The Bugle - Trump: Guilty Of Being Himself
Episode Date: June 2, 2024Trump is convicted of being himself, Narendra Modi engages with god, and North Korea insights a prank war. Andy Zaltzman is with Josh Gondelman and Anuvab Pal.PAID SUBSCRIBERS - get all this and an ex...clusive extra story in your podfeed now! To become a premium Bugler and get loads of great stuff, go here: http://thebuglepodcast.comThis episode was presented and written by:Andy ZaltzmanAnuvab PalJosh GondelmanAnd producer by Chris Skinner, Scarlett O'Malley and Laura Turner Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The Bugle, audio newspaper for a visual world.
Hello Buglers and welcome to issue 4305 of The Bugle, audio newspaper for a visual world
with me, Andy Zoltzman.
It is the 31st of May, 2024 as record a month ago at least as you listen to this
in June 2024 or indeed any other month from now until the end of time whichever is later and I'm
delighted to be joined on this truly historic occasion by two of the finest legal minds of
their generation to analyze well what has been a momentous week in American
and legal history.
You are both qualified lawyers, I think.
Anu Van Pall, who's currently in Bradford here in Britain, and Josh Gonderman, who is
in New York and basically therefore you have been part of the big trial, just by the sense
of your aura invading the courtroom.
Mm-hmm.
Well, I feel like you watch a movie and they go, New York City is kind of a character in
this film.
I feel like I, by virtue of being in New York City, am a character within all the stories
that happened here.
So yeah, I feel like I was a key part of this Donald Trump h tryout. Anubhav, you work in film scripts as well as various sort of comedic operations.
In terms of, we'll talk more on the Trump trial shortly, but as a script editor, you
must have enjoyed the many twists in terms of this f**king Ludacris saga.
Well you know Andy, I am currently on tour across the UK, my first one, and I am in a
premier inn.
Other inns are also available.
And it was difficult to get Wi-Fi, They have a thing here called Ultimate Wi-Fi,
which is better than their free Wi-Fi
that allows me to do this podcast.
And the first thing I Googled once I got Ultimate Wi-Fi.
The last Wi-Fi you'll ever see.
Yeah, before death.
This is the only Wi-Fi left.
And, you know, being in a premier real,
it's a bit like being in prison.
It's slightly like prison.
So I Googled, you know, in case I have to go to jail So being in a premier is a bit like being in prison. It's slightly like prison.
So I Googled, you know, in case I have to go to jail because it's fashionable now, is
there Wi-Fi in jail?
I Googled that and I was wondering if I was to do the bugle from jail.
Many people can carry out their professions from jail.
Apparently, I do get Wi-Fi for two hours in jail and I googled jail in India. I don't know which country will imprison me.
It's good to have your options open, isn't it?
Yeah, but just letting you guys know imprisonment does not mean I can't do this podcast. You just have to do it within those two hours. Yeah. I mean whether you can be president on two hours of Wi-Fi a day, I guess time may tell. We are recording this on the 31st of May, that's
in 2024. On the 31st of May 1859, Big Ben started working. The celebrity clock at the
Houses of Parliament here in London started keeping time, which I think was a big mistake
because I think we got more done when we didn't know what time it was. And I think Big Ben is a very bad example.
I think our productivity as a nation has gone down because you start panicking about dead
when you have no idea what time is. You know, I think people got more got more. Don't you
look at the like the career of, I don't know, Francis Bacon back in the early 17th century
got an awful lot done. Probably Shakespeare't. Shakespeare wrote all those plays.
That's right, didn't have a digital watch.
You know.
So hopefully we'll learn from that and ban all clocks
because frankly, time is a piece of shit.
On the 1st of June, it is Say Something Nice Day,
apparently, that's on the,
according to the Days of the Year website,
which is a bit old fashioned.
In fact, I'm just hearing it's now been downgraded to try to be a bit less of a c*** when posting
anonymously on social media day. On the 2nd of June in the year 455 the Vandals
sacked Rome! They plundered the city for two weeks. Now to me that is not what you
do if you've got two weeks in Rome. I mean, there's so much to do in Rome.
It's such a lovely place.
You know, without resorting to destroying everything in sight,
just to keep yourself interested.
You know, I think that reflects very badly on the Vandals.
I mean, Rome may have improved since 455, I don't know.
But I mean, it was probably lovely then as well.
Just seems a real shame.
And I hope they're ashamed of themselves frankly.
As always a section of this podcast is going straight in the bin.
This week we have first round in our new bugle one true God knockout competition.
As we've discussed on this
show it does seem that a lot of the world's problems do come down to
religious disputes, so in an effort to help humanity move on we are going to
collect all deities from history and have a knockout competition to find out
which one is the one true God. Quite a lot of deities from various different
cultures over the years and our first round, first clash is between Thoth, the ancient Egyptian god of wisdom,
and Tanaka Ki-Huatl, the Aztec goddess of creation and fertility. Now, I mean, that's
a big first round clash, you would say, because we all love wisdom and we all love fertility.
I mean, do either of you have a particular favourite of those two, Thoth and Tanaka Kikwapal? I come from a country of 130 million gods and in
in the race I'd like to throw in a temple that I saw in South India
dedicated to the Indian master batsman Sachin Tendulkar. So in the race I would like
to throw in the god of the wrist, leg side, clip shot along
with your two other gods, just as a contender.
All right.
Okay.
So we're throwing in Sachin against Thotham to knock out Ki-Huatl.
Anyone you want to throw in?
Josh, a bonus god in this first round knockout clash.
Oh, you know, I think my only concern, I think we have too many gods to begin with.
I think we're talking like the ancient Greeks are going to be so over indexed in this
conversation and they haven't done things.
They haven't done anything in years.
And the modern Greeks, they've whittled their gods way down.
So we're going to try and find, I mean, just a bit of background info on Thoth, God of
the Moon, wisdom, knowledge, writing, hieroglyphs, science, magic, art and judgment. Again, amazing the breadth
of expertise they had back in those days, so they don't specialize like we do now and I guess they
didn't have the same distractions. He had the head of an ibis, which is pretty handy, give you a
little beak to get into stuff, and Tanaka Kikwatl was worship for peopling the earth and making it
fruitful, which I think is really where our problems began as a planet.
Anyway, we'll have the result of this clash on our Twitter feed on Wednesday as we try to solve all of the world's religious
problems by finding the one true God and next week's contests. Let me just check the fixture list. Oh,
Oh, that is a bit of a provocative matchup.
Yeah, I might see if another podcast wants to take that one on.
I just want to quickly bring up that in one of the gods we have in India is a god dedicated
entirely to differential equations. That's pretty good. Yeah, I think we bumped them up the list.
Here's here's the problem.
I think in my life, I think with this matchup, this week's matchup,
we got to go, uh, Foff, because I've never in my life prayed for less wisdom.
But I have been in occasional incidents where I'm like,
less fertility would be nice right here.
That's what I'm saying.
Top story this week, America now has a criminal as a former president.
Exciting times at 10 p.mpm UK time on Thursday. Two truly
historic announcements were made within minutes of each other. One was that I, Andes Holtzmanam,
a contestant on the next series of the Taskmaster TV show, which will be broadcast in September.
And as if to bury bad news, the New York court then announced that Donald Trump was guilty
of all 34 counts in his current head-to-head against the US judicial system.
The serial bankruptcy, celebrity misogyny, superstar, impeachment veteran, civil war
reenactment fan and insurrectionist chaotic station was found guilty of essentially being
himself and specifically in these 34
cases of falsifying business records, guilty on all charges, much to the delight of everyone.
In fact, I guess, you know, please everyone who think it's completely appalling that America
ever elected a person such as Trump, and they now have legal confirmation not only that
he's a sex pest from last year, but also now a crook as well, and also to the delight of everyone who thinks that only a crook and a sex pest can make America once again the great nation
Of crooks and sex pests that it was in its greatest halcyon days
Josh
It's I mean it does feel like I mean it was out of all the extraordinary things that we've seen in the Trumpian era
Yeah, I've been seeing his angry furious face as really fun
in the photos and afterwards he emerged from the court.
I mean, it did seem to sort of sum up what America has put itself through
over the last one nearly decade now.
Yeah, I don't know if we're ever going to see Donald Trump brought to justice, but it
is fun to see him brought to fury and crankiness.
He was convicted of all 34 felony charges he faced, which almost feels like a lifetime
achievement award for six decades of uninterrupted crime, give or take a few years. Although you kind of
have to admit, right, he was on trial for using this hush money payment that is an incorrect use
of campaign funds to influence an election. And he did kind of get away with it because he did
get to be president for what I will describe as at least four years. So it is a little you're like, ah, you got a hand to him. He really
did it. So what's weird is this hush money payment was not the worst deal he's ever made,
which would be really saying something as he couldn't keep a casino up in an Atlantic city. I don't think pessimistically, I don't think it changes
anyone's opinion on Trump, right? To see that he's actually convicted of these things he's
accused of. I can't imagine anyone watching the news on TV and going like, honey, did you
see that report? Yeah, I guess I guess he did it after all. Shoot. Well, I should probably take off my
your feelings Trump 2024 T-shirt and get my
Hillary killed Epstein tattoo covered up with a
picture of the kids or something.
Seems like he's a bad dude after all.
Josh, I have a quick question.
I mean, yeah, my question is, could he run the
country from jail for the length of time he's imprisoned?
And if so, what kind of a setup would that jail require?
Fridge full of Diet Cokes, I think, if he gets any say.
It definitely seems like not only could he, but there are people that would
think that's the best thing he's ever done.
I truly don't know.
There's going to be a lengthy appeals process.
He also faces three other, I believe, criminal trials across the country.
So his presidency, he's going to be kind of busy the whole time.
Like I, which I honestly think is good. Even if he is president, you kind of want him occupied
being prosecuted for a lifetime of crime. I think that would be good for the country.
I honestly think whenever we get a president, we should kind of wrap them up in a lot of
legal red tape just so that the harm
that they could do is mitigated. As you say I mean you know the question whether it's going to make
any difference to people I mean not much I mean as we've previously discussed on this esteemed
news organ it it should not be possible to change your mind, as you said Josh, about Donald Trump in the year 2024.
It's not like, for example, thinking that you don't like 1980s pop music,
before finding yourself at first imperceptibly tapping your feet along to Too Shy by Kajagoogoo
and feeling a blinding light of truth searing its way into your soul.
Or, you know, maybe thinking you don't like mozzarella because you've never had the really
good stuff and then finding yourself alone with a glistening glorious
wobbly yielding pillow of buffalo and perfection
galloping the whole thing in five minutes of spiritual oneness and thinking that maybe we don't live in a godless universe after all or
You know
It's not like thinking you don't like test-match cricket before realizing that you've been foolishly
Procluding yourself from the greatest creation in human history and that no purer more sumuous, more kaleidoscopic form of unscripted narrative has ever, or could ever
be concocted.
You cannot have been waiting for this verdict before making your mind up about Trump.
This should not be the wafer-thin mint of conclusive evidence that tips you over into
the explosive realisation that maybe this guy is not entirely suitable to lead the world's
most powerful nation.
But you know, it might make a little difference.
I hope so.
A little difference in an American presidential election can become a vast defining difference
if it's, you know, a few thousand people in the right places.
Well, it feels like there is a little fatigue with these two candidates.
And I think there are some people
who really don't see a lot of daylight between them and I don't agree with that on a lot of
topics but with the low enthusiasm for voter turnout like we might have kind of a one-nil
football match type. Montana? Like there's not that many people there to start with.
So I mean if it comes down to just that the only two people in America who can be bothered to vote
are Biden and Trump. This could be crucial because Trump could be barred from voting.
That's right. In Florida, certainly.
Yeah. So that could be.
Yeah. Our justice system is a nightmare and it's good to see it giving nightmares to a person that deserves nightmares.
Anything that can inconvenience this guy is a joy to my heart, frankly.
And so it's not like I don't believe the American justice system is truly like, uh,
set up to equally meet out, um, legal correctness across the world, but it's nice, you know, it's nice to see that it's
bringing down its crushing weight on someone who seems physically uncrutchable.
He's more of a crumpler.
The Republican Party broadly has not reacted to this verdict by saying it's glorious evidence
of the full working of American justice.
Donald Trump did not respectfully say, well, law is law and I will respect its verdict,
understandably.
They've both thrown massive strops.
It's been, I can't remember who it was, said it was a rigged trial and
I guess it was rigged in that against the grain of the 21st century world it allowed
things like evidence, fact and the objective judgment of unpartisan members of society
to be applied which understandably many people find confusing, anachronistic and unfair.
Mike Johnson, the Speaker of the House said, today is a shameful day in American history.
And I guess at least on that we can agree. I guess we'll just disagree on why it's shameful.
And I think maybe I don't think it's shameful in the way that Mike Johnson does.
No, it almost feels like when someone goes, oh, you're eating pizza because it's national pizza day and you go, yeah, I guess.
Yeah, that's that's why.
This is yeah, we're doing other shames as a nation.
Yes, I guess one of the most senior figures in American politics describing the functioning of America's own legal system as a shameful day does make it a shameful day.
So it's kind of self a self-fulfilling statement.
a self-fulfilling statement. Donald Trump also said America's gone to hell, but I don't know if hell would let America in as it currently stands.
Gentlemen, just a couple of things here. One, I think this whole British system of rule
of law based on your document called the Magna Carta has had its time. I think this is the
age of TikTok. I think basically, if you can give your evidence
in a two-minute dance, that's really what counts.
And a couple of things.
Again, India is the world leader here in these sorts of things,
particularly in famous people doing things from jail.
So just maybe this is in the future of advanced democracies. An Indian billionaire called Subrata Roy was arrested in a Ponzi scheme.
He stole some 50 billion dollars from India's poor. And one of the things he did from jail when the Supreme Court told him to repay the money is he sold the Plaza Hotel in New York City from jail. Trump's reaction was very much on brand, I guess.
He said, we are a nation in decline, serious decline, millions and millions of people pouring
into our country right now from prisons and from mental institutions, terrorists, and
they're taking over our country, which was not entirely relevant to the case at hand.
But even if he's right, I mean, research has shown that immigrants in the USA have a lower
incidence of mental health conditions than those born in the USA itself. Also America has pro rata,
one of the highest prison populations in the world and you could also argue that with its
fetishistic glorification of firearms and its levels of gun violence, America has essentially
baked terrorism into the fabric of its everyday national life. So even if Trump is right that millions of people are pouring into America from prisons,
mental institutions, and as terrorists, which he obviously unprovably isn't, then he should
be pleased about it.
He should be encouraging it as it sort of makes it easier for new arrivals to a nation
founded on immigration to settle and blend in.
But such a real hypocrisy is not good.
Well, I mean, there's also research that shows, right, that people who come to America from
other countries commit less crime than people who were born here.
And that's certainly true now on average of presidents.
We've basically got two thirds of a felony per conviction per president, if you average
it out now.
I love a stat.
Can I just ask?. I love a stat.
Can I just ask a quick question here?
I don't know why Mr. Trump is complaining about millions and millions of people who
come and become criminals or are, you know, insane because they make up most of his fan
base.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
I don't know why he would be upset with that.
I think we've got to stop looking for logic in these things, that is the one thing that
we've learnt.
Indian news now and whilst US Supreme Court justices might have been chosen by presidents,
India is going one step further than that, even it turns out that the Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been chosen by God. And
this fact comes from no lesser source than the man closest to it, Narendra Modi himself,
who told an interviewer that he'd been chosen by God and God, quote, just keeps making me
do things. Now, Anubhav, it's long been rumored that God moves
in mysterious ways, but even by God standards, some of his moves with Modi maybe tip over
a little from mysterious into borderline despotic. But look, I mean, I'm not going to criticize
God knows what's best for God. Let's just let God get on with what God does best being
God. But I mean, it does. It's a bit of a surprise. I mean could this be influential in the ongoing Indian election, the news that Narendra Modi has been picked by God himself?
I mean we are a spiritual country, Andy, Josh, you know, and God sometimes tells our Prime Minister
to do things. And it just happens that the elections are going on completely coincidental
and God told Prime Minister Modi to arrest specific opposition leaders.
It's just, it's completely coincidental.
The two have nothing to do with each other.
And the period of voting in India, which is going on right now, carries on to the 4th of June.
You are not allowed to campaign while people vote.
That's the rule set up by some
British people a very long time ago, which for whatever reason, apparently, we still
follow because we're a make-believe democracy. And one of the things that the Prime Minister
has done, because he's a man of God, is he's done campaigning and he's gone off to meditate
in solitude to the Himalayas.
But what God told him to do when he goes off to meditate is to take with him a social media
team.
Because God wants you on Instagram.
That's what God wants.
And what you gentlemen don't know is that our Prime Minister has been seen everywhere, you know, as a vision.
He's been seen in Canterbury, you know, with the Archbishop of Canterbury.
He's been seen in Mecca in front of the great stone of Mecca.
He's been seen under the tree where Buddha was meditating.
He's been seen, you know, up at Kalashnath where the Lord Shiva is supposed to have been.
And that's what a Prime Minister should do, you know,
and an apparition of him should show up in all the houses of worship.
And what is your Prime Minister doing, Andy?
He's playing football in Southampton.
Wow!
You know, this is the difference, this is the fundamental difference,
is when you have a God Prime Minister,
he always can be in four or five different places,
as opposed to a human campaigning Prime Minister, who can always can be in four or five different places as opposed to a human campaigning Prime Minister who can only play football in one place. That's a very
that was having a perspective. Okay, but here's my big quibble with this. He said that God
keeps making him do things, Modi says this, but he cannot dial up God directly. And it's like,
look, if God only reaches out when he needs something
and doesn't answer when you try to call, God's just not that into you.
That's just that's just common sense, like dump him. Also, I fully understand this because
the Indian prime minister allegedly chosen by God, our leadership is chosen
by a more mysterious force, the electoral college.
So there is just something that is kind of above our heads,
working against logic and reason
to choose how our democracies function.
Seeing you hear a voice that keeps making you do things
is less of a leadership style
and more of
a serial killer's insanity plea for clemency.
Such a fine line these days.
Such a fine line.
And even members of his own party couldn't defend the statements, right?
All they said was like, oh, yeah, he's so energetic to make all these campaign events
and interviews to say these things, which is not a great defense because what it really sounds like
is oh he's not schizophrenic he's having a manic episode aka the neurodivergence that gets shit done
actually let's pick up on a couple of other things modi said uh annabelle he said that god
quotes does not reveal his cards and to me you know me, you know, that does make a lot of things make...
I mean, if all of life on earth is just some kind of high stakes card game between rival
deities, I think that would explain pretty much everything about the entire history of
our species and its cranky old planet.
So I mean, that makes sense.
That's that I understand that the hymn that really brings in the focus, the hymn by the
great theologian Kenny Rogers.
When they say, you got to know when to hold them, know when to fold them.
That's not talking, that's a metaphor.
And that's God talking to us.
Exactly.
And I think he's absolutely right, gentlemen, because you know God will reveal
himself when the time is right. And in Prime Minister Modi's case, you know, God reveals
himself as a group of income tax officials that show up at your doorstep and arrest opposing
journalists or not-for-profit NGO workers. You know, so I mean, it does reveal itself at the right time, but the
time is decided by God, not by Prime Minister Modi. And God feels this is a
good time for our jails to be filled with leaders of the opposition. That's,
you know, like God may feel differently in a month when they're all released,
and the Prime Minister is won. So it's seasonal, you know, it's karma. There was one other
thing Modi said, he said,
When my mother was alive, I used to believe that I was born biologically.
After she passed away, upon reflecting on all my experiences,
I was convinced that God had sent me. Now this to me
shows exactly why we must all talk to our loved ones
when we have the chance. Because this is exactly the kind of confusion
that could have been cleared up if little Nazza had asked his mummy while
she was alive was I born biologically or sent by God or both and you know my own
father died 18 months ago and I'd never asked him whether I was born biologically
or sent by God but fortunately my mother is still alive so I checked with her and
yes I was born
Biologically so you have to all of you buglers listen to make sure
You know before you do and say anything stupid like you vote for me. I was sent by God
This I also think this is just straight up an issue of object permanence, right? As soon as his as soon as his mother is out of his field of vision, he's like, maybe I don't have a mother.
He's a busy man. He didn't get much time to spend with his mother.
By the time he could ask her, she was dead and he was a man of God.
I mean, that's how most of our gods started.
I think if he really wanted to get this over, right, get this proclamation over,
he should have become one of those guys that ostentatiously uses female pronouns for God. Like, yeah, I talked to God and she said I should be the prime
minister. People will be like, wow, that must be real because he wouldn't just say a thing
like that. That's too progressive for him.
The Indian internet has been quite interesting as a result of these statements because there's
been a flood of stuff on Twitter saying, you know, I not only,
you know, am I not born of a woman, I also think I'm a Shaolin master.
These sorts of things have shown up on the internet of all the things that our prime
minister is.
So you know, I think that he's a pretty good chance of winning this election, particularly
because I've read in democracies where you have no opposition, you have a chance of winning this election, particularly because I've read in democracies where you
have no opposition, you have a chance of winning slightly better than where you have an opposition.
Well, it's either the people believe in Modi or if not, the Indian people I have to imagine
will lose their faith in God entirely if he's not re-elected. If God's choice can't be
elected democratically? Yeah. In other Indian news, well it's getting hot, Anubhav, it's all, I mean
generally it's pretty hot in India, but the temperature in Delhi has passed the 50 degrees
Celsius mark, the hottest day recorded in Delhi. Author authorities have warned there could be water shortages
with temperatures almost 10 degrees higher than expected, which still makes it 40 degrees,
which is f***ing hot objectively.
So I mean, could Narendra Modi now ask his de facto parent and boss, God, to chuck a
little cleansing snowfall delis way sometime soon, do you think?
Yeah, yeah, when the time is right. I think now he's using...
Exactly, Josh, the time has to be right. Now he's using the heat to make sure people can't come out and vote.
But when he's ready, you know, he's going to shower the people for not coming out to vote.
So turnout has only been 40%. It's so hot in Delhi, gentlemen, right now.
I don't know if you read this story,
but a tiger in the Delhi zoo was thrown a goat for lunch,
and he refused to come out and eat it.
A tiger in the Delhi zoo has gotten into intermittent fasting.
It does not want to deal with the Delhi summer.
It's, yeah.
Even the tigers are going, maybe just a Caesar salad in the heat.
Something light.
Kombucha.
Yeah, I'm going to get the goat sweats if I eat this thing.
And, you know, in terms of the temperature hitting 50 degrees in Delhi, I mean, it's
not the easiest city to
breathe in at the best of times. I mean I've only been to Delhi once, I was there in 2011 when the
air was as pure as a newborn mountain breeze relative to what it is now and I think it's taken
I think now 13 years for my blood oxygen to recover to something that is approximately
survivable. It has two components Andy, right? Nitrogen and oxygen.
The oxygen component is missing in Delhi.
So people often travel to Bombay and Bangalore to get that component back in the air.
But it's having disastrous effects on the water table because Delhi is already a desert region.
And one of the non-helpful things has been that the Chief Minister of Delhi, whose job it is
to run the municipality of Delhi, has been imprisoned by God. He has not been able to run
Delhi. So he's out of prison on bail, actually. Irvin K. Jowell has been out of prison just to be
able to campaign. And he goes back to jail on the 2nd of June. So he's also had to deal with administrative issues.
And one of the things he said about the water table of Delhi
is he said, I'm sad to report that the water table of Delhi
is no longer a water table.
It's just a table.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's not helpful.
I believe cities need water.
That's a very old fashioned way of looking at things, Anovab.
We've got the internet now.
That's great.
I don't like that this is the kind of world record we're setting now.
Whenever you hear about a record, it's always record temperatures.
It used to be a guy would make the biggest pancake the world has ever seen. And then you'd put his picture in a book until some
other lady made a bigger pancake. Yeah. And I miss those days. Now it's just like the
hottest day on record in Delhi. And I that's not that's no fun. Just for translation for
the American listeners that that like me need to Google this. 50.5 degrees Celsius is about 123 degrees Fahrenheit,
which I only converted because 50 degrees
doesn't sound like enough degrees over here
to start to be impressive.
The human body in America on our measurement system,
we know that the human body is 98 degrees
thanks to the famed biologist, Nick Lachey
and his cohort of singing scientists.
Climate change is like the most serious thing that we have daily evidence of getting worse,
and people will contort themselves around those realities to kind of flexibly deny the
future, right?
Like a lake will catch on fire, just the water is on fire. And people
are like, it's called summer, ever heard of it? Yeah, exactly. I mean, look, if people want a view
of climate change, they should come to North India in the summer, because occasionally you'll
drive through North India and you will see a Hyundai on fire on a regular basis. You can see what the end of the world looks like.
Just, you know, I have to say that Delhi does have a history of running out of water. In
the year 1600, the Emperor Akbar, the great emperor of India, decided to move the entire
capital of Delhi to Agra, where, you, they later the Taj Mahal came up.
And because he thought Agra was prettier
and he took the whole city there, realized they have no water and then
brought everyone back to Delhi.
So North India is quite used to this.
Wow. That, I mean, I've like left for a trip without booking a hotel before.
But that even for me, that seems like a lot is
moving an entire city to a different region with no water.
Always book a premier in that's what I said.
That's right it's the ultimate wi-fi that does it.
It's laughing at you.
UK election news now and obviously when you set the UK election which is coming on July
4th alongside America and India it does seem like a pretty disappointing jam stall at a
village fete.
But our politicians are heroically trying to make it as bonkers and shit as possible.
Rishi Sunak the acting Prime Minister Minister, who had, as we reported last
week, a very soggy start to his campaign calling the election whilst being
physically and metaphorically reigned on by fate, has been struggling I think to
sort of cut through to the broader public and came up with one of the weirder
suggestions of recent election campaigns in which he placed a bring back
national service for Britain's 18 year olds. Obviously this was reported as being all kids
are going to have to serve in the military, which wasn't what the public was, but to be
fair the Conservatives did promote it as essentially a military thing with the branding and the
language that they used for it. Admiral Alan West, a former first sea lord, proclaimed that the idea is, quote, basically bonkers. Richard Dannet, former
chief of general staff in the military, called it electoral opportunism. Personally, I think
the idea of national service being brought back is a fantastic one. Now, I don't generally
support the Conservative government and Rishi Sunak, I don't generally
agree with their ideas.
This I do think is a brilliant idea, trying to create a sense of social cohesion and communal
responsibility in a divided nation.
I just think they're getting the wrong people to do it.
It shouldn't be 18 year olds, it should be everyone f***ing else, frankly, that isn't
18.
And if that's not logistically feasible, which it isn't, this
is 2020s Britain we're talking about, nothing is logistically feasible, not getting a f***ing
train to run vaguely on time or stopping a turd going for a bath in the sea, then it
should be, I think we should aim for National Service for a, people aged, I don't know,
65 and over, maybe just replace retirement with national service it would give old people something to do give something back to society be anyone there should be like an
earnings limit on it so as soon as you start earning over a certain amount bang you have to
do your national service maybe 200 000 pounds a year or maybe you've got more than a million
pounds in assets and and then you do your national service anyone who voted for brexit obviously they
should be first on the list um and anyone who's donated over £10,000 to a political party.
And that would create, I think that would create some sense of social, but telling the
young who've had no say in what the nation is today, they've had no influence in the
nation splitting cantankerousness, fuel divisions of Brexit, or in flogging off our national
resources to anyone who'll pay, or stripping to the bone of the structures of our national
life, telling them that they need to be more patriotic, that really does not add up for
me. It reminds me of when I met the artist Damien Hirst whilst I was washing a cow in
a bathtub and he started shouting and screaming at me about how you should never put animals
in liquid. That is how it is. Andy, I've only spent a couple of summers in your country and I have a quick question.
Don't you already have a sort of compulsory thing that young people have to do? Don't
all your young people every June have to go to a place called Glastonbury?
Yeah, there is the two of that.
It's sort of like military service, right? They have to roam around semi-naked,
shouting, I'm looking for Stormzy.
Like, isn't this mad?
Yeah, often in very muddy conditions
reminiscent of the worst excesses of the third world war.
It's trench warfare, essentially.
Absolutely, yeah.
Yeah.
The military aspect of this was very concerning to me, right?
Because it seems to me from afar that because younger voters tend to lean left, the Tories
are playing the long game by proposing a system that will vastly cut down on the number of
young people, right?
Just by making them serve in the military.
Which I also don't like because I don't trust, no offense, a beefed up British military not
to get too excited
and start colonizing again. You get a bunch of virile 18 year olds together and they're
going to take over an already inhabited island and rename it after a member of the royal
family. That's just what they're going to do. You can't change a nation's DNA Josh.
And here in America, well so similarly here in America we're constantly talking about
how to drive youth turnout in elections and Rishi Sunak has solved that problem, but only forgetting
young people to vote against him. It seems like we need to find a conservative candidate
like that back here. Someone running on the MAGA ticket, whoever Trump chooses as a vice
president from jail to alienate under everyone under 25 by being like when I'm elected skinny jeans are back
in other election news the labor party looks pretty much nailed on to win the election that's
a term of course it goes back to the very first easter uh nailed them but anyway um the um um
however it's not taking this inevitable victory lying down and is in the midst of
what is now Labour's traditional internal party squabbling stroke civil war with arguments
over whether Diane Abbott and other more left-wing Labour candidates should be standing.
We will have more on this over coming weeks including at the bugle live
election special show on the 23rd of June at the Bloomsbury Theatre where
Anubhav will be joining me to give the latest on the the Indian elections and
Nish Kumar will also be there. Buy your tickets online it's quite a big theatre
so buy buy lots. Andy can I just say I will be there, but I won't be speaking, God will be speaking.
I just wanted to clarify, just quickly clarify that.
Wow, what a gig that is turning out to be.
Other world news now and North Korea has been shitting on South Korea. Quite literally.
The secretive parody communist dictatorship North Korea has apparently been floating bags
full of shit across the border attached to hot air balloons in an attempt to...
I have no idea.
I have no idea what this is attempting
to do but they have just been dropping bags of shit on South Korea now clearly
it's not great if you're on the receiving end of a bag of North Korean
shit but on the plus side probably a bit less concerning than for example a
nuclear weapon and if this is what Kim Jong-un's North Korea has been reduced
to slow-moving floating bags of shit I feel reassured and confident of a
brighter future for all humanity.
I mean, strategically, Josh, I know you're you are one of America's leading military strategists.
Yeah. What's the what's the thinking here?
Okay. Well, this is a tactic commonly known as Operation Dave Matthews Bans tour bus going to Chicago. And obviously this, I think this is actually a very subtle yet
effective way to wage international diplomatic conflict.
Because we've seen a hot war and we know the devastation that can
cause we've seen a Cold War. And we know that what that can do to
economies and what that can do to the global climate. What we
have not seen in years is an international prank war.
And I think that that's what this is. This is setting it off.
I think it to retaliate South Carolina, South Korea needs to call up Kim Jong-un and ask him
if his refrigerator is running only to tell him that he'd better go catch it.
And I think that kind of tactical
tete-a-tete is what's going to ultimately bring peace and
stability to the region. South Korea has a history. So this is
what I have, the only thing I've really come up with is South
Korea's history of sending leaflets and COVID, PPP,
personal protective equipment in balloons to North Korea. And I think this seems like
a pretty clear message from the North Korean government, from their regime, where they
would like South Korea to shove those things that they've been sending over in balloons.
Gentlemen, I just have to say this sets a terrible precedent. Floating feces is not helpful to anybody.
I am a little bit worried that, you know, I've been doing shows across the UK and some
of my audience members have been sending some of these floating feces towards the Premier
Inn.
I don't know what message to take from that.
Up through the pipes of the toilet.
I should say that just in case the Premier Inn's legal team are listening to this podcast, there are several differences between a jail and a Premier Inn, just to correct Anuvaab.
I think the beds are more comfortable.
Yes, and you can leave, that's one of the main differences.
I mean that is one of the key differences.
Although in jail, I imagine the continental breakfast goes to a more reasonable hour.
6.30am for some reason.
Well that brings us to the end of this week's Bugle.
Don't forget to buy your tickets for our election special show at the Bloomsbury Theatre in London on the 23rd of June. I will
be announcing my tour dates in approximately one week from now. So let's just say on next
week's Bugle. I'll tell you where they're all going to be. Quite a lot of dates. So
I'm going to need you all to find your way to lots of places. Also the news quiz is back next week on Radio 4 and BBC Sound, so tune
into that if you want more on the current state of the British election. Anubhav, anything
to plug?
Well, I'm finishing my tour Department of Britishness in London at the Soho Theatre
from the 4th to the 8th of June, and I just want to clarify Andy that what I mean by
Britishness is not the nation or ethnic Britishness.
What I mean by Britishness is that any one of us can be
British as long as we deny ourselves any external
manifestation of joy.
That is how I identify.
And I don't know how-
The audiences at my shows have been British for years.
LAUGHS
Josh, what have you got to plug?
Oh, I'm filming a new stand-up special
at the Tickets for the Late shows, June 21st at the Bell House.
And leading up to that, I've got a couple of quick headline shows to tune up.
Philadelphia on June 8th. that's in the afternoon.
Come see me at 4.30 p.m. at Helium Comedy Club.
Stamford Comedy Club in Connecticut on the 13th.
And then June 15th, a few more tickets left
for my show at the Kismet Theater in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
Late show tickets only.
I'm so excited.
And you can find all this in my newsletter,
joshgondelman.substack.com.
The newsletter's called That's Marvelous.
Thank you for listening, Bugles.
We'll be back next week with our live shows at the Leicester Square Theatre.
I believe there's very few tickets, if any, left, but we will have highlights from those
shows for you as our next Bugle in just over a week's time.
It will feature me, Alice Fraser, NATO Green and Nish Kumar.
See you all soon, goodbye! Hi, it's producer Chris from The Bugle here. Did you know that I have a new series of my podcast, Richie Firth Travel Hacker, out now.
It's the show where Richie Firth and I talk about how to make travel better in our very
special way.
In this series we discuss, Limebikes, Teslas, the London Overground and a whole bunch of
other random stuff that possibly involves wheels or tracks or engines of some variety. God what a hot sell this is I mean you you must be so
excited. Listen now.