The Daily Show: Ears Edition - ICYMI - Susan Rice on "Tough Love," Trump's Pandemic Response & The Portland Protester Crackdown
Episode Date: July 25, 2020"Tough Love" author and former National Security Advisor Susan Rice reflects on President Trump's handling of COVID-19 and his use of violent federal force against protesters. Learn more about your a...d-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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starting September 17th, wherever you get your podcasts.
Ambassador Rice, welcome to the Daily Social Distancing Show.
It's great to be with you, Trevor, thanks.
It's a very different way to be with one another.
And during this time, I've realized it's also a very different way for us for to to to to to to to to to be to be with one another and during this time I've realized it's also a very different
way for us to mourn the passing of people that we admired or cared about.
Most recently, John Lewis, when you look at his legacy and his life and what we need to
continue doing today, how far do you think we are on continuing that journey and creating
that good trouble as he called it?
Well, I hope that John Lewis's legacy will be to give us all a a their all all all all all all all all all all all all all all all all all all all their their their their their trouble as he called it? Well, I hope that John Lewis's legacy will be to give us all a kick in the pants
and remind us that we can be much better than we are, especially than we are today.
You know, he had such warmth and such humanity and such courage, and he never, never quit fighting.
And he knew that he was leaving us at a moment
when we were being sorely tested, when there's the possibility of us finally reckoning
as he tried all his life with our historic racial injustices and our deep-seated inequalities
that are not only racial but socioeconomic. But it's also a moment where we're struggling with a pandemic
that is disproportionately affecting
low-income people and people of color, immigrants.
And we have leadership that literally could care less.
You were the national security advisor to President Obama.
You were part of the pandemic response team. You were part of the pandemic response team.
You were part of the people who were tasked with protecting America from a situation just
like this.
What plans did you have in place that the Trump administration did or didn't use or what should
have been done as somebody who was on a task force design just to do this?
We understood, as did, frankly, prior administrations, that pandemics are inevitable.
That they, it's hard to predict exactly when they'll come, but we know they will come
and they've come repeatedly since 1918.
In fact, we had, under the Obama administration, in 2009, what was known as the swine
flu pandemic, which was quite consequential.
So we understood this could happen, so we were prepared.
We left the incoming Trump administration with briefing papers
and a 69-page playbook, which I like to call pandemics for dummies.
It was, here are all the questions and considerations you should run through if and when you face this
kind of crisis.
We had a tabletop exercise with the entire incoming Trump cabinet and the outgoing Obama
cabinet and we sat down in one of the scenarios we ran for them turned out to be prescient.
It was of such a novel SARS-like virus emerging China. And, you know, all of that
seemed to be for not, because a couple of years into office, President Trump dismantled the
office that I set up on global health security. They trash that playbook or stuck it in some
drawer in some shelf and never pulled it out. For two months, January, February and part of March, he really denied the reality of this virus.
You know, equated it to the seasonal flu, said it would go away, it was no big deal.
And then, by that time, you know, it was already well embedded in our country.
And closing down flights from China or flights from Europe
were too little, too late.
And he says that saved hundreds and millions of lives.
And he says that saved hundreds of millions of lives.
It seems like America is one of the few countries where the country doesn't have a rule about wearing mosques,
whereas overseas, you get like the UK,
you get South Africa, you get so many countries
who have gone, hey, we don't care about your personal opinions
on this, just like wearing clothes,
you have to wear a mask for now,
and it's as's ridiculous that we've
allowed small pieces of cotton to be this incredibly divisive thing.
We don't mind wearing shirts and pants in public.
Why do we have to mind wearing masks in public if it's going to protect ourselves
and our loved ones and those in our community?
If Donald Trump had, from early on said, look, you know, I recognize that, you know, it
may be a little bit uncomfortable or inconvenient, but when you're out in public, do as I do, wear
a mask, keep your loved ones and yourself safe, keep your city safe.
It'll make a huge difference.
It'll enable us to bend this curve, keep it down, and get our businesses back up and
running, people back to their jobs, kids back to their schools.
I don't think we would have had this political reaction to the extent that we have today.
How do you view the situation in Portland right now?
Because that has thrown many Americans off kilter, you know. Federal officers coming in in unmarked cars, in unmarked uniforms,
grabbing people off the streets, throwing them into vans, apprehending them.
People feeling like it feels less like a free country and more like an authoritarian regime
for some of the people who are on the ground there.
When you look at what's happening, I mean, there's always a balance between federal response and letting the states handle it or the cities themselves. But how do you
view what's happening in Portland right now? Do you think that it's a required use of force
or federal assistance, or do you think that something has gone off the rails? No, it's an abuse of
power and it's a purely politically motivated abuse of power. He's sagging in the polls.
He thinks the only way to rally his base is through racism and, you know, touting law
and order.
He is sending federal forces out on the streets without markings, without insignia, probably
without legal authority to do so.
And he's rounding up people as if we were, you know, in Belarus or something.
It's ridiculous.
And you know, it has nothing to do with their stated mandate of protecting federal buildings
and installations.
They're now out, literally beating the crap out of peaceful protesters.
And trying to incite more violence
so that they have an excuse to use more force.
But here he's now pushing the envelope in Portland and threatening to do it elsewhere.
And I think Americans need to be on high alert.
This is an abuse of power, it's corruption, its autocracy on our own shores.
There's no denying that your name has come up repeatedly
in and around the conversation of vice president.
Would you want to serve in the Biden administration?
Would you want to serve as a VP?
Well, Trevor, what I want is for Joe Biden to be elected the next president of the
United States. I want us to win the Senate and keep the House
so that we have the opportunity to put our country back on course
and to unite the country and to deal with the damage that's been done,
but also to take this opportunity and move forward,
improve health care, improve education, deal with our underlying disparities.
And if I can help in any way, you know, whether it's at the highest levels or some other way,
to be part of helping him get elected and to govern if and when he does, then that's what I want to do.
And if, you know, if that's not what he chooses for me, that's fine as well, I will do everything
I can regardless because of all that we've just talked about,
so much is at stake, we have got to move this country
in a different and better direction.
And so I'll do anything I can,
whether it's the modern day equivalent of licking envelopes,
or it's standing by this side.
Well, as you say, I hope America gets back on track. I hope people find a way to depoliticize those little pieces of cotton, and hopefully
your words will become prescient when we chat again in a few months.
Ambassador Rice, thank you so much for joining us on the Daily Social Distance show.
Thanks, Trevor, great to be with you. The Daily Show with Cover Noa, Ears Edition.
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When 60 Minutes premiered in September 1968,
there was nothing like it.
This is 60 Minutes. It's a kind of a magazine for television.
Very few have been given access to the treasures in our archives.
But that's all about to change. Like, the treasures in our archives.
But that's all about to change.
Like none of this stuff gets looked at.
That's what's incredible.
I'm Seth Done of CBS News.
Listen to 60 Minutes, a second look on Apple podcasts starting September 17.