Pod Save America - “You’ve got (no) mail.”
Episode Date: August 3, 2020The Trump campaign smashes that reset button, the President tries to undermine the election by attacking mail-in voting and the Postal Service, Republicans refuse to extend unemployment benefits, and ...Joe Biden gets close to selecting his running mate. Then journalist Kara Swisher talks to Jon Lovett about Trump’s threat to ban TikTok and the tech CEOs who recently testified on Capitol Hill.Subscribe to Missing America: apple.co/missingamerica
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
If you guys hear a baby crying in the background, that's our son Charlie.
Charlie was born two and a half weeks early on July 23rd.
He is a healthy, happy little baby.
And so far, sleeping well, eating well, shitting like a champ.
Emily's also doing well, continues to be the hero of our family
um and and thank you to everyone who subbed in for me last week meddy alissa dan from vacation
tommy who did like five pods in a row uh really appreciate that charlie listened to all of last
week's pods so now he is learning all of your voices uh and also listen to uh taylor swift's
folklore about a hundred times so he is he's off to voices and also listen to Taylor Swift's folklore about 100 times.
So he is he's off to a good start, guys.
Did he have any notes?
Anything you change?
He did.
Yeah.
We're going to send you all of his notes.
Higher pitch.
Higher pitch.
He wants higher pitches.
Had a few quips.
On today's pod, Lovett talks to our friend Kara Swisher about Donald Trump's threat to ban TikTok and last week's big tech hearings on Capitol Hill.
Before that, we'll talk about the Trump campaign's attempted reset,
the latest on the congressional stimulus negotiations,
and the final week of Joe Biden's veepstakes.
But first, Lovett, how was the show this week?
Great, Lovett, or leave it.
Latasha Brown came by, got everybody pumped,
talked about what we can do, talked about Biden's VP pick.
Brian Safi and I pretended to be straight again to canvas with voters.
It was a delight.
We got to talk about that straight impression.
No, I don't know that we do.
Just lowering your voice a couple octaves for no real reason.
I thought it was hilarious. I thought it was hilarious.
I thought it was hilarious.
I mean, I don't know.
I don't know how else to do it.
I think you nailed it.
Brian, too.
Also, we have a brand new Crooked Media pod
to announce from our pal Ben Rhodes.
Missing America is a limited series
about what happens when Trump's America
stops leading the free world
and starts trying to dismantle it.
Ben talks to leaders and activists around the world about what's happening in their countries,
how they're taking up the slack in America's absence,
and what the U.S. needs to do to repair the damage.
The first episode drops next Tuesday, August 11th.
You can listen to the trailer now and subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
Exciting stuff. A quick programming note
to mark the 55th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act. Vote Save America is hosting a virtual
screening of the new documentary about John Lewis's life. It's called Good Trouble. It's a
fantastic doc. You should check it out. It'll be on Thursday at 4 p.m. Pacific, 7 p.m. Eastern.
And afterwards, we're going to have a panel discussion with Crooked's political director,
7 p.m. Eastern.
And afterwards, we're going to have a panel discussion with Crooked's political director,
Shaniqua McClendon, me, and a few special guests.
$5 from each ticket will go to our Every Last Vote Fund.
So visit crooked.com slash good trouble to get your ticket today.
Finally, speaking of voting, last week, Vote Save America kicked off the Every Last Vote Week of Action.
America kicked off the Every Last Vote Week of Action. And thanks to your help, over 300,000 people were able to use our vote by mail tool. You guys also helped send over 3.5 million texts
and made over 54,000 calls to young voters in 11 battleground states on National Vote by Mail Day.
And 2,212 of you signed up to volunteer as poll workers.
You can still request your vote by mail ballot and sign up to volunteer at votesaveamerica.com
slash every last vote.
Truly impressive numbers there.
Amazing.
Incredible.
Incredible.
All right, let's get to the news.
So the Trump campaign couldn't even get its candidate
to pretend that he gives a shit about the pandemic
for longer than a day or two.
So now they are forging ahead with a new strategy that is yet another attempt to make
the race about Joe Biden. After pulling down all of their television ads for six days, the campaign
is rolling out a new series of negative ads that the Washington Post reports, quote, will aim to
brand Biden as a tool of liberal extremists. The negative ads will initially target swing states
that have the earliest mail-in voting dates. That's right. In North Carolina, you can mail
your ballot in as early as September 4th, and other swing states will start voting that month
as well. As for the new Trump ads, here's a clip of one that went up today. Joe Biden has embraced
the policies of the radical left. Trillions in new taxes,
crushing middle class families. If you elect me, your taxes are going to be raised, not cut.
Amnesty for 11 million illegal immigrants. Citizenship for 11 million undocumented folks.
Reducing police funding. Yes, absolutely. The radical left has taken over Joe Biden
and the Democratic Party.
Don't let them take over America.
I'm Donald J. Trump, and I approve this message.
Spooky.
Lovett, a couple of Trump campaign folks told Axios that their internal polling is now showing that the, quote, puppet of the left attack on Biden is beginning to resonate with voters.
Do you buy this?
Is there anything about the strategy that makes you nervous?
Well, I think, you know,
a lot of the pieces that looked at this new strategy,
first of all, I don't know how new it is.
I think that they've been floating versions
of this for a long time.
They really have two things they're playing with,
which is that, you know, Joe Biden is demented
and Joe Biden is a tool of the left.
Like those are the two,
that's the core pillars of the Republican agenda.
But-
He's a demented tool of the left.
He's a demented tool.
Well, why are you helping?
But the, why are you tightening?
But the, and I think, you know,
you can draw some reassurance from the fact
that this is on track
with what they've been saying for a while.
And it's been hard to leave a mark that said,
you know, elections are overdetermined.
We're not doing double blind tests.
Is it possible that buried in the data, you find, elections are overdetermined. We're not doing double blind tests. Is it possible
that buried in the data, you find evidence that these attacks have mitigated Trump's decline over
the last few weeks and months? Like, I don't know the answer to that, right? You don't know
if Trump wouldn't be performing worse if these attacks weren't resonating. That said,
you know, they've been trying to figure out how to land a punch on Joe Biden for a while. And this is the latest version of that. I find the like pulling down of ads for six days and
then going back up like I don't find that particularly like a hopeful sign that they're
really sort of not sure what to do, because, again, I don't find this line of attack that
different from what they've been doing. I think it may be just a new campaign manager coming in
and taking time to assess what the previous lunatic was up to.
Tommy, what do you think? I mean, every time I see the Trump campaign do something,
you know, my first reaction is, well, that's pretty dumb. But then I think, OK,
what did they think was smart about doing this? Because clearly it's like some kind of a subtle
shift. So maybe they're seeing something
in the research. What do you think? Yeah, I mean, like I am baffled by the decision to pull down
ads for nearly a week. And I still don't think they're back up in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin or
Michigan. Meanwhile, Biden and all the super PACs are on air. So you're just like leaving that space
uncontested. I just don't get it. In terms of the content of the ads, like I think the hardest thing
for for political junkies like us who are members that most people don't get it. In terms of the content of the ads, I think the hardest thing for political
junkies like us who are members that most people don't know who Joe Biden is, they're not paying
any attention to the election. And so maybe you know Biden was Obama's VP, but that's it. And the
concern is these new ads are filling in basically a blank canvas. The conventional wisdom is that
Joe Biden is harder to vilify as the mayor of Antifa because he's old, he's Catholic,
he's relatively moderate. And there's probably some truth to that. But I do think any campaign
should be worried about millions and millions of dollars in attack ads, even if the frame might
seem silly. Because if you pull apart the radical left frame, the specific attacks are taxes,
immigration, amnesty, and police funding. And those are areas that Republicans historically
are good at exploiting. They love blowing up cultural issues and finding sort of racially
divisive ways to split the electorate. The thing that gives me some comfort is that I do think
the answer to this narrative is just telling Joe Biden's story. I mean, if you know about his like
blue collar roots in Scranton and the way he persevered through tragedy
and, you know, stories about his kindness and his decency, like the way he served President Obama as
a loyal VP and their relationship. I think that fills in the gap of Biden as a person. And it
makes it a lot harder to argue that he is like running around Portland in all black trying to
burn federal buildings down. But, you know, you can't let attacks like this go unanswered. Like,
trying to burn federal buildings down. But, you know, you can't let attacks like this go unanswered.
Like, I do think they should be concerned about it. Yeah, I think that it is very similar to their overall message about Joe Biden, but it is a bit more subtle and sometimes subtlety works
better in politics. Like saying that Joe Biden is like the mayor of Antifa and is going to destroy
the suburbs. It's just not believable. Right. But if you get down to an ad that just says he's going to raise your taxes.
And of course, what he was saying that ad is he was going to raise taxes on rich people, not everyone.
And, you know, he's going to provide a path to citizenship for 11 million undocumented immigrants, which is true.
It's a true thing that, you know, I think most people in the country support.
But again, they're going for a very specific group of swing voters who might not.
You know, they're trying to do, like you said, Tommy, a more issue based attack, which I do think is probably more effective than saying just insane things about Joe Biden.
Like he you know, he loves
Antifa and all that. I do think the challenge is, is Trump's problem something that can be
solved by ads or is it something a little bigger? Like it seems to me that their big problem is
still the candidate, even if they have an ad strategy that's now firing on all cylinders,
which I think that remains to be seen. You know, no sooner do they release this ad this morning than Donald
Trump's out there attacking Deborah Birx for basically saying that the pandemic is bad.
And then we get a New York Times headline that he's under criminal investigation for bank fraud.
So like, it seems like their problem
might be bigger than that.
Their biggest problem,
if they could run an attack ad
that would make COVID go away,
I would be really, really worried.
But until that happens,
I think they've got a big fundamental challenge
that they're not addressing.
Yeah, I mean, it's also true that like,
you know, we've also seen what happens
when Trump is the messenger,
even on this specific line of attack, right?
Because he sits down with Chris Wallace and he's like, I checked the charter and it's an Antifa charter. And Chris Wallace is
like, there's no, it's actually not in there. And so, I mean, like there is some truth to the,
to the fact that Biden, who is not instinctively like a far left candidate at all, has been pulled
to the left by the primary and by these sort of policy processes. But what's coming out of those are consensus Democratic positions that avoid some of the biggest
lightning rod pieces of rhetoric or policies that Trump is trying to paint Biden as having adopted.
Yeah, I do think where they're spending the money is kind of interesting. The AP story about this
says that they've basically pulled the plug on Michigan altogether
and acknowledged deficits in Florida, Wisconsin, Arizona, though the campaign insists it's
closer than public polling.
But it is interesting that they're not up in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania with these new
ads yet.
The campaign says it's because they want it to go up in states that are voting, that will
start voting in September and that they'll be up in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania soon.
But it sort of strikes me as weird.
Like they have a ton of money.
Why not start?
You have three months left.
Why not?
What are you saving for?
Who's left?
It's crasbending their resources.
I mean, they just we just don't know.
But it sounds like they were throwing money against the wall and nothing was sticking.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the other key part of Trump's strategy to win the election is by stealing it. Even though the president and the White House
have backed off from last week's suggestion that the election should be delayed, they have since
ratcheted up their attacks on voting by mail, with Trump saying that it will lead to the greatest
election disaster in history and complaining that he doesn't want to, quote, wait for three months
and then find out that the ballots are all missing and the election doesn't mean anything. So obviously, many states have held
elections entirely by mail for years without any major issue. But I do think that undermining
confidence in mail-in voting during an election where more people will vote that way than ever
before could be, at least in my opinion, just as dangerous as suggesting that you delay the
election. But Tommy, what do you think about this? I think there's a lot of risk in undermining
confidence in vote by mail. There's also a lot of risk in what Congress is trying to do, what the
country is trying to do, which is stitch together sort of a hybrid vote by mail and in-person voting
system on the fly during a pandemic. So like if you look at Oregon,
they've conducted elections entirely by mail since 1998. There have been 15.5 million ballots cast since that time and only 14 cases of fraud. It's a better system. Their percentage of people
tend to be higher, like 77% of voters in our eligible voters in Colorado voted in 2016.
That's the highest rate in the country. So it's
obviously a great system. But what we're also seeing now is you have states like Texas where
Republicans pass laws that say you can only vote by mail if you're 65 or over and have some sort
of medical condition. Because as we all know, 64 year olds are totally safe if they get COVID,
right? I mean, the answer obviously here is there's scoping rules that make it easier
for his normally Republican voters to exercise their right to vote. So yeah, him undermining
our entire system of democracy is infuriating. It's especially galling when you know that 16
Trump officials have voted by mail, including the president, vice president, his daughter,
Kellyanne Conway, the new campaign manager, Bill Steppenwolf, or whatever the fuck his name is. So I know it's Steppian. So yeah, it's a very
annoying, constant drumbeat that undermines the process. Well, but what do you think? I mean,
there's no real issue with fraud with mail-in voting at all, but there are issues we've seen
with mail-in voting. New York is still counting ballots from their primary that was like a month ago. It is easier for some states to reject
absentee ballots for bullshit reasons like the signature not matching the signature on your
license. And we also know that just about every swing state except North Carolina will reject
ballots currently that arrive after election day?
Yeah. So it's I think it's actually I think it's worth thinking about it as sort of three
distinct problems that are intersecting because they're and they're all big problems. And I think
it's pretty overwhelming. So I think it's helpful to break it down. One, you have the genuine
challenge of standing up vote by mail in places that haven't had universal vote by mail.
That is a true logistical challenge, a financial challenge, an expertise challenge like that's real.
OK, then, too, you have political efforts to delegitimize vote by mail and to make vote by mail harder.
Right. Like what we saw in Texas. And by the way, the Texas situation is incredibly sinister because a bunch of people had already had already requested ballots based on the presumption that that
coronavirus would be an acceptable excuse, because if you're not immune to the coronavirus,
it is in some sense a disability. And you see versions of that playing out across the country.
And then the third piece of it is the targeted effort by Trump right now to undermine the post
office, right, to get in there with a political crony,
stop overtime, let mail pile up. You know, Trump is basically pushing the post office down a flight of stairs and then like yelling down to the bottom of the staircase, you idiot, you're getting blood
all over the mail. And so. Wow, that was graphic. I played with some less and more graphic versions.
Graphic.
I played with some less and more graphic versions.
So, and I think we need to, basically though, I think we need to attack each of these problems individually.
Some of them take money.
Some of them take political pressure.
Some of them take just a concerted political effort on the part of people who want everyone
to be able to vote to make sure that people start getting in their ballots early, maybe
like, you know, October 13th or whatever, the couple of weeks before the election, we declare it vote by mail election day, try to get as many ballots in early
as possible to try to defeat their efforts to undermine the election by just getting the ballots
in early. Yeah, it is astounding that in an effort to undermine the election, the president's also
taking away your mail. He's I mean, the new postmaster general, who is this Republican donor hack, has already implemented these cuts that are leading to slower and less reliable delivery in certain areas of the country.
People aren't getting their mail.
They're getting their medications.
I mean, it is it is unfucking real.
And like when you combine that post office delays with the fact that these states aren't't going to count ballots that come after Election Day, that arrive after Election Day, that's a huge, that could be like hundreds of thousands of voters disenfranchised and in a close election could easily tip the race.
it like, oh, there's, we didn't get the Christmas packages on time because we denied overtime.
When you systematically don't let the mail deliver, it's not going to get better. Not allowing the postal workers to have overtime to finish the deliveries on time doesn't make the
problem go away slowly. It just keeps building up. You have delays in Pennsylvania of like three
weeks. And if you don't let them work overtime to deliver the mail, there's no way to catch up.
The mail keeps coming. It just doesn't stop because it's the mail. Tommy, what can be done about all of this?
Well, I mean, in terms of the post office, I mean, the problem here is that the post office
is self-funded by the sale of stamps and what they charge for their services, but they are
hamstrung by decisions made by Congress, specifically one that requires them to pre-fund
their retirement benefits for any new employee 75 years into the future, which is this massive amount of money that they have to set aside.
And they've never recovered from that.
Congress also sets the rate for postage and things so that they can't catch up by increasing
prices.
So the post office needed, they said, $75 billion to help fix their finances and modernize
some systems in advance of this election.
For a while, it seemed like there was some bipartisan agreement on some sort of bailout.
But instead, the Trump folks said they're going to veto it.
So they got offered, I think, like a $10 billion loan.
And so, you know, like, I think Congress needs to solve that problem with some funding or
else we are going to have ballots that are showing up incredibly late.
I also think just like stepping back, this conversation is so frustrating because it's
a debate in Washington where the discussion is treated as if it's in good faith and honest
about like how to limit voter fraud.
That's just not the case.
Republicans pretend voter fraud is an issue when it is not, especially in vote by mail
states.
They use it as a scare tactic to pass laws like voter ID laws that make it harder to vote, especially if you're black in America.
And we know this because Trump has said as much publicly, right? Like he went on Fox and Friends
in March and said that the Democratic proposals to increase funding for absentee in vote by mail
would lead to, quote, levels of voting that if you agree to it, you'd never have a Republican
elected in this country again, end quote.
That's like so like he is stating as fact like why he doesn't want to fund the post office at a sufficient level.
And like, I'm not exactly sure what has to happen here.
Hopefully Pelosi can really go hard and get more funding for the post office.
But it seems like we are on a path that could potentially be catastrophic if we have millions of ballots just not showing
up in time to be counted. Yeah, so I think Democrats in Congress need to hold firm on
funding for the post office and an election security in general, which we're going to talk
about in a second. I think, you know, Mark Elias, Democratic lawyer and a bunch of other groups are,
you know, they have lawsuits that they're filing almost every day, it seems, against some of these voter suppression schemes that
Republicans are engaging in.
I think for everyone who's listening, one of the most important things you can do is
get your ballot early and mail it early.
Go to votesaveamerica.com.
We have all the tools there to help you figure out how to get your ballot.
And not just you, your friends, your family, people who maybe who haven't voted before that you know.
If you're going to vote by mail, do it early. Get the ballot early.
And the other thing, you know, as we mentioned earlier, this was always going to be a hybrid election where there's going to be a lot more vote by mail than usual.
But there's still going to be a lot of in-person voting.
than usual, but there's still going to be a lot of in-person voting. I think volunteering to be a poll worker if you're young and healthy so that older people who might also have underlying
conditions don't have to do it. That will be incredibly important. Early voting is incredibly
important there, too, because if there's more early voting, then we don't have like really
long lines where people are getting too close to one another. So I think making in-person voting
safe as well is going to be is going to be super important. The last thing I'll mention on this is Ben Smith in The New York Times had a good piece last night about sort of the media preparing everyone for the fact that it's it's highly likely we will not know if it's a close race who won on election night because they will be counting mail in ballots for so long.
who won on election night because they will be counting mail-in ballots for so long.
Even if they're not rejecting a whole bunch of ballots after election day,
it's still going to take, like it does here in California,
maybe a week or two to find out who's going to win.
And the networks and the media sort of have to prepare people for that because when we don't have, I mean, Donald Trump just said that in that quote,
when we don't have a winner in some of these swing states on election night,
Donald Trump's just going to declare victory if he's ahead and then say all the ballots counted by mail are fake.
And so I think it's going to be up to the media to sort of prep people for that.
And we should all be prepared now.
All right.
Let's talk about the negotiations in Congress over the next COVID relief bill.
The extra $600 per week that more than 20 million unemployed Americans had been receiving since the beginning of the pandemic has now expired,
which will force people to make a lot of very hard and sad decisions starting right away.
Republicans refuse to extend the benefits through the end of the year, and we still don't know what kind of unemployment benefits extension they will accept.
Republicans also refuse to provide funding to help people vote safely or open school safely, and they don't want to provide any money to state and local governments at all.
But at least as of now, both parties are still at the negotiating table.
Lovett, let's start with the unemployment insurance extension.
Republicans say they floated a proposal that would maintain the $600 per week for maybe a couple months.
They floated $200 per week.
They floated 70% of wages, 66% of wages.
What, if anything, does this tell us about what they might ultimately accept?
They're all over the place.
They've been all over the place for a while.
You know, they floated a kind of, you know, like a one week extension briefly thinking that they could get some leverage over Democrats. So it's again,
because this is all done so haphazardly and so last minute, it's not clear that people would
even be able to get that money because of the way it's all administered. It's all just a complete
mess. And so you have literally tens of millions of people sort of waiting to find out what comes
out of this agreement. I think you have a genuine like disagreement among Republicans, some who are, I think, saying truly like sociopathic
things about about unemployment insurance, like like a mix of a mix of just heartlessness and
also complete denial about what's happening in the country, as if the problem right now is the
six hundred dollars is making it too cushy for people to stay at home as opposed to what's really going on, which is
the pandemic destroyed the economy and we actually need people to stay home so that they stay safe
and we can get out of this fucking mess. You know, that said, it does seem as though Democrats have
been extremely clear that they want $600. They don't want to cut it. They don't want to, they
don't want to legitimize these Republican attacks on it. And they have all the leverage. And I think Republicans are flailing to try to
come up with something that Democrats will go for. But Democrats have held pretty firm.
Yeah, Tommy, I saw this morning that Pelosi just suggested that Democrats will not negotiate on
the $600 per week unemployment benefit, which I thought was an improvement over old Steny Hoyer last week, saying that maybe it was negotiable. Yeah, that was a weird posture to take going into
negotiation. Yeah, I mean, Pelosi has said, I think, even more recently than this morning,
that you could maybe tie the $600 payment to the unemployment rate. And if that unemployment rate
goes down, maybe the number can go down. Maybe that's more reasonable. I'm not entirely sure. But I mean, I think the thing people need to know is that we are not in this
position because of partisanship or congressional dysfunction or all these sort of things that the
press reports that I think obscures the truth. The Democrats passed a bill months ago and
Republicans refused to negotiate throughout the entire summer. That's why we're getting this last minute bullshit. And like the thing that is driving me crazy is what
Lovett mentioned, which is, you know, you have Ted Cruz and other just soulless assholes out there
suggesting that this unemployment benefit is somehow preventing people from working when
there is literally no evidence that the expanded unemployment benefit is leading workers to stay
home at all. In fact, there have been studies that prove that. And so, you know, now we're in this tough position
where this has become conventional wisdom. I don't get how that's the case because obviously,
like we should be incentivizing payments. We should be creating payments to workers to keep
them home so they don't get the coronavirus. That was the whole point of this thing.
Now, this morning, you read that the White House is considering executive actions to maybe do things on their own. One idea that was
floated was instructing the IRS to stop collecting payroll taxes so then people can keep that money.
I don't know what that does for the 30 million some odd people who are laid off, but this is,
it's a complete mess. It's a complete mess. And it is a, you know, Mitch McConnell Republican Party
created mess and people are really hurting. Love it. What do you think? What do you think
the red line should be for Democrats? And where do you think it's OK to compromise?
In addition to unemployment benefits, we got the the mail security, election security,
the state and local government funding. Mitch McConnell still high on his corporate liability
shield because, you
know, big thing is protecting corporations from getting sued that they force people to go back
to work and then get sick. Yeah, no, that's his that's his pet issue. Cool, cool guy.
That's his fetish. Cool priority. Yeah. I mean, I like one thing that I thought was good, right,
is that like Republicans proposed doing some of what Democrats wanted and said we will keep negotiating.
But Democrats said no, because I think they saw what happened last time.
I think it's a pretty, you know, I think there's a likelihood that whatever comes out of this is it.
All right. And it is for through the election, through the inauguration of either Donald Trump or Joe Biden.
inauguration of either Donald Trump or Joe Biden. And so I think making sure that whatever comes out of this helps people through the election and ideally through like the early part of next year,
I think has to be a red line. We cannot be setting up another one of these negotiations in December
or January. I think it's crazy, especially if we have a new president and they try to hold that
president hostage. You know, there is now a fight over whether that we can
get $4 billion for election security. Meanwhile, in the current version of the Republican proposal,
there's over $2 billion to rebuild the FBI and renovate the West Wing because Trump finds the
FBI building ugly. Now, in fairness to him, it is an ugly building. That's certainly true. It's a
real eyesore. Not a priority, obviously,
in a pandemic. But he's not wrong about that. I guess he also is interested in some marble
upgrades in the West Wing. But again, if we can find the money for that, I think we can probably
find the money for, you know, in a $2 trillion package, you're talking about, you know, 0.2% for election security. You're talking about
maybe a percent for postal, for supporting the post office. You know, these are small parts of
a big package. And one other thing, just the state and local government stuff, it's, we have to do it.
If we just do, if we don't provide aid to state and local governments, all the good that would
come out of a stimulus will be undone by the cuts that come at the state level, the chaos that happens at the state and local level.
That's all.
Yeah, we're talking about cuts to first responders, teachers getting laid off, schools, education, college, public services.
I mean, it is catastrophic.
Look, I think what we're seeing in these negotiations is the Democrats have all the leverage right now.
negotiations is the Democrats have all the leverage right now, right? Like Nancy Pelosi going out there saying they're not negotiating on $600 while Republicans have about 10 different
positions on unemployment insurance between the Senate Republicans, the House Republicans,
and the White House tells you who has the stronger hand here. I think what you said,
Tommy, is going to be the challenge for Democrats, which is they're going to have to fight through
the both sides bullshit in the media, because as these negotiations drag on, the media will
cover it like, why can't
anyone in Congress get together and fix something? And, you know, pox on both their houses for doing
that. And I think Democrats just have to look at the long term, which, like Lovett said, is,
you know, there's no there's not going to be another one, a package between now and the
election. So if we don't get help for the Postal Service, if we don't get election security,
if we don't get state and local government funding, we're not going to see that till maybe January of 2021, you know,
when hopefully Joe Biden is president, but who knows?
Yeah.
Right.
And so this is the last chance to get everything in.
And I think the Democrats also have to realize is if the bill fails and they don't get anything
done and the economy continues to suffer, like guess who's going to get blamed for that on election day?
Probably the guy who's in the White House and the party that's in power.
Yeah.
More than anything else.
My concern is that a shitty bill is actually harmful
because of all the things you mentioned.
It just means that there will be no chance to pass anything else
between now and God knows when.
And so like the bright red lines for me are
this idea of just providing blanket liability protection for companies is insane. The pandemic is worse. Now is not the
time to let companies force workers back into unsafe conditions as they're already trying to
gut OSHA and all these other worker protection agencies. They cannot let Republicans pass a
unemployment insurance benefit that creates a new system with a massive bureaucratic hurdle,
like calculating the percentage of your former income. Like we literally have people camping,
sleeping out in front of unemployment offices in states like Oklahoma, Alabama, and Kentucky,
because the state unemployment benefit systems have proven to be unworkable. They can't deal
with this influx. Creating a new massive bureaucratic
hurdle and much paperwork to go through is a disaster. Obviously, we need the election
security funding. That should have come months ago. If Trump wants the economy to reopen
and he wants schools to reopen, he needs to provide some sort of funding to help teachers,
states, municipalities deal with it. So I'm not exactly sure how they would do that. But it does
seem like they are completely screwing themselves both politically and screwing the country over by
not moving on this quickly because it's just holding the entire economy hostage.
Yeah. And just one last point on that, on the school funding, you know, there's a signal example,
I think, in the Republican proposal that sort of points out just how naive and kind of ideological
they've been throughout this entire pandemic and how it's made things worse.
Their current funding proposal incentivizes not health, not protecting kids, but actually reopening schools to create pressure on school districts and localities to reopen schools.
always, their priorities have been about short-term reopening, short-term economic gain,
when the real crisis has been our failure to kind of shut down for long enough to get a handle on this disease. And that's what they're doing across the bill, trying to just get out of this with less
than the bare minimum. And of course, it just makes everything worse. Because by the way,
one of the things that economists say is failing to provide the UI benefits hurts the economy and
hurts the recovery and makes the
pain last longer. That's all. Yep. All right. Let's talk a little bit about the veepstakes.
Joe Biden will reportedly hold a final series of one-on-one meetings with candidates on his
shortlist and announce his running mate next week. That shortlist appears to include Senators Kamala
Harris, Elizabeth Warren, and Tammy Duckworth, former National Security Advisor Susan Rice,
and Congresswoman Karen Bass. And because everyone who's waiting for this process
to finish is bored and impatient, we got leaks from donors, we got speculation from people who
have no idea what they're talking about, and now we got a Dems and Disarray narrative from
reporters who've been dying to write it. Here's Annie Linsky of the Washington Post, quote,
the dynamic threatens to undermine Biden's effort to use the vice presidential search to spotlight
some of the party's brightest female stars, pitting women, especially black women, against
one another. First question, Tommy, you've been on quite a few campaigns that have gone through
this process. How typical is what we're seeing right now? I mean, as that's the ticket fans with Dan and Alyssa know, like the Obama selection process was pretty quiet and locked down.
I think it leaked a couple hours before the announcement because others who did not get it were finally told that they didn't get it.
So you could just do a process of elimination.
You're always going to have donors and annoying outside advisors talking to the press about things they know nothing about.
The who's up, who's down bullshit, the posturing.
I do think this has been pretty bad the last couple of weeks. I mean, there's like
two parts to it, right? There's the leaks sourced to campaign aides or people like Chris Dodd,
who's on the VP selection committee, that were very bad. And that shit I know drives like actual
campaign staffers crazy because they don't want to deal with this stuff either. And they want to
shut down those kinds of conversations. The other piece is just sort of general positioning and like oppo research dumps
from people affiliated with potential vice presidential candidates, like that video of
Karen Bass's speech to the Scientology church crowd that doesn't show up by accident. Someone
is out there digging that up and pushing it around. And, you know, that stuff sucks for
Karen Bass, people on her team,
others who are getting oppo dumped on them. But ultimately, I think like for the Biden campaign,
it's OK to have that stuff out there. You want it out there before he makes the choice and not
after. Right. So it's all going to get vetted eventually. I have been personally surprised at
how many shots have been fired at Kamala Harris. It is it's pretty untoward. It wasn't just that
political piece
talking about Chris Dodd. There were people telling the New York Times that her polling
wasn't great in African-American communities. There was a campaign aide that reached out to
Jonathan Martin unprompted to say that some of Biden's aides don't like Kamala Harris.
If I were the campaign manager, I imagine General Malley Dillon is very, very angry about this shit
because it does a disservice to Biden and everyone involved in the process. And you're right, John. I mean,
that Washington Post story, I think, is overstated and annoying. But it's also the case that Biden is
about to make this historic selection. And what he does is critical, not just for the country and
the campaign, but the narrative is now that he's going too slow or pitting candidates against each
other. And that's bullshit. And I think it sucks. I mean, I just I think Biden is going to take his time, pick the person he likes the most, and that will be the end of it. And everyone just needs to take a deep breath until then.
Joe Biden was announced as vice president two days before the convention in 2008 in late August.
Tim Kaine was announced two days before the convention in 2016.
So the idea that this process is taking too long, it's like everyone fucking calm down. I do think, like Tommy said, some of the leaks coming from, you know, the someone close to fucking Chris Dodd or let's go to fucking Ed Randall for a quote who's been hanging out in
a green room for the last five years just waiting for his chance to shit on Democrats you know that
that stuff is rather annoying I totally think that the Kamala stuff is completely bullshit like
you want to talk you haven't have an issue with someone's record someone's policy position that's
fine throwing out fucking quotes like I don't like her and she wrote, give me a fucking break.
I mean, it is very sexist.
It is very gross.
Yeah, I think so too.
I do think that there's been a lot of kind of normal people desperate to find something
to write about this.
And so you go to a, it's always like a Biden ally or people close to Chris Dodd.
It's like, I don't know who Chris Dodd is close to and I don't want to know.
And I will say- Imagine if that's your sourcing,
your source to someone close to Chris Dodd.
Well, we're now in day, we're now in a, you know, like it's so harmful.
Right.
So we are now talking about the times reporting on Politico reporting on
someone who talked to Chris Dodd, who is someone talking to the campaign.
Right.
Like that is very
attenuated. That said, all these leaks that are attempting to like undermine Kamala Harris by
saying she's ambitious, saying she wants to be president, saying that she's not remorseful
for an attack like during a during a debate, I think are doing an incredible disservice
to Joe Biden. And by the way, doing an incredible disservice to Kamala Harris and the other women in contention, absolutely doing damage to it because they are like completely
illegitimate attacks. And like John, to your point, it seems like there's some kind of like
unspoken set of critiques about Kamala Harris that aren't in the stories, right? And aren't
actually being referenced when they say they're bothered by a sentence in a debate uh during the primary so there's like it's a it's a like kind of an anonymous campaign that
is then like twice removed in the press because it's a it's saying they don't like her they don't
say why and they offer a bullshit misogynist excuse so it's just i think that part of it has
been extremely frustrating yeah so i mean tomm mean, Tommy, you mentioned Karen Bass.
You know, she's a congresswoman, represents part of Los Angeles.
She's emerged just over the last few weeks as a serious contender.
We haven't really talked about her much.
She's the 66 year old chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, the former speaker of the California State Assembly.
She's the first black woman to fill that role in any state.
She's a former nurse, former community organizer on the streets of L.A. What do we
know about why she's risen to the top of Biden's shortlist? I mean, I think she's got a lot of
experience. She's someone who I mean, California doesn't really get its due. When you talk about
someone in the state legislator there in a very senior position, you are making decisions that
impact the lives of 50 million people at a time. Right? So that's a big job. And then she's
been in Congress for a long time. I think she's extremely well regarded by colleagues. There's
reports that, you know, Pelosi is making calls on her behalf, talking her up even to President
Obama and calls with him. So I think, you know, they were, I think it sounds like someone who
through the vetting process has come out stronger and stronger and stronger as people who know her are having conversations with the VP selection committee.
It does seem like Biden, through some of these various leaks and what he said himself, what some of the campaign saying is sort of looking for like a consensus candidate, someone who is broadly accepted throughout the
party. And it does seem like Karen Bass is a person who is very well liked by almost everyone.
I saw in the New York Times, like, you know, Josh Gottheimer, who's sort of a center right
House Democrat, and Ro Khanna, who was a Bernie Sanders supporter, and both said glowing things
about Karen Bass, right? So I think she's very well
liked in Congress by people across the political spectrum. And that might be one reason. And of
course, she's got governing experience. And that might be some of the reasons that she's
the top of the list. What do you think? I think it's a reminder that, you know,
there's a bunch of people in consideration and the people talked about the most aren't always
going to be the candidates that Joe Biden is thinking about the most.
We just genuinely don't know what he's thinking.
The only thing, you know, I think you look at what Biden has said and you say, all right, you know, he ran for president because he believed that this was an existential threat.
And he's going to make it so that there's no risk of harm,
that there's no surprises because he views the stakes as being total. And the other is someone
who can take over. Now, I think there's two ways you can think about that. One is just, you know,
someone who fits his idea of a bridge to a new generation, a younger candidate, someone who can
be the standard bearer of the party if Joe Biden doesn't run again, or it's just someone who he believes is simply ready to be president. And I think that there's
a bunch of women that sort of fit that, fit either one of those versions of what it means to kind of
be his second in command. I also think, I mean, every single one of these women,
if they are selected, there will be something that someone will say is a drawback.
Right. Like that's just. But I also think he has like an embarrassment of riches right now.
You know, like it lost in all of this process and all the sniping right now is the fact that he is seriously considering some incredibly qualified women, all of whom would make a fantastic president,
you know? And so, and we haven't talked about Tammy Duckworth. There was like a long profile
of her in the New York Times over the weekend that, you know, every time you really read one
of these profiles of one of the women who might be a little lesser known, like a Tammy Duckworth
or a Karen Bass, you're like, wow, she's impressive as hell, you know? And it's like, it's actually,
and since Susan has been seriously considered too, you start like, wow, she's impressive as hell, you know, and it's like it's actually and since Susan has been seriously considered to start looking into Susan's background and her
story and even knowing her, there's some things that I didn't I didn't realize about her background
that are really inspiring. So it's I think, you know, the reporters right now and other people
are like bored with the race as it is. They are looking to write a narrative that Joe Biden did
something wrong with the VP selection. And I think we have to be somewhat careful that we don't fall
into that bullshit. And it's not just reporters fault, because like we said, there's a lot of
people leaking and it's their fault, too. But, you know, the rest of us shouldn't buy into the
I just think like there's a fundamental disconnect between how the Biden camp is looking at this and
how the media is looking at it.
Biden is thinking about four years and he's thinking about a governing partner. He's
thinking about someone he's going to need to ask to do enormous things. The press is fundamentally
looking at potential hurdles in terms of getting elected. Like, is there oppo research out there?
Could you harm them with a gaffe? You know, are they known for Benghazi, right? Like,
Could you harm them with a gaffe?
You know, are they known for Benghazi, right?
Like every article you read about Susan Rice leads with a discussion of Benghazi, which was a controversy that was manufactured by Republicans in Washington as a way to harm
Obama, as a way to harm Hillary Clinton, right?
Susan Rice, as the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., had literally no substantive role when
it comes to protecting an embassy in Benghazi.
That was not her job in
any way. She just went on Sunday shows and pricks like Lindsey Graham decided to attack her. So
that mismatch between like what's reported on and what's discussed and what the conventional wisdom
is versus what the job actually is, is very frustrating. I'm sure it's frustrating for Biden.
I'm sure it's frustrating for the candidates. Because if you step back and you think about
all of these people, let's take Susan Rice, for example, like when you're a national security advisor and you're in the Oval Office every single day, multiple times a week, you have a pretty good sense of what it takes to actually lead.
You know what, how to rebuild the country like Kamala Harris has had huge jobs, both in California and in the U.S. Senate.
Like she would be she's an incredibly accomplished politician. Like all these all these shots fired about potential risks or downside hurdles you might face if you choose them are just so overstated to me.
It's very it's frustrating.
It's stupid.
Answering like why shouldn't Susan Rice be the pick with Benghazi is fucking pea brain analysis.
Answering why Kamala Harris shouldn't be the VP because like she lost the primary is pea brain analysis. Answering why Kamala Harris shouldn't be the VP because like she lost the primary is pea brain analysis. Like it's just like, it is so lazy to just like, a lot of the people that
have mentioned Benghazi are like, and we know that Benghazi was a manufactured controversy by the
Republicans, but it's out there. No, it's not. You're just repeating it. I will also say too,
one of the, you know, as people have talked up Karen Bassett, like who is an incredibly serious candidate, there's been this odd, like kind of pro Bass sentence that something's like,
and she's never been that ambitious about being president. And that makes her a great contrast.
What is like Kamala Harris wanted to be president. Elizabeth Warren wanted to be president. It's
actually not a bad thing to have a vice president who wanted to be and might want to be president
in the future. That's not a bad quality in a
politician to have them want to seek the higher office and seek to build the Democratic majority
over the time that they're in the job. It's just a... It's also a quality that is inherent in about
95% of politicians. Yeah. Joe Biden's been running for president since before computers.
Yeah. That is the incredibly absurd part of the attacks on Joe Biden. I mean, people
are saying Kamala Harris is ambitious. She might be running for president down the hall. Well,
Joe Biden was vice president for eight years and then he ran. And people say, well, she did not
run a good campaign. She underperformed everyone's expectations. You could also say that in his
previous runs for president, Joe Biden underperformed expectations and didn't run great campaigns right so it's all
of this is uh look where he is now look where he is now mayor yeah yeah he waited us out now he's
mayor now he's mayor of antifa yeah look at him anyway uh well check out if you want to hear more
about the veep stakes check out and you haven't yet check out dan and alissa's fantastic uh series
that's the Ticket.
And, you know, we'll be tuning in next week for the final result.
Won't it be exciting?
All right, when we come back,
we will have Lovett's conversation with Kara Swisher.
I'm now joined by the co-founder and editor-at-large of Recode,
the host of the podcast Pivot,
and contributing opinion writer for the New York Times,
Kara Swisher.
Hi.
Always a pleasure.
It's me.
So excited to see you.
Here I am.
Recode.
Yeah, you got your Recode shirt on.
Now, I did see over the past couple days on Twitter,
though I was on a brief, mostly a Twitter hiatus, I did see that you were posting some pretty wild early haircuts.
And I just want to applaud you for the courage that that took.
Thank you.
Let's start by talking about TikTok.
So Trump says he's going to ban TikTok.
Now we find out that Microsoft is in negotiations to acquire TikTok.
we find out that Microsoft is in negotiations to acquire TikTok. Trump's now saying, oh, they have till September 15th, or I will use some unspecified power to ban TikTok. What's happening?
Well, everything was okay. And they've been in talks to do this. There's been a lot of pressure
about TikTok, whether it should go public and become a US company, or someone should buy it
because of the concerns around its security because of China.
They're valid concerns, not the most valid considering all the other issues with China.
But, you know, Trump has zeroed in on TikTok for reasons unknown and focused on the idea that American teens are unsafe because China is sucking up all this data about them or whoever
is the 100 million people using it.
You know, it leaves out the fact that most of our phones are made in China,
a lot of our technology equipment is made in China.
China is making incursions militarily, technologically, with 5G,
with algorithms, with facial surveillance.
But let's focus on TikTok.
That's really pretty much.
And in doing so, he also screwed up the deal,
because there were
ongoing talks between Microsoft and ByteDance, which is the owner, it's Beijing-based owner,
to buy TikTok with Microsoft. And then he jumped in here and started to say ban, and nobody really
knows, and it screwed up the whole talks. And then Microsoft pulled out, sort of, or said,
we're going to wait until we get clarity from the White House. They talked over the weekend when cooler heads prevailed to remove
Trump from the equation. And Peter Navarro must have been standing behind him yelling at him in
some fashion. And I guess Steve Mnuchin and Lindsey Graham and Marco Rubio got involved and said,
this is a good outcome. This is going to be bad if you look like you're attacking the TikTokers.
And then they're in talks again. And so they have till September 15th to talk. And then
Microsoft had to write a hostage letter to Trump saying how great he is otherwise.
So, you know, you wrote a piece about TikTok that I think captured my own ambivalence about it,
which is that like, it's a really fun, interesting, creative space. Then on the other hand, there are these legitimate privacy
and security and surveillance questions. But a lot of that does seem twinge with sort of assumptions
about what a Chinese company would do while ignoring the actual reality of what American
companies do through their apps every single day. Do you think the fears about TikTok specifically
are founded? And do you think that those fears are answered by transferring ownership to Microsoft?
I think there's no proof that they are doing this. But that doesn't mean that they aren't
doing it. I am much more concerned about China than I am about Facebook. I hate to say that,
but the fact of the matter is it's Facebook selling or Amazon selling toilet paper or
whatever. I'm very concerned about all these companies sucking up all this information, but I'm more concerned with the state government doing so
always. That's always going to be the case. So it's not really comparable. Like it's not a
comparable thing. I think what the issue is, is that do we want the next internet age to be
dominated by the Chinese with their, with the values they have? And as, as, as damaged as we
are, the democratic values around the internet have been really great for the development of a lot of the internet, not all of it.
And what's happened is that it's become this sort of monopolistic space now with a few, as you saw last week in the hearings.
And so I'm concerned with two different things, and they're not the same.
You can't say I'm unconcerned, you know, I'm unconcerned with Facebook, but I'm really concerned about
the Chinese. You have to be concerned about all of them, but for different reasons.
So let's talk about that hearing, because actually one of the arguments against efforts to regulate
Apple, Facebook, Google, Amazon is if you break us up, if you hamstring us in any way,
you're just sort of ceding the field to China. Let's talk about the hearing. You had these four big companies. And what I was realizing and just
thinking about talking to you about this is these are four companies with incredibly different
businesses, incredibly different goals, incredibly different influences on the economy. What brings
them together is that they're huge. That's really huge and powerful. So what did you learn from the
hearing about, I guess, first of all, stepping back tech
generally, and then I think we can talk about the individual companies.
Yeah.
Well, you know, look, first of all, tech is not a monolith.
And by the way, everyone's not concerned with China.
It was Mark Zuckerberg talking about that because that's his argument, is that I have
to be this big, look away from the Russia issues, look away from the hate issues.
I need to be big in order to
fight the, you know, the Asian villains, essentially. And I think it's just a faint by
Facebook, even if he's concerned, and they are, there are issues around China, which is doing
rather well in proliferating its technology around the world, and a very big foe. So let's not take
away from that. But I think it's a talking point for his PR, like, look over here, you know, it's either she or me. And that's what I call the she or me argument.
And I'm like, I don't like either of you. Like, I don't like him more than I don't like you,
but I don't like you that much. You know what I mean? It's really kind of a weird,
it's a weird argument that he's making. But of course, it's a good one for him to make. And
especially it was followed this weekend by this activity around TikTok. He aimed at TikTok and TikTok aimed back at him too, by Kevin Mayer, the new CEO, American
CEO. So I think each of them are individual. Let's start with that. It's not a monologue. There's
issues around Apple's App Store, very different from the issues around marketplace at Amazon,
around whether buying and selling and controlling marketplaces, very different from search dominance
at Google, YouTube hate speech and stuff like that, which is also owned by Alphabet, which also owns Google.
Very different from hate speech and propaganda and allowing all kinds of lies to proliferate
on Facebook and the dominance of social media. So every one of them has to have a different answer,
right? And so that's what's difficult here. And the answers and the solutions and the way we fix these things are very different.
Overall, there needs to be a privacy bill that's passed. This will affect all of them.
Secondly, we have to look at each individual company and decide whether they should be allowed,
say Amazon, should it be able to sell things? And there was some very incriminating,
Mr. Bezos had to, Jeff Bezos had
to admit that they were using some third party data. He said, I can't say it hasn't been violated,
which they're supposed to keep separate. There was some very incriminating emails for Mark
Zuckerberg, who was talking about buying Instagram as a land grab and that they wanted to neutralize
the company. Those are words that monopolists use. So that's a different issue, sucking up all the innovation, hurting Snapchat just because they can, copying their ideas.
And then there's the app store, which is a lesser problem, but a problem for a lot of developers,
which can be fixed through regulation or fines or something. And so that's what, it's got to be a
multifaceted approach by our government. There's been no legislation by our government whatsoever.
So maybe one traffic law for them would be good, would be nice. I would like that.
Red lights, green lights. But yeah, I mean, one of the other things, it wasn't just that
Facebook was saying they wanted to swallow up their competition. It was that they were
suggesting that if they didn't go along with the deal, they would just create their version of
Instagram anyway, and basically squash them by copying them, right? Which is an incredible anti-competitive act, no?
Sure. But you know what? Good luck. Because they're the most non-innovative people on the
planet. Like, good luck. They've tried lots of copy, dating. What happened to their dating
service? What happened to their video service? What happened to their... They're not very good
at creating new things. They're good at buying them. And I think Instagram, which was created
by Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger, is a wonderful service, but it was created by Kevin
Systrom and Mike Krieger and not Mark Zuckerberg. And so what he's really good at is copying. And
I think that has a limit, just like it did with Microsoft. Microsoft couldn't play that game for
that long. It ends. Right. I mean, isn't the argument basically against this Facebook pitch like
we need a giant behemoth, basically utility version of a social media giant? Sure. Otherwise,
China will eat our lunch when actually, it seems to me our advantage has been born of the ability
of people to innovate in the space. Yeah. But if he wants to be a utility, let's regulate him like
a utility then. Oh, great. That sounds good,. Like either way, it's you either get regulated as if you're a utility or you allow innovation
to flourish. I think the reason we beat China and we were ahead in every way, it's because of
innovation, because of small startups, because of their fear that they're not going to, if they go
into social media or search or e-commerce, they're not going to get crushed. And, you know, small
businesses get crushed in this environment.
And no matter how you slice it, we have two companies making phones.
We have one company doing social media.
We have one company excelling in e-commerce,
as much as they say there's lots of competitors.
Amazon dominates.
We have one company that does search.
And by the way, in this pandemic, did you notice their results?
Everybody else is like gripping with their fingernails before they fall into the abyss.
Yeah.
Not these companies.
These companies are flying high and their stocks are flying high.
They've never been richer as people.
They've never been richer as companies.
They have advantages in the pandemic.
Amazon does.
Google does.
All of them.
Yeah.
I mean, it does seem as though I think one thing people have remarked on is that the
pandemic has accelerated a number of processes, right? It's accelerated some problems, really serious long-term problems for brick and mortar stores, but it's also accelerated the growth of these sort of digital platforms. What happens now? So we had this hearing. It was a pretty substantive hearing. There were actually some really interesting revelations.
pretty substantive hearing. There were actually some really interesting revelations. Not as many questions as you. A little bit. A couple. A couple. There was a couple of anti-Americanism,
talking to the only person of color, Sundar Pichai. That was interesting, calling him
anti-American. Jim Jordan going down the alleyway of conservative bias, that stuff. But otherwise,
it was good. I would say, though, there was fewer questions that presume things like the internet is made of pipes and my grandkids set up my email stuff.
There was a few.
A couple.
But we're always going to have to accept some of that.
That's the price of doing business with a bunch of right-wing zealots and septuagenarians.
But what happens now?
So we had this big hearing.
There seems to be at least some kind of beginnings
of a consensus that says, hold on a second. These companies have way too much power. They are
incredibly powerful entities. It seems like what happens next is we have to now do what you were
saying is right. Go at them, go with the problems individually, right? Not treat this like a behemoth.
What happens on Amazon, right? Right now we have Amazon. It's doing, it's, it has, it is this
incredibly sophisticated algorithm. It is able to sell stuff through its own shelves, right? Right now we have Amazon. It's doing, it's, it has, it is this incredibly
sophisticated algorithm. It is able to sell stuff through its own shelves, right? That's very
different than what a supermarket would do, right? Supermarket doesn't run up to you as you're
heading to your car and says, get this, you know, get this version of it. It's better. And they
don't hide, they don't hide Coca-Cola behind four or five rows of Amazon brand soda. But so,
so what happens next with Amazon?
Or price it below.
Price it.
That's what they tend to do.
I think they should separate the marketplace from things they sell.
I just think, you know, and make sure that data is in a lockbox of other sellers.
They are the marketplace in e-commerce.
They'll argue they're not, but they really are.
And delivery.
They're so good.
They're so good.
And people like them so much in terms of
the result. They're forgetting, just like getting in an Uber and it costs $4, it doesn't cost $4.
It doesn't, it's not that price. They're living off of other people's dimes, essentially. And so
I think separating the marketplace from what they sell, and same thing at the app store,
if Apple's going to get in the music business, they don't get to have any say over music pricing, right? You know what I mean? Like that's,
like you move away. It's going to be, that's a harder problem. But if they're going to get
into direct competition and services with people that they also serve, there has to be some sort of
buffer between them so that these groups that are making these decisions are making
good economic decisions, not Apple
economic decisions or Amazon economic decisions. Let's talk about Facebook. So, you know,
as you mentioned, you know, one of their challenges distinct around misinformation
spreading on their platform. You've interviewed Mark Zuckerberg many times.
Did you learn anything from Facebook during this hearing? Did anything surprise you?
No, I thought those emails were exactly what I thought they would be, you know, and I'm
sure there's dozens more like it.
The idea, instead of talking about innovation, he's talking about land grab.
Instead of talking about competing, he's talking about neutralizing.
That feels very Bill Gates-ian circa 1997.
That's what it feels like to me.
If you remember, he was going to crush them.
But I had a quote in one of my books in the 90s where Bill Gates said, we're going to
buy you, bury you, or copy you.
That's what it felt like.
I was like, oh, he's back.
You know what I mean?
Actually, Bill Gates is great these days.
Thank you for the vaccines, Bill Gates, someday.
But it feels very monopolistic.
So no, I think he did fine.
He's been there a couple of times and he's sort of
the one they beat up on, but he sort of escaped. There was no Katie Porter or AOC to, I think there
was a lot of, I think Jeff Bezos got more of it from a representative Jayapal, which I thought
was great. I thought it was amazing from Seattle. Yeah, she was great. So let's close by talking
about TikTok. So I did download it to my,
you downloaded to a burner phone. Yes, that's over there. Yeah. Which I respect. I did briefly
download it to my real phone until without ever setting up an account, it really did discover that
my interests were new ways of making grilled cheese and hot guys. Well, their algorithm is
great. Their algorithm is wonderful. That's an amazing algorithm they've got going. Yes. So, you know, put TikTok aside. Yeah. The growth of this sort
of incredibly sophisticated algorithm, whether it's what Facebook is doing, what YouTube is doing,
what TikTok is doing, where basically the algorithm is smarter than the people making it.
It is smarter than us.
It is able to know what we like in very sophisticated ways and ways we might not understand, right?
That actually don't make intuitive sense because it's not drawing on human intuition.
It's actually just looking at hard data and hard science.
What do you see as the long-term risk of how much of what we see and what we hear is born
of these kinds of algorithms,
regardless of what happens with these individual corporate entities?
Well, you know, there's a lot of talk around AI lately because OpenAI released some versions of
AI that are making people nervous. Everyone's talking about it. I think the question is,
how do we abrogate our decision-making? Or we give it off to these systems? When do we stop doing that?
When does human decision-making begin and when does that begin?
Now, some of their decision-making is good, like it's smarter, it's faster, it's quicker.
Most of our decision-making is based on anecdotes and bad data.
They have good data.
The question is what data goes in there, right?
What data, you know, crap in, crap out is the way I look at it with data.
And so if you have a lot
of policing data that show more people of color get arrested, the algorithm is going to think
people of color are more criminal, right? Like, why wouldn't that? It would make sense in a lot
of ways. That's a simplistic way of doing it. But it's just a question of, one, regular people are
making this AI, they're creating it, and then putting in regular data that may be flawed.
this AI, they're creating it and then putting in regular data that may be flawed. And then as it becomes ever more sophisticated, how do we know how it comes to conclusions, say about loans or
jobs or whether you can get in the country or not? Like, you know, there's something good about human
fallibility, right? Like some things don't, they can go, oh, oh, I see what happened here. This is
whatever. But the minute those, they can go, oh, that's what the data says.
That's the way it's going to go for you.
And so I think that's a stupid way of saying that we're giving over,
we're in the middle of the Terminator movie, you know,
right before they blow up.
That's not the case.
But it's just that it creates, and then who controls it?
Like what if China gets really far ahead?
What if it's used for facial surveillance?
These are questions our Congress of elected officials needs to be talking about.
And us as citizens, just like what happened in Portland, where they were taking in all
kinds of text data and drone data.
And it just can go on and on and on.
And that's the issue.
And it's not just that you like grilled cheese sandwiches.
It's so much more. There's so much,
you're so much more complex than grilled cheese sandwiches, John, I think.
Yeah. I like French toast.
And it's delightful. Okay. All right. Well then, but it's,
that's delightful and that's great. And that's, you know,
when you're on Netflix and they give you something you like, that's great.
The question is, think of the worst. I always say, think of the black mirror.
I've told you this, think of the worst. I always say, think of the black mirror. I've told you this,
think of the black mirror episode on this, and then organize yourself around that, right?
What's the black mirror episode to the cheese problem? But I don't know what it is,
but there is a black mirror episode about you and grilled cheese that is not, doesn't end
with a delicious sandwich for you. No, but I like the first act, I think is pretty fun.
It's delicious.
Last question.
I sent Elon Musk some Bitcoin over Twitter.
Do you think I'm going to get that back?
I don't.
I don't think.
I think that was hacked.
I don't know if you know that.
Okay.
Yeah, you're not going to get that back.
But Elon, that stock is killing it.
Boy, is he doing well.
Man, that guy, whatever.
Get him off Twitter. He's better off.
God bless.
He does better off Twitter.
He's still on Twitter. God bless. He landed that spacecraft.
Honestly, after the past couple of weeks when everything's going to hell and he lands that spacecraft with the cool suits, I was like, thank you.
Thank goodness.
It landed on impact. I was like, oh you. Thank goodness. Thank you. Yeah. And on impact, I was like,
oh, he did it. Thank God. Did you see that a bunch of unauthorized boats got too close?
Oh, did they? Yeah. They didn't they didn't cordon off the area enough. So a bunch of people,
a bunch of gawkers got up there. It's like a bunch of people on boats being like, hey,
America used to do stuff like this. Let's go check it out. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Probably were
they wearing masks? That's all I want to know. I don't think the voters wear masks. Kara Swisher. Thank you. So good. So good to see
you. Thanks for doing this. Good to see you. All right. Thanks. Thanks to Kara for joining today.
And we'll talk to you guys soon.
Pod 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.