Shawn Ryan Show - #115 Tucker Carlson - Revolution, World War 3 and Hijacked Media
Episode Date: June 3, 2024Tucker Carlson is an American journalist, commentator and host of the Tucker Carlson Network. He is most widely known for his 2016 - 2023 stint as host of Tucker Carlson Tonight, an extremely popular ...political Fox News show. Carlson's long career in media is marked by both critical acclaim and criticism. His expression of alternative view points shook the industry and mesmerized viewers. Carlson continues to carry on his mission with the Tucker Carlson Network, which aims to "build an alternative to legacy media...that empowers us to do our job without fear." Tucker and his team pull no punches in stating "It’s time they stopped hiding the truth from you. We’ll expose them together." Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://lairdsuperfood.com - USE CODE "SRS" https://helixsleep.com/srs https://hillsdale.edu/srs https://betterhelp.com/shawn https://drinkhoist.com - USE CODE "SHAWN" https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner Tucker Carlson Links: Network - https://tuckercarlson.com X - https://x.com/TuckerCarlson IG - https://www.instagram.com/tuckercarlson FB - https://www.facebook.com/tuckercarlsonTCN Store - https://store.tuckercarlson.com Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Tick, tick, tick. Tuck, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, tock, to Tucker Carlson, welcome to the show.
Thanks for having me.
Man, you're welcome.
Thank you for being here.
I wanted to come.
I've been looking forward to this for so long.
I haven't told anybody because I didn't want to jinx it.
And now here we are.
Jinxed it.
I was super psyched.
I saw your tape. I was like, well, that guy is real.
Unlike most people on the internet.
And I texted you, got your number.
I was like, that guy's, not to brag,
but I was like, that guy's gonna be a success.
Thank you, thank you.
He's not lying, like everybody else.
Yeah, we, so yeah, we got,
we actually got connected through Buck Sexton.
So- Oh, is that what it was?
Yeah, our mutual friend, Buck.
So I gotta get Buck a shout out, man.
Buck. I love that.
Thank you.
You're amazing. Did you work with him?
No, we never actually worked at CIA at the same time.
We met, you know how we met?
We met, he had reached out to me
because of the Eric Prince interview.
And I heard him on the radio kind of talking
about that interview and then we got connected
and became buddies and so yeah,
and then it developed into, yeah.
That's why.
He put us in contact so.
I love that.
Yeah, me too.
But, so we got a lot of stuff to cover today
in a short amount of time.
But I'd love to, I've not heard your life story
on any other interviews.
And so I'd love to kind of start there if you're willing.
It's not that interesting.
That's why I haven't talked about it.
I've seen a lot of interesting stuff.
My story is not that interesting.
I was born in San Francisco.
Well, hold on, hold on, hold on.
We'll get there.
But let me give you a quick introduction.
Great.
Tucker Carlson, you are one of the leading voices
in American politics.
You host the Tucker Carlson Show,
a brand new long form conversational podcast.
Time Magazine has called you the most powerful
conservative in America.
After spending decades in cable news,
you launched an online media company, TCN,
to provide an alternative to corporate media
that is dedicated to telling the truth
about things that matter, clearly and without fear.
Tucker Carlson hosted Fox News Channel's
flagship primetime cable news program, Tucker Carlson hosted Fox News Channel's flagship primetime cable news program, Tucker Carlson Tonight.
It was and still is the highest rated program
in cable news history.
Before that, you hosted other programs on Fox News,
MSNBC and CNN.
You're the author of two recent New York Times bestsellers,
Ship of Fools and The Long Slide.
Husband, been with your wife 40 years.
40 years, 1984. Congratulations.
That's incredible. She was 15.
I was 33. It was weird.
Oh.
Father to four children?
Yep.
Three girls, one boy?
Exactly.
In the last year, you've shattered viewership records
and reshaped the media landscape
by bringing your interviews and reporting online.
You've recently interviewed Donald Trump,
Vladimir Putin, Elon Musk,
and many more of the biggest names
in news and politics around the world.
You're 22 years sober.
22 years.
And a man of God. I would years. And a man of God.
I would never call myself a man of God, but I definitely believe in God.
Yeah, I am a Christian.
So am I missing anything?
I'm sure I'm missing a lot.
No, I mean that.
That's all half true.
But yeah, I turn 55 tomorrow, so it's a little, it is weird.
I'm not, I try not to be too reflective,
because that's just a well you can fall down
and not get out of.
But I basically just had the same job my whole life
and just kept getting fired or having, you know,
the mediums that I worked in disappear,
like magazines and newspapers, cable news,
broadcast television, that all just kind of went away went away, you know, as the country changed.
So I do feel blessed to have not a second act, but like a ninth act.
I do really feel fortunate.
I am fortunate, not for the money even, or especially,
but for the chance to do something that I like and that I think is sort of productive
and I have a lot of energy and I need to channel it
into something that's not negative or self-destructive.
And so I'm just really grateful.
You don't want to be a middle-aged man
as I am without an outlet.
Yeah.
Well, you've definitely had a superb career
and continue to.
What is it that you think that people gravitate towards?
I'm not self-aware.
I refuse to be self-aware.
I don't even like mirrors at all, which you can probably tell from my appearance.
So I have literally no idea.
But I do think that
Especially in the line, I mean I think a lot of things but in the last few years it's become clear to me that the categories that I thought were real or not and
that it really is a contest of in fact a war between
the truth and deception and
So I and I believe you know, I don't always know what truth is, and I've certainly repeated a lot of things that were lies, mostly unintentionally.
I try not to lie. I have lied, but I try not to. But I've certainly said a ton of things that were wrong.
But I am trying to tell the truth. I am. Not the whole truth all the time. You don't have to say everything you think.
You shouldn't. But you can't lie.
And I think that people can feel that.
It's why I'm sitting right here.
It's why I was attracted to your podcast.
Someone sent me a clip and I was like,
and I actually love the content.
I thought it was interesting and open-minded,
mostly I thought it was real.
And I think that you can perceive that on like a gut level.
Like I know when someone's lying to me,
I don't always know what he's lying about or why he's lying, but I can smell deception
as we all can from our instincts instantly.
And I don't have any special powers of any kind.
I don't have a crazy high IQ
or I really don't have that many skills,
but I would say my main skill is I believe my instincts.
Like I don't think they lied to me.
They're not trying to sell me something.
They're trying to get elected.
They're there to serve me. I really believe that.
That's true of all people and animals. I love animals, so I see this at work in animals
as well. And I don't hesitate to follow my instincts ever. And to the extent that I have,
I've gotten in trouble. So again, I don't always know what those instincts mean. As
I say to my children, they are unerring, but imprecise.
Like they're absolutely real 100% of the time.
The question is how do you interpret them?
Do you know what I mean?
I do.
I know exactly what you mean.
Well, it's probably why you're still alive.
Yeah.
Because you know what I'm talking about, right?
Exactly.
Yeah.
Every time I don't and I go against it, I regret it.
Oh, I could write a book on the counter-instinctual moves I've made that turned out to be disasters
or the conclusions that I reached against my own.
This was the thing for me with the Vax.
I don't know anything about it.
I was not against vaccines particularly.
I grew up in a town in La Jolla, California that was sort of... The whole town was based
on the polio vaccine that the Salk Institute, Jonas Salk Institute was there.
I was not against vaccines.
I hadn't really thought about them.
I thought they were, I guess, miracles of science.
That's what I was told.
I don't even know what I think of vaccines now.
But I'm skeptical.
But the COVID Vax, all I knew, I didn't know anything about mRNA technology.
Of course, I still am not an expert on that
but I know a lot about human deception because that's been my job my whole life and also I'm just try to pay attention to
whether something is true or false and
The behavior of the people selling me that was so transparently dishonest. I
Didn't know that the Vax wouldn't work which it didn't of course
I didn't know that would cause harm which it did
But I did know that the people selling it relires, which it didn't, of course. I didn't know that it would cause harm, which it did.
But I did know that the people selling it were liars.
I knew that instantly.
And I know some of them.
But I could just tell by their behavior they're lying.
And I was like, I don't know what this is.
No one in my family is getting this.
We're not doing this.
And I'm not doing this, period.
Period.
I figured that out the first day.
Yeah.
That's not true.
I did not figure it out. I still haven't figured that out the first day. Yeah. That's not true. I did not figure it out.
I still haven't figured it out,
but I felt it so strongly and I just obeyed.
And I think that works.
I think it does too.
Yeah.
You know, something I wanted to ask you
to rewind a little bit.
I ask everybody who's in a successful marriage,
this question, you've been with your wife 40 years
Yeah, I think you said you've been married for 33 years. Yes in a country where divorce is the commonality
What would you say the secret to a successful marriage is I mean luck destiny?
Providence plays a huge role. You know, you're not the author of your success or entirely of your failures, I would say.
Also, there's a lot that happens in life
that is not the product of choices that you made.
Free will is overrated.
I'm becoming more Calvinist by the day.
Just watch it.
Does the five-year-old get leukemia
because she did something wrong?
Like, no, a lot of things,
you spent a lot of your life in war.
People who know who died, did they deserve it?
You know what I mean?
It's like, you don't, things happen that are not for good and bad, that are not sort of up to you. You spent a lot of your life in war. People who died, did they desert? You know what I mean?
Things happen that are not for good and bad,
that are not sort of up to you.
And so a lot of having a happy marriage
is just marrying someone with whom you're compatible.
And you change.
I met my wife in 1984, and it's a completely different country.
And we're different people, but we're different in the same way.
Who's responsible?
Who did that?
I didn't, really. I hear people say, oh know, who did that? I didn't really.
I hear people say, oh, marriages are hard.
I've never had a hard time in marriage.
I've always enjoyed it.
These are hard times.
You've got a lot of little kids, you've got little kids.
It's like pretty hard.
But I've always been happy to be married to her
and more happy as the years go by.
But to the extent that you can't control these things,
like pick the right person, Do not marry a stripper.
They're all crazy.
I'm sure some are nice.
I've known some who are nice.
I'm serious, but they're damaged.
Try to marry a girl who likes her dad.
I think that's important.
Or who did like her dad when she was little.
Why do you think that's important?
I've never heard anybody say that.
Because I've noticed it.
I've noticed it.
I've noticed it a lot.
And up close, I mean, this is not not guessing it. I could be completely wrong
This is just an observation of mine
But girls who like their dads or who like their you know
Everyone's disappointed by his dad or her dad in later life like you learn that your dad's human and holy shit
I can't believe he's human. I thought he was God so there's no that's natural but you know when you're eight
If you're deeply disappointed in your dad, especially as a girl, that leaves
a mark.
And I've known women who had terrible relationships with their fathers, who were wonderful people
and well-balanced people.
But it's harder, for sure.
And if a girl has a completely contentious relationship with her father and has been
betrayed by him and the family abandoned by him.
That can really have an effect.
Whereas a woman who grew up really loving her dad and feeling secure in his leadership
as a dad and his love as a dad, that girl is more secure and less jumpy and she's not
thinking that every argument is going to lead to divorce.
The thing about damage in childhood is it it's hard to sort of let go of those patterns
and products of divorce, like me for example,
it takes a while to realize that like,
you know, you have a disagreement, that's okay.
It's not the end of the world.
You're not gonna like get divorced, you know.
So that's, I think that's important.
Second, like just resolve not to get divorced.
I do think that's important.
I'm not a particularly virtuous person at all actually,
but I did, when I got married,
I had lived through a divorce as a child.
I was like, I'm not doing that.
Like period.
My wife came from a stable family and she was like,
divorce, like what?
It was not even a thing.
But I resolved like, I'm not doing that.
And so that I think is helpful to decide,
here are the boundaries,
like whatever we're doing, we're not doing that. And so that I think is helpful to decide, here are the boundaries, like whatever we're doing,
we're not splitting up.
But I would say the main thing is spending time
with your wife when your kids are little,
which is really hard.
It's so hard and you love your kids
and so it's very tempting, it's natural actually
to divert your attention from your spouse to your children, because they're your children.
That's natural and you should do that.
But it's also very easy indeed, it's the natural course to ignore your spouse in favor of your
children, because children are instantly affirming, your spouse is complicated.
You can be with a woman for, as I have 40 years, and still only get like 65% comprehension
of what she's saying
because she's a woman so you can't really understand you know what I mean? I do. Which is of course the beauty of it that's why it's interesting and fresh and like a challenge and cool and you
learn a lot and if she was just like you you would learn nothing it's just narcissism it's
masturbation but because she's so different from you it's like what it forces you out of yourself
to figure it out but the temptation for men is to be like,
okay, I have a choice of hanging out with my five-year-old.
It's like, dad, you're so great.
And my wife was like kind of pissed at me
for reasons I don't really understand.
She's just crazy.
So I'm gonna just go up to the kids
because that's like the sugar high.
That's like, plus they're my kids.
So I can justify it.
If you keep doing that, you will destroy your marriage.
And it's so vital for men to force themselves
to work through the crazy.
Your wife is not, well, she's kind of crazy, of course,
but she's not deeply crazy, actually.
She's probably wise.
And to force yourself to get over that hump,
which is the first 10 minutes, you're like,
I can't, what the are you saying? Leave me alone, you're crazy. To get past that hump, which is the first 10 minutes, you're like, I can't, what the are you saying?
Leave me alone, you're crazy.
To get past that and realize, no, actually,
she's trying to tell me something that's really important
and be humble enough to hear it and assess it rationally.
And that's a process, it's painful at first.
And I have found the two techniques,
the practical techniques that work are long walks
because you're not facing each other.
So if there's a dispute,
you don't have to look into each other's eyes,
it's too intense.
You know, it's like big cats can't stare at each other
without eating each other.
I've never had a problem in my marriage
that I couldn't walk off.
And then the higher level of that
is the day long in bed summit meeting for like big issues.
So if you have like a long, not a minor,
but a long standing issue, a family problem, for example,
what do we do about that?
That's very complicated.
I don't know what to do.
And I think we kind of disagree and I'm pissed at you
about it.
Then it sort of simmers.
That's when you check into a hotel for a weekend
and you get room service, you get butt naked
and you sit in bed and you talk about it indirectly
in the way you do on a sensitive subject.
You don't dive right in, but you get comfortable,
and you stay there until it's solved.
And we get-
I've never heard that one either.
That's great and nice.
In our family, we call these summit meetings.
We have a couple of famous ones
that have solved like big problems.
I mean, we don't have big problems.
We never had big problems, but like, you know,
there are things where you have a difference of opinion
and you don't want to fight so you don't fully articulate it.
But you're just like, it's always the same.
She's crazy.
He's an asshole.
She's crazy.
He's an asshole.
It's like, those are the defaults, right?
But you realize that she's not crazy,
and you're probably slightly less of an asshole
than she assumed you were.
And you just need to talk it through.
And that just, it takes time,
and it also takes some balls
to face female dissatisfaction.
Like, I don't care the bravest man,
I don't care how many terrorist doors you've breached,
facing off against a pissed off wife
is the scariest thing you'll ever do.
It's scarier than jumping out of an airplane.
No man wants to do it. That's why they golf.
And you, to make yourself do that is really hard.
That's called leadership, actually.
That is male leadership.
And it's so worth it.
It's so worth it.
But you never want to do it.
The man's impulse is to run away.
Every single, I don't care how honorable you think you are.
You're not going like abandon her,
go get a pack of cigarettes and not come back, okay?
Though that happens.
But you're gonna abandon her in subtle,
easy to justify ways, mostly by hanging with your kids.
Why would you wanna deal with her?
You know what I mean?
She's mad at you.
But, and the last thing I'll say is,
if you wanna have happy children, have a happy marriage.
That is the most important thing you can do for your children. If it's a choice between going to Dylan's soccer game and taking your wife to dinner,
take your wife to dinner.
Your kids will benefit from that much more than anything you could do for them,
any game you could go to, any bedtime story you could read to them.
Focus, make your wife happy, and your children will be happy and secure what they want is security
predictability knowing that the center of the family isn't is an immovable rock called this marriage this love between
man and wife and
You will find that that that is you want kids who like each other which is the measure of happy kids
They like each other
And you want kids who are like calm and reasonable
and happy and not addicted to drugs, have a happy marriage.
And it's, I think it's that simple.
I really, I think it's that simple.
Man, that's great advice.
Thank you.
It's worked for me.
You know how many people that's probably gonna help?
That's amazing.
Well, it's pretty simple, but don't run away.
They all wanna run away. They all want to run away.
I've felt that so many times.
I can't deal with this.
I'm out of here.
I've got important things to do.
I love the, marry a girl that loves her dad.
That is something I've never heard of.
Well, I had a really close friend.
I don't want to reveal too much.
It's like someone really close to me.
I married like a truly crazy woman.
That's a relative of mine, like actually crazy.
It's like flamboyant, like there's no,
it's not a close call.
This is like a crazy, malicious,
narcissist drug addict, like actual.
And this is a very smart person.
And I said to him once, like, we're on a hunting trip,
we're sitting in a duck blind actually.
And I said, I don't want to hurt your feelings
or is this all kind of personal and it's too close and all
this, but I said, why'd you do that?
She's completely bonkers and bad.
And he said to me, they're upsides.
That's not what he said.
They're upsides.
And she hated her dad, you know, she hated her dad, but there were upsides, if you know
what I mean, and for the purposes of like a weekend, you know, men are really easily
controlled.
It's totally true.
They're very easily controlled.
They're such simple organisms.
And so yeah, but if it's a choice between, you know, like a hot weekend in Reno or a lifetime of happiness. You can lead them through predictability, reliability, good leadership, providing, protecting,
doing the things that men are on this earth to do.
You can lead them to a pretty awesome sex life, just to be blunt.
But it is not worth, I don't care how crazy she is in the sack or whatever, you
do not want to marry an unhappy crazy person, like at all.
I mean this is obvious, but the consequences of that are, I'd rather have cancer, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
Not to be too blunt.
No, that was great stuff.
So we have a subscription account. It's on Patreon.
One of the things that I give them the opportunity to do because they've been so good to us.
They've been here since the beginning.
They're our best supporters, our top supporters.
And so I give them an opportunity to ask a question.
Oh, I love it.
Every interview.
And so this is from Michael Cummings.
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If you had to make one statement about who you believe really runs this country, what
would it be?
It depends what you mean by who.
It's really a class of people.
It's the people who are the beneficiaries of our fake meritocracy, the people with the
most merit badges, the people who bought into the lie that undergirds the current disaster,
which is if you come up through these legacy institutions and gather the degree or the resume,
or you go to whatever, Horace Mann and then Andover
and then Yale and then HBS and McKinsey,
and you go up through whatever,
the tokens of achievement that we hand out
to a certain class of people,
that you will be a wise leader.
That's demonstrably untrue, of course.
They've mismanaged all the big things, the things that matter, the economy or foreign
policy and they've destroyed the family too.
So really the worst people.
But it's the products of that system, a group I'm highly familiar with, that have wrecked
everything but are still currently in charge. And the struggle between Trump and Biden
is not a struggle between two guys, two elderly men
with different worldviews.
No, it's a struggle between classes of people.
These are symbols, right?
They're not, I mean, they're people, of course.
But in the case of Trump as a person,
Biden is not fully human anymore because he's got dementia, but whatever
I shouldn't say not fully human, but he's not
Fully functioning. Yeah, he's not totally autonomous being anymore. He doesn't have personal sovereignty anymore
But whatever it but it's not even about them. Even if he did it wouldn't it's not about them
It's about classes of people and who should be running the country. Should it be the people, this leadership class, which really is the product of a quite elaborate
grooming system that's come up over the last century, but really accelerated post-war,
the past 80 years, or like the rest of the people who live here.
Should they have a voice too?
Should they have any power?
But that's who's running it. And it's quite a large group, actually.
And I grew up, if not in, then certainly adjacent to that group.
So I'm quite knowledgeable about it.
And I've lived around it.
So I know it when I see it.
Instantly know it when I see it.
And I didn't question it really as much as I do now.
Now I find it completely repulsive and immoral and really disgusting actually.
But I didn't always feel that way because I didn't fully understand it.
But the reason that it's so hard to describe who's really in charge and why people often
decide like, well, it's got to be Bohemian Grove or some small group of people.
The reason that it's so hard to really pinpoint who's making the decisions is because
It's quite large and diffuse. It's an entire class of people with similar instincts and similar vested interests and things and
And they unfortunately just have an awful lot of power, you know, and they control the monopolies that define our
You know and they control the monopolies that define our economy
Do you think that are these people you're talking about are they controlling the country or are they controlling the world?
Well, that's a really interesting question and I I don't know if they're if I've arrived at a really clear answer But it's certainly obvious at this point that borders are overrated. You know as meaningful
Distinctions between you know
country do countries matter
No, I mean globalization was an originally conceived as an economic system a much more efficient economic system
We're like it's cheaper to do one thing in that country
It's cheaper to do this thing in that country and why don't we just network them effectively?
and that'll be a much more efficient economy and we'll grow GDP, which we claim is an accurate measure of something, I guess,
of wealth.
It's not.
But let's just say that was the thought.
But what it turned into, because governance does tend to follow economics, what it turned
into was a leadership system.
So in other words, what we thought was just like a way to get cheaper electronics from
the Far East turned out to be effectively world government.
Not of course, strictly speaking, world government, not officially world government in the way
that we sort of people feared 40 years ago, the UN is going to run everything.
It's much more informal than that, but much more durable than that.
So it's a network of businesses, governments, intel agencies for sure, and NGOs that determine
what's allowed and what's not allowed.
And as someone who travels a lot abroad and has on and off my whole life, I don't know
that it has amounted to much, but I definitely
have been a lot of places, as you have. The most noticeable trend, and I traveled a lot
as a kid, so I've sort of seen the difference. The most noticeable trend is the homogenization
of everything. Everything looks the same. The attitudes are all the same. Everyone has
the same fashionable attitudes that are really top-down delivered.
And the world has just sort of lost its differences.
There are some exceptions.
There are some places you go,
I really wanna go to North Korea now
because I have any love for this Stalinism.
Of course I don't, I hate it.
But I do sort of want to be a place
that's a little bit different from other places.
Because I actually believe in diversity in the truest sense.
I think differences are fine.
I actually like them.
I appreciate them.
I think we need them.
I think nature creates differences.
God creates differences.
So I resent the fact that everything is the same, but that is one measure of the power
of this class.
It's international.
It's completely international. So the whole idea of like a sovereign nation
putting one country's interest before another country's,
that's completely alien to the way
the leadership class thinks, completely.
I just, well, if things go to shit here,
I'll move to Singapore.
And if the Chinese do to Singapore what they did to Hong Kong,
then I'm in Abu Dhabi.
And if things go to shit there,
then I'm in wherever the next place is.
Do you know what I mean?
Baker's Bay, you know, whatever.
It's like a, it's a way of thinking.
And it's hard to defeat that, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
It's, man, it just seems so complicated.
And then you'd be, but it's a conspiracy of instinct.
It's almost like, you saw this with the COVID Vax.
Like I was watching this and I was like,
what the fuck is going on?
Like, why is everybody saying exactly the same thing?
Are there talking points that went out?
Well, of course there were actually talking points
that went out.
And there was a conspiracy to bribe hospitals and churches
and all these different groups to like, you know,
stick with the message, the same message.
But it was more than that. It was just like a certain sort of person, the same message. But it was more than that.
It was just like a certain sort of person
reaches the same conclusion.
The people, and really a lot of it's economic.
It's like the people who've derived the greatest benefit
from American society or global elite society
as it currently exists, are almost to a person
the least productive people in the society.
People who like loan money at interest.
Really?
I mean, I guess there's a role for finance,
I guess, in a society.
But tell me how people who loan money for a living
should be the most revered and the most highly rewarded.
No, they probably shouldn't be actually the people who make things
Who innovate in a true sense who actually improve human life?
People who say profound things create beautiful things like they should be rewarded
So it's all the the truth is the people in charge are the least impressive
they're the least important if they want away tomorrow if like I don't know Susan Rice and
Janet Yellen the Treasury Secretary is like a
Freaking moron and if like bad person if she went away tomorrow would that like that be battered like it wouldn't have any
she's never done anything and
So that class of people which is disproportionately benefited
And so that class of people, which is disproportionately benefited from our system,
has a lot to lose, a lot, the most to lose.
Like, if I'm a super competent diesel mechanic,
diesel engines are going to be around for a long time.
Sorry, you're not going to do long-haul trucking
on an electric motor.
Sorry, just we're not, anytime soon.
So if I can fix a diesel engine, my value is demonstrable.
Probably not going to be unemployed, actually.
But if you're Janet Yellen, and you're an economist who knows nothing about economics,
and your whole life is getting paid off by the banks, which hers has been, you're not
really needed, actually.
You're a net drain on society.
And so someone like that has a lot to protect like a lot like the whole
Edifice of bullshit could just like come crashing down on her, right? Yeah, so she's a lot jumpier than your average diesel mechanic Why do you think I?
Mean you're talking about how old is Janet Yellen? She's got a be several hundred years old
Janet Yellen who's like a criminal, and she literally was Fed
Sharon. She took payoffs from the banks really for speeches. Why aren't they
people like her, people like Pelosi, people like Mitch McConnell, why don't
they hit this point where they go, I'm gonna enjoy all of the corrupt money
that I've accumulated over the 80 years
that I've been doing this.
What, is there ever a time when enough is enough for them?
I mean, they're gonna.
Well, the worship of money is a sin, of course,
but it's also a lie.
It doesn't make you happy, it doesn't fill the void,
it doesn't get you to heaven.
And to repeat the most tired of all cliches
that you'd ever hear anymore, you can't take it with you.
So it's just a lie, it's a disease,
and it's a moral disease,
and it's one that no one mentions anymore.
It's agreed it's not only fine, it's celebrated.
Well, it's disgusting,
I'm just gonna remind everybody of that.
It's not bad to have enough.
It's bad to have too much, actually.
But no one believes that anymore at all.
And it's considered like you're a socialist or something.
If you say greed is bad, well, no, I'm hardly a,
I hate socialism.
I'm not a socialist.
And thankfully I've been like a public right winger
for so long, I don't think anyone actually thinks
I'm a socialist, I'm a right winger, I always have been,
I guess, whatever that means now.
But greed is bad, it's not a virtue, it's a vice.
And they're all besotted with greed, of course,
and they think that the more you accumulate,
I don't know what happens, you become,
it's actually, it's a function of power.
The more power you have, the more you feel like God.
But you're not God.
You're just like some ungainly primate
feeling his way through the dark, like we all are.
And you'll be negatively rewarded for those attitudes at some point very soon.
So it's sad on one level, but it's also if your whole leadership class is just about
serving itself, it's all about greed and hubris, which it is, you're going to have like really
terrible leadership.
And we do.
It's only about leadership, by the way.
Yeah.
I mean, you're in the military, I didn't tell you, but bad leaders result in death.
Like that's obvious, right?
It's less obvious at the scale of like 350 million people in our society, but it's still
true.
It's true in the family.
A bad dad wrecks the family, wrecks his daughters. Yeah. Right? Yeah. still true. It's true in the family. A bad dad wrecks the family, wrecks his daughters.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
Very true.
Let's move into your life story.
So we're going to start at childhood.
Hit your news career.
And then we got a whole bunch of rabbit holes to go down.
Great.
Where'd you grow up?
I was born in San Francisco, California, children's hospital, same hospital Jerry Garcia
was born in, not to brag, in 1969, spring.
Um, we moved to Los Angeles.
My mother's from San Francisco, my father's from Boston.
Moved to LA, my dad worked for ABC News in Los Angeles.
When I was like six, my mom split
and ultimately moved to France, I guess.
I never saw her again.
Hold on, she just left at six?
She left, yeah, when I was six.
Boo hoo, poor me.
How many split?
I have one brother who I'm very close to,
have always been extremely close to my best friend
and who's a year and a half younger than I am.
So we grew up with our dad and we moved.
What did your mom, did she tell you she was leaving
or you just came home, she was gone or?
She, my dad worked for ABC News
and he had been quite successful as a reporter
and he got into some dispute with management,
which is a family trait.
And basically, actually he was pretty funny.
In television, you get free clothes from the wardrobe department.
And so you get measured for suits every year or whatever.
And he never got his suits.
And so he called the tailor.
I'll never forget this.
When this happened, I was in first grade.
And he calls the tailor. He's like, are my suits coming happened, I was in first grade. And he calls the tailor.
He's like, are my suits coming?
Where are my suits?
And the guy, you know, six weeks ago.
And the guy's like, actually, I've been told not to make your suits by management because
you're getting fired.
That's television for you.
You know, you learn from the tailor you're getting fired.
So he got fired.
And he's like, he got a job in San Diego.
It is CBS affiliate in San Diego called KFMB.
And we moved.
My brother and I and our house man and the dogs, or Springer Spaniels, we got in the
car and drove to San Diego.
And my mom just wasn't there.
And we lived in a hotel for a while, for quite a while.
And then we moved to a town called La Jolla, which is a little
bit north of San Diego, a very pretty town. And when I was in first grade, and I lived
with my dad and my brother and our dogs. And we had like the best time. I mean, it was sad.
One of the reasons I don't talk about it very often is it sounds like, oh, I had such a
hard life, but I really had a great life. And I love my dad. I worship my dad and I still do.
And I see him every day and I love him and, uh, and my brother, I always love my brother.
So, um, we had a really happy life and quite eccentric, but quite happy.
And then what did, I mean, what would your, what would, what would your dad say
when you would ask where, where he never attacked her.
Um, he never attacked her. He never attacked her.
She just kind of split and she, you know,
whatever, I don't want to get into the what was me stuff.
She was, I don't think she liked us for some reason.
I know we're not clear, but she was pretty clear about that.
And she was involved in drugs and alcohol and stuff
and was quite, she was a sculptor.
So she was pretty eccentric and our family was definitely not like every other family
at all.
But I thought in a good way, but definitely more kind of cerebral and like, you know,
we didn't play sports or go to sports games or watch television.
We would just have like extremely long dinners with random people always in the house and talk about books and ideas and the news and all this stuff.
And like, you know, it's just a different time.
Everybody smoked cigarettes, everyone, you know, liked art, and it was a kind of world
that just absolutely does not exist now.
But I really enjoyed it.
But there was, you know, a high level of eccentricity was tolerated, you know. And
I think that's very good. It makes creativity possible. You know, like, yeah, it was just
different, different attitudes, very, very different attitudes, all gone now. But it
was, it was, it was cool. I had a wonderful childhood actually. And I became extremely
close to my father and my brother.
And my father, my mother was from a very affluent family.
My father was an orphan and who had lived at the home
for little wanderers in Boston as a child, you know,
in the early 40s.
And so it was a...
Your mother came from a...
Affluent family.
And my father was a completely self-made guy who, you know,
never finished high school and joined the Marine Corps at 17 and was a very tough human
being, like actually tough, not fake tough, but legit tough.
But a very decent guy and a hyper intense intellectual
and self-educated, but with the motivation that comes from,
knowing that you didn't graduate high school,
he went to jail.
And so he was like, he'd keep a book
on the dashboard of his car for red lights, like he's that guy.
And just very intellectually engaged.
I mean, he could sit at a table and often did, you know, smoking cigarettes, recounting
a book he had just read, like in detail.
And my brother and I would just be spellbound.
And we would have, I mean, I'm not joking, we would have like six hour dinners, not kidding.
And it was just great, it was great.
And a very outdoorsy person, loved camping and nature
and hunting and fishing and very much about nature
and dogs and books.
So that was a wonderful childhood.
He got remarried to an amazing woman who just passed away
and really a beautiful soul.
And how old were you when he got remarried?
10 maybe something like that.
I think I was 10.
And he very much reserved the right to raise us.
He had a very eccentric opinions, not eccentric.
He turned out to be right about almost everything,
but he had a deep distrust of school.
He was an actual intellectual, like is an actual intellectual, like deep knowledge,
but a free thinker.
He thought that conformity made you dumb, and you should be free to explore what the
truth is.
He was totally opposed to school, completely opposed to school, very unimpressed that I
went to college.
Never, I don't think he knew the name,
he paid the bill, which I was grateful for,
but he never like asked like, what college do you go to?
Or what's going on in college?
You know, it was like, it was just like,
it was like the unspoken thing.
It was almost like I was like, you know, I don't know,
having some creepy sex thing in my life,
just don't talk about it.
He was not impressed by anything faddish or anything,
you know, group thing.
The herd instinct just made him sick.
He was like a true individual, probably not
right about everything, but right about a lot
of the big things.
And completely unafraid to take, well, really of anything,
but physically unafraid.
He was like the only dad in La Jolla who would like,
you know, like punch you out at a red light if you got,
he was like, I was just like not, you know,
that didn't happen where we lived.
It was a very affluent community and a lot of polite people
and my father was, you know, not someone to trifle with,
but very, very kind to my brother and me, very kind.
Totally tribal in his thinking.
Like there's our family and there's everyone else.
Like total mafia outlook, complete.
Not in a bad way, like not wanting to get
into anyone's business, but like,
fuck with the family, you die.
That kind of attitude, like it's us versus everybody else,
which was a great way actually to grow up.
So anyway, he got remarried and then in 1984, I think, then when I was a child, I went to
boarding school on the East Coast when I was 14.
I went to boarding school.
He sent me to boarding school in New England where he was from because he was like, get
out of this fake inherited money world, go be cold.
Well, I went to another inherited money world, of course, in New England.
But we had a house in Maine where we spent the summer and he believed in cold climate,
hard work.
He's extremely Swedish.
So it's good to be around snow and pine trees and you should know, that kind of stuff. So went to boarding school and then he ran for mayor
of San Diego for some reason and lost.
And then immediately after that went to work
for the US government and worked in and around
the US government for like the next 35 years.
What was he doing in government?
He went in to run something called Voice of America.
And the idea was he'd been a journalist.
He was in the Reagan administration.
And this was our sort of voice to the world.
Voice of America was like the big radio broadcaster,
which was really an instrument of the intelligence, which
I didn't quite realize at the time. But so he ran that for years.
And was this mockingbird by chance?
I mean, I don't know.
What's so funny is you don't get things as a child.
And I so revered and respected and do revere and respect my father that I don't know.
But I have no idea but I know that when the Iran-Contra thing happened he got caught up in that
Sort of I mean I was in boarding school, I guess when that happened
But I remember reading and it's like my dad's name like what you know
Broadcasting messages on behalf of the Contras or something like that and I remember saying to my father like what and he's like
That's all bullshit.
Probably not all bullshit, whatever.
Anyway, just a wonderful man.
I had lunch with him every week of my adult life.
I always had lunch with him every Friday.
And we'd gamble for lunch.
Always bring dice and we'd gamble.
And we'd eat at the same place, same table for decades.
And just a great guy, very earthy,
extremely powerful life force.
The one story that's sort of not to go on about it,
I've often thought about writing a book about it
because it was so unusual,
but then I was like, I don't want to do that
because it's too personal.
But this was my father in one short story.
When I was in college, I think I was a junior in college, he had been snoring and my stepmom
said, you're snoring.
My father's a big man, you know, prone to overeating just like me.
And he was snoring really bad.
And she's finally like, you got to go, there's something going on with your snoring.
And he hates going to the doctor.
He's like the only one of his friends still alive.
He never went to the doctor, smoked unfiltered cigarettes his whole life.
He's like, he's fine, I'm fine.
You know, he's that guy.
So he finally goes to the doctor and the doctor looks down his throat and alive, he never went to the doctor, smoked unfiltered cigarettes his whole life. He was like, he's fine, I'm fine, you know, he's that guy.
So he finally goes to the doctor
and the doctor looks down his throat and goes,
holy shit, and gives him an emergency tracheotomy
in the examining room
because he had such a huge tumor in his throat.
And he was such a heavy smoker,
they're like, you've got throat cancer.
Well, it turned out to be tuberculosis
that he caught in China,
but they didn't know that at the time.
So I get a call at school, your father has throat cancer, and he's in surgery.
So I'm in school and I was in college, yeah, I was in Connecticut.
I fly down to Washington, I get to the hospital, just as my father's getting out of the recovery
room.
My stepmom's there was really the kindest person I've ever met and really a great person.
He really loved her.
And so he's getting wheeled out and he's in this gurney and he's got, of course, so he She's really the kindest person I've ever met, and really a great person. He really loved her.
And so he's getting wheeled out, and he's in this gurney,
and he's got, of course, he can't talk.
He's got a hole in his throat.
He's recovering from surgery, and my brother and I
are there trying to keep from crying in front of my dad.
But like, her dad's dying.
He's got throat cancer.
Holy shit.
It's out of nowhere.
And he sees us, and he's like, hey, guys.
You know, we can't talk. Hey, guys. And he looks us and he was like, hey guys, you know, like we can't talk, hey guys.
And he looks down and he sees his wife.
And he sees her, I'm watching his face,
he sees her butt and he's reached out and grabs her butt.
I just thought, he's just an animal.
It's like, he's just learned that he's gonna like
die of throat cancer, but he just can't,
he just couldn't control himself.
And I saw that and I thought, I said to my brother,
it's like that man is the strongest life force
of anyone I've ever met in my, he's just,
you can't defeat him, doesn't matter.
I mean, he could be in prison
and he'd just still be the same man.
So I don't know why that the strength of spirit
required to grab your wife's butt.
When you get out of the surgery,
I just think it's just an incredible illustration
of who he is.
Anyway, I admire him.
What kind of stuff were you into as a kid?
Were you into sports or outdoors?
I love the outdoors.
And we went, we spent the summer in this little town in Maine.
So weird that we did that. We're the only people who went, you know, we spent the summer in this little town in Maine. It was so weird that we did that.
We were the only people who went from La Jolla, California to Western Maine, which is not
fashionable at all.
But my father had gone there as a child on hunting trips with his adopted father, so
he liked it, so we went there.
But we lived on the beach, so I was into surfing.
I was passionately into marijuana, you know, as you are when you grew up in Southern California
in the 70s and 80s.
I no longer think it's stupid now, but I was into it then.
I loved reading.
There was a huge premium on reading in our house, like read books.
I remember my father once said of my mother, like the one criticism he leveled against
my real mother, who was smart, actually after she died in France.
I didn't know she lived in France, but she died.
And all this drama happened after she died.
But the point is I got a couple of like correspondence
from her, whatever.
I really didn't know much about her,
but I got all this correspondence.
This was 13 years ago when she died.
And I was like, wow, she was really smart.
I didn't quite realize that. And so I said to my I was like, wow, she was really smart. I didn't quite realize that.
And so I said to my father, like, wow,
I got all this correspondence from her real mother
and pretty high IQ person.
Wow, I didn't know that.
And he goes, yeah, she read magazines.
Slick, the most slick.
She read magazines.
Like what a waste.
You know what I mean?
She read magazines. Like it was the New You know what I mean? She read magazines.
Like it was the New Yorker, but it's just a magazine.
People read books, like serious people read books.
So, and I'm the beneficiary of his library,
which was vast and the word eclectic is overused,
but it literally is eclectic.
It's like crazy.
And just every interesting book ever actually read and underlined,
like not these are not decorative books. These are like books he read.
Wow.
On every topic and not just books, but like transcripts of trials.
He's very interested in a couple of topics and really like American Indians.
He's really interested in the Indian wars and on different tribes.
He knew a lot about it.
Passionately interested in the Lincoln assassination for some reason and had the transcripts of
Mrs. Surratt's trial.
And like actually the transcript, like bound from 1865 and just a lot of stuff like that.
And he's like in a more honest world, he would qualify I think as a historian.
But anyway, yeah, she read magazines
Wow, that's the meanest thing she was like addicted to drugs and she abandoned her family she read magazines
if I
Remember correctly you wanted to you were trying to get into CIA
Yes, Vladimir Putin reminded me. I don't know how you knew that
Yeah, I applied to CIA when I I don't know how you knew that.
Yeah, I applied to CIA when I was a senior in college.
What did you want to do for the CIA?
Operations.
Yeah, it was a completely different organization.
Well, who knows what it was, actually.
I don't know.
I mean, I was operating on the basis of a lot of my father's friends served as operations
officers, some really wonderful guys, I guess I probably shouldn't name, but who were always at our house
and were just legit interesting people and smart people.
But you know, everything changed after 9-11.
You worked for CA, so I don't need to tell you,
but I think that the explicit paramilitary part
was much smaller.
And these were like spycraft guys, a lot of them,
probably involved in, who knows what they're involved in,
but they were definitely literate and smart and interesting
and they lived in all these countries
and we had just traveled a lot
and my dad was really interested in the world
and we never went to Florence or something,
we always would go to weird places
and he was just interested in how people lived
in different cultures and learning about them
and he's just interested in everything.
Amazing teacher.
So these guys had lived that life.
You know, they'd been there when this happened
or that happened or you'd been, you know,
chief of station in Jerusalem or something.
It's like these guys have really lived a life.
And I thought, I want to live that life.
I want an interesting life.
That's what I want.
I want an interesting life.
And we grew up in a pretty affluent circumstances,
not crazy private plane, rich or anything,
but you know, I didn't worry about money.
That just wasn't really a factor. No one ever talked about money, which is one of the privileges of you know, I didn't worry about money. That wasn't really a factor.
No one ever talked about money, which is one of the privileges of having it.
You don't talk about it.
And in our culture, you don't talk about it at all under any circumstances.
So I didn't really think about money at all.
I was just like, I want an interesting life.
So I applied to CIA and that whole application process then, this was 1990.
And I should just say for the record that I had no idea what the CIA was actually and I didn't believe any of the
Think Kermit Roosevelt actually lived right down the street from us. Are you kidding? No, man, that's cool
But I didn't know me but that's just the world you live in in Northwest DC
Like I didn't I never thought any of it was bad and the people who did think it was bad were like these
Fervid left-wing America haters.
And I was like, fuck those people.
They're all Noam Chomsky type.
They don't know anything.
And I was a child, and I was just dismissive.
And the Cold War was going on.
So it was really a binary.
It was like, are you for the US or the Soviet Union?
Well, that was not a hard one for us.
We're for the United States.
And so when I applied to CIA, and I've taken a lot of crap including from Putin like oh you're from a CIA family
Well, yeah, obviously my father
Worked in conjunction with CIA. I mean that's what that is
And I tried to join the CIA, but I'm not being false about it
I am a sworn enemy of the CIA at this point. No doubt about that. I've been the target actually
repeatedly, so
You know, I'm not ashamed to say any of this.
I'm not some secret agent or something.
And I would have been terrible as an operations officer because I'm not good at keeping secrets.
I hate bureaucracy.
I just wanted a life that was interesting.
I wanted to see stuff.
It didn't want to run anything.
I still don't.
I just wanted to see stuff.
I wanted to end my life at the table with my children and say, you know, I was there, you know
It's actually there when that happened, you know, and it was interesting and like the version you've heard is not quite right
Cuz I was there that's what I wanted out of my life and I got it but in another way
So I got ding from CA for drugs. Let's be totally honest. I had done cocaine
Within the last calendar year because I was in college and I was like an idiot
There were lots of drugs and I did drugs.
I was no drug addict, but I did drugs.
And the rule was at the time, at least this is what they told me, who knows what the truth
was?
Like you've, you know, we have a rule that if you've done certain drugs within 12 months,
you can't join.
I personally think that the personality assessment tests, I took a lot of them, I'm sure you've taken these,
with like a thousand questions,
and you have to answer true or false.
Do you remember that?
You gotta think about fuzzy bunnies.
I passed that.
So funny, I'll never forget this going home.
They would literally tell us that,
guys, just think about fuzzy bunnies
when they're taking this test
And I took mine at like Georgetown or GW University auditorium with all these most of our military guys actually
trying to move over into operations at CIA and
They told us they sent me a letter. So bring a number one pencil
Which was a mind fuck but I didn't realize that so I say to my father, I have to bring a number one pencil.
He's like, well, you better go to the stationary store
we lived in Georgetown on Wisconsin Avenue
and see if that's where I walk in there.
I was like, I'd like a number one pencil, please.
And I'm like, there is no such thing as a number one pencil.
So I go home and I say to my father,
I'm like, I couldn't get a number one pencil.
And he's like, well, just try it with a number two pencil.
So I show up and we sit down in this giant auditorium
to take all these tests and like all the military guys, you know, they're so like, got to follow the rules.
Excuse me, sir. I couldn't find a number one pencil. And everyone's like, I couldn't either.
And I'll never forget the CIA guy administering the test is like, you couldn't find a number
one pencil. Okay, well, then I guess a number two will do. And I do think it was like an
elaborate, you know mind fuck
But anyway, you take all these you answer these questions as you know
And I'll never forget one of them was and they're they're repetitive
They ask you the same question in a different form and one of them was I am fascinated by fire
I'll never forget that and I went home and I said to my father's like pop
One of the questions was I am fascinated by fire like you'd have to be a fucking lunatic to say yes,
because you're clearly a psycho, right?
And my father, who knew a lot about the subject goes,
yeah, but the psychos don't know they're psychos.
So it reveals like through repetition and the time,
there's a time limit.
You don't have time to think about it.
You just have to like, well, you know all this, of course,
but it was amazing.
Anyway, I didn't get into CIA and thank God, I would have been awful.
And I don't agree with the mission.
So the whole thing would have been terrible.
So I'm so grateful I didn't.
And then I was getting married, and I
didn't have a college degree.
I was a senior in college.
And I was like, my father-in-law is a good man with a job.
I was like, you need to have a job before you marry my daughter.
So I went to my father, as usual.
And I was like
And I applied to work in a boarding school in Morocco and they were like no I
Just want to do something interesting and he's like you should go into journalism. I did that I didn't have any credentials and but I could write I was literate
And I said, okay, so he got me a job at a
his assistant's
wife worked at this magazine.
So I got a job as a, basically a fact checker at this magazine.
And I loved it right away.
That was August of, I got back from my honeymoon and went to work.
I'd never really had a job when I went on my honeymoon.
I worked at a gas station.
Where'd you meet your wife?
First day of 10th grade at the boarding school that we went to.
Her dad was headmaster. And I had been there in 9th grade and she showed day of 10th grade at the boarding school that we went to, her dad was headmaster.
And I had been there in ninth grade
and she showed up in 10th grade,
we got a switch of headmasters
and I was standing on the quad, I'll never forget.
I was like, holy shit, that girl's cute.
Wow.
And so I was just on that, like that.
It was just on that, like right away. September 23rd, 1984, I was actually dating someone else, but I was like, that's the girl. Wow.
Yeah.
You remember the day.
That's awesome.
September 23, 1984.
I'll never forget it.
And I was like a very non-ideal person.
I mean, I'm like kind of an asshole now.
I was really an asshole then, like actual.
It's like super arrogant, dumb, doing drugs,
just being a little bit of a jerk.
And I was like, I'm not going to do that.
I'm going to do it. I'm going to do it. I'm going to do it. I'm going to do it. I'm going. I mean, I'm like kind of an asshole now. I was really an asshole then, like actual.
It's like super arrogant, dumb, you know, doing drugs,
just being like a complete overbearing jerk.
Arrogant, really arrogant, which is my nature.
I try to fight it.
But yeah, but we just had this weird chemistry,
so it worked.
What, you mentioned you were into drugs.
You're 22 years sober.
Yeah.
Congratulations.
Yeah.
What was the, what was it that got you sober?
Was it a scare?
Did you hit rock bottom?
I didn't really.
I mean, I was hosting Crossfire, actually, at the time.
And so I had been successful, young,
and it wasn't really drugs.
I mean, I was not, you know, I did a lot of drugs,
but that's just because of the world that I was in.
Like that was not, I mean, it's embarrassing to say it now
because drugs are so clearly bad, like really bad.
And all these people now die of drugs.
And that was not the case when I was a kid.
Like drug addicts died of drugs.
Junkies died of overdoses.
But like no one you'd ever know would ever die of drugs.
At this point, I know a lot of people who died of drugs.
So it's a different landscape.
It's a different attitude now.
So it's embarrassing to say that.
But I was not a drug addict.
I just was like into adventure and experimenting with stuff.
And the world I was in, that was pretty much acceptable.
I hate to say it, but it was true.
That's just true.
So same with cigarette smoking.
Excuse me, cigarette smoking was encouraged.
So it was a different time.
But it wasn't the drugs.
It was that, though, some drugs really wear you out
like cocaine.
Not good.
And hard to live a productive life
if you're going to bed at seven in the morning or whatever,
which I didn't do a ton, but some.
But it was booze.
That is what got me.
And it was just progressive.
I was 33.
And I just, I mean, I had, my wife was pregnant with our fourth child.
And I was fairly functional. I mean, I did a daily TV show and was fairly well known,
kind of famous actually at that point.
And so, you know, kind of killing it,
but I do think the physiology of it,
which I don't understand really,
but if that's real, like your body responds
to alcohol differently as you age.
And I would start to get these hangovers
that were stabilitating and then I'm busy,
I've got a lot of children, I've got stuff to do,
and I would just like not hesitate to have a cocktail
or three in the morning.
I just wouldn't, I'm just like a no dick around kind of guy,
I guess.
And I don't feel good, so like,
there's a screwdriver for that.
And that's a very bad pattern to get into, obviously.
So, but anyway, I quit when I was sitting at my desk
on Sunday morning, and at this point,
we had gotten an ice maker in our refrigerator,
which we'd never had.
That's a, if you're struggling with drinking,
don't get an ice maker, because it's just too easy.
Like where you go and you click the,
and we don't even have one now actually.
We're sort of low tech on kitchen equipment,
but whatever.
In this one house that we had,
we got an ice maker and I was like,
wow, look at that.
Clink, clink, clink, clink, clink.
And then you could like,
and someone taught me about scotch.
I knew nothing about scotch.
I was always a bourbon guy or whatever,
but I sat and drank a quart of scotch with a friend of mine.
He's like, scotch is really good, just drink a quart of it.
So we did, we're up in Maine, it didn't matter,
it was in the summertime.
But then I got back to Washington in late August,
or mid-August, and I have this job,
and then I get home from the job,
it's like, click, click, well, try some scotch.
And the next thing you know, you're like shit-faced at home.
And part of me was like, that's not good.
And I had a couple of moments where I lost control,
actually at the White House Christmas party in 2001.
I got too drunk to talk and stuff like that.
It's just embarrassing.
But I woke up this one morning at the last day of August 2002.
My wife was 10 days away from giving birth to our
fourth child.
And I was sitting at my desk, like smoking a cigarette at home, feeling bad.
And I just heard this voice.
I don't know if it was a voice.
It was from God.
And it was the clearest possible instruction.
If you keep doing this, you will lose your wife and children.
And I haven't always been a great husband or father,
but I've always wanted to be.
I've always really cared a lot.
And it's easy to care about people who are, you know,
loving and fun to be with as my family is.
So it's not hard, but I have always cared a lot.
And I just had this dead certainty
that if I kept on this path,
I would lose my wife and children.
No one had complained about my drinking, really.
What were you doing when you got that voice, when you heard it?
I was sitting at my desk smoking a Camel Unfiltered.
I'll never forget it, looking out my window at my lawn and feeling just like enervated
and crappy and cloudy as you do when you're hungover.
And I just had this feeling and I was like, wow,
I think I'm an alcoholic.
I had lost control.
I'm leaving a few things out, nothing dramatic,
but I didn't crash a car, but I blacked out a couple of times
which I didn't know what that was, like actually black out.
I always hear people say that, but like I didn't remember
how I got home from a restaurant, for example,
with my college roommate or I had a friend
over another college roommate that summer, wonderful guy, his wife and children, just
a beautiful family and beautiful people, great people, not people you'd want to be like snarling
drunk in front of.
And I remember sitting in my backyard in Washington and making gin and tonics.
I'm quite a good gin and tonic maker.
But it's the kind of thing you want to have a couple cocktails
with your buddy and his wonderful wife,
and they're just really great people.
And next thing I know, I'm like shit-faced.
I'm like, I don't really actually want to be shit-faced.
I can't believe I got shit.
Like, what is that?
I was losing control.
This is all very...
And then I, you know, some other stuff like that.
Or I stayed, you know, I had a friend in town town and he's like, let's do a couple lines and you know next thing
I know it's like seven in the morning and I'm like what I can't do this shit. Anyway, the bottom line is I
I quit I never had another drink after that and I went into like not
Medically serious but for me pretty serious withdrawals. And that, I was like, what?
I'm having alcohol withdrawals?
I knew nothing about this, okay?
I didn't know that there were alcohol withdrawals.
Like, I just didn't know.
You'd think, because of my mother, I would know this,
but I didn't know anything.
And my brother was a problem drinker also,
but I didn't think of myself as a problem drinker.
I was like, well, my brother's out of control.
He later quit too.
But when I started to go into withdrawals from alcohol, like shaking hands, can't sleep,
sweating a lot, and I have to host this TV show, and I'm like, I was addicted to alcohol.
Holy smokes.
Like, how did I not know that?
And then so I never drank again.
And unlike most people who quit or many people who quit, I've never wanted to drink
again.
Once I got past the first six months, I just felt so much better.
I was so grateful.
I've enjoyed being sober a lot.
And that's a huge blessing.
That's not for me.
It's not like I have an especially strong character.
I don't.
If you put a tray of Fig Newtons right here,
you would see how weak I really am.
It's just on this one thing, the booze and drugs,
it's like, I don't want that at all.
And so I never went to AA.
I didn't go to AA.
I've been to one AA meeting in my life,
and it was three weeks ago.
And it was because Russell Brand, who I really love,
was at my house and he goes to AA all the time.
And I said, why do you go to AA?
And he's like, I just love the people
and people are so honest.
And I said to him, I thought you went to AA
to keep yourself from drinking again.
Like you're right on the edge, which I'm not at all.
Like you couldn't force feed me alcohol.
I just don't want it.
And he's like, no, no, no.
For the beauty of being around truth
and people who are just totally unafraid
to say who they really are.
And there's something wonderful about that.
That's like the best thing there is.
That's liberation.
Like that's actual liberation.
And I was like, I gotta go to A&E.
So I went to an A&E meeting and I loved it.
And I'm going back.
I've been traveling and all this stuff,
but I ran into a buddy of mine, literally on the road,
trucks parked next to each other.
He's like, I'm going to AA.
And I was like, I'm gonna, you know, text me.
I had to travel, but I was like, when I'm back next week,
just text me when you go.
I wanna go, you know, whatever.
It's not that interesting, but that's my experience of it.
I was delivered from that.
You know, whatever, it's not that interesting, but that's my experience of it.
I was delivered from that.
And I don't know why, but I'm just so, so grateful.
And my brother too.
My brother was an actual drinker, like whoa.
I mean, no more than I was,
but he's like way more boisterous and like Swedish
than I am, and he's a punch you out guy.
And a wonderful person, but he woke up one morning,
he's like, I'm never drinking again and he never did.
Wow.
Almost 20 years ago.
So it's like we both have been so blessed that way.
You know, there's a lot of people out there
struggling with addiction and alcoholism.
So do you have any words of wisdom
for somebody that's looking to make the change?
Well, I was dealing with this this morning.
Yeah, it's one of the great privilege.
No, there's no formula, right?
But rehab doesn't work for most people, of course, at all.
It works for some.
But I was just giving someone advice about this,
which I do a lot because I really care about it.
I love sobriety. I really love it. I know it's not a sacrifice for me. It's like the greatest thing that
there is. So I'm in a good place to tell people about it because I really believe it. And
I got off so easy. I really did. I was, I got off easy. Oh my gosh. But what I always
say is quitting drinking is a huge decision.
It's a huge life change.
Everything changes when you do that.
A. B, it can be extremely painful physically, which nobody ever talks about.
They're always like, oh, you drink to whatever.
Yeah, for sure.
You drink because you're insecure, you're afraid, you're lying, you're a narcissist.
Drinking makes you a narcissist.
It's all about you, right?
But another reason that no one ever mentions that you drink
is because you have a physical need for it.
It's physical too.
So when you quit drinking,
I told someone this morning,
you need to be prepared for feeling very shitty
and very shaky and having your sleep disrupted and
feeling like you're going to have a panic attack at all times.
That's all real and you should just know that going in.
The third thing I always say is that it's so great to be sober because you don't have
to lie at all.
There's no shame in that.
I always tell my children this and I really believe it.
It's a foundational belief for me that we're not good at lying about ourselves and that everyone already knows
who we are.
So no matter what it is, whatever the secret is
that you're hiding and you think, you know,
I'm gay but no one knows or, you know,
I'm an alcoholic but no one knows
or I used to smoke secretly like at my in-laws house.
No one knows.
Are you kidding?
Everybody knows.
Whatever your dumb little secret is
that you think is like uniquely horrible,
that secret is shared by hundreds of millions
of other people on this planet
and has been since the beginning of time.
That is our common humanity, is our basic flaws,
and that those things are already known.
Everyone already knows you're secretly gay, alcoholic,
secret, whatever it is, you're insecure, you know what I mean? You know, you've got a big butt
and you're trying to hide it. Like everyone already knows that. And a lot of them love
you anyway. So once you realize that, you're, you're free. I don't have, you know, it doesn't
mean you should stop trying to be better or if you should never stop trying to be better,
but you don't need the
shame as like so unnecessary.
There's almost nothing you could do that would shock me personally, having watched people
really carefully for many years.
There's no variety of human sin that is shocking at all.
They're all sad, but they're not shocking.
It's not like, well, you're really plowing new ground there.
You begged your sister to like it, believe it.
Seen it, seen it.
You know what I mean?
It's like, there's nothing you can do that is shocking.
And there are a lot of things you can do that are wrong,
of course, but they're not, you can admit everything.
You can admit everything.
And the people who love you will still love you.
And when you know that, it's like, you are bulletproof.
It's like, what are you gonna do to me?
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
I do, I do.
And sobriety gets you there.
I can't think of one thing that changed for the worse
when I got sober, and I've only been sober
for two and a half years.
Is it a struggle?
I mean, for me, it wasn't.
I mean, I kind of told you at breakfast, you know,
that it was, I didn't even mean for me it wasn't it. I mean I kind of told you a breakfast, you know, that was I
Didn't even mean for it to happen. I mean I used to put away
Probably two-fifths a day, you know two-fifths. Yeah, I would wake up two-fifths of liquor
Yeah, and have whoo many everywhere, all over my car.
Oh, so you were full blown.
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
Were you able to work?
Yeah. And on pills, and on coke, and on sleeping pills.
And I remember going to my therapist and telling her.
Oh, that's...
She thought I was trying to kill myself for sure and
So I'd you know, I'd mentioned ideas my I use my way off of benzos and sleeping pills and painkillers and and you got
Off benzos alone alone
It takes four years takes balls. I mean it was I
Don't even care. I mean it, I would be working for the agency.
And I mean, we're all insomniacs.
And it was just, take whatever the fuck you can
just to try to get some sleep.
And then it became, you know, then that starts the cycle.
But yeah, I kicked that stuff and then.
A lot of people die getting off Benzos. Like alcohol, I think those are the only two categories
where withdrawal can kill you.
Heroin, no.
Crack, no.
Benzos and alcohol can literally kill you
and kill a lot of people.
Yeah.
Did you know that?
Were you like afraid?
I didn't know that.
Yeah, well good.
I didn't know that.
Yeah.
No, I did not. not I mean this was around 2015 and
that I started kicking all of that shit and
It I
Had a suicide attempt
Can't believe we're going here, but I'm not surprised at all with that much. Yeah
going here. But I'm not surprised at all with that much.
Yeah. Park the car in the garage, left the engine running,
recline the seat back and was like, let's check out. And it
didn't work. Believe it or not, obviously, I'm sitting here. But
so I kicked the booze. So but what was the immediate aftermath of that? Was that like a, did that shock you back into life?
You realized-
I didn't believe it.
So I woke up in my bedroom in my townhome
and my whole townhome smelled like gas.
So I came down the stairs and there was a pistol that I had gotten out of the safe,
which I never use and all my clothes were on the couch in front of the TV. So I think that maybe I
was pondering killing myself on the couch. And then, oh, you were loaded when you did this.
Oh yeah. I mean, of course, I don't know how I got back from, from the bar.
you did this. Oh yeah.
I mean, of course.
I don't know how I got back from the bar.
And then I went to the garage and I touched the door handle
and it was hot to the touch.
And I was like, oh shit.
Maybe there's a fire in there.
And so I was like, well, if I open the door,
then maybe that'll be it.
I'll be done.
Well, I opened the door and that didn't happen.
And I walked in, my fucking car was still running.
The seat was reclined all the way down.
I was like, holy shit, I was still fucked up.
But I didn't want to open the garage
because my dumb ass thought, well, if a spark flies,
this whole place is going up.
Now I'm kind of in it, you know,
and which is stupid because the pistons are firing
in my car, but the car had gotten so hot
that the gas tank melted and gas was dripping.
No way.
Yeah, I'm not shitting you.
Gas was dripping.
I didn't know this at the time,
but gas was dripping onto the exhaust, the muffler.
What kind of car?
An Audi.
So I opened the garage, turned the car off.
I told you I had been in therapy altogether
three and a half years, twice a week,
called my therapist, called Peggy Matthews,
the woman I had told you about
that had started that nonprofit.
And they're like, yeah, you tried to kill yourself.
And I was in denial.
Yeah.
So reason I knew the gas tank melted is when I had to,
when I took off later that day,
just to go get something,
my girlfriend at the time followed me
to make sure I was all right.
And my fucking muffler was, you could see fire coming off of it.
So then I she called me, told me, I looked and sure as shit there was gas
dripping on the damn muffler.
Yeah. So that started kind of my let's wake up and.
Yeah.
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long with Helix. Better sleep starts now. So that's one of the wildest stories I've heard,
actually, what you just said.
You didn't even know that you did it because you were blacked out.
What effect, once you realized what had happened and you call your therapist and she confirms
the obvious, what the evidence suggests, what effect did that have on you?
I mean, I just never realized I was capable of suicide.
You know, and so I called my therapist, I called Peggy,
I called my best friend, Dave Rutherford,
who lived down the road from me.
Also a former CLCA guy and still in denial,
still fucked up.
You know what I mean?
I mean, I haven't even slept it off.
And, but, you know, it, you know, I've,
I can't let my dad down.
That's the spirit.
That's always been like, that's what carried me through.
All the shit that I've been through,
getting into the SEAL teams, I could never like,
I felt like I let my dad down so many times in childhood up to leaving,
just from being a fucking turd that I just,
I couldn't let him down anymore.
And that just stuck with me from 18 to today.
That's a great motivator.
Yeah.
But anyways, moving forward. We can I just ask you one question though?
So you said you didn't think you were capable of that,
which is like a horrifying thing to realize about yourself.
I've realized that about myself on different levels.
I didn't think I would ever do something like that.
I just did.
But where do you think that came from?
Do you think the impulse to destroy yourself
came from within or do you think it was something from outside you that entered from? Do you think the impulse to destroy yourself came from within, or do you think it was something
from outside you that entered you?
Both.
I think it was both.
I mean, it was a...
There was a lot of things that I didn't think
I was capable of doing that were all happening
around this time, you know?
And, you know, I'd kind of told you about my lifestyle and living
in Columbia and, and, and there was a lot of shame, you know, I was going through a
lot of shame and trying to create a new identity after leaving the agency and the, and the
SEAL teams and starting from nothing.
So that was all in there.
And, and I mean, we talked about it this morning at breakfast,
you know what I mean?
It's like athletes, pro athletes, they get done
and it's like, well, now what the fuck am I gonna do?
And that's how I felt.
And I felt very unaccomplished again.
And it just really bothered me really like, bothered me.
There was a lot of, a lot of processing
that was going on at that time.
But, but yeah, then, so I had kicked everything eventually
within a couple of months and vodka was gone.
I had, I had switched to wine and, and.
The old switch to wine.
The old switcherisk.
And, uh, and then, uh, years later I went and did psychedelic
treatment and I didn't even go down there for that.
And I just came out of it and I haven't had another drop of alcohol since.
But just, it's like in a week I did Ibogaine 5 Meo Dnt.
I came, I came home and I just it's that experience almost.
It's like it showed you everything that's poison in your life.
It was like a new intuition that I had developed over.
The course of a week of just,
I guess I guess you'd call it healing, right?
Yeah.
And, yeah, it just.
Did you go by yourself?
No, I went, I wanted to go by myself.
And then I went to, it was very private though.
I didn't want anybody around that knew me
because I didn't know what was gonna come out either.
And, but yeah, it's like,
it showed me toxic people in my life,
not to be afraid to say no to people anymore.
And alcohol, Adderall, Adderall is the one thing I kept on
after my suicide attempt.
And even like, I guess I can't say caffeine,
but coffee, like I haven't had any coffee.
And then cannabis, I would use to sleep,
kick that for about six months.
But that's the only one that didn't stick,
was the cannabis.
And sometimes I'd need that to sleep.
So yeah, that's my journey to sobriety.
Were you afraid, I assume you didn't have
like an extensive history of hallucinogenic
experiences?
No.
So were you afraid that you would freak out?
Yeah.
I did a lot of drugs and I was always scared of psychedelics and stuff that makes you hallucinate
because you don't know what's gonna arise.
But I had hit this, I had, I mean, when I did it,
I had felt like I had pretty much conquered the veteran PTSD traumatic.
Like I had reinvented myself successfully.
And the new problem for me was,
I had just had my son,
he was about four or five months old, I believe.
And I just, business just kept creeping into my mind.
And I was like, man, I don't,
I just wanna fucking be in the moment with my wife and kid.
I don't wanna be thinking about who my next guest is,
or how am I gonna,
I just didn't wanna, I wanted to be able to shut that down.
And so, and I started getting real panicky
because as the show's growing, people see that,
and then people wanna be around you
and not all those people are good
and a lot of people wanna fucking use you and,
and, and hey, Oh really? I'm, I know I haven't talked in 20 years,
but now I want to be your best friend again. Hey, how's it going? You know,
like all that shit just started getting to me and I felt super fucking guilty.
Like, man, I'm sorry. Like I cannot shout out another nonprofit.
I can't shout out another business.
Like I, I do everything I can to bring awareness
to like good shit and businesses
and lift veteran businesses on my show.
And like, that's what I can do.
Other than that, like you're just taking time
from my family.
But I always felt guilty saying that.
And which is weird because I didn't have somebody,
I never had somebody like Rogan to amplify my business.
I had to do this shit by my fucking self.
But I know how hard it is.
And so I wanted to help guys elevate their business
by bringing exposure to them by the show.
But then it just, nothing's ever enough.
You know, and you feel guilty, like saying,
I'm sorry. And resentful if you're being used.
Yeah, and so I did that and it did.
It got me back in the moment with my family.
It gave me, it gave me like this new ability to be like,
I'm not doing that, I'm sorry.
And it made me realize like,
Sean, they don't give a fuck about you.
They just care about what you can do for them.
And if you can't do it, guess what?
They're gonna go to the next person.
And then they're gonna go to the next person.
And then it's not about you,
it's just what you can give them.
And most of the time.
And so it helped me like come to peace
with a lot of that stuff and business.
And then although alcohol funny, I have a bar over here,
but.
I do too.
I have a huge bar.
But yeah, you know, it helped.
You have a huge bar.
I didn't even notice that. I'm so tuned out from alcohol that I don't, I know, it helped. You have a huge bar, I didn't even notice that.
I'm so tuned out from alcohol that I don't really notice.
Yeah, I get a lot of shit about that
because I'm always talking about sobriety, but you know.
Well, it's a measure of how little control it has over you.
I can't watch someone smoke a cigarette
without my mouth watering.
Really?
Even though it's been 10 years, yeah, 10 years today.
I quit 10 years today.
Congrats.
Thank you.
And I've lost interest.
I tried to smoke a cigarette last year.
I thought, I'll start smoking again.
Why do I care?
Because I do love smoking,
but I didn't want to actually at all.
But for some reason,
if I watch someone smoke a cigarette,
I'm like, oh, it's so cool.
It's so diseased, but I feel that way.
It's Pavlovian.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But let's get back to you.
I don't like talking about me, but...
That was wonderful.
I'm so glad that you did, actually.
That's wonderful.
Well, thank you.
I do think, as I often say to people around me, the one person I know I don't trust is me.
And I think it's important to say that.
And I did do hallucinogens as a kid.
I didn't have any positive experience at all.
I learned anything other than the value of sanity.
But one thing I did learn was, for sure I learned at like 14 or 15, was there's a lot
of stuff floating around inside you that I personally don't have any interest in being
in touch with because it's, but I think it's important to know or to have some sense of what you're
capable of.
Not be ashamed of it, but just know, like under certain circumstances.
The one thing that drives me insane is people are like, I would never do that.
Well, I think whatever it is you would do that under certain circumstances.
Don't lie about yourself or to yourself, you know? That's a damn good point.
Well, I think it's a blessing to know that
and to survive something like that.
Why did you survive?
I mean, I'm sure you've pondered this a lot, but-
Oh yeah, I mean, well, I mean, I chalk it up to,
I chalk it up to God and Jesus,
and which we talked about that at breakfast.
And there's all these weird,
I used to call them coincidences.
Now I don't call them coincidences.
I think it was just how I'm supposed to play out.
I agree with that strongly.
So that is the one cool thing about making it past 40 is you start to see how non-random
everything is.
You know, when you're a kid, it really is like driving fast at night.
There's just like lights going past you and you don't, it's hard to interpret what they
are and like everything's just happening and like for the first time.
But with age, I mean, the downside is you do have to wake up to take a leak, like that's
real, I can tell you.
But the upside is so much better than the downside is you do have to wake up to take a leak. That's real, I can tell you. But the upside is so much better than the downside.
At least at this stage of my life,
you start to see coincidences, really?
I don't think so.
Doesn't mean you're conspiracy nut.
It's just like you notice patterns.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They are coincidences.
No, no, no.
That's such a childish thing to tell yourself.
You don't realize how childish it is because you're a child, but with age, you're like,
okay, kids.
And that's why young people, they can't deal with that, actually.
Even the open-minded ones.
Certainly, it's true of me.
When I was younger, I was like, conspiracy nut, crazy.
You know what I mean?
Oh, Kennedy was assassinated as part of a plot.
You know, it's like, okay.
I didn't believe any of that. You know what I mean? Oh, Kennedy was assassinated as part of a plot. You know, it's like, OK.
I didn't believe any of that.
Yo, UFOs, you know, whatever.
But you learn the hard way, or you learn inevitably,
in any case with age, how little you understand,
how unreliable you are, how narrow your field of vision is.
You learn a lot, and it's good to know.
Yeah.
Yeah, I would recommend that psychedelic treatment to everyone.
It's just been, it's so powerful.
I've seen it change so many lives.
Well, it's hard to argue with the fruit the tree bears.
I had the opposite experience.
I was like, whoa, I'm never doing that again.
Yeah.
I think it all comes down to intentions with that stuff.
100%.
And children should not be taking hallucinogenic drugs.
What?
Again, it's just time and place.
It's just different time, different place,
different attitudes.
People don't understand how much things have changed.
Even I forget.
Like the current—and I'm not even judging in either direction.
I'm just saying like the current attitudes that we have as of mid-May 2024 have evolved
to this point.
These are not the attitudes that we had 20 years ago or 40 years ago.
They're just not.
They don't bear any resemblance to those attitudes. So are not the attitudes that we had 20 years ago or 40 years ago. They're just not.
They don't bear any resemblance to those attitudes.
So things do change a lot.
And when you're marinating in it, it's the frog in the hot water metaphor.
You don't feel it.
But you look back and you're like, really?
How did people do stuff like that?
Because everyone thought it was fine.
Or they did.
Or there was an attested agreement not to talk about it or whatever.
But attitudes have changed so much in this country that you can't even talk about it because it doesn't sound, first
of all, it doesn't sound real.
And it's just horrifying by current standards, but I have lived it so I can say we have very
different attitudes than we used to have for good and bad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right. So back to you
You got into journalism. Yeah, when did you really see your career just start to I've never had a career thought of myself as having
A career. I don't think that now I never will think that I don't I don't I'm not a career person and I reject the whole idea of careers
And I just don't I wasn't raised like that. No one had a career.
It's like we just didn't think that way.
It's just like, are you doing something interesting or not?
That was just kind of the only measure.
And do you think it's meaningful?
Do you enjoy doing it?
So I have always felt that way.
I have had a lot of different jobs within journalism, like almost pretty much every
job you could have.
And I've been better at some than others and enjoyed some more than others, but they've
all been branches of the same tree.
And my views on it have changed a lot.
I began, began just because of my father and my great grandfather was a well-known journalist
also.
So I really felt like, well, this is what I was made to do.
And it's honorable.
No one's more honorable than my father,
so this is inherently honorable.
Bring information to people, being their eyes and ears,
and in some cases, their voice.
You know, what's better than that?
Like, there's nothing to be ashamed about in what I do.
I've always thought that my whole life.
And then you look around and you're like,
every other person who does this job
is a total piece of shit actually.
And I've concluded that because it's true.
When did you realize that?
Oh, 2016.
Okay. When the world changed.
Yeah.
And you hate to give Trump credit for it.
I love Trump personally, but he's not worthy of that credit.
It was, there are a lot of things going on
and he was the embodiment of a lot of different things.
We're all sort of people, but we're also symbols kind of, and that's true of him as well.
But whatever, everything changed that year, and particularly the world that I lived in,
which was permanent Washington.
I moved there at 15 or 16, and in 2016, I was 47.
So that's a lifetime.
And I had strong views about a million different things.
I was paid to have strong views.
And they came to me naturally.
But one thing I never really did was question the foundations of the system.
I questioned neocon foreign policy in 2002 when I went to Iraq to see the outcome of
this thing I had advocated for.
That changed my view completely.
But my views on the whole system were in place from childhood up until 2016 to an embarrassing
degree.
I just didn't understand that a lot of the things that I was living around and participating
in were really wrong.
And I heard people say that, but I thought they were dumb.
And like, what do you know?
You don't live here.
I live here.
I raised my kids here.
Like, this is my city.
I know everybody.
I know the city, like the physical city and the culture of the city.
I know it really well.
And I loved it.
And I thrived there.
And I came there with like no record of success or college degree or like anything impressive.
And I did fine.
You know, I sent my kids to private school and I was fairly successful.
And waiters and Valley Parkers are nice to me.
And like, you know, you just sort of live a comfortable, happy life in a really beautiful
place.
The residential parts of Northwest DC are really beautiful and not that expensive, actually.
It's just a nice life.
Nice people.
I loved it, and I defended it relentlessly for decades.
And then in one year, I came to see a lot of it.
And it wasn't about Trump.
It was about the reaction that he provoked.
It was so unreasonable and defensive and low.
It was low.
And none of the things that they claimed to believe in,
they actually believed in.
It was purely self-protection.
They couldn't defend the way things worked.
Trump was not especially articulate
in diagnosing the problems at all.
He didn't understand the problems.
He wasn't from there.
I'm from there.
Like I know what the problems are, or I thought I did.
But Trump would say things and they would freak out and they would refuse to give a
legitimate answer.
This is my neighbors I'm talking about and my friends and the whole city.
And I was like, I'd never seen anything like it.
I lost all respect.
I was like, you're really smart people.
These are high IQ people.
These are achievers.
These people want to the top schools, which I did not go to, but I'd certainly been
around it a lot, long enough to lose respect for it.
But these are capable people and also nice people who love their children and are in
mostly successful marriages and make sure their lawns are mowed.
And like, they're not bad people.
They're good people.
They don't spray graffiti.
They're not jumping the turnstiles.
They're not raping old ladies.
These are the pillars of our society and they can't answer basic questions like why are
we doing it this way?
And they refused to and they attacked him in very unreasonable ways without even rebutting
his critique.
And I have no respect for that at all, not as a conservative or or even an American just as a man who's got rational faculties
I'm like, that's not good enough. Actually, I catch you doing something and you attack me. You don't even answer my charge
You're disgusting to me and I noticed this on many different levels immigration NATO. I
Never questioned NATO a single time. My dad worked with NATO. It's like NATO. They defend us from the Soviets
I never questioned NATO a single time. My dad worked with NATO.
It's like, NATO, they defend us from the Soviets.
And I never one time thought, well, wait a second.
The Soviet Union collapsed on my honeymoon, which was August of 1991.
I was in Bermuda in Tucker's town, and it collapsed.
I remember reading it on the beach at the Mid Ocean Club in the New York Times International
Herald Tribune Digest or whatever.
Wow, a failed coup.
It collapsed. That was failed coup, it collapsed.
That was 1991, this was 2016.
I'm not good at math, but a long time later, and we still have this defense alliance to
prevent the Soviets from invading Germany when the Soviets don't exist and Russia's
not going to invade Germany, doesn't want to.
What's the point of NATO?
Which is totally fair question, which I'd never thought of.
And Trump in his like artistic ways, like, why don't we have NATO?
Holy shit. people went crazy
What you do Putin tool or whatever? It's like no, I never mentioned Putin. Why do we have NATO?
Like what's the answer answer the fucking question and
They couldn't and that that right there. I'd never had a single opinion about NATO other than NATO good. Mm-hmm
Not one opinion. I didn't know much about NATO
and opinion about NATO other than NATO good. Not one opinion. I didn't know much about NATO. And it was the defenders of NATO's inability
to defend NATO that, to me, it sounds obscure,
but it's not obscure.
It's central.
I didn't know that.
I now do.
But that, to me, was a turning point in my life.
I was like, why can't you answer the question?
Why are you getting mad?
I have a lot of children, so I'm familiar with these phenomena. Right?
Did you know what I mean?
You ask a straightforward question,
I demand a straightforward answer.
Period.
And if you're lying to me, the question becomes, why?
Why are you lying?
Why are you attacking me?
I didn't do anything.
Why are we threatening to kill Julian Assange
or trying to put Ed Snowden in prison?
Yeah.
You're the criminal, actually.
He's the one who told me that you were a criminal.
He's not the criminal.
You are.
That's my opinion about life, not just about the US government.
Anyway, so that completely changed my view.
Because Trump was involved, who again, I just say it again because I mean it, I love Trump
personally. I know him quite well and you know long before he ran for president
Because I was in the media and I've always enjoyed him, you know, and I do to this day
But it was not about Trump. It was much deeper than that and it was very easy to be like, oh, you're a Trump sycophant
Well, of course, I'm not a sycophant to anybody
Other than maybe my wife. I'm an enthusiastic sycophant.
Fine.
That's allowed.
But I'm not an ass kisser, and I never have been.
So that's not a fair response.
The question hangs in the air.
What's the point of NATO?
And a million other questions.
Why not have a border wall or whatever?
And they had no answer for any of it, and they were wildly defensive.
And in a period of just a few months, I lost all respect for them and all desire to live in that city,
which was shocking because I'm on the record.
I can just tell you what my views were.
And I express them a lot in print and on television.
This is a great city with great people.
We make mistakes and Head Start doesn't really work.
And I got it.
Federal government's too big.
I agree.
But fundamentally, these are people who are trying their best and they're pretty impressive
people and they make mistakes and these programs last too long.
But they're not evil.
They're trying hard.
They work hard and they're smart.
And in a few month period, I was like, actually, no, that's true.
They're not good people at all, at all.
Because now we all know that this whole enterprise is bullshit and they refuse to get better.
They refuse to admit it.
And as a former alcoholic, I know the process of just admit it, just admit it.
I'm kind of a loser.
It's all right.
You can say that because it's true when everyone knows it already.
Just admit it and get better.
They refused.
They're still defending the Iraq war.
They're still defending the indefensible Vietnam war. Still pretending we didn't know the Japanese were going to
attack Pearl Harbor. There's too many lies. I can't deal with this many lies, actually.
And it's very unhealthy to live in a society that is defined by lies. It corrodes your
soul. It's bad for you. You go to hell, actually. You're living in hell when you live that way.
And all of this came to me in this short period of time, and I couldn't quite articulate it,
but I felt it so strongly it affected my sleep.
And it really just changed my life forever.
And so I would say, for the better, for the happier, but it's a burden to have all of
your preexisting beliefs explode in a short period of time.
It's like, wow.
It's like being kicked out of a cult.
You're like, I can't believe I live there.
You know what I mean?
I think a lot of us know what you mean at this point.
And I have to say, and you don't talk about yourself,
but it's especially relevant to you and men like you
who went and were asked to risk your lives and to
kill other human beings and to really give up everything for the sake of this thing.
And the disillusionment that I have noticed in men like you, who've really done a lot
for this enterprise and then come to the obvious conclusion that it's not exactly what it seems.
I can't imagine living with that.
I honestly can, and I sort of get the suicide rate.
I'm just being honest.
I get it.
Yeah.
I mean, how much of that, I know this is a very complicated subject that you're deeply
involved in, but how much of the despair and up to and including suicide comes from guys realizing, wow, maybe that wasn't worth it.
It's a hard question to answer because there's so much going on.
Yeah, I believe that.
You know what I mean? It definitely plays a role, but it's not the whole world.
I believe that. You know, there's just, they're now calling,
especially for like special operations guys
that have just done it over and over,
like we were talking about my interview with Tom Spooner,
guys done over a thousand hits,
meaning he's hit a thousand plus targets.
I mean, a thousand?
I think it's totally disgusting to do that to anybody,
to ask any man to do that.
That's too much.
I'm sorry.
And then they kick you out.
But it's what you did, it's how you did it,
it's addiction to adrenaline,
it's culture of being in that life.
It's a very toxic fucking culture.
It's the competitiveness that's ing. It's a very toxic fucking culture.
It's the competitiveness that's ingrained in you
from the time you show up day one, week one of training.
It's who's the fastest runner?
Who's the fastest swimmer?
Who's the best shot?
Who's killed the most people?
Who's gone on the most ops?
Who's gone on the most high profile ops?
Who's got the most jumps?
It's all that, all that, all the time.
Every day you have to prove yourself to be there,
which we were talking at breakfast about
egomaniacs in my community.
And I've thought a lot about this
and I think that's where it stems from.
I think it is the competitive nature is
ingrained in you and
in
striving for perfection on day one week one of training when you're going to
To become a special operator though, and I do
That's so clearly true and nicely put, you obviously thought about it a lot.
I would just revise something that I said at breakfast,
which was to describe people like that as egomaniacs
or narcissists.
I do think, this is so obvious,
it's just coming to me in the last few years,
but like egomania is really insecurity masked.
You know, people who are comfortable with themselves,
who really are deeply,
first of all, you can feel it immediately.
Someone is actually kind of content inside.
It conveys very, it's a smell and I can smell it like that.
And it's the opposite of egomania.
People like that do not, like the man you're talking about, Tom Spooner, is that correct?
So I watched that.
That guy, just through the screen,
I could feel that that man's like,
has achieved a high level of contentment or peace,
or he's wrestled with things
and settled a lot of things inside him.
So I could just feel that coming off,
just on the screen, I could feel that.
I don't know if that's true.
I don't know, I never met him,
but I got that vibe right through my phone watching that.
Because I think it's that obvious.
And it is the opposite of the way that people we describe
as egomaniacs behave, which is constantly reminding you
how great they are.
Well, you know, someone who actually thinks
he's done an okay job or is at peace inside
is never going to remind you that he's great
because it doesn't occur to him.
He's focused on you or whatever.
He doesn't need to do that.
Like what?
You're compensating. You feel like shit if you're doing him. He's focused on you or whatever. He doesn't need to do that. Like what? You're compensating.
You feel like shit if you're doing that actually.
And competition makes you feel bad, of course.
Am I actually the fastest?
I don't know, you know?
That's why I have to tell you that I am.
And it's sad when you start to see it that way.
I don't like people who can't stop talking
about how great they are.
I actually hate that more than almost anything.
But in the last few years I've decided like,
no, you should feel sad for people like that.
And famous people, and SEALs, let's just be honest, are famous people.
They're celebrities in our culture.
They are universally loved and respected.
I mean, that's just true.
Was this kind of obscure thing that President Kennedy thought up, but now it's like a huge part of our culture.
They're Hollywood celebrities.
Like basically, same thing.
Famous people, for some reason, the more famous they get,
I've lived this among us my whole life, the more insecure they get.
It's so interesting.
The more they're praised, the more they feel insecure
about who they really are.
Maybe they don't believe.
I don't know what it is, but that is absolutely fine.
If you subject someone to constant adulation,
over time you'll make him hate himself.
I mean, it's just real.
Yeah, I think a lot of this comes from,
I've talked about this a lot of this comes from,
I've talked about this a lot before, but there's very few people that you meet in media
that are the same person that they are on camera is off.
Oh yeah.
Cause they're frauds.
You're one of them.
You're the same person.
I hope so.
And it's, it's refreshing to see. I them. You're, you're the same person. I hope so.
It's, it's refreshing to see. I don't have time to be more than one person.
Well, you know, it's, it's, it's, it's, I think a lot of people, like they, they,
they get to a certain point in life by being in character.
They wear a fucking costume.
They're a character.
It's a facade.
And then they get fucking trapped in that facade. No.
You know?
And they can't get out of it, and so there's nothing real about them.
Yes.
And now that they've found success through being a fucking character, now they're trapped
forever.
Well, that's why they have bad marriages, because the one thing that you can't, like
you'll never fool your wife. You
know what I mean? Like you'll never fool, you'll never impress her with that stuff ever.
She knows who you are. And what happens is, and I have a PhD in this, having seen it so
many times, the distance between how a man is treated in public and the way he's treated
at home becomes intolerable for him.
And I had a friend, a wonderful man,
a very famous person, who ended up leaving his great wife,
he was in his 50s, one of the hottest,
55-year-old wife around, and super nice.
It was the kind of thing where it's like,
why would you leave her?
And I was with him in private one time time years ago and he's like, going back
to my wife. And I was like, he literally moved out. He was like maybe 53 or 54 and he moved
in with like a 29 year old. The kind of thing where everyone's like, what is that? You know,
don't do that. And he did it and he had to go back to his wife and he's like, the amount
of shit I'm going to have to eat. I mean I Mean for real I've humiliated her my daughters want to kill me
But I'm going back because I really miss her and I was like, why did you?
Do that and I thought he was gonna say I was younger and I was dumb
Er and I thought he's a cuz she's just full smoke show and she did shit to me in the sack
You can't even believe and you know, not one word about that. Nothing to do with sex
and she did shit to me in the sack, you can't even believe, and you know,
not one word about that, nothing to do with sex.
He literally said, when I get home,
my wife is like, have you taken out the trash?
This is exactly what he said.
And all day people kiss my ass and treat me like a celebrity
and I get home, my wife is like, okay,
Mr. Celebrity Guy, and he goes, I couldn't deal with it.
And this young woman, it wasn't even,
it had nothing to do with the sex,
I mean, she was hot or whatever, but that doesn't last, right? It's not that important really.
She treated me like I was Jesus and I just wanted that.
How self-aware is that?
Wow.
That's a high level of self-awareness that he was able to say that out loud and admit
that.
It's cool.
That's so embarrassing, but he admitted it.
And I've never forgotten that.
There's something about flattery that is way more destructive than criticism.
I won't have it in my world, like at all,
not one word of it.
Any flattery, you're done.
Criticism is fine as long as it's sincere
and meant to edify rather than tear down.
Constructive.
Constructive, that's right.
But flattery is by its nature sinister.
It's dishonest and it's meant to weaken you.
And nothing weakens you faster than the things that feel good.
Obviously, you know, this is a former partier,
but flattery is a kind of moral cocaine.
You think it makes you strong,
but actually it's hollowing you out inside.
So anyway, that stuff wrecks your marriage because your wife is never long-term
Gonna go along with that at all
Yeah, yeah, so don't get wrapped up in your own bullshit. Oh, I would be even more psych
I mean, I think it's such a threat that I would just be absolutely like there's all kinds of things you tolerate
that I would just be absolutely like, there's all kinds of things you tolerate with people around you, work for you, your friends, your family, you know, of course, people are flawed,
they do flawed things, fine.
But you have to decide there are a few things you're not going to tolerate.
And one is like crazy addiction, because crazy addiction carries people into places that
they, well, as we both know, you know, it changes them in ways that are hard to fix
while they're still partying.
And the second you can never tolerate is flattery, ever.
It is an absolute threat to you.
Any ass kissing is a threat to you.
It's better to get punched in the face than be flattered because there's no good motive
for that.
Someone's lying right to your face in the stealthiest, most feline way.
Oh, you're so great.
Oh, you're so great.
You're so great. Oh, you're so great.
You're so great.
If anyone says anything like that to me ever,
no, you're done.
Good for you.
Well, no, I just did, purely.
And luckily, I come from a family
where compliments are just not a thing.
Love is a thing.
I love you is a thing.
Honesty is a thing, but ass kissing is not a thing in our
family at all.
Yeah. Good. I want to go back to media. And so one of the things that I really wanted
to chat with you about is when did you kind of notice the weaponization of mainstream
media start to happen?
I mean, you know, it's like you're too close to things.
You don't get it at all.
I didn't realize how totally corrupt that there is no ideal at the center of it that
in any conceivable way benefits the public, the public's interest,
democracy, any of that.
Informing the public so they can make informed decisions on who to vote for.
That is the last thing from anyone's mind.
It's actually the most corrupt institution in the United States by far.
What do I know?
It's the only one I've worked in.
But I can say it's fundamentally corrupt.
There's no non-corrupt part, period.
And I realized that incrementally over time, it's the kind of thing I'm still realizing.
I don't consume anything, period, anything at all.
I don't want it in my head.
I don't want flattery in my head, and I don't want lies in my head.
Of course, they both managed to end up there, but I have a pretty tight screen, because
I just don't want that.
So yeah, it's totally and utterly corrupt.
And that's why I'm coming to this late in life and I'm coming to a cold from working
in the institutional media for over 30 years to all of a sudden not in the last year.
And so there are a lot of things that are obvious to you and your viewers and that are
not obvious to me.
I'm just learning.
I'm like, wow.
I really do feel like the last Chinese soldier coming out.
I'm like, the war's over?
Really?
Everyone's like, yeah, it's been 20 years.
That's how I feel.
But I'm amazed by podcasts.
I just think talk about it on a likely vector for truth.
A podcast?
When podcasts first started, I mean, I was not even aware of it, of course,
because I'm such in a different world, but I became over time aware there was
things called podcasts, and I was like, well, that's not going to work,
because the one thing we know about information
is it's being diced into smaller pieces.
And ultimately, TikTok will be our only news source.
TikTok didn't exist.
But the idea that 15 seconds of video
would be your source of information, that seemed obvious,
because that was the trend line.
Shorter, faster, shallower, more pictures, fewer words, you know, those trends were really
obvious and they were real.
But the idea that people would sit and listen to something for like hours is the opposite
of what was happening in my world.
And I was like, who would listen to that?
Who would ever listen to that? Who would ever listen to that? Meanwhile, not only was the media, which is a source of all of our information, degrading
and becoming not only more corrupt but more obviously corrupt, but our educational system
was in like completely collapsed.
The humanities collapsed.
There's no education.
Like, none.
That's not an overstatement.
I have a lot of children.
They have a lot of friends.
I have young people work for me.
No one learns anything in college, like at all.
It's only in the humanities,
I'm sure electrical engineering is different,
veterinary school is different, you know,
but in the sort of broad middle of like,
I'm gonna take English history, communications, media,
you know, it's all fake.
And so that was happening,
and what I didn't perceive is that
all of that stuff was moving to podcasts.
I guess because I have such a dark and pessimistic temperament, thank you Scandinavia, I didn't, I assumed that because the products that people were consuming were getting worse, that people
had lost their desire for good products, I guess.
I guess I assumed that without thinking of it.
But it turned out that like, no, they were just getting it from a different place.
Like, there's a hunger to learn.
There's a hunger not to be lied to.
People can tell one's... They don't know exactly what the truth is.
I have no idea exactly what the truth is about anything.
But I know the direction it's coming from, and I definitely know lying.
And there's a natural human desire not to be lied to.
And to, like, what is that?
To understand things.
Curiosity is a human
thing curiosity died in the media they're now officially opposed to curiosity just asking
questions is a crime in fact it's my crime i have noticed just asking questions oh what
i will never be embarrassed to ask questions like sorry you can't make me embarrassed of asking
questions yeah my motive is irrelevant by the. My motive happens to be fairly pure.
I am interested.
But even if my motive was sinister,
it doesn't change the fact of it
that answering questions is never bad, period.
Whatever.
So as the mainstream media, the big media companies
were becoming just arms of the government
and just full North Korea media landscape.
Like no one knows anything.
It's all lies.
That is where we are.
I can say that with great authority, having worked there my whole life.
There was this incredible renaissance happening in the most unlikely of mediums, this podcast.
And not just about politics, but about history.
It's incredible.
I mean, there's no way if you go to Trinity College in Norfolk, Connecticut, where I went,
not an impressive place.
But even if you go to, I don't know, pick a school, Dartmouth, probably not going to
learn that much about legitimate history.
You can learn it instantly.
And podcasts, millions of people are.
You want to know about the fall of Rome, 470.
What happened?
Why did that happen?
Or just the details, the punic wars.
Name it, it's on there.
And then that is the world headquarters
of free thinking and honesty.
Man, of all the trends, and again,
this is right in my world, this is media, that's my world.
Of all the trends in the last 30 years,
that is the last one I would have predicted
and the most hopeful.
It's incredible.
How do you like doing it?
Well, I absolutely love it, because it's how I grew up.
Do you like podcasting better than?
I've done a total of two podcasts in my life.
I mean, I've been on, well, in the last year,
I'd never really been on.
First of all, I work for a big media company.
We have our own world of promotions or media relations.
I think the last company I worked for called it that, but it's just the PR department.
And we have our own way of doing things, and it's a huge company, a billion, multi-billion
dollar company, and they have a way of doing it.
And all these 28-year-old girls are telling you, we've got to do an interview with New
York Times Magazine, You know, whatever.
So I'd never done podcasts. Like podcasts, that's not even on their radar.
They didn't even know that existed, really.
They thought like Esquire, where I used to write,
or New York Times Magazine,
they thought that was really impressive.
It's not impressive at all.
No one reads that crap.
No one believes it.
The people who do, you don't care about
because they're dumb by definition.
They read the New York Times and believe it.
What?
You'd have to be like a pretty delusional low IQ character to be in that position right
now. No, I'm serious. I've written a lot for the New York Times. I used to read the New
York Times every day, but it's absurd and everyone knows it's absurd. And if you don't
know it's absurd, then I don't care about your opinion. I'm not even going to argue
that with you. So I had never done podcasts really. And I did like a hunting podcast in Maine once
because I knew the guy or whatever.
I'd never done podcasts.
So the last year I've done all these podcasts and I loved it.
It was so fun.
And it was, it was fun because it's exactly how I grew up.
Like this is like the most natural thing.
This is how I grew up.
This is what we did for entertainment.
Sit around the table and talk about what you think and what you've read and be as honest as you can be.
Like one of the, I hate to say this,
I guess I'm not always saying this,
but one of the beauties of growing up
as a young child with like no women in the house,
you can say whatever you want.
There's no one to offend.
You know what I mean?
It's like how I grew up.
So you just say whatever you want.
And you can be as honest as you want.
Like there's just dudes, you know?
It's like, are you going to offend your dad?
No, probably not.
What has he seen?
Are you going to offend your little brother?
Who cares?
You can just really be honest.
And I love that.
Like the happiest times of my life.
And our family is that way.
And we have exceedingly long dinners.
We play games at the end.
It's just fun and everyone's like, everyone can say exactly what they think.
I've always lived that way at home.
So a podcast is like not different from that, really.
And so I've done two episodes.
So it took me, you know, I'm very much a non-genius.
So it takes me a while
to like figure out the obvious.
And after a year of doing like cable news interviews
on the internet, which did fine, you know, it's fun,
I like interviewing people, it finally occurred to me
like the most fun I've had in the last year,
I've done two things that I've really enjoyed
since getting fired.
One was being able to travel around to different countries
and interview people there.
I couldn't do that because I was stuck in a studio every night.
I really love that, so I want to keep doing that, and I am.
And the second thing I've really enjoyed is going on other people's podcasts.
I just enjoyed it.
You know, it's just fun.
And why is that not fun? It's fun.
And why don't I do that?
And why don't I do it like at why don't I do it at my actual dining room table
in my barn, where my son's engagement party was,
or where my family actually eats.
Why not do that?
And I've had a makeup artist my whole life, as I told you.
And that's a little embarrassing to admit that.
Maybe since I've been with my kids,
your dad wears makeup when they were little.
But why do that?
I probably should be ashamed of how I look,
but I'm actually not really.
I'm married to the same girl, I don't really care.
And so why not just do exactly what I would do anyway?
And we've always had, we don't have TV at our house
and we don't go to the movies or we don't,
like our entertainment is meals.
Like that's always been our entertainment, always.
And we take them really seriously.
Always have people for dinner,
and we always have 10, 12 people at the table.
It's not, you know, not super exciting,
but for us, that's our entertainment.
That's what we do.
And that's what we've always done.
Since the day, week we were married, we've done that.
And that's, as I've noted, exactly how I grew up.
So why not just do that?
Like, why is that not great? It is great. Oh, I've only, exactly how I grew up. So why not just do that? Like, why is that not great?
It is great.
Oh, I've only done it twice.
Okay, I interviewed Aaron Rodgers, who I loved.
He's a really good guy.
And I interviewed a friend of mine called Dave Smith,
who's a comedian, but kind of a really smart guy,
who has the same instincts I have about a lot of things.
And I've just done two and I have loved it.
And I'm doing three a week for the foreseeable future
and why not?
Incredible.
Well, I mean, I always, I don't always,
but I usually get to the obvious conclusion last.
I start with like, let's do something really elaborate
and unlikely and probably certain to fail.
And then like over time, you're like,
you know, probably didn't need to do that.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I do.
I think that about the last thing I'll say,
I can't stop talking.
That's one of my main faults, but I always think that,
I always, you know, you see these numbers and like,
no one's dating, much less getting married,
much less having kids and like like men and women don't
understand each other.
It's all real.
It's like the central tragedy of our time.
But I always think it's kind of not that hard.
Like does she smell good?
Is she nice?
She have cute butt, in your opinion.
This is a very subjective question.
Do you find her attractive? Probably just like if she's a decent person,
you'd probably just marry her and make the commitment
and try hard and conceive a bunch of kids.
That's actually not that hard either, having done it.
And like, it's just not hard.
It's like animals do this and they're like pretty happy.
So just like take that route.
Don't overthink it.
You know what I mean?
Yep, I do.
A little bit ago, you were talking about all the lies
that we had, I mean, with COVID,
the media, Iraq.
I mean, Iraq alone, you know,
I've heard you talk about 9-11 a little bit.
I'd love to dive in on that, but with building seven.
But I mean, even Iraq, I mean, I was all about it when we were there.
I thought we were there for the right reasons.
I think the whole country thought, at least at the beginning, that we were there for the
right reasons.
And then, you know, and then, I mean, I wasn't a big picture guy, I was a, hit this target right in front of
you guy.
And now looking back and seeing Cheney's ties to Halliburton and for those that don't know,
Halliburton was the biggest logistics company.
It was the only logistics company to my knowledge that was, I mean, they did, they built the
barracks, they built the chow halls, they
cooked the food, they cleaned the shitters, they supplied the shitters, they did vehicle
fuel, they did the laundry, they did every logistical thing you can possibly imagine.
They basically built an entire city's infrastructure out. And when you look at that, when you look back at that, and nothing was really accomplished
there other than pulling Saddam out, then you start looking at 9-11, which could have been prevented.
And what isn't a fucking lie?
Well, you know, I would say from, you know, the summer of 1914 until present, you know, really the modern era, the beginning
of the First World War till now, most of the big perceptions that we have about that are
wrong at every sort of stage.
So I don't know the answer to most of the questions.
Where I'm going with this, I mean, even, I just interviewed this guy.
He was a, he's an Afghan resistance fighter.
Yeah.
And I brought him on, and he is telling us,
and this has been confirmed by another CIA targeter,
which is gonna be confirmed,
it's leading down the whole rabbit hole of interviews,
we're now giving the Taliban $40 million a week.
Did you know that?
I'm not surprised at all.
$40 million a week.
We spent 20 years, 20 plus years fighting over there,
the Taliban, Al Qaeda, and now just on the drop of a hat,
40 million a week, which we'll find out in a later interview,
it's actually upwards of 87 million a week.
Yeah, I mean, it's-
Everything has been a fucking lie.
Yeah, it's endless and yeah, I mean,
I have thoughts about every single thing you said.
I mean, I guess the most obvious response is,
well, let's start declassifying some documents.
Why are there any 9-11?
What was that, actually?
I don't know the answer.
I have a lot of theories about it.
I was not fighting any wars.
Of course, I was just a journalist, but I was definitely as- I was paying close attention
in Washington and in various locations around the world to how that unfolded at the
time.
But why in the world would any 9-11 document remain classified?
Yeah.
And thousands are.
And the fact that they are has stymied a series of lawsuits by the families of people who
killed a 9-11 against the Saudi government.
Now, whether those suits are justified or not, I have no idea, but I really don't know
what I think about all of that.
I suspect there's a lot of lying there, too.
But what's the possible rationale in keeping any of that classified?
And the truth is, and this is true in our private lives as well as in our country's
life, secrecy abets dishonesty, of course.
It's like, I don't want my wife to see my phone, why?
Why?
You know what I mean?
A buddy of mine once said to me,
have you heard of Life360?
And I was like, yeah, the thing where all your family members,
he goes, yeah, my wife tried to get me on that,
no fucking way.
And I was like, why?
Well, it's just no one's business,
it's an invasion of privacy.
I started laughing. We were of privacy. I started laughing.
We're not having choice.
I started laughing.
I said, wow.
You're, what?
And by the way, I love privacy.
You know, I do.
I think privacy is a prerequisite to humanity.
Like if no privacy, you can't be human.
I believe in privacy.
However, secrecy is a slightly different thing
and a sinister thing, actually. Why
in a democracy would we have big secrets? Particularly decades down the road or 80
years down the road in the case of the Kennedy assassination, 61 years down the road. Well,
of course, the only reason is to keep misdeeds hidden. That's the only reason, period. That's
sources and methods, sorry. Anyway, let's just declassify it and find out.
And of course, that will never happen because there is deception at the heart of that.
Now I don't know exactly why I have some thoughts on it, but I don't know if they're true or
not, so I'm not going to articulate them.
But there's definitely still a lot of lying about that.
And people sense it.
And whether they're right in their specific theories or not, I can't say, but
they're right to be very suspicious of 9-11.
Absolutely.
And we can prove that because there are many thousands of documents still classified.
That is proof that there's something amiss, that there's lying.
Period.
It's true of the Kennedy assassination.
It's true of everything that remains hidden from us.
What could possibly be the pretext for hiding
what our government is doing if it is in fact our government?
If this is an exercise in self-government,
if this is whatever you want to call it,
constitutional republic, democracy, whatever,
if the people rule, what possible justification
could you have from hiding something from me?
Because it's my government.
Well, of course, the answer is because it's not your government.
It belongs to the people who run it.
The organization exists for its own sake,
not for yours. You just pay for it. And that justifies revolution right there. Now, I'm not
rooting for revolution. Don't want one. A lot of people will die. I don't know if it'll work.
They rarely improve anything. They leave lasting scars. I'm very anti-revolution. However,
as an academic matter, you have the groundwork for one, because the system itself is based on a lie,
and the lie is that the government serves the people,
and that, of course, is not true.
It oppresses the people and uses them as cannon fodder
and as bank accounts for its own sake.
And that's not a system that can continue very long
because it's fundamentally rotten.
I want to dive into that.
I don't want to believe any of this,
but the evidence has convinced me.
I've heard you talk several times on building seven.
And I never looked into that until,
until right before this interview,
just because of time.
And so that building got reported being down 26 minutes
before it actually fell.
And you can't-
Totally normal.
Yeah, right.
There's a woman on BBC-
Self conspiracy theorist.
There's a woman on TV talking on BBC,
talking about-
Oh, I've seen it.
Yeah, talking about how the building is already down,
has already collapsed and it's right behind her.
Well, let me just say-
26 minutes later, the building collapsed.
What do you think that is?
Well, first of all, how dare you for noticing?
It's really your fault for noticing that, I think.
And I think you're a bad person for noticing it, just to be clear.
That's the official position of Washington.
Shut up.
I don't have the answer, of course.
I'm not a structural engineer.
A lot of people think what happened to Building 7 seems, a lot of structural engineers have
written this and think that seems impossible.
It seems impossible to me too, but I don't know.
All I know is that in the case that I described with NATO and Trump, if your answer to a sincere
question like how did that happen is shut up.
It's to attack me for asking the question that I know you're rotten.
I know you're serving evil.
I mean, that's the hallmark of it.
You're attacking me for asking an obvious question?
Really?
Because I'm not a slave.
I don't work for you.
I'm a free man in a supposedly free country, therefore I have an inalienable right, which
is to say given by God right, to ask obvious questions or even non obvious questions any question
I want you can't attack me for that. You certainly can't punish me for it, but they will
So that just tells you that they're bad
period now how bad I
Don't know the answer to that in what ways are exactly are they bad?
I don't know but they've already showed me they are bad
So and those by the way are like people I know personally
and live near and whose bidding I did unwittingly for years.
So like I have a kind of bitterness and intensity
about my feelings on the subjects that are just real.
As I'm sure you do, cause you fought their wars.
I didn't fight their wars, I just watched.
It's enraging.
Yeah.
It's enraging. Yeah.
Do you, do you, I feel like we're being pushed into civil war.
Yes.
Oh, of course.
Who do you think is pushing?
I mean, it's all on instinct.
With the, with the weaponization of media, social media, bots, I mean, all this, all
the lies in the division, I mean,
of course, who do you think is pushing it?
Or are we already in it?
Well, we're already in it.
We're in definitely an undeclared conflict.
It's a conflict, of course.
This wrapping another country, you would see this was,
you know, strife of some kind.
I mean, who knows what to call it, but of course.
I mean, it's the oldest.
It is a strategy.
I think it's, I don't think it's ever fully articulated
anywhere by anybody, but it's a conspiracy
of like-minded instincts, as I noted at the beginning.
People from the same class, the beneficiaries
of our current system, understand what people all understand
intuitively, which is divide and conquer.
Fight amongst yourselves.
Hey, white guy, it's the black guy's fault.
Black guy, the white guy is impressing you.
Or whatever.
Racism is America's biggest problem.
Racism is not America's biggest problem.
That's for sure.
Or whatever.
The thing, or the Israel protests.
The biggest thing happening in America is a fight over a fight in a faraway country
No
Over a hundred thousand people have died of fentanyl this year like what?
And I'm taking position on the Israel thing
I'm coming at this from very limited interest actually, and I'm not against Israel like nice country to visit
I wish everybody well just in general general I do. I want to, try to.
But if you're telling me that that conflict
is the biggest thing happening in my country,
fuck you actually, because no it's not.
And that doesn't make me pro-Hamas or anti-Israel
or pro-Israel or pro-Hamas, it doesn't even matter.
Like I'm American, like what?
So if you're filling up my airwaves in my brain with that, first of all, you're not
serving my interests because you're not telling me about what's happening in my own country,
my own family.
And second, you're very likely trying to divert my attention, mislead me, scramble my priorities.
That cannot be my top priority because I'm not from that country.
My top priority is my family in this country.
And my family's been here hundreds of years.
I think I have a right to say that.
And you're trying to scramble my priorities.
You're trying to make me think that something that's not the most important thing is the
most important thing.
And why are you trying to do that?
And we can only guess, but it's bad.
It's sinister.
That is absolutely sinister.
And again, coming from the news business, a lifetime in it, I know that there's a reason.
I don't know what it is.
And I also don't know if the people pushing it know exactly what it is.
A lot of these things happen as they do in our daily lives on the basis of instinct,
not forethought.
I don't have a plan.
Well, I have no plans.
I never have any plans.
I'm not a planner.
I don't believe in planning. That's why I don't believe in careers. I don't believe in any. I never have any plans. I'm not a planner. I don't believe in planning.
That's why I don't believe in careers.
I don't believe in any of it.
That's not how my life has unfolded.
I'm not doing what I thought I would be doing.
God has a plan I don't, so I really feel that.
So I don't think that there is some conspiracy necessarily,
but there's a conspiracy of like-minded instincts.
I'm just guessing we've not talked about this,
but then I bear no anger toward transvestites
or transsexuals or whatever we're calling them at all.
I feel no anger at all.
I feel sadness.
And I actually don't even feel that much.
Other people's weirdnesses have never bothered me
because I grew up in a weird world.
But I know my reaction,
the first time somebody told me
that a man can become a woman,
I was like, that's fucking crazy, no.
First time somebody told me that a man can become a woman, I was like, that's fucking crazy.
No.
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Let's get back to the show.
And I'm sure you felt the same way.
I'm not mad at s***.
I'm just like, that actually can't happen.
It's not factually true.
There were a lot of people, some of whom I know,
who were like, yeah, that can happen.
So why did they think that and I thought what I thought?
Because we have different instincts actually.
Now who knows why?
Maybe it's genetic, maybe it's socialization.
I have no idea.
All I know is the world was divided,
as it is on so many issues,
into people who had one gut reaction
versus people who had another gut reaction.
And people who have a very specific gut reaction, which I think across the board is destructive,
let's destroy something, those people are in charge.
Let's break it, whether it's Ukraine or whatever.
They're into breaking things.
Not into breaking things at all.
I hate breaking things.
I hate vandalism.
I hate graffiti.
I hate watching beautiful buildings collapse from lack of care or attention.
I hate that.
I believe in preserving things and building things and creating things, making things.
I made this.
Here's what I made.
That's the highest level of expression.
And for some reason, we went up to this leadership class.
It's all about breaking shit.
Let's just get rid of it.
Let's just break it.
Oh, the grid.
Do you know how complex a power grid is?
You know how it took a hundred years
to figure out our fucking power grid.
Really smart people with specialties
you can't even understand.
Wattage, amperage, you don't know the difference.
AC, DC, you don't know the difference.
You don't know anything about electricity
and you're gonna replace our grid?
You don't know anything.
You have no skills.
That's a gut reaction I can't understand.
Like I approach everything with like a profound sense
of my own ignorance.
I don't know how that works.
So I'm not going to break it.
And so people with this weird and destructive instinct,
that's what it is.
It's not a conspiracy.
An instinct have taken over all the levers of power.
And I think it's like a spiritual force.
That's my personal view.
I can't prove it, but I really believe it.
But maybe it's not, maybe it's something else,
but that's what I perceive.
Well, that's what I think it is too.
I mean, nothing anymore makes any damn sense.
I'm convinced that when we die,
we will see that everything that we know or think we know
is a lie.
I totally agree.
Yeah.
Well, I know that that's true.
I can tell you how I know.
But I do know that, that when we die, we'll know.
It'll all make sense.
I know that for whatever it's worth so
Sorry, but um, yes, that is absolutely true when we die and I was talking to a friend of mine
Recently who was like a new friend of mine, but I really love that's a cool thing about this moment
It's like you're meeting all these people who are so deep and honest. It's like it's wonderful
It almost makes up for everything sad,
but I was talking to someone recently and he said to me,
he goes, I'm not excited to die.
I've got all these kids, whatever.
I don't want, no one wants to die,
but kind of psyched to like understand what all this is.
I've had this conversation several times.
Oh yeah.
I feel that way.
You do?
Totally.
I'm not looking forward to death at all
I'm happen not to be afraid of it want the answers. I do know what makes sense
Yeah, and I know I know is a dead certain fact that that awaits
So do you think that?
do you think that the
Kind of pushing us into
kind of pushing us into civil war scenario,
do you think that is to distract us, or do you think that's to dismantle
the entire United States, or both?
Again, I don't know that anyone anywhere,
I was with Klaus Schwab this winter.
You were with Klaus Schwab?
I was just trying to casually drop that, Sean. I was with Klaus Schwab. Klaus Schwab this winter. You were with Klaus Schwab? I was with him. I just tried to casually drop that, Sean.
I was with Klaus Schwab.
Klaus Schwab said to me, no, I was at an event in the Middle East he was at.
And whatever, I don't know Klaus Schwab, but I got to see him up close.
And he's like an idiot.
He's like an elderly idiot.
He seems a little senile, like doesn't have any idea what he's talking about at all. He's totally an elderly idiot. Seems a little senile, doesn't have any idea what he's talking about at all.
He's totally unimpressive.
And it was just another reminder that the closer you get,
like Toria Nuland, for example,
basically started the current war in Ukraine.
She's like this kind of sad, fat, dumb girl, actually.
And so the closer you get,
the more you realize that the people running things
are mediocre.
They're buffoons.
They have no idea what they're doing.
Tony Blinken?
I mean, really?
Anyway, no, I don't think there's a conspiracy.
I doubt they're smart enough to articulate it and write it down or anything like that.
But it's just like, again, they are weak people.
They are motivated by rage and envy.
They are not the people who built the current society that we live in.
Anything worth having, they did not build from our beautiful train stations to our power
grid to any of our infrastructure to Harvard University to our legal code to anything that's
great about America.
They didn't protect the national parks.
They didn't do what the yellows do.
They didn't create anything.
They're not capable of it.
And they're mad about it.
And they're mad in the way that primitive, envious people
are mad.
They don't celebrate beauty.
They destroy beauty.
You see this a lot.
It's one of the main motivators of evil, in my view.
And they just want to tear it down.
They just want to tear it down.
They're mad about it.
They couldn't have done that.
Dead white men.
Okay.
Who created our entire society, like everything,
all our founding documents, everything.
And they hate them most.
Why do they hate them actually?
Why would you be mad?
Why are you mad at James Madison?
Like he's long gone.
Thomas Jefferson owned slaves, okay.
Unlike Mohammed.
Or whatever, they come up with these pretexts
to justify their hate, but really it's just envy
Because they're not capable people they have no skills like Tony Blinken
Yeah, like Tony Blinken couldn't change a tire on your truck. He's a fucking idiot. Like actually it's not a surprise that he's mismanaged The world he's out there like playing guitar in Kiev, which he calls Kiev because he's just like it
he's like a child they all are and
They're mad about the fact
He's like a child. They all are.
And they're mad about the fact that they're fraudulent
and weak and helpless, actually.
Supply chain breaks down.
They all starve to death.
They know that.
And they're mad about it.
And so they want to wreck the things that others built.
This is like the oldest story there is.
You think that's what it is?
Of course.
It's why the vandals sacked Rome.
Of course.
You built this great.
It's why people spray graffiti on beautiful buildings in. Of course. You built this great, it's why people spray graffiti
on beautiful buildings in New York City.
You didn't build this, neither did your ancestors.
You're a fucking moron.
You couldn't build anything.
So you tear it down, of course.
It's the oldest impulse there is, vandalism.
It's all vandalism.
And vandalism is committed by Vandals.
And Vandals are by definition primitive.
And they may have gone to HBS, they may be rich,
but they're still primitives actually.
They're not capable of any of this.
That's why, and they have no appreciation for beauty
at all, they hate beauty.
It's the first thing, and look at their architecture,
it tells you they hate beauty.
Look at their modern art, it's anti-beauty,
it's ugly on purpose, because they don't have the ability to create something beautiful
because they're totally non-creative, actually.
And non-creative people are hostile to beauty.
Creative people love beauty.
Of course, it's what they strive to create themselves.
Just like self-made people are not afraid of going bankrupt because they can build it
again.
You're an entirely self-made person.
If someone took away this duty, they'd be like, let's build it again. You're an entirely self-made person. If someone
took away the studio, build another one. Because you would, because you know you have that
power. Inherited money people who've created nothing, they're living off the creation of
others, are terrified of losing anything because they know they can't replace it. So our leadership
class-
That's a fucking great point.
Our leadership class is basically
we're at the inherited money stage of empire
where we're all living on the labor of people
who are long dead and we know we can't recreate it.
We could not create our power grid right now.
We don't have enough engineers to do that.
And so all of these fantasies will soon crash and burn
and I would include EVs and AI
and all the other energy devouring acronyms
that we're now in love with, all
of those need to be powered by electricity.
Our current grid can't do it.
Not even close to do it.
I'm not good at math, but even I know that.
At some point, someone is going to need to move from the world of theoretical, AI, EVs,
probably stupid ideas, they're stupid justifications, climate change, whatever they are, going to
need to move to the field of physical engineering.
How do we create enough electricity?
How do these competing imperatives of stopping climate change, we can control the weather
because we're God.
How does that mesh with the idea that none of us are ever going to have to work again
because computers will make the decisions for us, AI?
They're going to need like practical answers and this class of people who run our country
are totally incapable of coming up with those answers because they have no skills.
And that's why they're destroying it.
It's so obvious what's happening.
Because history is the same story.
Anyway. Man.
Do you think we're going into World War III? Really close to it, as you know.
Really, really, really close.
The fact that anyone would even consider
getting within 1,000 miles of fucking around
with a nuclear exchange just shows you that the core impulse
here is suicide.
That's what all of this is.
That's why I personally think it's spiritual.
I think the word demonic is suddenly being overused.
It's everywhere because it's real.
But yeah, if you see a human movement that's anti-human, the push toward nuclear war for
its own sake is by definition anti-human, I would say.
AI is anti-human by definition.
Trans-generism is anti-human by definition.
Trans-humanism is anti-human.
Do people act against their own long-term interests?
Probably not, actually.
So it's probably not human.
I mean, I'm looking at this very very autistically, very simply trying to reduce
it to its most basic elements.
And like any movement that's anti-human is probably not human, is it?
Probably not.
Do dogs act against their own collective interest?
Do caribou?
Do porcupines?
Do single-cell amoeba?
Do sea cucumbers?
No, none of them do.
No animal does that because it's not natural.
Animals are part of nature.
They do natural things.
People are subject to the supernatural, so they do things that are not natural, like
kill themselves.
That's why we're the only species that kills itself.
Right?
So when you kill yourself, whether slowly or all at once, you're being acted on by
forces outside of you.
Spiritual forces, obviously.
I'm just trying to apply logic here.
You'd mentioned several times that you think that the UFO, UAP-type phenomena stuff is all spiritual.
I think so.
I think so.
And I don't, I mean look, I should just state
about every topic, like I don't know shit.
Nobody knows shit.
Yeah, that's, well that is the root of all wisdom.
As my father always say when we were kids,
the root of all wisdom is knowing what an asshole you are.
And I think that is totally, and knowing how ignorant you are
and how limited your foresight is and all that.
So I don't know.
But yeah, I would bet my house on it.
At least some of it is.
I'm sure some of it's like advanced technology that we possess.
US government clearly does possess a lot of technology that is not publicly known about
or available or only in fragments.
I mean, that's clearly true.
You've done a lot on this.
I mean, that's why I first You've done a lot on this.
That's why I first reached out to you because you did such an amazing segment on that.
I was shocked by how great it was.
That's why I'm sitting here.
So you know all this.
And clearly, that's part of it.
But there are other things that are clearly not.
They baffle the US government.
Here's what I'm really surprised by.
And I've actually stopped gathering string on, as we say in reporting, stop gathering
string in this, gathering information because I'm satisfied that I know enough and I don't
really want to know that much more because what I think I know is, you know, this doesn't
help me at all to know that.
So that's a conclusion I've reached.
I'm usually pretty curious.
I've stopped being curious about this because I don't want to know anymore.
You truly don't want to know anymore about it.
I think I know. I think I know what's up. So I can't want to know anymore. But. You truly don't want to know anymore about it. I think I know.
I think I know what's up.
So I can't prove it, so probably not gonna articulate it,
but I think I know what's up, yeah.
But.
Can you articulate it?
Well, I think it's a really old story.
You know, I think it's a really old story.
So that's what I think.
What is it?
Well, one, you know, I'm a Christian,
and I am fairly sincere about it.
I try to be sincere about it.
More sincere than ever, for sure.
But one thing that you notice about all every world religion
I'm familiar with, I'm interested in that topic,
there are commonalities between religions.
You know, Jesus is unique unique and I believe in Jesus.
I don't believe in any kind of pantheology.
I don't think they're all equal or anything like that.
I think mine is correct.
I think that.
Sorry.
But there are commonalities that are very striking between all world religions I'm aware
of and all creation myths.
And one of them, and this is of course true for Christianity, very true, is that the belief
that supernatural beings take physical form.
They all believe that, the Greek myths, Jesus, most famously.
But that they take physical form, that they're not just like some ethereal,
they're not just shadows floating around,
specters, fog, that they're physical.
Like, they're as real as the arm of your chair.
And that they reproduce with people.
Again, Christianity believes that.
Jesus, immaculate conception,
spirit reproduces with human woman. That's what the
story is. It is described in Genesis as well, in Genesis 6. Again, it's not just the religion
of the ancient Hebrews or the religion of the modern Christians. It's Hinduism as well.
And the animist religions, the religions to the extent
we understand them or know about them,
of the American Indians, all the same.
So if every culture in the world that we know about
has left any kind of written or physical record
is reaching the same conclusions about something,
maybe there's something there.
And maybe it's not so crazy to think
that what everyone else has always thought since
the beginning of time, which there is this combination in cases of human beings and the
spiritual realm, whatever that is.
I can speak about it with no precision at all because I don't understand the specifics
of it, but I know that it has been written about since people have been writing.
So it's a little weird to think that in 1945, really the day we dropped that first bomb
on Hiroshima, from then until now, it's just a speck of time in the continuum of history.
For that one period, we've assumed that's not true, but everyone else has always assumed
it is true I'm kind of going with everyone else on that just on the odds. Okay
It's a very long-winded way of answering your question, but I think that's kind of what we're looking at
I think that I think there's I think there's some evidence that that's real
So and I don't want to fully articulate it because it sounds like so out of the realm
But it's not out of the anyone else's realm
In fact is at the very center of everyone else's realm until just the other day.
So I don't think it's a crazy thing to think, and I happen to believe that's true.
So whatever, but I can't prove it.
So I'm certainly not an evangelist on the subject at all.
And I also don't know how that helps anybody to say it.
So I've tried not to talk about it because I don't know it's true and I don't really
know what you do about it if it is, other than say it is. What was it that led you to believe that?
Talking to a lot of people.
I got really interested in it, and since that is my job, it's literally my job, is to call
people and see them and talk to them.
That's what I've done my whole life.
It's like that's just natural for me.
It's not a hobby.
It's my profession.
I hate to use the word reporting because it's been so discredited by the liars. Oh, we've done a lot of reporting here at NBC News,
we've done a lot of reporting. Fucking liar. You talk to some flack at CIA who told you a bunch
of lies, which you're now repeating to me and my kids. So shut up. You've been done reporting.
I hate to use the word reporting, but just like satisfying your curiosity by trying to identify
who might know, talking to a bunch of people about it, assessing who's telling the truth.
Maybe they're wrong anyway, but you can kind of feel whether someone's telling the truth.
And there are ways to know or to get closer to knowing whether someone's telling the truth.
And I just talked to a lot of people.
And I've done that because I got really interested in it.
Sort of by accident, I never thought I'd be interested in this at all.
And so I talked to a lot of people, and I was really shocked by what credible people
told me.
They could all be wrong.
Of course, I can't prove it.
But I became completely satisfied, I'll say that, that they were not lying and that they
were right or in the vicinity of right.
I always assume that details are wrong.
I was a police reporter for a while and you interview someone like a shooting
You know, we you've obviously seen shootings, but most people don't see shootings
So you think if you saw a shooting you'd like to remember every detail of the shooting they get them all wrong
You know people don't aren't good at detail. Okay, that's just true
But they are good at themes
They're good at themes like they remember the guy's fat. He may have been 400 pounds. He may have been 280, he was fat. If everyone says the guy was fat, he was fat.
We can't say that.
And so if everybody you talk to is saying,
oh, this is really upsetting.
I don't know what this means, but here's what I know.
Here's what I heard someone say.
I was in a meeting, or here's what I mean.
It was that kind of stuff.
And I didn't talk to anybody in the UFO community.
I'm not even sure what that is.
I know I don't trust anybody, actually.
You know what I mean?
It's not my job to trust people.
So it's my job to assess whether what they're saying
is right or not.
So I talked to people who I thought
had firsthand knowledge, and I talked to a number of them.
And then I was like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa,
I'm out.
Because I don't need to go farther than that.
I mean, I think that the real struggles are unseen.
That is absolutely a part of Christian theology.
I didn't fully appreciate it at all.
It's a part of every theology.
In fact, it is theology.
That is theology, the belief that the real struggles are
in the spiritual realm, that has been
a constant belief since the beginning of history, recorded history, everybody has thought that
except us in the West since 1945.
I can't say that enough.
So once you get perspective on this question, you're like, okay, that may sound crazy to
someone who thinks buying shit on Amazon
is the meaning of life, but to every other person in the world, we may disagree about
what the truth is, I'm sure we will, but we will never disagree with the fact that there's
a lot of shit going on that we cannot see or measure with our senses.
That is absolutely true.
And of course, looking back, you have experiences, And we talked about this in great detail at breakfast.
You look back and you're like, okay.
That's what the, duh.
The only surprise is not that it happened, but that it took you, blockhead, so long to
see it clearly.
And then to admit it.
There's some, can I say one thing and then I'll stop.
I cannot keep a straight trajectory with my thinking sometimes.
But what I find so striking about the UFO is this is the main takeaway I have.
It's like there's this debate like, is this stuff, these phenomena, which are clearly
obviously real?
I mean, there's no debate about that.
There's a lot of shit that people can't explain in the sky and underwater.
We know that fact.
Is this, so the debate is, is this government technology, is it from outer space, or is it some spiritual
realm here?
I've already told you my view of it.
But what I find so interesting, we know the government's lied about it.
They're lying about it now.
That's a fact.
There's no way around that they have absolutely lied about it in very elaborate ways.
I am really struck.
Here's my current thinking on it.
The main effort that the US government has put into its disinformation, its lying on
this topic has been not to mislead you on the technology.
They're not telling me they don't have anti-gravity technology.
It sounds from watching your podcast that they do, which I believe.
No problem believing that.
Their main interest is in convincing convincing that the supernatural is not real
That's and if you watch and there are people in the media who specialize in
Spreading these lies on behalf of the government
I'm not gonna name anybody but like some of them work at the New York Times
If you once you realize what the point of the exercise is it's crazy
And I hope you'll assess all the fact-check the skepticism on UAPs through this lens.
The main thing they want you to believe is the supernatural is not real.
Then you have to ask yourself, like, why?
That's interesting.
It is so interesting.
Why is that important to you?
Why do you care if I think the supernatural is real?
Like, why is that important to you? Why do you care if I think the supernatural is real? Why is that, first of all, why is it, how dare you, as my government, try to get involved
in my spiritual beliefs?
That's totally not your area, so get the fuck out of there, okay?
A. But B, why has that been so important for 80 years for you to convince me the supernatural
is not real?
Why?
Why is that?
And of course, I can't answer the question, but my gut level response is, well, because it is real. Why? Why is that? And of course I can't answer the question, but my gut level response
is, well, because it is real. Whatever they're telling you is not real. And if they're punishing
you for saying something you know for a fact, it's not real. You're not allowed to say that.
Oh, not because it's... They don't have no problem with me lying. Because they lie. They lie for a
living. So lying brings no sanction. You can lie all you want which can't do is tell the truth. That is a fact
so once you know that you can sort of reverse engineer their lies and
Know with some certainty that whatever they're telling you is not true is in fact true. That's exactly the truth
It's exactly the truth
But then you have to ask motive like it's not a profit motive. Like does it make them rich to deny that there's supernatural forces? No
What is that and I don't know the answer but make them rich to deny that there's supernatural forces? No.
What is that?
And I don't know the answer.
But the obvious answer is, well, because they sort of know they're working for supernatural
forces, actually.
And I think that's probably true.
They, the US government is millions of people.
Is there a specific reason or a handful of reasons, or is this a hunch?
Did you believe that they're working with the supernatural realm or have a relationship?
Well, I can't prove that.
I mean, I'm suggesting that.
I'm not saying it because I can't prove it, but I'm suggesting it.
And if you're asking whether I believe it, the is yes But I think I believe that for two reasons one because I've told that directly by a couple of people who I think seem knowledgeable
And I attached some way to that though not conclusive weight. I don't know. I don't know I wasn't there
Maybe they're super sophisticated liars. Maybe they're telling me the same lie for some reason
Maybe it's all part of a disinformation campaign all the geniuses on the internet the really smart kids, you know
Thank that's all you're falling for the disinformation. Yeah, thanks son
um, I
Know a lot of a disinformation campaigns. Okay
but
It's like one of my few areas of expertise
Having participated in many unknowingly
So either they're totally lying or they're telling the truth.
But the other reason that I think that is for the reason just stated, which is that
their main goal, when I hear a bunch of lying, first I want to recognize that it's lying,
it's untrue.
I know that's untrue.
Then I want to ask, what's the nature of the lie?
What exactly are they trying to get me to believe or not believe?
That's really important.
What is it?
What's so important to them that they're going to all this effort, spending all this money,
getting all these journalists to repeat knowingly or not repeat their lies?
Why?
Why are they doing that?
It takes time to do that.
It's a big effort to lie.
It's much harder to lie than tell the truth.
So why bother?
And then the third question you have to ask is like, so like, what is that?
What does that mean?
And then of course, I don't know the answers, but it's very suggestive.
One thing I do know, and if you look at it, if you look at like the New York Times or
Popular Mechanics or any of the, I say Popular Mechanics, I'm not getting that wrong, I think
it's Popular Mechanics, but there are a bunch of different stories
that have run over time, debunking certain claims
about UAPs, UFOs.
And some of them are quite vehement and sophisticated
and mean too.
People who believe in this stuff aren't just wrong,
they're crazy.
They're conspiracy theorists,
they're like pedophiles kind of in a way.
I mean, that's kind of the,
like why would you attack someone for that?
Like, do you know what I mean?
Like, why do you care?
Like, I'm not a Buddhist, but I'm not mad at Buddhists.
I'm totally in line with what you're saying.
And I mean, we had...
But why are they doing that?
There's just so many signs too.
Like, we had talked this morning about my experience
about getting slapped in the face by God basically.
And ever since then,
I take a minute, I step back
and I try to find the symbolism
and what I'm seeing at the moment.
And I told you I have a lot of,
pretty much everybody on my team is extremely well versed
in the Bible.
Yeah.
And they bring me up to speed and hurry.
But I mean, even just,
those are the wisest people I've discovered.
Yeah.
I didn't know that.
But everywhere, there's nowhere you can look and go,
that makes sense anymore.
Nothing makes any sense at all.
The confusion of genders, it's everywhere.
I mean, I was in DC, what was it, last June
when we had the big Pride party on the White House lawn and men
were flashing their titties. I look at that as symbolism now. That is some type of evil force
that's in there. This Easter, this Easter was the correct...
You mean Transf Visibility Day?
Exactly, on Easter.
With Easter bunnies and Easter eggs
in the White House letterhead declaring that day,
Trans Visibility Day.
That's a symbol.
The Pope.
That's a pretty clear symbol.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it doesn't.
I'm not a theologian or anything.
When you replace Easter with any day, I think maybe you're making a statement about transcendent matters. It's not
just about politics. But the shit's everywhere. It's everywhere you look. Yeah. And only the
Bible readers are prepared to understand it. That's what I have.
Because everything is the opposite of what you were told.
So you were told that all the Bible readers
were the most superstitious and inflexible and stupid
and lacking wisdom and common sense
and they couldn't see reality.
And like, that's where I grew up.
I mean, even though we like went to church occasionally
or whatever, of course we hated religious people
because all affluent Americans hate religious people in the world that I grew up in,
because they're like superstitious and dumb and they're embarrassing and they're like kind of middle class or poor whites and you're like, ugh.
I mean, I'm so ashamed to say that, but I, and I was never against them really, but I just didn't, I don't know,
you just don't question what you were taught really kind of, you know?
And then it turns out that like those are the only people who know what's going on. And I don't know, you just don't question what you were taught really kind of, you know?
And then it turns out that like those are the only people who know what's going on.
They're the best people.
I've known that for a while.
They are the best, religious people are the best people.
Like there's no, it's not even close.
Who else, who else hopes other people just for, who else prays for their enemies?
Anyone, anyone?
Nope, just Christians, that's it.
So anyway, I've known that for a while that they were the best people.
And of course I'm married to one,
so I knew that, but what I didn't know
was that they're the only wise people,
they're the only ones who know what's up,
and that they're just way smarter than everybody.
I didn't know that, I had no idea.
And the last couple of years I've been like,
holy shit, they're the only people who know what's going on.
And you had the greatest line this morning,
I won't reveal personally what I'm talking about,
but you were talking about something like super crazy
that happened to you, and you went to a Christian
who works for you, who was just like, well, yeah, of course,
like that happens all the time.
And you said to them,
to people who really understand this stuff,
it's like not a shocking event,
I think you said it's like Tuesday,
because they know that this is real.
Yeah.
And what a mind fuck that has been.
No, it's so great though.
Well, you know, with everything that's going on
and as disgusted as I am in the country and the citizens
as I am in the country and the citizens and the government.
And I'm starting to get an eye into that as the show grows. And I see how disgusting it actually is in there.
And they are, it's just fucking horrible.
And this show is definitely, I mean,
this show kind of radicalized me a little bit,
which is not easy.
Radicalizing me!
But so yeah, no, you are definitely doing your part
to tell the truth, which I thank you.
I love that.
It gives me hope though, In a weird, weird way,
now that I can kind of see through this shit
and realize, okay, none of this makes sense.
And it actually makes sense that none of this makes sense
because it's all been written.
It's in that, it's in the book.
I know.
It's in the book.
I know.
And it's playing out right now.
And anyways, it-
But the fact that-
Honestly, it's the the fact that honestly,
it's the only thing that brings me any hope
because I don't think we're getting out of this.
No, of course not.
But right, but that's, I mean,
that shouldn't be surprising either.
I mean, again, I just can't believe that in the end,
when it really gets intense as it is now,
that it's Christians, it's people actually believe
the Bible are the only ones with wisdom
who understand what's really going on. They're not shocked at all
And they're not panicked either they get it. It's so interesting who've and that that itself is a biblical principle
The last shall be first the most you know, the the humble among you will be exalted
It's like it's everything is the opposite of what you thought it was
You know victory is defeat defeat
Christianity is defeat being tortured to death is actually
victory. It's like, it's just, but once you start, even if you're not a Christian,
which I think you should be because it's true, but even if you're not, you can acknowledge just
having lived here for a while that that is absolutely the way things work.
absolutely the way things work. It's interesting too, you know, and I really like the fact that you don't do email, social
media, any of that shit, and somebody else handles all that stuff and you're only a text
guy, correct?
We just want to, I'm sorry, I sound so entitled and like I don't deal with that.
Whoa.
I'm so powerful I don't have a briefcase.
What? I think that's just, that sounds so powerful. I don't have a briefcase
That sounds like you're just taking control of your own mental health well, I don't believe I'm not a luxury guy I'm not just saying this. I'm not especially rich, but um
I'm not a luxury guy at all
I mean ask anybody who knows me or lives near me or with me. I'm not into that like I don't care
I drink my coffee black sleep in my truck. It's or with me. I'm not into that. Like, I don't care. I drink my coffee black, sleep in my truck,
it's fine with me.
I'm really committed not to being ensnared by luxury.
But I do think a more profound form of luxury
is reducing the noise a little bit in your life
if you can do that.
You know, more nature, more quiet,
more one-on-one conversations, fewer distractions,
less frenetic have to do this stuff, more one-on-one conversations, fewer distractions, less frenetic have to do this
stuff, more thoughtfulness.
I don't achieve it.
That's for sure.
I'm constantly texting people.
I have a lot of chaos, not chaos, but I have a lot of stacked up nonsense I have to do
in my life.
But everybody does.
But if you can reduce that by 10% or 20%, that's worth more than a private plane, which I don't have
But do you know what I mean? I do well, I mean when I heard that it inspired me
And so I'm gonna do the exact same way already doing it. I mean you don't go to what you don't drive
You know over the Triborough Bridge into an office building to work for somebody else like that. That is the ultimate luxury
Yeah, if someone said I'll pay you $50 million a year
to commute through Midtown Manhattan for two hours
to work for some company controlled by its HR department,
or I'll pay you 1.50th of that to work at home,
I don't think any wise person would choose the 50 million
because it's not worth it.
It's not about money.
Yeah.
Where I was kind of going with this is my perspective
of reality may be a little off or maybe it's way off,
but I'm not in, I never watch the news anymore.
I get my news from other sources.
Yeah, me too.
And right here. But so I I get my news from other sources. Yeah, me too. And right here. And, but, so
I'm a little removed from whatever the latest agenda is that they're pushing, but it seems
like to me, and I love this conversation by the way, but it seems like to me that we're
approaching the final division. I mean, it seems like, it seems like the race shit has
kind of cooled off a little bit and the gender
stuff has cooled off.
And all the things, the defund the police, BLM, Antifa, the war, it all seems to be starting
to die down a little bit.
And what I'm seeing, and maybe this is just because I'm that interested in it, is you're
seeing a massive wave of Christianity coming.
And you're also seeing a massive wave of Satanism.
And it seems like we're approaching the final division, you're seeing pedophiles on the rise, sex
trafficking, human trafficking.
I mean, the U S is the number one consumer of kitty porn on the planet.
And, and, and you just see this good and evil just going farther and farther apart.
And it's becoming, at least from my point of view,
you know, it's becoming very rare.
I couldn't agree more.
I couldn't agree more vehemently.
And I don't have too many, you know,
great insights into things or prophetic feelings.
You know, I'm very conventional.
But the one thing that I really felt strongly a couple of years ago was really strongly,
I felt it overwhelmingly, like from outside me, was that there's some form of religious
revival coming.
I felt that really strongly.
I'm like an extremely secular person, obviously.
I say, fuck every other word.
I'm sorry that I do that.
I shouldn't.
I definitely grew up that way.
So for me to have that insight, but I, wow, overwhelming.
And I said it to a couple of friends of mine who were very sacrilegious.
They're like, what?
But I felt it.
And that has turned out, I think, to be true.
And I have no idea where it's going.
And I get a lot of people coming to my barn like every day, literally every day
and leaving me big stacks and stuff on the end times.
I think history ends.
I think we all sort of sense history ends, but it's also really clear that we don't know
when it ends.
So I kind of resent that a little bit because it's like, what are you, God?
You know the future.
We don't know the future.
We can't know.
We're not going to know the future.
That's very clear.
And I believe it.
But we are clearly moving towards something big.
Who doesn't feel that?
Everybody feels it.
And the divide is spiritual.
And I try to be mindful of my own sort
of sectarian limitations, like when you're one thing,
you think everyone else should be that thing or whatever.
And I really am a Christian, or attempting to be.
But I think it's enough to say
the people who know they're not God, who show
reverence before a power bigger than themselves, like those people are on our
side. That's how I personally feel. And I think
you need to believe in Jesus. I think that.
Okay?
But I am also willing to believe that as a functional matter, that people...
I had an experience, and this is like, I'm sure it will offend a lot of people, but it's
real.
I was flying the Middle East recently, and I was on one of those planes with a...
The double-decker planes, A380s, I think, were a big plane.
And I go back, take a leak, and it's like everyone's asleep or whatever on the plane.
And there's like the little bar here is like an open area.
And there's a guy, he looked to be South Asian, looked Pakistani to me, but maybe not.
I had to be 70 years old.
And he's got his prayer mat out, and he's praying.
There's no one around, and he's praying in the middle of the fight, and he's praying. There's no one around and he's praying in the middle of the fight when everyone's asleep.
And I've never been particularly pro-Islam,
in fact I was very anti-Islam for a long time.
And I thought to myself, I'm not a Muslim,
I'm never gonna be a Muslim.
I disagree with Islam in a lot of ways.
But a guy who's taking his time, taking time out
in the middle of a fucking fight when everyone's asleep
to acknowledge that he's not God and bow before his God,
I don't think that man's my enemy on a deep level.
I just don't, I'm sorry.
Call me like a tool of Muhammad or something.
I'm not, I'm a Christian.
But like, how is that guy my enemy?
He's a massive improvement over everyone in DC
who thinks they're God.
Like I do think that, I'm sorry.
I do.
There's something about the humility of acknowledging
I'm not in charge, I can't see the future,
I'm totally imperfect
That is the most important thing and that's how I kind of see the spiritual divide that said
Christianity seems to be growing in power even as the church is collapsing into absurdity church leaders
Not all but a lot of them are totally corrupt. I
Don't know what's going on with the Pope. I'm not Catholic. So I'm not gonna comment on that but like whoa
Doesn't look like Christianity to me. It's another symbol.
On the other hand, the number of Catholics,
some of my closest friends are Catholic.
A lot of my closest friends are Catholic.
They're the most fervent, sincere, on-target Christians
I know.
I'm just saying that.
They are.
I mean, I'm sorry.
Maybe their theology is wrong.
I don't know.
It's not up for me to judge.
But they are serious Christians.
And they mean it.
And their life is bearing. I don't know. It's not up for me to judge But they are serious Christians and they mean it and their life is bearing the fruit of those beliefs
in other words as the church like the structure collapses some of the
Members of the church seem even stronger
Did you notice this? Well, I mean it goes back to what we were talking about this morning. The church is not
You know, I'm new with this. Oh, me too, oh God.
The church is not a brick and mortar structure.
No.
The church is the living body of believers
in God and Jesus Christ, and that is it.
There is no club, there is no,
I'm in this camp and you're in that camp,
you're either in the church or you're not.
I agree.
It's not a fucking brick and mortar.
Totally agree.
But you see it, all of a sudden you see it.
I mean, I made it like 50 years,
more than 50 years in this country
without really talking, I mean,
where I worked, you know, in the media,
television, people come out and like talk about
whatever some threesome they had,
or they're doing meth over the weekend.
I'm like, people are pretty far out in TV,
because it's all theater kids,
it's all people who project and share too much.
So I just worked in a world where people just would
tell you their deepest secrets at the drop of a hat.
I don't think I ever one time heard someone mention
a spiritual dimension in his life, ever.
That was totally verboten, that was the one thing you could not talk about. I never heard someone mention a spiritual dimension in his life, ever. That was totally verboten.
That was the one thing you could not talk about.
I never heard anybody talk about spirituality.
It was so embarrassing.
Your freaky sex life, not embarrassing.
The idea you might pray, highly embarrassing.
And that's just the world I've lived in.
I'm hardly bragging about it.
I'm ashamed of it.
It's ridiculous, actually, but that is just true.
For the record, I was not into math or freaky sex shit at all.
Very conventional person, but I was around that a lot.
All of a sudden in the last few years, just random, normal secular American people are
like, I was praying about that, or I think God's doing this.
We were not... I have a good memory.
That's my one superpower.
We were not having these conversations in my world
five years ago, nobody.
Yeah.
So what is that?
There's something going on.
And of course that's the way it works, God works.
You know, evil is not unchallenged.
Clearly we're under the oppression of evil,
not just the Biden administration, which
is just a manifestation of it, but there's something way bigger, trying to hurt people
for the sake of hurting people with climate change or manufactured famines, which clearly
that's going on.
And you know, this is pharma stuff.
It's always evil, right?
It's very obvious.
And everyone watching this, I think, knows, of course, everyone knows what I'm talking
about.
But that's not going to happen in a vacuum.
That can't happen.
That's not how it works.
That's not how the universe works.
That's not how God works.
So as that stuff rises in power, so does God.
Who's more powerful?
And I know how the story ends, he wins.
So like, that's true.
I'm not afraid at all.
But it's cool to see it.
Do you feel that way?
Do you feel like?
I do.
God is showing or God is showing his face more?
I mean, is that?
Absolutely.
I mean, I just, we talked about it.
Yeah, it's crazy.
He literally just grabbed me by the collar
and was like.
And yeah, and ever since he got my attention, uh, I'm all in and I, it, it's, there's
nothing that gives me hope.
There's no presidential candidate.
There's no politician.
There's nobody.
There is no human that gives me hope.
It's all part of the assumption.
And, and, and who knows? Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe I don't
think I'm wrong. But you know, I look at all these things that we're seeing with the gender
wars, with the race wars, with the division, with the right and left, with the Easter Sundays,
now Trans Visibility Day, the Pope is saying that gay marriage is great.
Look, I don't give a shit about gay marriage,
but I'm sorry, but it's,
the Pope is not the man to change the Bible
or the word of God.
Or just take three steps back, what is that?
It's like, don't get lost in the weeds of the details.
Like, that's not, that's fucked up.
You know, you're serving the other team.
I'm sorry, you are.
But what I'm getting at is I look at all this stuff
as symbology and it's symbolizing that all this stuff
that I had dismissed for years is very real.
It's the only thing that is real actually.
Yeah, it's, so it gives me, when I see this stuff, is very real. It's the only thing that is real, actually. Yeah.
Yeah.
It's, it's, so it gives me, when I see this stuff, it still pisses me off and enrages
me and, and the Easter thing like really threw me.
Oh yeah.
But we start showing their face.
Once I calm down.
They murdered the president of the United States and a lot about it.
So right.
Okay.
So like this has been going on a long time, long before we were born. In fact,
it's been going on for all time. And I will say this about the Christians to their great credit,
they're not shocked at all. Like, what did you think? You thought some politician was going to
save you? Are you worshiping people now? You don't worship people. They're people. No one's going to
save you in this life. That's a lie. And by the way, shame on you for believing it,
you fool. That's how they feel about it. And the rest of us, the dumb people like me are like,
I can't believe it's not real. They've been lying to me. I can't believe it.
All the stories you told me, there's no Santa? Seriously? And the Christian's just like, what?
all the stories you told me, there's no Santa? Seriously? And the Christian's just like, what? Of course it's fake. Are you kidding? We don't fight against it. It's not against men.
It's the same thing that's been going on, again, for all time that every other civilization has
believed in as its core belief, except us. And we're shocked, I can't believe it, that our
as its core belief, except us, and we're like shocked, I can't believe it, that our stupid post-war materialist
theology turned out to be fake.
Who could have guessed?
Ha ha ha!
Yeah, yeah, but that's what gives me hope.
You know, it's this way of saying all the symbology.
Totally, and also, you're kind of commanded,
or you are commanded to be hopeful and cheerful
and joyful. And if you're not, then that's kind of on you. Then you know what I mean?
Then you obviously don't believe it. I mean, I never, I mean, I stopped going to church
during COVID for that exact reason when the priestess at our church was like, which itself
like nuts, but whatever.
The denomination I grew up in was nuts.
I didn't quite realize how nuts until COVID.
And then the rector of the church is like, well, we can't have services because I'm afraid
of getting COVID and dying.
And it's like, you're afraid of dying?
Really?
You're afraid?
I thought our whole religion was not to be afraid of dying.
Like the whole point of our religion is we don't need to be afraid of dying.
What's the other point?
I don't know.
Do we have another point?
I think that is the point.
And so if you're afraid of dying, but I remember being so shocked by that.
And I went home and said to my wife, I was like, we're not going to church again.
This chick says she's afraid of dying.
I was like, what?
And we were both like almost in, because we really did grow up in this church.
And I was like, we were both so shocked.
And then looking back four years later,
I'm like, I can't believe we were shocked.
How dumb were we?
How naive were we?
Yeah.
Of course, people are deceptive and they,
but lies are always exposed in the end.
And you don't, they're not gonna win.
They may have some temporary ground gaining offensives, but they're not going to win.
Yeah.
Are they?
No, they're not.
Can I say one last thing?
Absolutely.
I know a lot of these people who the people I'm always railing against, I hate them and
all that stuff, but they're totally suffering now.
They're totally suffering now. They're miserable.
Like if you, I think if you looked inside Tony Blinken's soul,
you would not find anything interesting or profound at all.
At all. It's as like banal as you imagine it is.
This is my guess.
But I think you would find a lot of turmoil and unhappiness and insecurity,
barely sublimated rage, unhappiness, chaos.
And I think that it's true of all these people.
You think Joe Biden is happy,
or his creepy fake doctor wife,
or any of these people, Gavin Newsom,
you really think he's got a joyful life?
These people are living in hell now, actually.
And so I do think that should be a marker.
If you're looking at who to believe, who to put your confidence in, not your faith, put
your faith in no man, but your confidence, I think the first thing you have to assess
is, is this person happy, is joyful?
Because if he's not, he's clearly on the wrong path.
He's following a lie, knowingly or not. Like I think it's a fair way to assess.
Yeah, yeah, that's a damn good point.
So if you wake up in a society run by unhappy women
and the weak men who make them unhappy,
these are not people worth following.
That's a damn good point.
We're producing unhappy women,
that's the only thing that we produce now.
Our steel industry has died, we don't produce good cars, but we do produce a lot of unhappy
women.
A ton.
Like a surfeit actually, we can't even export them at this point.
Sorry, it's true.
If you looked at export.
You can't export them.
Yeah.
No one wants them. Well, well, Tucker, I think I need to get a flight to catch her soon.
I should probably stop talking.
I got to have a boss now, though.
So I think it's great.
You know, it's that's what gives me hope.
It sounds like that's what gives you hope.
And I wanted to have tons of hope.
I have tons of hope.
I have tons of hope.
Is there anything else that gives you hope? Or is it just spirituality, which alone is great?
In my life?
I mean, yeah, there's so much.
I mean, I didn't lose any children during the turmoil,
and a lot of people I know,
and I don't mean to lose like died,
though a lot of children have died, actually, a lot, have killed themselves with drugs or through suicide, but the faster
form of suicide.
But I didn't, a lot of people I know a lot, like part of the purpose of one of the hallmarks
of evil, maybe the hallmark of evil is division, pulling people apart, destroying relationships,
killing love.
A lot of really good people, including people I love, have lost children to this.
The child disowned the parents.
The surface level explanation is that it's different politics and people with different
politics can't be friends, including parents and children with different politics.
It's way deeper than that.
It's not about politics, of course.
It's spiritual.
There was no moment in my life up until recently where politics would prevent a friendship
or a family relationship.
That just wasn't a thing.
It was not a thing.
You vote Democrat, I vote Republican.
We hate each other.
When did that happen?
So it's not political, it's spiritual.
And a lot of people have had their families destroyed, including a lot of people I know, really good people too, good parents. All
of a sudden they had a child who was like, fuck you, I'm never talking to you again,
racist or whatever. You know what I mean?
Damn, yeah.
And there's, I mean, I'd rather die than have that. Like that's the worst thing I can imagine
is losing a child, losing contact with a child, having a child disown the family.
And we have not had that at all.
We've had just the opposite.
Our family, I'm not bragging.
I am bragging.
You say, what gives me hope?
That gives me hope.
My children or other people are not perfect, but our family is closer than it's ever been.
And I mean, I don't care.
You can fire me from a million jobs.
You can take all my money.
And if I have that, I mean, that's enough for me. And me and I'm not just saying I really mean it from the bottom of my heart
And so it's hard to be too upset
The thing that the last thing I'll say is that I think one of the great temptations and deceptions that we face is
Living at 40,000 feet all the time
Especially in this business that you and I are now both in because you're constantly thinking about what's going on
You're following things like oh my gosh, all the things that I loved are degrading the institutions. Well that you
specifically served
With everything
You know, you can't have confidence in them. They're falling apart
They have been distorted or perverted and they're serving some bad purpose. It's like overwhelming. It's so upsetting
It's like it can make you despondent and make you feel powerless and helpless
Which is I think part of the purpose of it is to make you feel like holy shit. I give up
But that's only one perspective. That's the macro perspective you look at America
America this this country that we're from and that we're gonna die in
And it's not it's not doing well at all. Look at all
However, the other way to look at it is,
the people that I love, I love more than I ever have.
I'm closer to than I ever have been.
The family that I'm responsible for is thriving,
not even materially, but in love.
And like, that's incredible.
And I love this country.
I really mean it.
I really love America, and I always have.
But I would trade 1,000 countries for the people that I love, because in the end, America
to me is the people that I love, not just my blood relatives, but the people in my orbit.
And they are all thriving.
Again, they may have cancer or alcoholism.
People have problems, okay big big problems
But in their honesty with each other in their commitment to each other loyalty to each other their love expressed love for one another
Their kindness their understanding their tolerance for each other. It's all increased
and like that that's part of the story too that may be a bigger story actually than
The Federal Reserve or the fucking
war in Ukraine. You know what I mean?
Yeah. Yeah, I do. Man, thank you for sharing that and talk about we're out of time or you're
going to miss your flight.
Am I really?
Yeah. No, you're not.
I can talk like a freaking animal.
You're good. But I just want to say thank you for making the time.
Well, I loved it. And thank you for making the time. Well, I loved it.
And thank you for what you're doing.
Can I just brag and on one bragging note?
Sure.
I saw the video, somebody sent me one of your videos.
Never heard of you.
I had no idea.
I don't watch podcasts or I didn't then.
And I saw this and it was an interview, as I told you this morning, with this contractor,
son of a contractor who had seen some stuff at a military base, whatever.
It was super interesting. but your interview style,
I was like, that guy is honest.
That's totally real right there.
And I'm good at that.
I can tell.
And I was like, that guy's gonna be successful.
I just knew.
I knew nothing about you.
I just saw that and I was like,
that guy's gonna succeed.
And you have.
Thank you.
And I called that.
Thank you.
That means a lot.
I know it's ugly to brag about it,
but I can't help it.
I knew that. I appreciate that. Thank you. That means a lot. I know it's ugly to brag about it, but I can't help it. I knew that.
I appreciate that.
Thank you.
And I forgot, I have one other gift to give you.
Everybody gets one.
Thank you.
I wear with pride or without pants.
Let me get my- Little something for the ride home.
Glasses.
There you go.
I can't take these, you know why?
Why not?
I think you know why.
Oh no, those are legal.
No, cause I, I'll eat them.
I turned 55, I can't eat fucking gummy bears,
are you joking?
Like how old are you?
Give them to the driver.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
That was awesome.
But no, thank you for coming and man,
I hope to see you again, Tucker.
Oh totally. I wish you the best of luck. Come up and text me when you're in my neighborhood. I will. Awesome. and man, I hope to see you again, Tucker. Oh, totally.
I wish you the best of luck.
Come up and text me when you're in my neighborhood.
I will.
Awesome.
Thanks, man.
I appreciate it.