had smeared Biden by referring to him as elderly and talking about his memory issues.
I was very entertained because part of the transcript shows that Biden does remember
going to Mongolia and having an awesome time bow hunting, which sounds super fun.
Apparently, Biden excels at archery.
How is that not?
That's my takeaway.
Archery is hard.
From a trip to Mongolia 13 years ago, and he's remembering hitting the target.
I don't even want to know why that story came up, by the way.
No, he wanted to talk about cars, and he wanted to talk about how hot his wife is so i was
like yeah joe biden elderly wife guy who remembers elderly wife guy things that checks out um but i
think like the main you know it was interesting how rather than ask questions that could show
like why didn't charges result from this why did this not appear in the ultimate report that you gave? Like, what,
you know, getting actual answers? Everyone involved decided this is a televised hearing.
We must do televised hearing things and yell at each other and yell at him. This former special
counsel who did not ask for any of this. He's just there and he was yelled at. But I think that
for any of this.
He's just there and he was yelled at.
But I think that
it was interesting
because a couple of the write-ups
I saw were like,
this could have election ramifications.
And I'm thinking back to,
do you remember four years ago?
Do you remember
what was taking place
roughly four years ago?
Oh, I think we were
home for quite a while.
Yeah, we were home
for quite a while.
Some stuff was happening.
I believe we
are now just over the anniversary of when Rudy Gobert caused the entire NBA to shut down,
which I will never move on from the fact that as far as I'm concerned, it's all Rudy Gobert's fault.
But we have no idea what is going to happen in between now and November.
It is not ideal that Biden is in the situation.
This report is not good.
This hearing was not good.
But whether it will be relevant to people voting in November,
which is, I don't, it's a while from now.
A lot can happen.
You can have an entire global pandemic between now and then.
I would prefer we didn't that happened
four years ago i was like all right goodbye everybody taking my social media break for
lent and i came back and we were in the midst of a global pandemic so i'm really trying not to like
instigate that again yeah um i'm i'm doing my very best but i will just say like i don't know
how relevant this is going to be i don't know what's going to be at top of mind for voters, especially because the opposition candidate also has apparently memory issues and a deposition and a host of legal issues.
Couple depositions at this point.
Yeah, exactly.
He's been deposed a bunch of times.
Exactly.
he's been to a bunch of times exactly and also had a whole classified document scandal and his classified documents were kept in various places in mar-a-lago and now there are interviews
with former mar-a-lago staffers saying like yeah we just moved stuff around and it seemed weird like
that's not good um but again i don't know what it will mean for people voting in November.
Yeah.
I mean, my takeaway is if you are truly concerned about Joe Biden's memory or cognitive abilities,
I would urge you to read or at least skim.
It is 159 pages, the full transcript of the interview.
It paints a much different portrait of Biden than Herr's report, in which the special
counsel very clearly cherry-picked, exaggerated, and editorialized in a way that absolutely wasn't
necessary in order to explain why he chose not to bring charges. Just one example, in the report,
Herr says Biden, quote, did not remember even within several years when his son Beau died.
Of course, what actually happened is that Biden
was telling a story to her about why he started thinking about running for president in 2017,
2018, which involved a promise to his dying son. Biden said, what month did Beau die? Oh my God,
May 30th. And then a White House lawyer interrupted to say 2015. And Biden said, was it 2015? He died. The
lawyer said yes. And Biden said it was 2015. So like, it's not like her was completely lying.
But when you say did not remember even within several years when his son Bo died,
you wouldn't know from that that he immediately knew what date it was and was just had to be
corrected on the year as he was telling a very, very long story about why he ran for president.
Yeah, exactly.
And especially because I think if anyone has experienced tragedy, sometimes you remember
every aspect of it.
Like it happened.
It is still taking place.
And sometimes little things fade away.
Like you might remember, like I remember where I was when I found out that this person had
passed away. I can tell you everything about it when I found out that this person had passed away.
I can tell you everything about it.
I can tell you what the weather looked like.
But what year?
Not sure.
Like, might need a moment.
And so, like, that was a moment in which I think that, and I think Representative Raskin also made the point that, like, there seemed to be, I mean, Republicans getting really upset about document handling seemed a little bit of a, I'm giving a side eye.
I'm aware that side eye is not ideal for a podcast format.
But I do think that there is a sense about being like this hearing was not about documents.
This hearing was about Biden should be charged with crimes and removed from the White House.
And you know who should take his place in the White House?
Biden should be charged with crimes and removed from the White House.
And you know who should take his place in the White House?
Donald Trump, another person with documents issues who actually has been charged with crimes.
Yeah.
And by the way, if you don't if you don't think that Biden is going to be charged, which
none of them really think because Robert said he's not going to be.
And now it doesn't look like they're going to impeach him because they haven't found
any evidence that warrants impeachment.
And it also and Ken Buck just retired.
So now they barely even have a House majority,
let alone enough people to impeach him.
So in case that's not going to happen, Biden's old.
Biden's old and he's senile, even though Robert Herr just said he wasn't senile.
But anyway, that's what they were trying to push.
I don't think they successfully advanced the the storyline about biden's age in this
hearing right exactly because that's i mean politics so much is about storylines and about
introducing ideas into the media zeitgeist i am a part of the media zeitgeist i do zeitgeisty
things on occasion and there is an idea of like if we talk a lot about how biden is old then the
media will have to report that he is old.
And then they'll have to do like roundtable discussions about how old is Joe Biden?
He's so old that he might remember Truman.
I don't know.
And like, that's the point.
But I do think that the challenge is that like Trump is also old.
I'm aware that that is not a discussion that we have all the time.
I think that a couple of people,
I think McKay Coppins,
who's a great writer for The Atlantic,
has made the point that like
so much of Trump's weirdness is baked in
with American voters and with, you know,
kind of the media that like,
if you just keep saying like weird things Trump says,
there's a certain moment,
there's a sports writer,
he owns the ringer
uh bill simmons he came up with this thing years ago called the mike tyson zone which is that like
mike tyson if you if you hear that mike tyson did anything like um mike tyson jumped off the
eiffel tower you'd be like yeah probably like there is a certain zone and like donald trump
is within the mike tyson zone of like yeah if i heard if you
told me that donald trump went on a long rant about the netflix revival of gilmore girls and
how terrible it was i'd be like yeah 100 percent not a surprise at all nope nope nope i'm like now
i'm gonna incept myself into believing that this happened. But like there it it this hearing was an effort to put this conversation about Biden's age back into media spaces and make the media talk about it.
And I think that the media will continue to talk about Biden's age because I do think it is relevant for obvious reasons.
Namely, he is elderly.
Actuarial tables are actuarial tables for a reason but i also think
that on this particular issue of the documents issue i don't think that they got what they
wanted out of it it's the same way that the biden impeachment didn't go anywhere like
you can you can bring a horse to water but you cannot make it into a document scandal
as the saying says i think um part of their problem is that the hearing
came uh you know several days after a state of the union where biden appeared feisty was a joyful
warrior and you know my take on the state of the union is it's not going to be a game changer since
state of the unions often aren't game changers that there's they usually don't lead to any change in approval ratings or or bumps in the polls but i do think it was a blueprint for biden for the campaign
like if he is like that uh out on the campaign trail or when we see him in public from now
until november he's going to be a lot better off but what did you think yeah i think that um
how the state of the union is perceived is always it's always challenging
because you are asking people who already have a perception of the person giving the
State of the Union.
Like you cannot bring in people who have literally never heard of Joe Biden be like, watch this
speech.
How do you think this guy did?
Like, that's not how this works.
And I do think like how his I don't think it's going to have any impact on polling. But I do think that Republicans keep setting the expectations for Joe Biden on the floor.
We saw this in 2020 and we have seen this over and over again, that Joe Biden is supposed to be barely alive.
He is supposed to be unable to do literally anything and then he will do anything he will he
will appear to be a member of the human race in good standing and then republicans are like well
he was loud he was very loud and he's jacked up joe jacked he seemed annoyed and like
at a certain point like maybe set your your expectations for Joe Biden, like slightly above comatose.
Like I think that that that is the challenge here.
Like if you have baked in this idea that Joe Biden is senile and then Joe Biden does things that make it obvious that he is not senile.
and then Joe Biden does things that make it obvious that he is not senile.
I think that you are ignoring, if you're a Republican,
things that are actually things you could go after Joe Biden on.
You could go after Joe Biden on any number of subjects. You could go after the withdrawal from Afghanistan
or any number of actual policy issues.
This is me trying to make this election about policy
while it will
not be about policy i know that i know that but like i think that it just it's so easy it's so
easy to just be like oh he's old and can't do anything whereas donald trump not old, not weird, is this vital person, like a Ben Garrison comic.
And it keeps not working, and they keep doing it over and over and over again.
I remember in the early months of the 2012 reelect,
the Romney people sort of tried out a line on Obama that was, you know, he's a he's a decent man who was a historic president.
And we're so glad that he made history, but he just hasn't been able to turn the economy around.
And we need someone new. And we were we were much more afraid of that line of attack than we were what they ended up with by the end which
is like you know he did Benghazi and because once again the Republicans let like the fringe take
over the messaging and it's just not as it's not the people had doubts about Obama but they didn't
believe that he was some uh evil whatever that they painted him out to be and that is the same
thing that the Republicans are doing with Biden right and i think that that's something um you know 2012 like mitt romney
wanted to talk about like the economy or like very specific issues that i think were tethered to
actual policies upon which you could actually criticize barack obama whose actual polling numbers were not like that great in 2011 2012
due to any number of things and the GOP media base was like no Benghazi slash Orly Tate's
slash something extremely strange like oh I've never I will never forget about Orly Tate's you
can't take that away from me but like it is it is interesting how I mean, this is I mean, it's a it's a cultural discussion.
Biden's age is an easier conversation to have that everyone makes sense of when talking about withdrawing from Afghanistan gets complicated because a lot of people wanted to withdraw from Afghanistan and everyone was always going to be mad at the person who actually did people could be mad about the economy or about bionomics or about inflation
but like all of that is a little challenging to talk about but like he's old that's easy yeah and
he's senile every yeah that's something that people kind of understand it just happens that it keeps not necessarily being true right yeah and the truth is
he's uh a well-meaning elderly man who can remember just with mind-numbing detail all kinds
of stories from his 81 years on this earth and will tell those stories to you like ad nauseum
yeah yeah like and i have been it is the joe biden in
that transcript is like the joe biden anyone who knows joe biden who has been in meetings with joe
biden who has talked to joe biden like we have all heard those kind of stories where he has a
the mental acuity is he is sharp right and he remembers a lot he goes on at length right
and he tells these stories.
And some of the stories are a little kooky.
Might make you roll your eyes from time to time.
But the guy is sharp.
He is really sharp.
So the House is on a real tear this week on the heels of that very successful special counsel hearing.
They just passed a bill 352 to 65 that would ban TikTok from all U.S. app stores unless ByteDance, the Chinese company that owns the social media platform, agrees to sell TikTok to an Americanbased owner within 165 days. The legislation
passed overwhelmingly bipartisan support. It also has support from President Biden.
This is all based on assessments from the intelligence community and the FBI that TikTok
poses a threat to national security. They believe the Chinese government will use or is using the
app to spy on American users, spread pop propaganda, and interfere in
our elections. The bill may or may not pass the Senate. We don't know yet, but it does have one
brand new opponent, Donald Trump, who tried to ban TikTok when he was president, but just changed
his mind recently after a fierce lobbying campaign by people with financial ties to TikTok, including
a billionaire donor and Kellyanne Conway. Imagine that. All right, before we get to the Trump of it all,
what do you think of the ban or the potential ban? So I think that there's
in a normal objective conversation about this, I think that the ban that is not really a ban to be clear yeah let's if we go back to 2020
there's another app that's very popular and occasionally lightly controversial that has
this exact same issue grinder which some of you might be extremely familiar with and some of you
were like what's grinder and but you're also lying you know what it is so grinder in 2020 owned by a chinese company kunlun the u.s forces the sale
of grinder uh to san vicente acquisition because of security concerns and people are still grinding
is that what i'm not gonna ask someone will email me to tell me what the verb is when you still grinding still grinding got the episode title i uh i'm i'm leaving that there so there there are examples for this this is not no more tiktok
ever this is sell it to an american subsidiary sell it to an american company which is i think
it seems to me a reasonable ask if you would like to continue having TikTok in the United States.
Like it's a thing that you can do, but then it's not about objectively what TikTok actually is.
It is about what TikTok means.
If you're former Vice President Mike Pence, you believe it is digital fentanyl, which I don't entirely understand what that means or what Mike Pence thinks fentanyl is. But that's neither here nor there.
If you are Rand Paul, you believe that this is all deeply unfair.
unfair. There are obviously a lot of libertarians with like, I think, on many issues, I agree with them with regard to attempting to ban TikTok or limit TikTok for like, some of the arguments
against TikTok that I've seen from Republicans seem to literally be like, it's poisoning our
children with liberal nonsense. Like, the idea that in China, TikTok is like, ah, they watch
orchestra performances. But in America, they watch pornography on TikTok.
No, that sounds stupid.
If you have actual security concerns with regard to the ownership of TikTok,
that is different from TikTok is bad, ban TikTok, no more TikTok for anyone.
Those are two different things.
So I think that how people are thinking about this app
is actually how people are thinking about tech
and this type of tech.
On the one hand, you have people who I think
are a smidgen too enthusiastic about it.
Some of them are being paid to be enthusiastic.
Our good friend of the Bowling Green Massacre,
Kellyanne Conway.
Some people, you know, there have been a host
of TikTok influencers who
have been on Capitol Hill to talk to people. I don't know if you may have seen, others may have
seen, TikTok has had a big ad campaign to the United States to being like, you know, I'm able
to support my family. I'm educating toddlers. I'm making soap. Like, I'm the nicest person in the
entire world and I'm on TikTok. Nothing bad could happen here, which I'm like, fine. Like I'm the nicest person in the entire world and I'm on TikTok.
Nothing bad could happen here,
which I'm like, fine.
But I think that the conversation is less about what TikTok is
and more about what TikTok means.
Which is about a social media platform
that is confusing and loud
and sometimes filled with really bad stuff and sometimes filled
with really good stuff. And it is currently seemingly out of control. And a lot of people
don't like that. And a lot of people don't like that. Other people don't like that.
Yeah. I mean, look, my view on this is that most social media platforms as currently designed
do more harm than good. That's my own bias here. I think that functional
democracies require a shared reality and social media is not in the shared reality business,
traps us in different realities where we only see and hear now what we want to, even if it's not
true, makes rational debate impossible, makes it very easy to ignore what's going on in the world
altogether. I think TikTok is maybe one of the worst of all the platforms
because the algorithm is more determinative, right?
There's very little choice involved.
You're just being fed video after video based on your own interests.
But what if I really want to watch a llama hopping to party up by DMX?
That's my right.
I have the right to watch a llama hop to party up by dmx don't take that away from
me that's what i'm saying it's like so that all that aside like i'm not like i said i'm not a fan
of uh twitter even though i use it and i'm addicted to it i also am i've spent an hour on tiktok and
then where did the hour go right so like but you're right if you want to if you want to do that great
but operating in a country where the government is actively hostile to U.S. interests and looking for ways to spy on us, not good.
I don't think we would have accepted during the height of the Cold War the Soviet Union owning NBC.
Right.
That's something that would have been a problem for people.
Right.
Exactly. I think that it's difficult for people to separate all of these pieces.
It's like any hearing you have on these issues with regards to the Chinese Communist Party
or the Chinese government obviously turns into rabid Sinophobia, which no one needs.
But there is an actual security concern here.
There is a security concern that has been raised by many people of both parties.
People who I do not think are completely insane.
I think that that is worth hearing, especially because if TikTok is owned by an American company, then you can continue to watch.
Keep TikTok.
Whatever. Yeah, you can keep to watch... Keep TikTok. Whatever.
Yeah, you can keep on TikTok-ing
or inventing TikTok dances.
And please,
just don't film your TikTok in public
because you look insane.
What is also of interest to me
is that Donald Trump,
on this particular issue,
who, as you mentioned,
wanted to ban TikTok in 2020,
Donald Trump, occasionally, is accused or given the accused is too negative a term.
He is admired for his ability to do three, four, five dimensional chess on any number of issues.
But Donald Trump is actually the most easily influenced person in
the history of time ever like ever at any time um and on this particular issue he has been
effectively influenced because there is a person that he hates that That person's name is Mark Zuckerberg. That person runs Facebook and a host of other entities.
For years, Donald Trump has hated Mark Zuckerberg, hated him a lot.
And so the brilliant people who are paid millions of dollars to do this very thing go to Donald
Trump and are like, hey, you know what Facebook hates?
TikTok.
You know what your supporters love?
TikTok.
And your supporters are free on TikTok.
David Urban, who's a lobbyist, long time advisor to Trump,
I believe he ran the Pennsylvania campaign 2016 for Trump,
said that the app could be a campaign tool.
You've got Kellyanne Conway,
who's being paid by Club for Growth to defend TikTok which is a a circle that I really want to put a pin in to have a
conversation about later because Club for Growth doing this is weird to me as someone who's been
following conservative politics for a long time yeah but so and then you know I think most
importantly you have um Jeff Yass who owns about 15% of ByteDance.
He's the biggest donor to Club for Growth and thus Kellyanne Conway.
And so all of a sudden, Donald Trump, again, most easily influenced person in the history of time.
Like there are eight-year-old boys who are less easily influenced than Donald Trump.
Actually, eight-year-old boys are really hard to convince of
a lot of different things not donald trump so donald trump now is like tiktok and whatever
but in comparison to the evil mark zuckerberg we got to keep tiktok i mean it also goes to show
people like donald trump will abandon his position on literally any issue he will screw over literally anyone his own family
if it will help him politically or if he thinks it will help him politically that is the only
thing he cares about is donald trump so he i'm tough on china doesn't matter if it's gonna if
if coming out against the tiktok ban is gonna help him politically whether it's whatever the issue is
he will abandon it in a second if it's gonna to help him politically. And I do think, having said what I just did about
TikTok, that there is a good case to be made that a TikTok ban that it well, if this legislation is
signed into law and ByteDance doesn't sell and TikTok is then banned in the United States and
President Biden has signed that into law and Donald Trump is out there opposing the ban.
I think there's a very good case to be made that this will politically benefit Donald
Trump, especially with a group of voters, young voters who Joe Biden has been struggling
with compared to how he did in 2020.
And so like all that said, I'm like the political strategist in me.
I'm like, yeah, I might wait until after the election to do anything about this legislation.
Right.
Which I think that that seemed to have been the path that was attempted four years ago.
But I will also say a couple of things.
One, the TikTok audience is older than anyone thinks it is.
The TikTok audience is actually generally people around my age because
um the deeply elderly people in our uh in our 30s we are ancient we we we are struggling well
meaning millennials and i will also say that um in other countries where this has been attempted
people basically tiktok basically just did what it has already done in the United States, which is that it became Instagram reels. Like Instagram reels are essentially repurposed TikToks.
There are thousands. I don't actually have TikTok, but because of Instagram, I feel like I do.
And so it's not as if like TikTok has broken contain. TikTok, like the people who are on
TikTok do not stay there. They are also posting their content on YouTube.
But like the content is there.
The users are there.
Like you can't really, attempting to limit,
we are now in a point of like kind of social media amalgamation
in which people who are on one platform don't just stay there.
Their content doesn't just stay there.
It crosses over.
But I do think, mean if i if i'm
bite dance i just sell i just sell i do it like grinder i just sell to an american company for
but the chinese government has millions of dollars but i guess the chinese government has a say here
right if by dan if by dance is allowed to sell and they have previously said that they will not
uh allow a sale which if you weren't worried about Chinese government influence on TikTok
before the fact that they have been very opposed to a sale should raise some
red flags,
people.
Yeah.
It just,
I mean,
that does seem
lightly.
We're not letting go of this company.
And also,
by the way,
the Chinese government that does not allow any American social media
platforms to operate in their country.
Yes. And also has tight limits on their social media platforms to operate in their country. Yes.
And also has tight limits on their social media platforms,
as has been found out 90 bazillion times over the last five years.
But I think like,
I am,
I am not sure what the political ramifications would be.
I will say that the polling indicates,
and again,
polling is just a photograph in time.
It does not tell you how anyone will actually react to anything.
The polling indicates that most Americans are in support of a ban on TikTok.
Now, why that is, we need to ask most Americans, and neither of us have that kind of time.
But how people think about this particular issue might be a little more complicated i mean yes i am fully convinced that house members have had been diluted with calls
from young people which i will say it's it's kind of funny to me that people are like why aren't
young people more politically active and then young people get politically active and then
call their representative about an issue that matters to them and people like whoa stop it
stop it go away i'm like they're doing
the thing they're supposed to do all right before we go to break and in case you missed it the
cricket store just launched a no trespassing collection inspired by states where abortion
is under attack a portion of the proceeds will go to vote save america's fuck bands fund which
currently supports abortion rights organizations across arizona nevada and florida head to
cricket.com store to shop now.
Also, in case you missed it, our Pod Save America and Love It or Leave It 2024 tour
dates were just announced, and the Friends of the Pod pre-sale is happening now.
So if you want access to the best seats in the house before everyone else, subscribe
at Crooked.com slash friends to get the exclusive code Alright so here's a New York Times
Headline that made me throw my phone
Aaron Rodgers and Jesse Ventura
Top RFK Junior's list for
Running mate what a world apparently
Kennedy has approached
the New York Jets quarterback and the former professional wrestler about joining his independent
ticket as vice president and quote, both men have welcomed the overtures. Two people familiar with
the discussion said the Washington Post then followed up with the report that Kennedy has,
in fact, selected his running mate and will announce his choice within two weeks. Kennedy's
currently only on the ballot in four states,
though his super PAC says he has enough signatures to qualify in Georgia and Arizona as well.
Like Kennedy, Rogers and Ventura, both conspiracy theory guys.
Rogers spreads misinformation about COVID.
Ventura thinks the government did 9-11.
Going to be tough to choose between them, huh?
Apparently Discovery Channel host Mike Rowe and Tony Robbins,
yes, that Tony Robbins,
are also in the mix.
What do you think, Jane?
I'm about to say words
that I have never said before,
but all credit
to former representative
Tulsi Gabbard,
who has apparently
stopped having discussions
about becoming vice president.
Too crazy for Tulsi.
As had Senator Rand Paul,
which makes sense because the idea of Rand Paul being anyone's vice president uh too crazy for telphy as had uh senator rand paul which makes sense because the
idea of rand paul being anyone's vice president just seems um unlikely unworkable on a lot of
things um with respect that is due jesse ventura did serve as governor the great state of minnesota
that that is a real thing that happened. Many of us were there.
Aaron Rodgers.
Hang on, I need to gather myself. So in January, I started out writing about the NFL and college football.
That is my first love, my true passion.
And a quote went around a bunch yesterday.
The absolutely fantastic ESPNn commentator reporter mina kimes shared it as to a host of other people so in january aaron rogers jets
quarterback who played two plays for the jets before tearing his achilles he's he told pat
mcafee on espn because uh aaron rogers had time to call into Pat McAfee anytime he wants.
And he loves it.
He said the Jets need to eliminate distractions,
which it's a real guy in hot dog costume asking,
we're all trying to find who did this.
Aaron Rodgers, I want to talk at the very micro about the football of it all because this is a rare opportunity
in which I can do this
I figured yeah
so he has
a job
he has a job that for
what
30
31 other starting quarterbacks
and like a ton of other people
is an all encompassencompassing job.
Being an NFL quarterback is extraordinarily high pressure, very difficult. People are mad at you
all the time. You are working all the time. Aaron Rodgers came over from the Packers.
If you watched Hard Knocks this year, which was excellent, Aaron Rodgers came across as like a nice, interesting person
with a lot of strange views, but he didn't really talk about those.
And he seemed kind of like, oh, you know, he was going to make the team better.
And he was doing a lot with like team camaraderie and people got along.
And then he gets hurt.
And in normal peopleville, it would have been like, you know,
you would have just seen a lot of like hashtag grind set posts on Instagram
as he like works his way back from an Achilles chair, which is like the fact that you can do that now, like an Achilles chair in football or in sports in general used to just be like, well, that's done.
He was even hinting in December that like, oh, I could make a return.
That was never going to happen, but he just likes to hear himself talk.
Being an NFL quarterback is a full-time profession.
Like, if you're an NFL quarterback, that's all you do.
Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow has been recovering from a hand issue.
That's all he does.
He goes to physical therapy and recovers from his hand issue.
He's not like, while we're here, I'm going to enter the seminary and become a priest in my spare time.
Not a lot of opportunities for part-time work when you're an NFL quarterback.
And do you know what's also a full-time job?
I don't know if you've heard this.
Being a vice presidential candidate.
Being a vice presidential candidate.
Which, just to really circle things up here, the election that is going to take place is in November.
You know what else is taking place in November?
That's actually way cooler and better and I like more than elections.
Football.
Football is taking place then.
The fact that I saw that headline in the new york times and for just a
second i was like this isn't like some of that one of those like weird you remember like early
2000s like internet scam stuff that was like political scams where it's like oh you know
we fake the cover of a magazine and it's supposed to talk about how this is actually all about
climate change or something like that like for a second i talk about how this is actually all about climate change
or something like that like for a second i was like wow this is a really involved fake
but no i had i did a double take as well i did it's a real thing it's a real thing and unfortunately
we like i keep going back and forth on how seriously to take rfk jr's candidacy because he is uh not quite a serious person uh has proved
himself to be nor is uh aaron rogers in his um spreading covid uh misinformation and uh and
random conspiracies about uh jimmy kimmel and uh and uh jeffrey epstein that turned out of course
not to be true so like aaron ro, not a serious person at this point.
Nor is Jesse Ventura at this point.
Or arguably ever.
A lot of the other people on this list as well.
But I actually, I want to jump in here for a second.
Aaron Rodgers is not a serious person.
This is something like the conspiracy stuff.
He does conspiracy stuff in the way that, like, it's interesting because it's the one way in which i think aaron rogers is a
very identifiable american because he does conspiracy stuff for fun like this is this is
interesting and entertaining for him like it's like the guy you work with where you have had
approximately one beer with him and we're like that will never happen again because he just
randomly started being like so how do you think they fake the moon landing and you're like oh no it's this person um
he is like every time i mean and he always has that plausible deniability about being like i'm
just you know i'm just thinking out loud trying to think outside the system but like he does have and should stay within his actual job his actual job
at which he is let's remember very good at multiple mvps he's won a super bowl he has been very
successful and he just happens to have this sideline of saying things that are fucking insane rfk jr is actually a very serious person which is why he is of
concern because he very seriously says and does the things that he says and does like yeah this
is not a sideline he is a former environmental attorney who um has been spreading vaccine
misinformation for years not because it is fun for him. It actually
seems like it's not fun for him at all. He is very serious about this. He really, really believes it.
This is not like a being contrarian thing or trying to think outside the matrix. He is absolutely
100% convinced of it. That is not good. And I think too, I'm guessing what you're thinking
of like how you know what
role RFK will play in the election
I think
that the challenge is going to
be that each
party believes that he is
going to be a
problem at
best for their opposition at worst
for them and so for instance there's been talk about rfk
joining the libertarian party ticket i don't think that is going to happen because i will say this
for the libertarian party rfk is a very non-libertarian person very non like the the
adjacent it's not it's he the ways in which he wants to wield the government
on a host of issues, ranging from environmental issues,
which let's keep in mind, that is where he started out.
Like, not very libertarian.
Now, that, he could still attempt to run on that ticket,
but I don't think that the LP will permit that.
I do think that RFK can thread this very particular needle of being someone that appeals to people who are conservative on social issues, but fairly liberal on economic issues with regard to the welfare state, with regard to social security. You know, when you have conservative influencers and pundits saying like,
why should anyone retire?
Retirement will kill you.
Just work forever, as Ben Shapiro implied, I believe, yesterday.
A candidate who is talking a lot about the need to build up the welfare state
while espousing the same kind of anti-corporate anti quote-unquote
big pharma attitudes that used to be something that like lefties talked about in the early 2000s
like when you you have a candidate who can appeal to people who think of themselves as being
conservatives while also sounding like somebody who would be at the wta protests in 1999 like that's an interesting through line yeah however i will also say like
i think that i think that that's the concern also for biden like you have someone who
can who sounds this particular way who can you know thread that particular needle that i think
that is a that is a populace that neither party is reaching out to or understands.
That is not to say that everyone should be aiming themselves at the vaccine-skeptical conservative voter.
That's not that big a population, and also vaccines are cool and good.
But I understand why both parties are concerned about this. this and i think like it is this list of potential candidates really speaks to the
i'm not socially conservative i'm like the kind of the like the the political middle that political
muddily middle of people who are also vaccine skeptical and really like state power but also
don't want to be told what to do, which is a large swath of people.
I think that I understand this list of people as being representative of that when you get Tulsi and Rand and Aaron Rodgers.
I get why people are worried. I get that.
It's anti-establishment, countercultural, and low trust at a time when people do not have a lot of faith in institutions and are pretty cranky. So
yeah, that's like a toxic mix. Kennedy's campaign also has like an extremely online feel to it.
Heavy on conspiracy, grievance, fringe, weird. DeSantis campaign was also very online. Didn't
work out so well for him. You wrote a piece that you and I talked about before on the 2020 Trump campaign being too online. And it does seem
like the terminally online reactionary manosphere is the real driving energy in at least some
segment of Republican politics right now. I know you've been thinking and writing about this.
What's your sense of what that's all about and sort of why it's bubbling up right now?
Yeah, I think that first, I think it's helpful to explain what I mean by
extremely or terminally online, which is something, John, you understand.
Very well.
Being extremely online is not just being on the internet.
It is believing firmly and acting as if events that take place online matter to everyone offline.
And the 2020 campaign was a great example of this because Donald Trump would routinely go on the stump and talk about things that online conservatives were talking about all the time.
To audiences in like Iowa or Nebraska who were like, what in the fuck are you talking about?
were like, what in the fuck are you talking about? He went on the stump or would tweet at the time and would talk about how we need to repeal Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1997.
Now, I love Section 230 of the Communications Act of 1997. That has to do with how basically it says
that if you post something on Facebook, Facebook is not liable for the thing you post.
If you post a comment on a website, the person who runs that website, whether it's InfoWars or a recipe website with two long descriptions at the top that you have to scroll all the way through, they are not liable for that.
That's awesome.
I love it.
Donald Trump does not.
A lot of people do not.
Most people don't know what it is or care. And I think that the online-ification of the right, which I think that has been ramped up by the fact that X is now a, what I would argue to be a conservative, not conservative like William F. Buckley conservative, but like a right-leaning social media outlet.
And it's still incredibly popular with online conservatives
and the people who care what they think.
It means that you spend a lot of time fixated by issues
and talking about issues and hyping yourself up about issues that only matter to
other members of the online right or the online left that hates the online right.
And I think you saw this over and over again in 2022, where you had a midterm election,
where Biden did that speech about how this is about democracy. This is about fighting
against the forces that would end democracy. And the online right and like the super online left
make fun of him and talk about how he looks like Hitler and how it was scary. And this is actually
going to be a red wave because you're transing our kids and noms for liberty and libs of tiktok and blah blah blah and then you might
recall there was no red wave that's the problem with this which is like this online right-wing
activism has now like infected and taken over a lot of the party i mean it's a problem for them
i think for i think if for democratic strategists, it's to lift up these examples, right?
And by the way, these aren't just online influencers.
The Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, he monitors his grown son's porn consumption.
He thinks there are dinosaurs on the ark, on Noah's Ark.
The guy they're running for governor in North Carolina thinks Black Panther was a Jewish plot to scam black people.
A bunch of them are mad about recreational sex,
but they also like band.
They want to ban all abortion.
No exceptions.
Ban IVF,
ban gay marriage,
ban books,
ban no fault divorce.
They want to replace it with covenant marriage.
But they're also very mad that women aren't sexy anymore.
Like there are all these like AI things where it's just like showing like,
here's what the ideal woman looks like.
And also all of these ideal women happen to have 11 children and amazing breasts
they think that sydney sweeney's breasts are a victory against wokeism that's the that's
i am so sorry sydney sweeney i am so sorry this is all so weird it is so weird but that is the
energy of the party and a lot of republican politicians are just like they have bought
this now yeah yeah and like you see i mean the host of defections coming from like
people in congress because like this is the onlineification of the right is happening in
congress too where you have people who are like the online nature and i will say also
that this is a problem this was a problem for Democrats as well, because everybody has their weirdos you keep locked in the political closet.
That's a thing you have.
You got to keep them locked in.
In 2020, you had a host of people who were talking about how rioting was great and how this is awesome.
And then you had a lot of people looking at actual voting numbers
from including like from working class African-Americans who were like, no, it's not not
cool at all. And Joe Biden notably won the Democratic primary out of what, 85 people.
How many people ran for president among Democrats in 2020? I believe it was 85 people.
five people and he is and to his credit he is very not online like absolutely 100 not online i know he now has a tiktok now but like that is run by nice people who were like 25 years old
that's fine this is a person who like in the state of the union was like i was born during
the second world war i i don't remember it but i think about it a lot and i'm like yeah you do of course you do but
like that is something that is adjacent to reality and i think for the online right the challenge
is that they are not adjacent to reality and then reality will take place and they are so put off by reality that they retreat
even more into the loving embrace of the online right but this is why i think that um republicans
have been very good especially over the last couple years of like picking out like you said
sort of the craziest anecdotes on the far left and highlighting them and right and i do think that
if for us to do that to them we don't have to pick some random
conservative activist online or someone here they're like there's plenty of politicians that
they're running for national office that are doing all these yeah c-pack is it c-pack literal
partying with literal nazis it's like actual nazis and then they're like no we weren't and
then it's like no it actually there's jared taylor like yeah actual actual real nazis like actual nazis and then they're like no we weren't and then it's like no it actually there's jared taylor like yeah actual actual real nazis of potomac or whatever so i think it's a i
do think it's going to be a um a big issue a big issue to harp on uh in the fall for democrats
like again because it's not just going to be about trump it's going to be like look at all
these freaks they nominated. All these weirdos.
Yeah, well, so. Jane,
thank you so much for
joining Pod Save America.
This was a lot of fun. Thank you so much for having
me anytime. You know, if Aaron
Rogers does get this VP spot, you
gotta bring me back. We'll bring you back. Oh, no. We're gonna have
a whole episode on that. We're gonna have content
for weeks if that happens.
Alright, everyone. We will be back with another
episode Friday morning. Take care.
Bye, Jane. Bye.
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