5/12/25: Stephen Miller Plots Ending Habeas Corpus, Trump Claims Massive Drug Cost Reduction, Kanye New Song, Mayor Arrested By ICE - podcast episode cover

5/12/25: Stephen Miller Plots Ending Habeas Corpus, Trump Claims Massive Drug Cost Reduction, Kanye New Song, Mayor Arrested By ICE

May 12, 20251 hr 5 min
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Episode description

Krystal and Emily discuss Stephen Miller plot to suspend Habeas Corpus, Trump claims sweeping drug cost reduction, Kanye's new song, Mayor arrested by ICE speaks out.

 

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Transcript

Speaker 1

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Speaker 2

So in recent comments to reporters, Stevin Miller floated suspending habeas corpus. Really take a listen to how he lays this out here, because I think there are some several significant things he says.

Speaker 3

Let's take a listen.

Speaker 4

Well, the Constitution is clear and that, of course is the supreme law of the land that the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus can be suspended in a time of invasion. So it would say that's an option we're actively looking at. Look, a lot of it depends on whether the courts do the right thing or not. At the end of the day, Congress passed the body of law known as the Immigration Nationality Act, which stripped Article

three courts. That's the judicial branch of jurisdiction over immigration cases. So Congress actually passed is called jurisdiction stripping legislation. It passed a number of laws that say that the Article three courts aren't even allowed to be involved in immigration cases. Many of you probably don't know this. I'll give you a good example. Are you familiar with the term Temporary

protect the Status or TPS. Right, So, by statute, the courts are stripped of jurisdiction from overruling a presidential determination or a secretarial determination on TPS when the Secretary of Home Insecurity makes that determination. So when Secretary Nome terminated TPS for the illegals that Biden flew into the country, when courts stepped in, they were violating explicit language that

Congress had enacted saying they have no jurisdiction. So it's not just the courts aren't just at war with the executive branch. The courts are at war these radical rogue judges with the legislative branch as well too, So all of that will inform the choice that the president ultimately makes.

Speaker 5

Yes, christ I just want to say Stephen Miller is at war with the Trump administration there because the Trump administration stopped the invasion.

Speaker 3

Oh, yes, true.

Speaker 5

It's an amazing Yeah, it's an amazing contradiction.

Speaker 3

So are we being invaded or are we not being invaded?

Speaker 5

They are justifying this threat of habeas corpus on the idea that we are under invasion. Right, They're also touting that they have completely shut down the southern border. So these two things are absolutely in contradiction. I was supposed to have be on the New media pool duty yesterday, but they called a lid. Yeah, and that was like the top question that I was going to ask, Like which one is true? Did you stop the invasion or can we have habeas corpus because we're being invated?

Speaker 2

That is a fantastic question. And I mean the key line there, which squares the circle, so.

Speaker 3

To speak, is or whatever, Yeah, got you know what I'm saying?

Speaker 2

Got it anyway? Is he says it depends on whether the do the right thing or not. So also the invasion, apparently that would justify this depends on whether.

Speaker 3

Or not they like the court's decisions.

Speaker 2

In terms of the last thing that he lays out there about the court stripping position provisions, et cetera. You know, my reading, based on other people who understand this stuff way better than I do, is that he's really playing fast and loose with the facts there, and that yes, there are court stripping provisions basically that push immigration law into immigration courts, but appeals into federal courts, as you would expect, and that is the process that's been playing

out in the court system that we've seen. But you know, when you hear him say this, of course there's a question of, well, is this just Steven Miller doing Steven Miller's stuff and you know, trying to make a spectacle or raise some threat, But they're not really that serious about it. On the contrary, CNN at least has reporting that Trump has been directly involved in these discussions himself.

Speaker 3

We can put this up on the screen.

Speaker 2

He's been personally involved in discussions inside the administration of potentially suspending habeas corpus lego, procedure that allows people to challenge their detention in court. While Trump has not explicitly mentioned habeas corpus in public. It was what he was referencing last month when he commented on steps he could take to combat nationwide injunctions against his actions on deportations.

According to one of the people familiar with the talks, and we actually have that sound of Trump sort of vaguely alluding to what Stephen Miller is laying out explicitly here.

Speaker 3

Let's go ahead and take a listen to that.

Speaker 6

You mentioned this last night in your speech and home. We're basically an unprecedented situation. There's a lot of abuses of nationwide injunctions, so we're seemingly designed to sort kill your power, specifically when it comes to deporting these idegal, violent aliens that came in or the previous administration. Have you spoked your team couplays to mitigate this and continue to.

Speaker 7

Deliver femare Yeah, Well, there are ways to mitigate it, and there's some very strong ways. There's one way that's been used by three very highly respected presidents, but we hope we don't have to go that route. But there is one way that has been used very successfully by three presidents, all highly respected, and hopefully we don't have to go that way, but there are ways of mitigating it.

Speaker 2

So I believe Emily the three presidents he's referring to are Abraham Lincoln most famously. I would say, Grant during reconstruction to try to get the violence of the KKK under control.

Speaker 3

And then George W.

Speaker 2

Bush wouldn't necessarily say highly respect to that one during the we're.

Speaker 8

Also taking the Iraq war plans.

Speaker 2

That's true, so I guess there we're rehabbing George W.

Speaker 3

Bush with this administration.

Speaker 2

But yeah, so during the war on terror and effectively, look, what they want to be able to do is say whoever they want to designate as you know, a quote unquote terrorists, whether that's a cartel association or a tattoo or just because they say so, or perhaps someone who harbors ill will against a tesla, or who said the wrong thing with regard to Palestine or Israel, or who dared to protest and a hands off protest or something like that against the Trump administration. I'm not making these

examples up, by the way. These are all groups that have been floated as domestic terrorists by the Trump administration, by Trump administration officials that they can just snatch them up and imprison them indefinitely without them being able to

challenge that imprisonment as unlawful. That's what they are contemplating here, and I think most immediately they're contemplating it in the context of the of Immigration and obviously their plan to use the Alien Enemies Act to effectively get around any sort of court challenges and just ship people into these foreign goologs where they've never been heard, where they can never be heard from. Again, that has been in large

part blocked by the courts. They're very unhappy with the court decisions, and so now this is the next path to try to effectuate this same lawless outcome via you know, a different legal patina that they're going for.

Speaker 5

Yeah, and I think some of this is van Miller trying to ratchet up pressure on judges. I think, of course, whenever you see Trump or top officials, someone as powerful as Stephen Miller flirting with this stuff in public, you have to absolutely take it seriously.

Speaker 8

If I had to.

Speaker 5

Guess, I would say that Steven Miller's strategy here is ratcheting up pressure on judges, and that he is not entirely serious about doing this.

Speaker 8

Because of what we were mentioning.

Speaker 5

Earlier just that it would make it, you know, it would make it appears that there's an ongoing invasion during the Trump administration, which is going to become an increasing

problem for their immigration crackdown period. As you mentioned, that's what they're justifying some of these deportations with the idea that there's an invasion that is being orchestrated trend by the Venezuelan government through trend at raguall which even I think John Hudson had this in the Washington Post, even the Trump administration's own intelligence underminds that's not being orchestrated by the government of Venezuela.

Speaker 2

So I mean, and a Trump, a Trump appointed judge said the same, said effectively like this is a preposterous invocation of the Alien Enemies Act.

Speaker 3

It fails on every level.

Speaker 8

Yeah, yep.

Speaker 5

The last thing I wanted to say on this is I think it is fair to point out that there have been some real abuses, abuses of the Universal Injunctions, and there's been at executive functions. Jackline and Goldsmith has been following this in a really interesting way and a very critical way that is very critical of Donald Trump. Basically, you know, we were talking about this in our earlier

corruption block. In general, there has been just a lot of norm sliding since twenty sixteen, as everyone kind of knows, or maybe backsliding norm backsliding is one way to put it. And it is true that some of this so, for example, administrative stays. He writes, the practice of administrative stays against executive action, according to Christopher Moore, was basically unheard of

before twenty twenty two. And he says that the Trump administration arguments against single federal judges in joining programs on a universal basis are entirely legitimate, meaning there have been a lot of cases in this second Trump administration where judges are acting alone on a national basis with these

universal injunctions in ways that are inappropriate. That said, obviously, he goes on to say, some of this is because the Trump administration itself is doing some unprecedented as taking some unprecedented steps.

Speaker 8

So I think we're in one of those situations.

Speaker 5

Where it's like the answer to Trump's craziness might also be crazy. It's just sort of a question of how do you get out of the doom spiral? And that's pretty like that that feels. I guess I feel very pessimistic about.

Speaker 3

That, Crystal. I indeed I do as well. Emily, I do as well.

Speaker 2

Yeah, it reminds me of you know, one of the talking points that Trump administration officials and defenders like to say is like, no president has faced, no presential administration has faced more lawsuits. It's like, well, yeah, because they haven't done as much illegal shit, just like wildly in less, you know, in one hundred days or less as you all have. So there's a logical reason why you're facing

so much trouble with the courts. And it's on immigration, it's on a lot of the DOGE activity has been enjoined and you know ultimately will likely be struck down. You can see that there is has been with this administration, I think, and intentionally you talked about this as well. They just decided they don't really care about the law. They're going to do what they want to do and then let the courts have to clean up the mess exactly.

Speaker 3

And so then when the courts come.

Speaker 2

In, are like, you can't do that, and you know, you can't just shut down the CFPB, you can't just shut down USAID. You can't just decide that you don't like this program, so you're not going to spend the money that was congressionally appropriated. You can't just ship people to foreign gulog no due process. You can't admit that you wrongfully deported this person and then be like, we're

not going to do anything about it. Though when they come in to clean up the mess, you don't get to kick and scream about it, because your whole plan was We're going to break a lot of laws and then force the courts to have to come in and

clean up the mess afterwards. So, you know, I think that is a kind of ratcheting up that is that they I'm sure anticipated was going to come as a result here, And so I think the significance of the Miller comments like, I think you have to take these things very seriously at this point because of the way the Trump administration has conducted themselves, and clearly they do have a goal of getting around normal due process and normal checks that have existed, you know, in this country

since the founding and you know, going back to like the you know, magne Karta in terms of legal principles.

Speaker 5

And pulling out all of the documentary my pocket man.

Speaker 8

You should sell Breaking Points branded pocket magnet.

Speaker 5

Oh gosh, Soccer would love that. We shouldn't even speak it into existence because.

Speaker 3

He'll be our baby gift to him.

Speaker 5

That. By the way, if you're not following executive functions, shout out to them. They're pretty Trump critical, but I do find them pretty helpful.

Speaker 8

And just one more point from Goldsmith, who writes he's argued the.

Speaker 5

Administration has a legitimate complain about universal injunctions administrative states that should ultimately be resolved by Supreme Court of Congress. There is a pattern of mostly democratic point at district judges and joining Trump initiatives, just as there was a similar and indeed more extreme in terms of percentages mirrored pattern during the Biden years. But to know whether the twenty twenty five pattern reflects real or systemic bias, we

would need to assess a whole slew of issues. And this is I'm just gonna list this out so we know what to keep our eye on going forward. The influence of plaintiff forum shopping, the profile of judges who denied relief, and the abundant evidence that Trump two point zero is not taking legal compliance seriously. So those are the things to follow, I think going forward in this broader narrative of the universal injunctions in the.

Speaker 3

Stays yeah, because I mean some things.

Speaker 2

Yeah, their extraordinary actions have required extraordinary actions as well. And even so the courts can't really can't really keep up.

You aren't really a match for and in the Trump administration to that point has just in many instances said yeah, we got this ruling against us, We're still not really going to comply, like we'll do a little bit, or we'll pay some lip service, or we'll sort of like pretend that we're that we read it a different way, etc. But you know, in many and many of them, not the high profile like Kilmar Bargo Garcia, but some of the decisions that have gone against Doge, for example, where

they say, okay, you have to reinstate this money and then they just don't.

Speaker 8

Well yeah, and you're right, you mentioned this just really quickly as we wrap up.

Speaker 5

That's part of the strategy here is to throw as many novel legal theories at the wall and see what sticks.

Speaker 8

That's very much the Alien Enemies Act.

Speaker 5

A lot of people in Trump circles would say, listen, what we're doing is taking this action while it works its way through the courts, and if the courts go one way. Trump has said this many times, we'll follow the courts. And that's because, as dangerous as it is to even tell that line, the reason they're doing that is so that they can get as much done as

quickly as possible. So it's not just a messaging flood zone strategy visa Vi Bannon, but it's actually just about trying as many different strategies as they can to get things done while the courts go through the process. Otherwise they feel like they won't have enough time to take as many ramatic actions. Dose is a really good example of this, just folding the CFPB for example, Well, it's

basically done like that, that's already happened. Yeah, So, I mean it's under they've kind of like truncated it and moved it and to formally close it have to go through Congress.

Speaker 8

But now the overtime window has just been exploded.

Speaker 5

So when the CFPB, if it goes to the Reconciliation Bill that they're getting rid of it, it's less of a fight because we've gone through five months now without the CFPB.

Speaker 2

Creative facts on the ground, yeap, just really quick. I wanted to get this in the show because this is just wild. Put this up on the screen. So Trump has by and large suspended refugee resettlement, with one very specific example, which is white South Africans are not only being granted refugee status by Trump, but they're also being given you know, funds and plane tickets and all sorts of assistants to relocate here. So you know, this is a Elon Musk Steven Miller project. You've ever seen one.

So you know, the refugees fleeing wars and persecution from any other place around the world, Nope, even ones who had been you know, absolutely vetted people, you know, people in Afghanistan for example, who had helped our own troops during the war there at grave risk to themselves. And now you've got the Taliban back in power, their refugee resettlement applications being torn up even though they're vetted, ready to go, that's not happening.

Speaker 3

But white South Africans they're.

Speaker 2

Being you know, given the green light and the red carpet rolled out for them to come here.

Speaker 5

Yeah. And part of the reason is that the Trump administration feels as though this is a really clear cut contrast with some of the BS asylum claims. So it's not that they aren't sympathetic stories, but they are economic cases that people have claimed asylum come much of the unit ST's words claimed asylum, and in some cases I think this is probably true with Kilmar Abrego Garcia, but

who knows. We actually asked his attorney about this a month or two ago about the legitimacy of his asylum claim that he made in twenty nineteen.

Speaker 8

So the administration feels like they have a perfect juxtaposition here.

Speaker 5

Of people who in South Africa it is a deeply uncomfortable thing to think about, or talk about or explore. There is still high levels of racial violence, and that's

where they think they have this clear cut case. And they're trolling with this because there's a Tucker did an interesting interview actually a couple months back with a South African civil rights activist names Ernest Rhetz, if I'm pronouncing that correctly, and you Tucker asked him about this, and he was like, South Africans, they don't want to leave.

So that's why I think this is a troll from the administration to say, here's what a real asylum case looks like versus here's what the economic migrant asylum case looks like.

Speaker 8

And South Africans are fighting for a reason.

Speaker 5

It's because they don't like their family settled that land hundreds of years ago, if you listen to their point on it, So they feel like it would be the opposite of what they want to do to flee to the United States. So it's just a troll basically, Yeah, okay, it's it's I mean, it's so.

Speaker 2

The numbers are that white South Africans make up roughly seven percent of the South African population and own roughly seventy three percent of the individually held land, and their claim is that they are the victims of such egregious racial discrimination that their claims should go beyond those of like I said, the you know interpreters who worked for US in Afghanistan, or people who are fleeing Democratic Republic of Congo or Venezuela or correct, Yeah, that's that's right,

which you know Republicans five seconds ago would have had a very different take on that view. And so all refugee resettlements shut down except for this group of white South Africans, who Steve Bannon says are the most racist people on the planet, according to Steve Bannon, just quoting him.

Speaker 8

Just quoting, just quoting Steve.

Speaker 3

Yes.

Speaker 2

So anyway, that Steven Miller project is ongoing. One more piece here, which is, you know, the some of this is breaking through with the public in terms of their views of Trump. We can put this up on the screen.

This was a poll that was taken in the context of Trump's first one hundred days that we didn't get a chance to cover, but I wanted to, you know, make sure to highlight here you have a majority of Americans now fifty two percent who say that Trump is a dangerous dictator whose power should be limited before he destroys American democracy. That was the question here, and I

think this was commissioned by Axios. So fifty two percent of all Americans, eighty seven percent of Democrats, fifty six percent of Independence and even seventeen percent of Republicans, which is actually a little bit higher than I would have expected. Along racial lines, there's some racial divide here. The highest numbers are among Americans sixty seven percent, than Latino sixty three percent, Asian Americans, Pacific Islander fifty eight percent, and

white Americans forty five percent. So even among white people, you're getting pretty close to a majority who say this guy is a dangerous dictator. And you know what I've been saying, Emily is I think as his popularity declines, I think you will see more and more aggressive authoritarian tactics to shut down dissent. Now, I think what we're seeing this week, and this is very we see this around our show. You've got the China quote unquote deal, You've got whatever is going on in Gaza, you've got

the prescription drug thing we're about to talk about. Like, I get the sense he realizes that his popularity is plummeting, and he needs to do some stuff, make some announcements, make some things happen, get some good pr get some good headlines to try to stem the you know, the

the tide in terms of his plummeting approval rating. But in any case, you know, even as people of course have responded to typically respond most to their own direct material interests, people are also, you know, in America, pretty opposed to dictators who threaten democracy.

Speaker 3

We're at least.

Speaker 2

Theoretically ideally committed to having a demic product system here. It's something that people take a lot of pride in this country. And so I do think because his actions have been so extraordinary, so authoritarian, and so rapid, that the flip side of the what is Bannon called the days of Thunder, the flood, the zone strategy of doing so much at one time, you don't get to have that boiling frog effect where it's just ratcheting, ratcheting, ratcheting.

Speaker 3

This hit people over the head.

Speaker 2

And you know, I think there's a genuine, deep concern among a lot of people about the direction that he's taken the country in.

Speaker 7

Well.

Speaker 5

Yeah, and so this poll was February to March and it was by the Public Religion Research Institute. It as part of this like gargantuan poll. It's a very interesting poll actually if you read all of it. And I mean that's why I kind of thought the Bukeli stuff was just playing with fire for the Trump administrator. Like I think they had this idea that the Cali stuff

made them look cool. And I think to most Americans it's like there's nothing cool about Bukele, Like he's so sad, Like it's it's such a ridiculous thing.

Speaker 8

That he's doing. I call himself a cool dictator.

Speaker 5

Maybe it flies in Latin America does not fly in the United States like it just it doesn't hit the same way here. Now, the poll juxtaposed that question that you just read with so dangerous dictator. Also that he's a strong leader restoring America's greatness was the other option, that he's a strong leader who should be given the power he needs to restore America's greatness. And then I think there was like a skip option. So it was

fifty two to forty four in that question. Interestingly, in that poll, he had a forty three percent approval rating, which means that there's probably some overlap of people who approve of the job he's doing and also see him.

Speaker 2

As a Well, that's why I was noting the Republican numbers seventeen percent saying he's a dangerous dictator. I'm sure he probably, you know, is a Republican approval rating is probably ninety percent.

Speaker 8

It's probably pretty hard.

Speaker 2

So there's probably you know, some percentage in there that are like, yeah, he's a dictator, but hey.

Speaker 3

You do what you gotta do.

Speaker 8

Yeah, that's probably true.

Speaker 2

Yeah, Well, I mean that's that unfortunately, is what we've learned throughout history is when democracy is unable to deliver benefits, then guess what.

Speaker 3

People start to become curious. And I do think that's where we are.

Speaker 8

It feels like desperate times.

Speaker 5

And I mean, if we don't even talk about this enough, nobody talks about this enough. How useless Congress has become just utterly useless. This is even if you're look at you, if you were a Republican right now, you're looking at Republicans holding the presidency, the House, and the Senate, and all they can do is muster a reconciliation bill because they're not confident in their numbers. There's no way for them to build consensus to pass major pieces of legislation.

They have punted so much of their responsibilities to administrated agencies and to the president itself.

Speaker 8

I mean, just to try to take back tariff power. They couldn't even get.

Speaker 5

That pass, in part because Democrat was like traveling overseas and didn't even care enough about the freaking vote.

Speaker 8

So Congress is just it's a really dangerous situation.

Speaker 5

How much or how how atrophied the political process of like republican government is.

Speaker 2

Although, to be honest with you, I don't know that that is really necessary. Like we've talked about this in the context of immigration. This will be a good transition to the prescription drug piece. Yes, Democrats were ready to capitulate on all kinds of immigration things, like if they have wanted to work through a congressional process to accomplish something, especially in the very early days of Trump's term, they certainly could have done it. You know, I think it's

just easier to put on an executive order. Then he doesn't have to negotiate.

Speaker 3

He can just be a king.

Speaker 2

He can just issue his proclamations and then you know, kick it to the courts and make the courts stop him. And so I think he just prefers that to the messiness of having to get in the weeds or god forbid, work with some Democrats on something that he would want to get done.

Speaker 8

And they don't want to take votes. I mean, Congress doesn't want to take votes.

Speaker 5

They don't want to be held accountable when it's easier to go through the president, So it just better.

Speaker 2

It's mutually reinforcing. They don't have to take any tough votes and he can just do whatever he wants. Right.

Speaker 8

Trade war, trade wars, actual wars, all of that.

Speaker 5

I mean, we're just completely like Biden kept the Trump tariffs and that didn't go through Congress. The same thing with like we've had an AMF for however long that bipartisan presidents have used three or whatever. Yeah, mutually, it is mutually reinforcing. Yeah, huge news yesterday. That could turn out to be ultimately kind of nothing or it could turn out to be I guess.

Speaker 8

Sort of significant. And part of that depends on Congress.

Speaker 9

Crystal.

Speaker 3

Yeah, as we were saying, so we can put.

Speaker 8

The first element on the screen.

Speaker 5

This is Donald Trump on Sunday afternoon talking about prescription drug prices, untrue, social and I'm going to read this. For many years, the world has wondered why prescription drugs and pharmaceuticals in the US were so much higher in price than they were in any other nation, sometimes being five to ten times more expensive than the same drug manufactured in the exact same laboratory or plant by the same company.

Speaker 8

Question Mark, question mark, question mark.

Speaker 5

After a few lines of all caps there, If you didn't get it from my voice, I'll just let you know that's what it is. Now.

Speaker 8

How we're going to lowercase.

Speaker 5

It was always difficult to explain, and very embarrassing because in fact there was no correct or rightful answer.

Speaker 8

Rightful.

Speaker 5

Interesting, the pharmaceutical drug companies would say for years that it was research and development costs, and that all of these costs were and would be for no reason whatsoever borne by the quote suckers of America alone, campaign contributions can do wonders.

Speaker 8

But not with me, he says, and not with the Republican Party. Interesting.

Speaker 5

On the same day Crystal as the Cutter plane announcement. Yeah, so we could go to the next sled. Yeah, so, he says. Therefore, I'm pleased to announce that tomorrow morning. So today in the White House at nine am, I will be signing one of the most consequential executive orders in our country's history. Prescription drug and pharmaceutical prices will be reduced almost immediately by thirty to eighty percent.

Speaker 8

They will rise throughout the world.

Speaker 5

In order to equalize and for the first time in many years, bring fairness to America. I will be instituting a most Favored Nations policy, whereby the US will pay the same price as the nation that pays the lowest price anywhere in the world. Our country will finally be treated fairly, and citizens of healthcare costs will be reduced by numbers never even thought of before. So Chrystal, this

is a fairly significant announcement. I think, probably more significant if a if momentum builds in Congress to actually codify this. So Roe tweeted actually late last night eleven thirty eight pm. I'm willing to introduce the Trump EO exactly as written as legislation to be bipartisan and get something done for the American people. Any Republicans willing to co sponsor, Let's then get Speaker Johnson to call a vote on it.

So Congressman Conna, obviously a Democrat in the House of Representatives, now calling on Republicans to take that EO text and pass it through Congress, pass it through the Senate, and make it law because an EO can get again, as Roe says, challenged by big Pharma. So that I think the likelihood of this actually becoming law probably depends on whether Republicans are willing to get this through Congress, and that seems highly unlikely, especially the Senate.

Speaker 8

Yeah.

Speaker 2

Well, I mean my top line reaction is that this is probably fake, an attempt to generate positive headlines to distract from the fact that the big beautiful bill entails giving a giant tax cut to the rich paid for by, you know, cuts to.

Speaker 3

Healthcare for poor people. So that's my big day. And the reason I say that, I would love to be proved wrong. By the way. The reason I say that.

Speaker 2

Is because he did almost six exact same executive order in his first term and it got immediately blocked by multiple courts. So maybe something will be different, maybe there's a different legal strategy. I it's nine oh nine now as we're as we're recording this. I don't know if he's released it yet, but we haven't seen all the details. But the way he describes it in this Truth Social is pretty much identical to the executive order in the

first Trump administration, which immediately got blocked isstruck down. We also know that he had been talking to the Republicans about including something like this in the reconciliation bill and they all balked at it. So you know, the Republicans are not willing to go along with it, and he hasn't shown in the past that he was actually like committed to following through in order to get something accomplished.

And what I mean by that is, look, if you're going to if you are going to do something like this, it really can't be done through executive It does have to go through Congress. So if he wants to accomplish this, he would take row up on his offer here. He would you know, steamroll Republicans and make this as much of a priority as it would take, it being as much of a priority as something like his immigration policy is.

Speaker 3

And I see no signs of that.

Speaker 2

So until improven otherwise, I have to think that this is an attempt to grab headlines and distract from many of the very indefensible and unpopular things that are happening with this reconciliation villain, with his administration in general.

Speaker 5

This sparked another billionaire on billionaire war, by the way civil war in the billionaire class, because it seems as though Bill Ackman popularized this idea in Trump circles.

Speaker 8

He was kind of bragging about that it was.

Speaker 5

He posted an idea that looks a lot like this on March seventh of twenty twenty four, kind of took a victory lap. Yesterday, Then Mark Cuban jumped on and said the manufacturers aren't the big problem, Bill. They could sell brand meds for far, far less and in some cases lower than other countries today. If you take the big PBMs, so pharmacy benefit managers out of the middle, and you are proud of the problem, Bill, I'll bet you've signed a pharmacy benefits deal with a big PBM tomorrow.

Call them and ask for a list of your claims and the net drug price paid for each. Ask them for a net price list after rebates that you can verify. Let me know how long they laugh at you. He goes on to say the issues that CEOs have no clue about their pharmacy or health care benefits, so they work with the PBMs that cause this mess, assuming their consultants are doing the right thing by them. He said, this EO can have a huge impact, but it has

to be built around transparency and removing the middleman. So the PBMs are obviously a part of this problem. Actually, there's there's going to be some conservative backlash this. We've seen that before too, because it's price fixing and they're in the park pocket of big pharma. There will be some completely ideological and sincere conservative disagreement with this because they see it as price fixing, and we don't need to open up that can of worms necessarily.

Speaker 8

But whether this.

Speaker 5

Actually gets through Congress, that's the problem is Republicans partially are in the pocket of big pharma like many Democrats, and then partially also are have this this ideological aversion to anything that looks like price fixing. So good luck with that, Mike Johnson and Roe sadly.

Speaker 2

Yeah, well, and I mean on the merits, like, it is absolutely unjustifiable that Americans pay so much more for prescription drugs than discussing anywhere around the world. Trump is right that we are expected to put the bill for

their overhead and their quote unquote research and development. Now, the other thing that this is wildly at odds with the rest of the Trump administration plan is every single new drug molecule has been developed over the past several decades has been funded by public research.

Speaker 3

It has not come out of industry, come out.

Speaker 2

Of public research dollars, the very dollars that are being completely slashed and gutted by the Trump administration currently. So the actual innovation that has pushed for an advanced science that is under assault and that would inherently actually push more into the into private industry, and you know, we

would have to rely more on private industry. And a lot of the quote unquote R and D that private industry does is more about trying to extend their patents, you know, reformulate something they already know works and is popular in order to extend their patent life. That is what a lot of their research and development funds ultimately go into. And yes, the American taxpayer and the you know, American consumer have been forced to front that research and

development through these extraordinarily high prescription drug prices. You know, the place where it's most egregious is with Medicare where we're banned, have been banned from negotiating negotiating with drug makers to lower drug prices. That's something the Biden administration

took some tepid steps in the direction of fixing. I believe this is part of the Inflation Reduction Act where they had a list it wasn't all drugs, but a list of certain top drugs that now Medicare is going to negotiate on, and that is you know, a small but quite significant win. Those are the sorts of things that you would need to do to actually get this under control, so we'll see where things where it goes

from here. But you know, color me skeptical until I still see some actual, you know, actual commitment to this and action beyond what again he did in the first Trump administration with literally zero effect.

Speaker 5

Fair enough, should we move on to Kanye. I know you're tramping at the bit to get to the segment.

Speaker 3

Yeah, So, Kanye of Us is out with a new album.

Speaker 2

I believe the album title is cuck Leave is the name of the album title, and one track in particular has garnered quite a lot of attention because it is the whole chorus of the track is basically just Hyle Hitler.

Speaker 8

It's n word, Kamayle Hitler.

Speaker 3

Yes, that is uh, that is the course of the track.

Speaker 2

Now, Spotify and Apple and a bunch of other you know, a bunch of other outlets have banned distribution of it. They've really tried to block it, but it hasn't matter because it's gotten millions and millions of views on Twitter and other places where it's been allowed to go. So we have a little bit of a censored version of the video just so you can get a taste of what this is all about.

Speaker 3

Let's go ahead and take a listen.

Speaker 8

I don't understanding things I say.

Speaker 5

I don't understanding things I say.

Speaker 2

Some of the other lyrics Emily, according to Grock are man, these people took my kids from me, then they closed my bank account. I got so much anger in me, got no way to take it out. Think I'm stuck in the matrix where the fs my nitrous of referring to nitrous oxide. Yes, I am a cook. I like when people f on my b word the shit that I'm posting on Twitter. They're telling me, hey, don't say that.

How Edwards can see me in public. I'm driving an off road maybox, so get some you know, classic wealth poorn in there as well. With all the money and fame, I still can't get my kids back. With all the money and fame, I still don't get to see my children. So I became a Nazi. Yeah, bitch, I'm the villain. That is some of the sampling of kin the lyrics of someone who's clearly like, I mean, I don't know

what to say. He's clearly in the midst of a mental break, has been for a while surrounded with people who are not going to intervene and you know, in a way that is incredibly destructive to himself obviously, his his family, his kids, his relationships. Apparently the only people who surrounded with are you know, yes, men who just will will hype him up and tell him everything he does is great and glorious and brilliant and with you know, damaging impacts on society as well.

Speaker 5

I think you have to say, can you read the last lyric by the way, those last two lines.

Speaker 2

With all the money and fame, I still don't get to see my children. So I became a Nazi? Yeah, bitch on the villain.

Speaker 8

Yeah, this is like profoundly sad. Yeah.

Speaker 5

The point of the song, so like there's been this understandable reaction to the song is though it's like Kanye West embracing, which he's done in other formats, by the way, white supremacy and like.

Speaker 3

Being an overt Nazi, being an overt celebrating Hitler.

Speaker 5

Yes, right, what he's saying in this particular song is that and this is very Kanye West and just an absolute torture genius and extremely profoundly sad. He's saying that he's been pushed into this basically because he's so desperate. This is a cry for help that he is nobody is helping him, basically, and so he is now turning to the most taboos object in this country and in the broader West, just to just to get attention from his family and just to get help from his family.

And it's like one of the saddest things to witness. And John Legend has said that he's like, this is they used to be friends, and he's like, this is incredibly sad to watch.

Speaker 8

I think we all feel it the same way. It's incredibly sad to watch.

Speaker 5

And the song is interesting to me because it's his turn into extreme extreme right wing like fascist, race science, disgusting nazi bullshit.

Speaker 8

I think I have no idea what he believes.

Speaker 5

I don't think he has any idea what he believes because he's so he's in the throes of like this, this horrible mental illness. It's crazy that it also sounds like subconsciously at the very least, he's starting to grapple with the fact that this is a cry for help, and that is just is incredibly sad.

Speaker 2

The song concludes with the sample from a nineteen thirty six Adolf Hitler speech, If you consider the work I'm doing to be right. If you think I have been diligent, that I have worked, that I've advocated for you this year, that I've spent my time honestly in the service of my people, then cast your vote. If so, then stand up for me like I have stood up for you. So including a you know, well sampling from Hitler himself

into the song. I mean, I don't know, I struggle to have as much empathy as you do at this point, Emily, because it's not like there haven't been people who have tried to get him to He obviously needs medication, yeah, like he needs to be probably institutional and not nitrous.

Speaker 9

Yeah.

Speaker 2

And you know, there's it's very it's a very it's a very difficult situation. But even in the throes of mental illness, there is still some level of agency. I mean, if you're able to pen a song that people would you know, part as some sort of cry for help,

then there's obviously some level of agency there. So you know, get yourself on a trajectory where people who actually care about you, where you listen to them, where you stop damaging them, and that's where you know it's I saw I think it was Ken Klippenstein who said something to that is another really difficult aspect of this story, which is there are, understand for very good reasons, you know, a lot of a lot of guardrails in place against

people being institutionalized against their will. Yeah, right, and I totally get that, right, and we understand where that comes from, and.

Speaker 3

We really respect it.

Speaker 2

But also you look at what he's doing to himself, let alone to his kids who now don't have the benefit of a relationship with their dad, who you know, I'm sure, I mean, obviously that's a really important thing

for any kid in the estrangement from his family. And then, you know, even as you and others can can parse since how this is a cry for help or whatever, we also have to acknowledge that the way it's being landing in society is just as a celebration of Hitler totally, and because he has so much fame and power in Cachet and the torture Genius blah blah blah. That is that furtherre's a lot of extremely ugly, racist, horrific ideologies where you know, it's just like, oh, this is now,

this is now on the table. I think it's also a demonstration of the of the doom loop spiral that society is in as well, where there's rewards just for saying the most provocative thing you possibly can. And I think that's part of what's going on here very intentionally with Kanye as well, is like this is the ultimate

third rail. There is nothing more horrific that people can imagine than the intentional extermination of millions of people just for who they are, Jewish people, just for who they are. And so for you to overtly embrace that, then you're going to instantly win the race in terms of who can be the most outrageous and the most provocative. And

I think he understands that too. So it is also a reflection not just of you know him in throes of mental illness, but is also a reflection of the things that are rewarded in our society.

Speaker 5

Right and increasingly, No, I think that's your I mean, he absolutely has agency on the point that you just made let's roll E three on the screen, because that's how this is what we have video basically of how this is landing with some people who I think you know there, Crystal. This is one of many examples of music that geez, people are doing like just full listening to the song, doing just full Nazi salutes. If you're if you're listening to this and not watching that was a video.

Speaker 3

Of there's a Roman salute. Simily they're throwing their heart out to Kanye West.

Speaker 5

You know, is this a throwback to another debate that we add But yeah, definitely not Roman salutes in this case, one hundred percent not Roman salutes in this case because.

Speaker 8

They are literally saying Hile Hitler, singing Hail Hitler. I imagine they're dropping the N word in there as well.

Speaker 2

And yeah, it's it's, which is also something that's being apparently celebrated on the right currently, at least as aimed at at five year old autistic children.

Speaker 5

Well, and this is to your point that, yes, Kanye West absolutely has agency, and the people around him who are indulging this have agency as well. And the reason that he is able to make these music videos and produce this music is because there are people around him who think that they can continue profiting off of this extremely sad situation, both monetarily and by you know, the actual like proximity to.

Speaker 8

Fame that they have with Kanye.

Speaker 3

Well, in his spell in a way.

Speaker 2

Yeah, you know, who believe that he really is the victim of this elaborate conspiracy and he really is this you know, this world historic genius and it's eccentricity not

mental illness. You know, I don't know anything about him person, I've never been around him or whatever, but you know, he may be one of these people who's able to create this sort of like reality distortion field around him, where you couple that the you know, those sort of like powers of persuasion into distort reality with the personal self interest of wanting to be close to someone who is rich and famous, and you end up with a crew of enablers who are you know, in it for

what they can get out of effectively exploiting a person who is deeply mentally ill in a way that is very damaging to him himself, his family and the culture.

Speaker 8

Yeah, and the culture. Yeah, I think that's an important point.

Speaker 5

Though.

Speaker 8

The last time I'll say is I mean, the.

Speaker 5

Song is obviously awful, it's out there now, and I can't dismiss that it's also such a horrible insight into the mind of Kanye West, which is that in this sense in the song, there's this recognition and you mentioned this. This is this recognition that this is the ultimate taboo and that this is an awful or that this is an extreme place to find yourself. That's the like he's acknowledging that and clearly conscious of it in the song.

And I mean, how sad is it that in some sense he recognizes other people want to hear this for reasons that are different from his own in the song, which is I can't get my kids, so now I'm going full Nazi. There are other people out there who are just like they just care about the full Nazi part. Yeah, And that's just like, I mean again, like he does

have agency. I don't want to dismiss that at all, but it's just so sad that there's room right now for that to be powerful, for that to be something that gets a lot of attention views that people see something so cathartic in gravitating towards like overt racism and Holocaust denial and whatever else they're going towards. I mean, maybe not Holocaust denial, Holocaust celebration. And it depends on who you're talking to in those like fringe fringe awful circles,

whether they're outright denihialists or celebrationists. But yeah, it's it's it's in the song. It's like baked into his sort of admission here that he's going full Nazi.

Speaker 8

Is this idea that other people are they want that and he can sort of get some type of attention for doing it.

Speaker 3

Yeah, no, that's true.

Speaker 2

But it's like, listen, if you want to see your kids, take your mads and get well, yeah, you're gonna have a much better chance at seeing your kids. And if they you know, if you have the chance to see them, about them having an actual.

Speaker 3

Like healthy relationship with you as well.

Speaker 8

Horrible.

Speaker 3

Yeah, all right, guys.

Speaker 2

I was able yesterday to speak with the mayor of Newark, who also, by the ways, running for governor of New Jersey. He's in a pretty packed Democratic primary against some leading lights of the Democratic Party like Josh Gottheimer.

Speaker 3

That's one example. In any case, I do get in a question to him.

Speaker 2

At the very end about that race for New Jersey governor governor. He was arrested on Friday. He and three Democratic members of Congress had gone to this ice facility. Apparently the Democratic members there arrived there first. There is a law in place that was passed during or after the first Trump administration to permit any member of Congress going to inspect a federal facility. So they were availing themselves over that opportunity in the law to conduct to

this inspection and oversight. He joined them, he's told to leave, he does leave, and then he's arrested for alleged trespassing. He denies that he did anything wrong or broke the law in any way. In the context of him being arrested, I'll show some of the video in this segment. There was a we'll just call it a very chaotic scene that plays out.

Speaker 6

Now.

Speaker 2

The Trump administration is threatening also those Democratic members of Congress with arrest as well. So in any case, I had a chance to record this interview. The mayor was on his way to I think a Mother's Day event or something of that nature, but got some good insights on his side of the story, at least of what unfolded. Let's go ahead and take a listen to that. Mayor Ross Baraka of Newark, New Jersey, was arrested by mass federal agents on Friday after attempting to accompany three members

of Congress. Democratic members on an inspection of an ice facility that it opened over his objections and which he says is operating illegally in his city. I'm going to let the mayor lay out the timeline of exactly how these events unfolded, what his goals were for this action on this day, what occurred, what led to his arrest. But I can show you right now a quite chaotic scene that unfolded outside of this ice facility as they did attempt and eventually successfully did arrest mayor of Newark

ross Baraka. He was released several hours early later, and he was charged with trespassing.

Speaker 3

Uh.

Speaker 2

The mayor says that these charges are false, that he did nothing wrong. Here take a look. So the mayor is there at the center in the red is representative of Lamonica mckiv. Congresswoman Bonnie Watson Coleman is also there in the midst eighty eight year old woman in the center of this action. So the Trump administration claimed that these members attempted to storm the ice facility. This is not backed up by the video evidence and the eyewitness

accounts on the scene. They have also now said that they are looking at potential charges against the members of Congress who were there to perform that oversight on that day, So in order to get a breakdown of everything that unfolded, the plans for the day, what the timeline was, the differences between what actually happened and what the administration is claiming unfolded. Is the mayor of Newark, New Jersey, and New Jersey golubminatorial candidate Ross Braka. I want to start

off by getting your reaction to Trisia McLaughlin. She is the Trump Administration's Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs at DHS and her characterization of the events that unfolded leading up to your arrest. Let's go ahead and take a listen to that.

Speaker 5

Thanks Victor for having me.

Speaker 10

I'm glad I can be here to actually give viewers the facts. What happened as that these members of Congress, including the mayor as well, and a mob of protesters as there was a bus full of detainees going through the gate, they stormed the gate and actually entered the first security checkpoint. This put law enforcement at risk, and

this actually put the detainees as well at risk. If any official, including these members of Congress, want to enter the facility and take a tour DHS is more than accommodating. But just because you're a member of Congress does not mean you can break the law, trespass, put law enforcement at risk, and storm the detention facility. I haven't yet to hear anyone on this network actually talk about who

is in this detention facility. There are members of MS thirteen, known terrorists, murderers, child rapists, there are some of the worst of the worst in.

Speaker 8

This detention facility.

Speaker 10

And I'm still very confused why these Democrats are so held then on getting these heinous actors out of this facility when we have the proper permitting. And actually in that press conference, those members of Congress actually noted the great conditions of this facility that are ice enforcement officers so bravely operate.

Speaker 2

So, Mayor what is your response to her allegation there that you and these members of Congress stormed the facility.

Speaker 11

Either she's misinformed because she wasn't there, or she just flat out lying. I mean, it's insane how these people behave like they lie over and over again, and they figured if they lie enough people to believe it, it's the truth. The reality is nobody stormed the gate when I got there. The members of Congress who are already inside, they were in a booth. They didn't go all the

way in, but they were in a booth. Uh so they were They were there waiting over an hour for Homeland Security officials to come to give them a scheduled visit that they had through the building. So number people have to storm. They were invited there right, So that that right there is a flat out line. You know, all of this stuff about being assault a salting people, all of it is wrong. I mean, either she's misinformed or she's just lying.

Speaker 2

So you arrived, the members of Congress are already there inside the gates, and then what happens from.

Speaker 9

There, they're already in a booth.

Speaker 11

I don't even see them because they're in the building in a waiting area, waiting to get the tour.

Speaker 9

There are people outside who are there every day.

Speaker 11

You know, the protesters outside who are there every single day, by the way, they're there today as well. So I mean outside of the Congress, people, outside of media, protesters there, they're going to be there and they have a right to be there, right outside of the gate. I arrived there waiting for the press conference that are supposed to happen after that. She alluded to, there's a scheduled press conference they're supposed to happen at one point thirty outside

of that gate. But obviously it didn't happen at that time because these people never arrived when they were supposed to.

Speaker 2

They charge you, obviously with trespassing, which I know you dispute. So can you lay out for us you know what happened in terms of your entry and you know an exit from the facility.

Speaker 9

I didn't break any law.

Speaker 11

I was first of all, if I'm on the property, somebody let me in the property or invited me in the property. That that's what happened. I walked in there. I didn't kick, push, shove, run. I stat in there with ICE agents for over an hour. ICE agents were in there with me for over an hour. They didn't do anything for me. They didn't say anything. Then asked me to go.

Speaker 9

I just sat there.

Speaker 11

It wasn't until the special agent in charge showed us we probably would give it. Was given orders to approach me, and that's what he did. He approached me. The congress people responded trying to stop him from harassing me. I left the gate. You know, told me to get out. I left, I left, it went out. They came outside of the gate and proceeded to try to arrest me outside of the gate after I already left the property.

The Congress people and uh, you know people that were standing by got engaged in it because I mean they were being very very very aggressive, you know.

Speaker 9

So obviously if you come outside of the gate, that's what's going to happen. And that's what they did.

Speaker 11

They took me and these are the ones that dragged me back onto the property and cuffs.

Speaker 9

No, they cuffs me and dragged me back into the property and arrested me for a trespassing So.

Speaker 2

I'm sure you know, Mayor that the administration is now threatening those members of Congress who were there with you with arrest as well, and they are sharing some body camera footage that they claim shows some of these members of Congress in their view, assaulting.

Speaker 9

His offers.

Speaker 3

Masses were there. Let me just go ahead and show you a little bit of that.

Speaker 2

So it's clearly it's extremely chaotic that's represented of mackivor and the Red Relieve. Can you just tell us what we're looking at there and what from your perspective, was.

Speaker 11

Them assaulting me, grabbing me, trying to lock me up them they were holding on to me.

Speaker 9

Uh, so they were pushing them off of me. Uh if you see the whole video.

Speaker 11

There's several videos out there with all kinds of viewpoints. Several people were thrown to the ground, Several several bystanders were thrown to the ground by agents. They were pushed, they were shoved. If you see people being pushed, it is them pushing the Congress people. And you can hear people in the background saying, don't touch them, keep your hands off of them. You're not supposed to touch them. They're members of Congress, mayor.

Speaker 2

One thing that I think has disturbed a lot of people is the use of masks by these federal agents in this situation and many others that we've seen with ICE arresting immigrants across the country. What do you what do you make of the significance of this wide spread use of masking to obscure the face of these federal agents.

Speaker 11

That's pretty strange, and it makes it feels like they're on a like real military uh, you know, special obsmission.

Speaker 9

I don't know what's happening there.

Speaker 11

The excuse is that ICE agents are under attack, and uh, you know, they have to hide their identity because they're under attack. I mean, our police officers in Newark can't go to places like this, like they have to always be visible. The body camera footage has to always be on. They have to be visible, and they face harrowing and difficult and dangerous situations.

Speaker 9

All the time.

Speaker 4

Right.

Speaker 11

You know, I don't understand why this is happening, but I mean the reality is their behavior and the things that they're doing to people, in my mind is extra legal and beyond the constitution.

Speaker 3

What is your objection to this ICE facility in Newark?

Speaker 11

Our issue was with GEO. It's not even with ICE. It's not an ICE facility. First of all, it's GEOS facility that they changed in the process of trying to change because a contract that just got from ICE to Howse some detainees, same kind of contract they gave to El Salvador.

Speaker 9

They've given to these people here locally sixty three.

Speaker 11

Million dollars over a billion dollars over a period of time to house detainees. Our contention is that they need a certificate of occupancy. They argue that they have one They have one from twenty years ago, which we think is outdated and it needs to be updated, updated to explain what the use of the property is. Now inspectors have to go in the building and inspect everything from fire code inspections to health inspections to electrical inspections.

Speaker 9

Now they're playing with that and not allowing people in. We went up there, We go there regularly.

Speaker 11

We're in court about this, and they have a right to dispute what we're saying if they don't think they need a stificant occupies if we think they do. In America, these things are settled in courts of law, and that's where we're at. We're in a dispute with the court. Ice doesn't settle that. The President doesn't settle that Homeland security, nor ICE settles that judges settle these things. These are

disputes that are settled by judges, not by authoritarianism. And so while we're going through this, they make a decision to go forward anyway to do what they want to do despite our effort to get this redress in court, which we believe is beyond the scope of their capacity, and they don't have the right to do this. So we're pushing back against this, and it's that's a terrible precedent.

We allow them to do this. Anybody could come in here and set up whatever the heck they want and say they don't need to listen to the city's laws. We allow these people to do it. So we're going back and forth with them about this. ICE has interceded and have decided to do what they're doing today.

Speaker 2

Mayor, I'm sure you know that for years, activists have contended that ICE is a lawless roguauate and sy that should be abolished.

Speaker 3

Do you agree with that?

Speaker 11

Well, I think that there is some use for homeland security. Obviously, there is use for us to have law enforcement. But at the end of the day, I think what they're being weaponized to do is wrong. I think what the President has weaponized these agencies to do, it is far beyond their scope.

Speaker 9

Right now.

Speaker 11

They weaponized to attack anybody that speaks out against the president of the United States, anybody that's against the policies of the United States, whether they're documented or not, whether they have a student VIZA, you know, whether they have a green card or whether they're undocumented. And frankly, they're not just this lie about the places everybody's every place is filled with like child rapists and murderers.

Speaker 9

And gang members. It's just a flat out lie.

Speaker 11

These people are attacking everybody, right, everybody in America that's going through the process to become documented is not documented.

Speaker 9

Yet and sometimes it takes seven, eight, nine years. So in that process, any of.

Speaker 11

These people are eligible to be deported, they will come and grab these people and deport them, which we think is unfair, unconstitutional, lacking of due process, you know, and.

Speaker 9

You know, should we pushed back against.

Speaker 11

And people all over the country are and so my position against Ice, my contention was ICE, and and really my contention with the you know, with the Trump immigration policy is different than my contention with GO. Those are two different issues, right, and we have the right to fight those issues on different fronts.

Speaker 2

Last question I have for you, Mayor, I know you're you're busy, and I appreciate you taking the time today, is you're running for governor and you have a pretty crowded Democratic primary field that you're up against. You know, do you think that you would interface with the Trump administration as governor of New Jersey in a different way than your primary opponents would do you think that that's an aspect that sets you apart.

Speaker 11

Clearly. You know, everybody is saying that they are gonna do are gonna fight Donald Trump. That's the buzzword of today because he's become so rogue. I mean, violating the Constitution, undermining people's democratic rights, taking away medicaid, you know, attacking social security, veterans benefits, attacking diversity, equity inclusion.

Speaker 9

I mean, it's just all out attack on working people. You know.

Speaker 11

Obviously, Uh, we're gonna have to defend ourselves in New Jersey, and I'm gonna do that. We're gonna have to unite with other states that are pushing back to do that, and.

Speaker 9

We're gonna do that, clearly.

Speaker 11

But we're also trying to build a democracy in New Jersey, one that you know, all Americans can be proud of and and and obviously, uh, we we think that if if the President of the United States supports that, then fine, If he doesn't, doesn't our ideas and a thing that we create will be opposed to that. I mean, we're not building a New Jersey that's centered around Donald Trump or what he's for and what he's against.

Speaker 9

Building a New Jersey.

Speaker 11

That's democratic, and that's a you know, supportive and available of what we believe in in this state and create a pathway for all New Jersey ins.

Speaker 2

All right, Maya ross Broka, thank you so much for taking the time.

Speaker 3

I appreciate it.

Speaker 2

All right, guys, that is the show, Emily Pleasure. Three lady shows in a row, discounting Friday. I mean Friday, we had Ryan in, but Friday's like a little bit different.

Speaker 3

So I'm talking about the main shows.

Speaker 5

Yeah, main shows, three in a row. So you guys will get your fix of the normal man woman dynamic. I guess tomorrow and Wednesday, because Ryan and I will be in on Wednesday, and Crystal, I'm really excited to watch you host with Tim Miller tomorrow.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I'm looking forward to It'll be interesting. I get some questions for him. I'm actually listening to his book to hear his explanation of his major ideological transition. And you know, he did a fair amount of self assessment about his sort of like culpability in the trends that led to where we are now.

Speaker 8

So SPI's a lot of tea in that book too.

Speaker 3

Yeah, that's a lot of definitely.

Speaker 2

So I'm probably is a Republican reading like on the right reading it, you probably picked up on even more of the tea or some of the interpersonal dynamics.

Speaker 5

Well, yeah, I mean it's a really interesting book and I've actually recommended it to people before who want insight in how Washington operates. And people can dispute Tims and maybe I'll talk to the talk to him about this tomorrow, but they can dispute Tim's motivation for writing this, and

he might actually even come out and say this. But you know, as soon as he was kind of i guess ostracized because of his views on Donald Trump and could no longer kind of operate in that space, he wrote the tell all about it, and you know, again question the motivations by all means. But I think for Tim he did have a pretty sincere conversion away from the GOP orthodoxy that he really was aggressively pushing and making money off.

Speaker 8

Of for a long time here in DC.

Speaker 5

So what you get in that book is a glimpse, a really really i think detailed and a granular glimpse of how the sausage is made here by consultants and oh, lobbyists, and all of that.

Speaker 3

Yeah, well, he talks about how the.

Speaker 2

Compartmentalization that he was able to deploy as a gay man who was working for politicians who were anti gay in the context of a party that was overall very anti gay. It still is that that compartmentalization is in some ways the very same skill that other operatives who previously may have been, you know, disgusted with Trump and opposed to what he stood for, et cetera, how they're able ultimately to just sort of cope with it and

go along with it. So it's somewhat at least, you know, so far few chapters into the book, it's so much self deprecating about how he recognizes in the Trump justification the very same justifications that he was using in the context of working for John McCain or John Huntsman or other Republican politicians or for this group that basically would like fund AstroTurf, you know, organizations to bolster whatever conservative billionaires wanted them to do.

Speaker 5

No, and I knew t him back then, and you know, even just talking to him now, I'm really excited for this episode tomorrow because he's he's i think has a lot to say about it like he's willing to talk about it, and I think that's really helpful because it's very rare that you get someone who's fully willing to kind of uh divorce themselves from the previous, their previous life in Washington. And he's also like really funny, so it'll be it's it's a he's a good messenger for the past.

Speaker 3

Life, excellent explaining it all.

Speaker 2

I'm looking forward to Thank you guys so much for watching it. Thank you so much for sure supporting the show. If you are premium subscriber, we're going to switch over and do a premium a m A. If you want to be part of those in the future, make sure to subscribe at Breakingpoints dot com. I'll see you back here tomorrow

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