7/31/23: Trump Employee Flips On Mar A Lago Coverup?, Megyn Kelly Vs DeSantis, Black Republicans Blast DeSantis, Biden Facebook Censorship, Biden Acknowledges Secret Grandchild, Staff Coach Feinstein To Vote Aye, Seniors Robbed By Gold Scammers - podcast episode cover

7/31/23: Trump Employee Flips On Mar A Lago Coverup?, Megyn Kelly Vs DeSantis, Black Republicans Blast DeSantis, Biden Facebook Censorship, Biden Acknowledges Secret Grandchild, Staff Coach Feinstein To Vote Aye, Seniors Robbed By Gold Scammers

Jul 31, 20231 hr 23 min
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Episode description

Krystal and Saagar discuss a potential Trump employee flip on Mar A Lago coverup as additional charges are made against the former president, Megyn Kelly dukes it out with DeSantis over his handling of Bud Light and Disney, Black Republicans blast DeSantis on his comments of "slavery benefits", Facebook Files show Biden censored Lab Leak on Facebook, Biden shamed into acknowledging his secret grandchild, Saagar looks into Staff caught coaching Senator Feinstein into voting "Aye", and Krystal looks into Seniors being robbed by Gold Scammers through Conservative media.


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Transcript

Speaker 1

Hey, guys, ready or not, twenty twenty four is here and we here at breaking points, are already thinking of ways we can up our game for this critical election.

Speaker 2

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If you like what we're all about, it just means the absolute world to have your support. But enough with that, Let's get to the showing.

Speaker 3

Good morning, everybody, Happy Monday. We have an amazing show for everybody today. What do we have, Crystal?

Speaker 1

Indeed, we do lots to get to you this morning. So additional Trump legal news, he is facing additional charges as we move towards potentially more indictments. We are certainly on watched for that. This week's they'll break all of that down for You've also got a bunch of political news, a bunch of candidates who were in Iowa. Trump out

on the campaign trail around Santis. How's it going for him as the donor class seems to turn against him and he is increasingly under fire from black Republicans over that black history curriculum in the States. So will break all of that down for You've got some bombshell revelations about the Biden administration attempting to censor Facebook, so we

will get into all of that. And also a story that we covered previously about the Biden family and Joe Biden himself refusing to acknowledge Hunter's youngest child, Navy, and there is a development there They are now I guess, basically.

Speaker 4

Shamed into acknowledging her.

Speaker 1

But we'll talk about it. Yes, we will, so all of that to get to. But before we do any of that, what died to remind everybody. We're getting more and more emails, Griffin tells us from people who are frustrated with the fact that they're premium subscribers. They're clicking on the YouTube link and they're still getting ads. So we wanted to remind you if you're a premium subscriber and you want to completely add free experience, really the best place to go for the video content is Spotify.

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You can still watch the full video. You just have to connect to your premium feed to your Spotify Player and you'll be able to watch it seamlessly within the app. You know, we push it heavily whenever they roll that feature out. I know so many of you from the usage statistics are taking advantage. So it's both a reminder

and also a push. If you want to guarantee you don't want to single ad on that, you can go ahead and use your Spotify app and you can watch it fully in on Spotify Player, which I know that many people whenever they're on the go, they want to be able to pull something up and put it.

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related sojourns in while, which was a fun experience. You can continue to do that at Breakingpoints dot Com. Like I said, so, thank you all very much. But Trump indictment.

Speaker 1

Yeah, so we have a new superseding indictment in that Trump document's case.

Speaker 4

What that means is they've added.

Speaker 1

An additional charge for Trump with regards to that, you know, the document that he's on audio recording waving around that we were told had something to do with Iran military plans. They've now apparently found that document. They're now charging him in addition with having that holding on to that document.

We also though, and this is potentially even more significant, we have another Trump employee who was included and is now charged in this indictment as well, and you have some conversations with him relates to the potential obstruction in terms of Trump trying to hide exactly what he had from the government. This was considered so significant that even Fox News in their coverage of this development, had to acknowledge that this was a bad situation for Donald Trump.

Speaker 4

Let's say listen to a little bit of what they had to say.

Speaker 5

There's electronic evidence involved here, right, they're talking about deletion of digital evidence and et cetera. That's the kind of stuff that can be tracked that's right, black and white to a jury. So this day and age, with the CSI effect, that kind.

Speaker 3

Of stuff goes over well.

Speaker 5

So they've gained some ground here in the case against mister Trump. It's not entirely duplicative of what they had. It is a superseding indictment, and it does, you know, unfortunately for the president, adds.

Speaker 3

Some substance really quickly.

Speaker 6

You said, the goal is to flip Carlos de ela Verra, to turn him into a witness against President Trump. There's been some suggestion that that's already been attempted for months. They've been trying to get him to flip on President Trump, and that doesn't appear to have yet been a comp.

Speaker 5

So this is the hammer, right in any case like this, if you're trying to cajole a witness and to come on over to your side, especially one that really seems to know the inner workings. Your last card to play is what they've done, which is in ditem.

Speaker 1

This is the hammer that lawyer says in terms of trying to get a Trump employee to flip. We have some additional news this morning that we may have another Trump employee who has already flipped. But before we get to that, let me give you some of the additional details about what's in the superseding indictment. We can put

this up on the screen. So with regard to this new Trump employee, Oliviera, who has been charged, they say here they've got some electronic communications of him speaking with another Trump employee who they're just calling employee number four. They say they left the area of the IT office together, walk through a basement tunnel to Oliviera, who is the one who has been charged, took Trump employee for to

a small room known as an audio closet. Once inside that closet, he told Trump employee for the following that their conversation should remain between the two of them. Then Oliviera asked Trump Employee number four how many days the server retained security footage. Trump Employee four responding believed it was approximately forty five days. De la Viera told Trump Employee four that quote. The boss that of course would

be Trump wanted the server deleted. Trump employee for responded, he would not know how to do that, and then he did not believe he would have the rights to do that. Trump employee for told Olivia that he would have to reach out to another employer who was a supervisor of security for Trump's business organization. Dea Olivera then insisted to Trump employee for that quote the boss wanted the server deleted and asked, what are we going to do?

So we have additional, you know, pretty direct conversation here between these two Trump employees, one of whom is now charged, basically, you know, alleging that they are involved in the cover up and trying to delete some of the security footage. This came right after the government had been requesting this very security and surveillance footage, so doesn't look too good.

And then the other piece this morning saga is that it looks like Trump Employee number four may have flipped already and that may be where some of this additional information that is coming in the superseding indictment came from We've got a CNN report that you skilled Taveras Amar, a Lago employee who oversees the property surveillance cameras, received a target letter from federal prosecutors. So we got a letter from federal prosecutor saying, hey, you're a targeted in

this investigation. But he hasn't been charged yet, and we know that he has been speaking with investigators. So when you put those two pieces together that they said, hey, buddy, you are targeting this investigation, and he appears to be speaking and potentially cooperating with investigators, this employee may have already flipped on Trump.

Speaker 2

Yeah, this is almost cartoonish in the way that it was described there.

Speaker 3

We literally were, you know, when you were reading.

Speaker 2

Crystal For those who are listening, that is directly from the indictment of the Department of Justice, also showing the penetration that they have into the Trump staff. I mean, I just think and continue to believe that it's very important for everybody to analyze these cases. On their face, Some are silly, some are stretches of legal interpretation, not

nearly enough standing. But on this one, I mean, they have it so cold in terms of the timeline in terms of the facts, in terms of the recordings which we've all been able to take a listen to about. I could have declassified it, I didn't declassify it. And then now in terms of the cover up, which is

why he's really in trouble in the first place. That ultimately is what he just keep coming back to, is that this is a problem literally of his own making, where he had some ego maniacal attachment to documents and calling them quote my documents, regardless crystal of classification status. And then whenever the government came and tried to get it back, they continued to obfuscate, to obstruct, and to try and to keep it away. So this is not James Comy, this is not Muller, This is not any

number of you know, walls are closing in. It's just like basic presentation of the facts. There's a reason that Fox News is not airing any counter you know theory to this.

Speaker 3

Yeah, and I actually look, if.

Speaker 2

People are interested, go there's only one pushback to this entire thing, and that is vivik Ramaswami's theory of the case around the Presidential Records Act and the superseding of executive privilege and the DOJ. So if people want to go and watch that, we had an interview with Vivaki, Crystal and him went at it for what ten minutes.

Speaker 3

Or so, you can go and see.

Speaker 2

But that is pretty much it in terms of respected I guess theoretical legal way out of this particular case, I think.

Speaker 4

It's fair to say that it is.

Speaker 1

There are people who would assert that that may apply in the circumstance and that maybe kind of get down a jail free card for Trump. I would say it's a fairly novel legal interpretation that is certainly not held by the majority of legal analysts that I've heard. I haven't even heard the Trump team really making any sort of a significant defense on that front. At this point. I really think Trump's plan is just he's got to

get elected. He's got to get back in the White House in order to escape all of these charges, because every piece that's added looks increasingly more and more damning from him just to drill down on the other piece of this. So, like I said, probably the most significant pieces.

You've got another Trump employee who is charged. You've got more communications that are directly related to the alleged obstruction, but you also did have a thirty second count of wilful retention of national defense information that was also added in this superseding indictment with regards to Trump. And this does have to do with that audio recording of Trump and his office talking. He's actually a Bedminster talking to a number of people, saying, hey, I have this document.

Speaker 4

Take a look at this, waving you.

Speaker 1

Hear the papers rustling in the background, and he says I could have declassified this when I was president, but now I can't, which again sort of takes off the table. One of the defenses that they had floated early the reporting had been that had this document had to do with military plans with regard to a run, that it was highly top secret. The reporting had also suggested that the government hadn't been able to find this document as

of yet. Well, now apparently they have the document and they are charging him based on his wilful retention of this document. And it's described in the end as a quote presentation concerning military activity in a foreign country that was marked top secret no foreign No What does that mean?

Speaker 3

No foreign? No foreign? Remember I remember this from our discord.

Speaker 2

That means that you can't the discord leaks that you can't share it with Five Eyes Intelligence.

Speaker 4

Oh that's right, means yeah.

Speaker 3

Those were coded in some of the documents that we reported on.

Speaker 1

So anyway, that's an indication that's a very high level, extremely secret document that Trump was waving around and bragging about apparently. So that's what we know thus far in terms of this superseding indictment. And as I mentioned before, we do also have indications this morning that another Trump employee has flipped and that's potentially with some of the new information is coming from. But just a reminder, I mean, this is far from the end of Trump's legal troubles,

but this next piece up on the screen. We are certainly on indictment watch this week. We thought indictments may actually have come down last week. You had the Jacksmith related grand jury meeting last Thursday. They did not return an indictment on Thursday, unless under seal, which is a possibility but nothing that we know of. But this looks very much like it's coming to a close. The reason we know that is because Trump's lawyers actually met in

DC with that team. That's usually an indication that things are wrapping up on that front. It's sort of a last ditch effort for them to be able to plead their case. You also have the grand jury down in Fulton County, Georgia that also looks like they are wrapping up their work. Fanny Willis has said that, you know,

their investigation is complete. I'm also aware that they have actually erected security barriers outside of the federal courthouse there and anticipation of whatever is going to happen on that front. So Trump's legal troubles certainly seem to be mounting in severity, complexity, all of the above, and sagre. The The piece of this that I just I really can't wrap my head around is on the documents case. This trial is set from May twenty fourth, I think, so May of next year.

The timing is basically like the Republican nomination will probably be so nub yeah, and so they will have I think limited options to get him out of being the nominee. And there's a very real possibility this man ends up in prison.

Speaker 3

They're not going to drop him. They're there first.

Speaker 2

Yeah, first of all, that is certainly possible, he said, And he keeps laying it the marker I think intentionally of I'm not dropping out regardless of what happens, if they convict me, if they throw me in prison, I'm still going to continue right to run for president. Now,

in terms of the GOP, they have no choice. I mean, if he gets popularly selected with this hanging over his head, how can that would be the most undemocratic thing in the world to try and replace him, And there's no actual process for that, Crystal, Yeah, it doesn't require some serious like delegation chicanery. The only way is if he voluntarily drops out, which is just not going to happen based on everything that we know right now, based on his own statements, he says he's not going to drop it.

Speaker 3

Maybe it's possible.

Speaker 1

I mean it's on the Democratic side they have this, like what is a really undemocratic super delegate process. So if you had a similar situation unfold on the Democratic side, they might be able to pull some behind the scenes canery to oust whoever their you know, dude was that

ended up in prison or for whatever reason. On the Republican side, they don't have the same mechanism, and so, you know, I think this all feels very theoretical to people, But there's a very real possibility that former President Trump is at least facing prison time going into a general election, and I just like, I don't know what that means in terms of the country. I don't know what that means in terms of how people are going to react.

I have to think that it's going to be pretty difficult for Republicans to win a presidential election if the guy that they're behind is in prison. But it's just, you know, it's pretty wild to contemplate how this is all going to unfold, and there's just no way you can predict how this.

Speaker 4

Is all going to play out.

Speaker 1

Yeah, agreed, Okay, So at the same time, we have some additional news here that we wanted to get to about the way that Trump is paying for his legal bills. Put this up on the screen from Bloomberg. That's pretty wid I think those are reported for us by the

New York Times. Trump's pack has spent more than forty million dollars on his legal defense, his legal costs, and also they are also paying for the legal costs of his employees here underfire as well, which you can understand because you know, they don't want them to flip and so by sort of keeping them close and paying their bills. They lessen the chance that those employees that have been charged are going to flip.

Speaker 4

And that's not all.

Speaker 1

You also have an indication that, you know, these legal bills, even for a wealthy guy who's able to raise a whole lot of money, that it is really putting a squeeze on him. The Pack had to request a refund on a sixty million dollar contribution that it made to another group that was supporting Trump, signaling they say, a potential money crisis for the campaign, originally reported by The New York Times. And the forty million dollars is not even the whole of what Trump has apparently spent on

his legal defense and those of his aids. That's an addition to a sixteen million dollars that Save America spent in the previous two years on legal fees. So all these Trump supporters that are giving to his pack, all these donations that are coming in, a lot of it is not going to, you know, campaigning against Ron de Santis or campaigning against Joe Biden. It's going directly to paying Trump's legal bills.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and us covering this will not diminish their fundraising. Whatsoever, because to them, I mean, it's clear Trump is the you know, everything that he's using the money for is the reason why they love him, right defense, the Biden administration is going after him. It's never his fault. It's always the establishment as always somebody else who's In some cases, listen, that is true, that's part of the problem. Sometimes it actually partially is true. And in some cases, like the

Document's case, it's directly his fault. But forty million dollars in legal fees, Listen, folks, if you don'tate to the Trump say America pack like, that's where your actual money is going. And they're strapped enough that they have to issue the refund. And I personally just like that has bothered me from day one. I remember covering first on Rising, then here the January sixth case. How many times he said, I'm going to contest the election results and all this

stuff for the people who believed in it. And guess what, not a single dollar of that actually went to any contesting of the legal results of the election. Instead, he put it in the bank, apparently so that he can dedicate it to his legal defense fund, you know, instead of doing what he said and once again, it's just like the NFT thing. For some reason, these people have a relationship to him where they are constantly willing to just frankly be builked and to just turn their money over.

Speaker 3

And it's a free country, you can do what you want.

Speaker 2

I mean, I just personally think it's really wrong whenever you're an elected official and you're using it to these purposes. But like I said, in many ways, the reason they're giving this so much, this money is exactly why this is all happening in the first place. They feel he's under threat, they feel he's being persecuted, they see him as presentative of them.

Speaker 3

It's just going to continue to go on this way. It's amaze.

Speaker 1

It may be true that some decent or very high percentage of those who gave money to the Save America pack are cool with it being used for his legal bills.

Speaker 4

That may be the case.

Speaker 1

It's also the case that it's definitely not what was represented in terms of when they were making these donations. I did see this morning that he is going to start a separate legal defense fund. I mean, it is also just a mind boggling amount of money, sixty five million dollars just on legal bills is really hard to

wrap your head around. At the same time, Trump was out on the campaign trail, he was given a speech and he is calling on his opponents to drop out of the race and put their money towards what he describes as a ballot harvesting operational and signalis into that.

Speaker 7

I think it's time for Ron to Sanctimonious and so many of those other clowns on this story.

Speaker 3

Now you have to see Iowa.

Speaker 7

They're speaking to people that aren't even listening to talk. I'm the sanctimonious and so many others that are wasting hundreds of millions of dollars that Republicans should be using to build a massive vote gathering operation to take on Crooked Joe Biden and nov.

Speaker 1

But it's a bit of a turn about there, Sager on the whole mail in ballot and quote unquote ballot harvesting operation, which is the language that Republicans like to use to paint all democratic efforts to encourage people to vote mail in as like really nefarious, where you know, out drums just like, yeah, drop out and give all your money to our own ballot harvesting.

Speaker 2

Listen, if that's what it takes to get take mail in balloting. I'll just take it because it's so like the all the rhetorica around it is so stupid, it's so annoying. But increasingly I see Glenn Youngkin and other Republican politicians who are fully embracing mail in voting. You had that famous, the the big clip of Hannity pressing Trump repeatedly four separate times to embrace mail in balloting

aka ballot harvest. Trump didn't want to do it, but eventually, you know, he seems to be a convinced now that this might be the only thing that he's doing. I actually think this is a smart play in terms of whenever he's up on DeSantis and the rest of his rivals this much, he's like, you are wasting money, you are wasting my time as the anointed one, as the representative of our base, and all that you need to

drop out and ensure a Republican victory in twenty twenty four. Now, the only way that wouldn't work is if Republicans thought that the other candidates were more electable. But we now have reams of data, both polling and otherwise, to point to to say actually actual Republican GOP primary voters they think Trump is the most electable. Yeah, so to them, of course that's going to resonate. They're like, why are you wasting all of our time? You should be defending

President Trump. That's that is you have to put yourself in the mind of some of these voters whenever you're looking at this.

Speaker 1

By the way, I don't know that they're wrong about Trump being more electable than I kind of agree with you. Well, I mean the obvious wild card is that mentioned before, you might be in prison, so there is that. But I was just looking at the polls this weekend in terms of real clear politics average in terms of the hypothetical head to head between Biden and Trump or Biden and DeSantis, and Trump is closer to Biden in that hypothetical head to head than DeSantis is at that this point.

That was not the case previously. There's also reporting that even within the White House they've changed their opinion about who they would rather go up against. They now think Ron DeSantis is actually the weaker candidate, and the Republican base, by the way, agrees with you. There's big New York Times pull out this morning. We may cover it tomorrow.

That you know, they do their their bit. They spend a lot of money on these on these things, and they've got a President Trump, former President Trump at fifty four percent, Desantus at seventeen percent, and everyone else at

three or two percent. So obviously, with Trump pulling in a majority of the vote, there, even if you have the you know, donor dream of everyone else dropping on everyone coalescing around one particular candidate, whether it's Ron DeSantis, Tim Scott, or someone else, still they are losing significantly to Donald Trump, so you know, it is certainly not breaking towards any of the contenders from President Trump had some interesting commentary about some of the phone calls he'd

been receiving from former Rond De Santis donors at that same campaign rally.

Speaker 4

Let's take a listen to that last week.

Speaker 7

I start getting phone calls two three, four weeks ago. Hi, President, I just called to say, hello, what are the big donors?

Speaker 8

Oh?

Speaker 7

I thought you were De Sanctis, No, weren't you with the Sanctis sometimes referred to as Dy Sanctimonius, never referred to as DeSantis.

Speaker 1

Never so talking there about the fact that some of the donors which were really, you know, the backbone of the Ronda Santis campaign, are starting to call it.

Speaker 4

Who knows if it's true or not.

Speaker 1

It's Donald Trump, but it certainly he's picking up on a vibe and some of the reporting that is out there. Let's go ahead and move on to this next part actually about ron de Santis, and put B two up on the screen because this dovetails with what we were

just talking about. We have a affording from Politico that apparently a bunch of high level Republican elites at Bohemian Grove are now turning on DeSantis, they say, at the Bohemian Grove secretive conclave of men who gather in northern California.

Speaker 4

The attendance was a who's who.

Speaker 1

A pre Trump Republican's, a murder's row of bundlers and Wall Street Journal editorial page favorites, including former House Speaker Paul Ryan ex Florida Governor Jeb Bush. With fear setting in about Trump's renomination, gathering became somewhat of a fantasy camp on how to avert that prospect, or at least confront it. You also had a lot of hand ringing over at the annual Aspen retreat for donors that for the Republican Governors Association there was a similar how do

we stop him chowder? There much fretting about Governor run DeSantis' ailing candidacy. Two contenders showed up to work the donors and governors. That was Tim Scott and Mike Pence, but a candidate in waiting also received ample attention. Contributors buttonholed Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin. Tend told me with some asking if you'd run others skipping pleasantries and pushing him to get in the race. So the fact that the donor class is turning on to Santas is a big problem

for him. And you know, I mean if they think that Glenn Youngkin or Tim Scott is going to be the Trump beater here, and I just wish them good luck.

Speaker 2

I just certainly agree with you. I also we were talking about this in our call Bahomie. How is Bohemian Grove still a thing? I am?

Speaker 3

After the Alex Jones exposam.

Speaker 4

I find another secret billionaire, another.

Speaker 2

Compound, like we have to worship the owl God. That's just this is the thing. It actually confirms something going on here because I'm like, clearly they would have ditched it now at this point, but apparently, you know, no, the owl is so important that you got to go and pay homage to the owl.

Speaker 5

Uh.

Speaker 3

And you know, Paul, it's it's crazy to me.

Speaker 2

It's like Paul Ryan and Jeb Bush and all these billionaires and Glenn Youngkin and New Gingrich and all these people are Bollemian Grove. It's just it's insane that there's still a thing. But it is a perfect view. And apparently they allow this his journalists and they're due which, by the way, I want to know more about the owls. They give us a view into their thinking, which is that this is some First of all, that it's up to them.

Speaker 3

It's clearly not up to them.

Speaker 2

They have no control anymore the donor class in terms of like the actual base and their wants and their need. The best thing they could probably do is just back Trump and hope that you can do the exact same thing last time around, which is get your preferential tax legislation,

but tasing his ass now whenever he's if he's president again. True, but then what's clear too is that they're focusing all on the wrong things like to them, they have a different view of electability, they have a different view of likability.

Speaker 3

They also have a different view of outcome.

Speaker 2

I mean, donors want an outcome about taxes, regulation. Of course, that's what elites want whenever they look at politics. But look at what voters are asking of their Republican elected officials. They want to punish the left and they want to piss off the media. That's it, I mean, and for that, like,

how can you not vote for Trump? Like, that's obviously the person that you wouldn't want to vote for if you don't care about any underlying thing, which I think it's very clear now that that is what the populace, or at least the primary voters actually want whenever it comes to their politicians.

Speaker 1

The reason I think it's a problem that the Bohemian grove set is turning on DeSantis is because he obviously has some money issues. Yeah, I mean, he just laid off a third of his staff and there's all these horrific articles about how he laid off a third of his staff and then the very next morning takes off on a private jet And so he has really been reliant for fundraising support in particular on these large donors.

He has one of the smallest percentages of small dollar grassroots fundraising base is one of the smallest percentages of anybody. Trump has the largest on the Republican side. And so the fact that they're chopping around that they're, according to Trump, giving Trump a call, that they're looking at Tim Scott, they're trying to push Glenn Youngkin in the race, etc.

Speaker 4

I mean, this means that he.

Speaker 1

Really could have the legs completely out from under him and have trouble even making it to the Iowa caucuses and the primaries after that. So that's why that's significant. At the same time, you know, he had an interesting exchange with Megan Kelly. She had a big sit down interview with him. Part of his new strategy reboot is he's got to do more interviews with a wider range of hosts because he had been very sort of sequestered

in friendly territory. Now he's going out where he's going to take a few more tough questions and see how that works out for him. So, as part of that tour, went on Meghan Kelly's podcast and she really pressed him on his approach to Disney and his approach to bud Light.

Speaker 4

Let's take a listen to that exchange.

Speaker 8

Much is the base is angry at these wild corporations, And I get it, and I know you get it. Aren't you doing the very thing to these companies that conservatives are mad at left wing leaders for doing, using government to punish citizens for political wrongthink.

Speaker 9

No, not at all. So taking an nyser bush, I mean, we're not punishing them. They departed from business practices by indulging in social activism that has caused a huge problem for their company, and their stock price has gone down. Well, our pension fund in Florida holds up Anheuser Busch InBev stock. So it's actually hurt teachers, it's hurt cops, it hurts firefighters who depend on that pension fund.

Speaker 8

And so can you support the boycott against them?

Speaker 4

No?

Speaker 9

I did, but that just as a personal thing. But I mean we didn't have like the state government, you know, necessarily you know, putting power about it. But as an American, I said, I'm not doing Anheuser, but I'm not doing bud like.

Speaker 8

So why can't Disney oppose your lay and why can't they promote this agenda in their view pains, they can't without being punished by the state.

Speaker 9

They're not being punished. We're just simply removing a special benefits that.

Speaker 10

They have had.

Speaker 4

It's not about intending.

Speaker 8

If I go to my boss and I say I use sexually harassed me, and then suddenly he reduces my salary from two hundred thousand to one hundred thousand, that's retaliation. I am worse off. And it's not a defense to say, well, everybody else of the company was getting one hundred thousand. You've reduced my circuit.

Speaker 4

You punished me.

Speaker 9

No, but that's that's a that's an employer employee relationship. But I think that that's much different.

Speaker 3

But the state taking a way of benefit.

Speaker 9

But your but your position is basically that Florida should be forced to subsidize Disney, regardless of how it's going to use those subsidies, so that they can weaponize the subsidies they get from the state and turn it against state policy. Why would we want to subsidize that behavioral.

Speaker 3

I get it, I get it right back.

Speaker 8

But I don't want a president Gavin Newsome doing this to conservative companies or companies who have a more conservative viewpoint.

Speaker 3

Well, here's what I would say.

Speaker 9

I don't think there's any arrangement in America that mirror the arrangement Disney had in Florida for many, many decades. I mean, I think it was a unique situation.

Speaker 4

What do you think of that exchange, Sacer?

Speaker 2

I actually think you should have owned it and be like yeah, I'm I mean, because here's when we're trying to legalize our way around, just say yeah, I'm the governor, I have the I have the power. I'm going to use my power to go after and hyser Budd. That's a more honest way. It actually reminds me of Supreme Court politics pre Trump. So this is crazy to think about, but pre Trump, nobody who was a Republican nominee would

ever say I'm going to appoint pro life judges. There was always hiding under like originalism and I'm going to appoint judges that are hero of the constitute. There's like a wink wink, you know to the evangelical, but nobody ever wanted to just come out and say it.

Speaker 4

Yea.

Speaker 2

And then Trump shocked shocked Republican politics when he's like, I'm just gonna appoint pro life judge just gonna over. Everyone was like, what nobody's ever said that before. You have to just say the quiet There's a true there's power in just saying the quiet part out loud about what you're actually doing, and that's what people want to hear. Actually, the people who agree with the policy and the people who don't agree with the policy.

Speaker 3

What you think you can convinced.

Speaker 2

You think you can convince Bill Ackman that you're not punishing and heyser Busch.

Speaker 3

Right, but who are we kidding?

Speaker 4

I mean very clearly, Yeah, yeah, over just own it though a marketing decision that you didn't like, right.

Speaker 3

Yeah, but just own it like you do.

Speaker 1

If you put Trump in DeSantis is shoes and you imagine what his answer would be.

Speaker 3

He'd just be like, yeah, they need to be punished.

Speaker 1

I mean you know, and everyone was like yeah, and even you know all the nuance of I've talked about that, We've talked about the Disney thing here. I mean, he is right that they get these special privileges, that they have way too much power in this like that is correct, but it was also correct that he was fine with that.

Speaker 4

He was totally cool with that.

Speaker 1

Until he decided that you know, he didn't like this political move that they made, and he was going to punish that. Like it's very clear. The Budweiser thing, it's just obvious, like virtue signaling to the Republican base, same kind of deal. They didn't like this marketing decision that they made to send an influencer can or whatever to transactivists Dylan Mulmany. So he's trying to lean into that and you know, get the right people mad at him

again or whatever. But by dancing around it and trying to act like this is some noble, principled stand on behalf of Florida tax bearers, it just doesn't pass.

Speaker 2

That's why it links to the original thing about bohemian growth, which is guess who this may the most mad the donor. The donors are the most angry about this. And Kelly does have a point. I mean, first of all, there is no such thing as a conservative company anymore, at least in terms like I don't think I exist at least in.

Speaker 4

Like wildly disagree with that.

Speaker 1

If you look at the union busting, and you look at the lobbying on tax legislation, maybe on the surface level to them, maybe on the surface level cultural stuff, yes, but in terms of how they actually operate in America and the fact they have it is definitely concerned.

Speaker 2

I don't disagree, but that I mean by that definition like Amazon is a conservative company.

Speaker 4

I agree with that.

Speaker 3

Well.

Speaker 2

I agree with that you're looking at the actual metrics. We're not talking about the wig code.

Speaker 1

Lapping Black Lives Matter on your website does not make you it's a left leaning I have always believe.

Speaker 2

I know I'm saying only in the way that the culture actually like imbibes this stuff. I don't think there's any there's nobody out there like putting MAGA hats on at a Fortune five hundred level. So that's why I think that the Gavin Newsome example doesn't really work. That said, that already is kind of happening. So it's one of those where we're in a mutually assured destruction like we had the whole MLB situation Georgia. You know, the Anheuser

Bush is just basically the liberal version of that. So you know, just be like, look, they did it first, Now this is what we're going to do. You have to own the decision. But he doesn't have the confidence, I think enough in his in his decision to actually just sit there and to own it in the only honest way that you.

Speaker 3

Can justify the policy.

Speaker 2

That was my problem with the answer, which is you're trying to have it both ways. Where the CEOs and the free market libertarian types, specifically the Fortune five hundred CEOs, people like Ken Griffin and others who love to say it, they hated his decision, and so he's got to try

and like use some shareholder effectively. What he's advocating is shareholder activism and a government level, which I have all kinds of problems with shareholderism and activism and all of that, but he's trying to have effectively a dishonest critique of the what he's doing instead of just saying, yeah, it's political, I did it for, you know, for political reasons. He's like, I had the lever, that's what my voters wanted to see, so I did it, and that's what Trump would have done. Yeah,

just keep coming back to that. The actual honesty is what connects so much with a lot of voters.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I think there's a sense on the Republican conservative right wing side that we're losing at the cultural level and so there's a comfort with using state power to enforce the cultural outcomes that.

Speaker 4

They would like to see.

Speaker 1

And I think, you know, that's where DeSantis is where a lot of his legislation comes from, where certainly this lawsuit against Budweiser for a marketing decision comes from. Where the you know, the direction with Disney comes from.

Speaker 4

All of that.

Speaker 1

But it really gets to the fundamental tension in his campaign of the type of coalition that he has to be able to stitch together in order to attempt to defeat Trump. And a key part of that coalition for him is donors who absolutely despise this direction. I mean, they do not want Florida or any other state to be able to sue them over decisions that you know, companies are making about their marketing spend or their budget

or what they're doing privately, whatever. So they hate this direction for Ron DeSantis, and you know, I do think it is a part of the reason why they're shopping around for other candidates. And at the same time he's trying to he understands that the moves may be popular with the base, so trying to do this wink and they're not at the base. But also give comfort to the donor class and it just ends up kind of a mess.

Speaker 3

I agree.

Speaker 2

The funniest thing is it's not like you know, conservatives needed them to.

Speaker 3

You know, Budwisers just late.

Speaker 2

Anheuser Bush is laid off like several hundred people, all the marketing people involved in it.

Speaker 3

Like they were punished.

Speaker 4

You know.

Speaker 3

It's one of those where it's like.

Speaker 2

They don't need you to sue them, like their their punishment is long standing. Go to a grocery store and say which bud light is still on the shelves. It's like it's one of those where this almost never happens, but it's actual organic pushback but genuinely materialized in the marketplace.

So I don't know, in a certain way, I'm almost like, did you really need to do this, because now you're getting all downside and you didn't even need to actually do it to tip the scales or whatever you're trying to virtue signal, and now it's actually kind of backfiring away.

Speaker 1

And she kind of got them there when she like you supported the boycott though, right, yeah, because if you're real concern, I mean, Megan's a great interviewer. She's just like you know, I think top notch in these situations. But if your real concern is the harm to Florida you know, pensioners, then you wouldn't have been endorsing a boycott that hurt the stock price, like you were complicit in that. So she kind of got him and exposed the real reasons that he was shaking on this fight.

Speaker 3

That's right, Okay, let's go to the next party.

Speaker 2

Or actually very much connects to what you were Absolutely so Ron DeSantis obviously had we talked a little bit about it before. He has the new curriculum for American history and history books specifically around slavery, where there's a section within that actual curriculum, this specifically for middle schoolers about whether slaves benefited or not from slaves. Now, in terms of the benefit language, it was basically built as like in some cases they learned trades which were later

on useful to them. So this obviously has exploded in terms of political controversy. DeSantis himself not backing down at all. He gave a very bearded defense of it at a press conference. Here's what he had to say, Well, you.

Speaker 9

Should talk to them about I mean, I didn't do it and I wasn't involved in it, but I think I think what they're doing is I think that they're probably going to show some of the folks that eventually parlayed, you know, being a blacksmith into into doing things later later in life. But the reality is all of that is rooted in whatever is factual. They listed everything out and if you have any questions about it, just asked the Department of Education. You can talk about those folks.

But I mean, these were scholars who put that together.

Speaker 3

So crystal.

Speaker 2

Since this has come to light, it has now become a major controversy, not just in actually the liberal media, but many black MAGA Republicans specifically some also non MAGA. One of them is a Senator Tim Scott running for president, who called out Ron DeSantis on the campaign trail.

Speaker 3

Here's what he had to say.

Speaker 11

There's no silver lining in freedom and slavery. But seriously, there's anything you can learn that any benefits that people suggests that you had Joe slavery, you would have had a free person. Well, slavery was was really about separating fat works, about mutilating humans and even raping their wives. It was just devastating, So I would hope that every person in our country, and certainly money for president, would

appreciate that. And I said, people have bad days. Sometimes they regret what they say, and we should ask them again to clarify their positions.

Speaker 2

Ask them again to clarify their position. Interestingly enough, now I I alluded to, this has also become a major thing amongst black Maga Republicans. So let's go and put this up there on the screen. So we've got two individuals here. One is Congressman Byron Donald's. Interestingly enough, he's from Florida. So he says, quote, the new African American standards in Florida are good, robust, and accurate. That being said, the attempt to feature the personal benefits of slavery is

wrong and needs to be adjusted. That obviously wasn't the goal, and I have faith that the Florida Department of Education will correct this. Then John James, who actually ran for Senate in Michigan, now he's a congressman. He says, quote non DeSantis. Number one, slavery was not CTE. Nothing about four hundred years of evil was quote a net benefit to my ancestors. Number two, there were only five black

Republicans in Congress, you are attacking two of them. My brother in christ if you find yourself in a deep hole, put the shovel down. You are now so far from the Party of Lincoln. Your ed board is rewriting history. You're personally attacking conservatives like Tim Scott and Byron Donald's on the topic of slavery.

Speaker 3

You have gone too far.

Speaker 2

Stop And also from a campaign, the thing is is that the campaign too is also not holding a back Crystal, the one of the when she's a spokesperson, a member of the Tampa campaign, Christina Pushaw is attacking now Tim Scott, Byron Donalds and John James as repeating Kamala Harris' talking points. So things are getting vicious here. Yeah, there's some interesting valances actually to the entire fight.

Speaker 3

But I'm curious what you think.

Speaker 4

Well, there's a few things.

Speaker 1

I mean, first of all, I think the comments from Tim Scott and Byron Donalds, by the way, we're so mild.

Speaker 4

His critique there so mild.

Speaker 3

Good, robust, And well there's this what he said, you.

Speaker 1

Know, he's like, I got this a little bit. Overall, it's fine, right, And what caused this really to blow up was Christina Pouscha and other Desanti's team members who were viciously attacking Donald's and Trump supporters getting into this whole messy online fight. And then that's what causes John James to come and be like, hold on a second, let's be clear about what's going on here. So they're creating this issue for themselves in their incredibly thin skinned

like reaction to what was going on here. And then of course let's go and put the last ELEMENTC five up on the screen. Of course, the Trump campaign can't resist getting in on this as well. This is a statement from Jason Miller, and you know, they it's interesting the way they frame this because they don't directly address in this statement the you know, personal benefit to slavery situation directly, but they say Congress and Byron Donald's is

a conservative hero. The Republic Party's lucky to have as leader. President Trump's honored to have his endorsement. If he thinks something is bs, he'll tell you that's why we like him so much.

Speaker 4

For the official.

Speaker 1

Office of the governor, and what's left of Ron De Santis's presidential campaign to attempt to smear Congress and Donald's like this is a disgrace. It's indicative of why DeSantis has plummeted faster than any presidential candidate in history. DeSantis needs to look in the mirror recognize that at his current trajectory, it's not just twenty twenty four that's dead

for him, but twenty twenty eight as well. DeSantis has continued misguided attacks are only helping Joe Biden, and if that's his goal, Desantas should just get out of the race. So I mean Trump, of course taking full advantage of this, and now we're hearing this manch or repeated multiple times from him that listen, it's over, guys, get out of the race, and let's all come together to defeat Joe Biden.

But to me, there's three things here soccer. I mean, first of all, I think DeSantis completely mishandled this curriculum. He should have known it would have been under intense scrutiny, and it wasn't just the slavery situation. You also have them like both sizing of race massacres where white people lynched black people and being like, let's all talk about the violence from the black people too. So you have

that piece, you have him mishandling the issue itself. You have this overly online, you know, freak out over some incredibly mild critique from Tim Scott and Byron Donald, and then you also have what we were discussing before. How do you think the donors who have been behind him, how do you think that they are going to feel about this whole flap.

Speaker 3

Yeah, I mean, look, I have complicated feelings.

Speaker 2

I personally would have handled it in a more confident manner and I would have said, I'm not going to take lectures on slavery from people who mischaracterize the sixteen nineteen project and said that the American Revolution was about slavery. And I would have just ended it there. That's what I would have sucked to. But they decided to litigate it. And when I heard a joke once, it's like, anytime you're trying to add a butt to the end of slavery, she should just stop this slay.

Speaker 3

And I think it's true.

Speaker 2

I mean, look, we can sit here and we can have a long discussion around curriculum.

Speaker 3

I actually would love to do that.

Speaker 2

So I have a couple of books if anybody's interested in podcasts, so people who want if you actually want to learn I would listen to The Day and Carlin most recent history on specifically chattel African slavery. They're Hugh Thomas book again on the history of African slavery. Both are incredible, They're deep historical texts if you really want to know what happened. Those are the books I would read if you want to know about the American context

and specifically the end of slavery. Battle Cry Freedom is the best one volume book that actually exists on the American Civil War. And then there's also Partying the Waters, the three part series about the Civil Rights era. So anyway, those are actual historical texts, that's what I would recommend. Those are all accepted, at least at one time, were

by left and by right. But it does come back to you, Look, it's complicated issue politically, valance in terms of like the way that you're going to attack it. If you were going to do it in the way that they did, I think it should have come back to confidence. But instead you're getting a bit of a whiny kind of back and forth that DeSantis is engaging. Here, we have some video from the campaign trail that illustrates f I'm talking about.

Speaker 3

Let's take a listen, were there beneficial aspects to slavery?

Speaker 9

That's not what the curriculum says.

Speaker 11

What are you doing?

Speaker 9

What the correct No, there's no, it's not and the curriculum is very clear. You have I think it's like two hundred plus pages of all kinds of stuff that you can't read that have you read it? So what's your Have you read it? But you haven't read it? So I'm just making that clear. That makes it very

clear about the injustices of slavery in vivid detail. So anyone that actually read that and then listens to Kamala would know that she's lying and that particular provision about the skills that was in spite of slavery, not because of the EIGHTP course has made that same point.

Speaker 2

So, like I said, you know you're gonna sit there and you're gonna litigate with the butts. I just think you're in more of a losing position. I will say, at least on this, I think Byron Donald's and John James are being dishonest because these are straight up maga guys who we all, by the way, go look at what they've said about Trump or whatever. On Charlott's felt there is a huge element of just attacking Dessantis to try to get it out of the race. So look,

you could call me racist if you want. I personally just doubt sometimes the sincerity of these like ultra maga politicians, yeah, who clearly I think are being weaponized in order to go after DeSantis on a political level.

Speaker 3

And do they believe it or not. I don't know.

Speaker 2

The reason I think Tim Scott is being sincere is a Scott has never coded himself like maga or whatever. He's running for president, but he has always kind of been a dissenting voice on racial politics with true the GOP. So I'm gonna I'm not gonna say that about him. But the other two, having watched them kissed Trump's ass like repeatedly, and also seeing the way that the Trump campaign was like using their statements in order to validate criticism,

I just I can't help. But maybe it's serious, maybe it's not, But I do think that has to be.

Speaker 3

Thrown out there.

Speaker 4

I'm not going to listen.

Speaker 1

I have no idea about their sincerity on this because the other way that you could read it, and I actually think this is perhaps more in what I'm inclined to believe is the fact that they feel comfortable voicing this kind of descent with Ron De Santis and they did not feel comfortable voicing this kind of descent with

Donald Trump. It just shows you what a stronger figure he is within the Republican Party, because I mean, listen again, though, I want to say with Byron Donald's initial comments, they were so mild, and if the DeSantis campaign had said nothing about them, honestly, this.

Speaker 4

All probably would be over now.

Speaker 1

But there's nothing the media wants to cover more and that you know, is more like actually significant to the race. Then this big blow up between Ron De Santis and now three out of five of the black elected Republicans at the national level. So what I looked at this and thought is like, if Trump did the exact same thing, remember he had his like patriotic education initial or whatever the hell it was. If he did the exact same thing, maybe Tim Scott would have spoken of there would have

been very little descent from it. There would have been much more rallying around it, there would not have been this whole blow because he just can get away with things that other candidates cannot get away with. And so to me, the fact that you do have this whole, ugly, messy intra Republican fight breaking out into the public around DeSantis' history curriculum in the state of Florida. It's another sign of his weakness within the Republican Party.

Speaker 2

That there is no disputing that whatsoever. Let's go to the next part here on the Facebook files. This was actually released by Congressman Jim Jordan as a result of some requests from the House Oversight Committee and other things that were uncovered emails directly between Facebook aka Meta and the Biden White House. Let's go and put up some examples of what we learned, he says, quote Facebook files Part one, smoking gun docs prove Facebook censored Americans because

of the Biden White House pressure. Let's go to the next one here, guys, please, they say, quote, what did the Biden White House want removed a meme? That's right, Even memes were not spared from the Biden Whitehouse's censorship efforts. One of those is that you can see here is the meme from shared on Facebook April fourth, twenty twenty one. Ten years from now, you will be watching TV and you will hear quote, did you or a loved one

take the COVID vaccine, you may be entitled. So that's including the Leo DiCaprio meme from Once upon a Time in Hollywood.

Speaker 3

Let's go to the next one.

Speaker 2

In terms of what was removed, they say, quote to appease the Biden Whitehouse talking points were actually drafted for Nick Clegg, that's senior vice president of government relations at Facebook or Meta. They say Facebook was ready to tell the White House it had demoted a video posted by Tucker Carlson fifty percent actually in response to White House demands,

even though that post did not violate any policies. The fascinating part about this is they actually draft in this talking point while we remove content that explicitly directs people not to get the vaccine, as well as content that it contains explicit misreputations around vaccines. We reviewed this content in detail. It does not violate these policies. However, they say that the video is receiving fifty percent demotion for seven days, that is in the queue to be quote

fact checked. Let's go to the next part here as well. It says, and this is from Michael Shallenberger, they show you specifically one around the lab Leak, and this was an email saying, quote, can someone quickly remind me why we were removing claims that COVID is man made? And here is a direct response from email, quote we were under pressure from the administration and others to do more.

So you have explicit examples here Crystal four separate ones that we just showed you of memes that were being taken down, videos that were being secretly demoted while they're being weighted to quote be fact checked. And then the lab leak one where I love that a guy inside the company's like, hey, why are we demoting this again?

Speaker 3

I thought it was true, isn't it true?

Speaker 2

And they're like, no, it's because we were under pressure from the administration. And you know, now that I'm thinking about it, it reminds me of an example I think believe Zuck was on Lex Friedman's podcast where he talked about how a lot of the pressure on his company to say COVID information ended up being true.

Speaker 4

Yeah.

Speaker 2

Specifically, he pointed to lab Leak and now we see the actual emails he was referring to that they were being lobbied by the White House, by the administration around this, and I mean The gross part about it is it all happened behind the scenes.

Speaker 3

Where we're finding out that this freaking two.

Speaker 2

Something years is July thirty first, twenty twenty three, almost more than two years after some of these emails were actually sent to this company.

Speaker 3

Yeah, you had no idea in real time.

Speaker 4

Yeah, I mean that's right.

Speaker 1

That's why in some ways, the like demotion, that's the way whind the scenes is more to faeries Because the Hunter Biden laptop situation, we knew what they did at Twitter. It was clear there was an ability to have a public outcry and investigations whatever, Like, we didn't know that this content was being demoted by fifty percent for a period of seven days, et cetera. Because it all happens behind the scenes. So, you know, it's useful to see

the way that this actually works. I thought, perhaps even more revealing where some of the exchanges about first of all Facebook actually worked, that suppressing or outright censoring vaccine hesitancy content would lead to a kind of a Strissian effect where people felt like, since they were being censored, what they're saying must be true, that there must be a government cover up to force them to take the vaccine that they were onto something, that they were being silenced, et cetera.

Speaker 4

You had a draft memo.

Speaker 1

To Facebook leadership which said there may be risk of pushing them further toward hesidancy by suppressing their speech making them feel marginalized by large institutions, which I think ends up being pretty prescient. And then there was another piece where they were weighing how to respond to the administration's censorship requests, which they didn't really want to go along with, but they said, given the bigger fish we have to fry with the administration data flows, etc. That doesn't seem

a great place for us to be. They're referring to them being at odds with the administration over censorship requests, so grateful for any further creative thinking on how we can be responsive to their concerns.

Speaker 4

So you see the way this works.

Speaker 1

Facebook had other things things that they wanted from the administration visa VI their business, and I think this had something to do with European data flows, and so they were kind of willing to like, all right, well, we got to throw them a bone on the censorship that they want so that we can get this other piece

of our business and that's the way this works. It reminds me of the conversation we had with Jack Dorsey of You formerly of Twitter, who was talking about the intense pressure that not just our government but governments around the world are putting on Twitter all the time to have various content suppressed and outright band and how difficult it is to stand up to all of those requests.

So this is not to like, you know, absolve Facebook or whatever at whatsoever, but you can see the way that this works and how the government throws their weight around to get what they want from these companies.

Speaker 2

What also disgusted me is there's actually a series within these about a discussion between then vice president of the company Cheryl Sandberg and Nick Clegg after if we'll recall, President Biden publicly said in July of twenty twenty one

that Facebook quote is killing people. That tongue lashing, not even a specific request, actually caused massive consternation within the company and an official re evaluation crystal of policies around COVID nineteen content, including from these officials like Nick Klegg, Cheryl Sandberg all the way up to the level of Mark Zuckerberg. The simple fact that they were being criticized by the president for quote unquote killing people was enough

for them to take an internal reevaluation. So it's not even just the pernicious remove this, remove that, remove this. It's when you directly put pressure like this on these companies, you are effectively asking for a total difference in policy. It's not illegal, but you're the full force of the government.

I mean, I'll never forget. And probably the most extraordinary moment censorship that's probably ever happened, you know, in the under the Biden administration, was Jensaki being like, I've been banned from.

Speaker 3

One platform, you should be banned from all.

Speaker 2

It's literally dictating content policy across everything. And you know the I can part there about the drafting talking points for the senior vice president of Facebook. That's crazy. Whenever they're talking about the emotion. I mean, and you know, in many ways validates so many things. You and I know, intuitively, you and I do a video about epscene, it gets like fifty thousand views and gets demonetized.

Speaker 3

You're like, well, I mean, it wasn't the day, like, was it not? You know, what's going on?

Speaker 2

Nobody knows it just it exists into the ether. And you're like, maybe it didn't hit that day. Maybe with something else going, maybe people didn't care. Certainly possible, but then a part of you has to think like no, but maybe you know, usually people do care. Actually, I know there's a lot of people care about the story. And you know, we don't care as much about views here for money or anything, but you know, it's nice

to get exposure. And you're just you think, like, there's something odd that's happening right with the coverage of this, but you can never get it confirmed.

Speaker 4

Start to think you're a little crazy.

Speaker 3

You do start to think you're crazy. You're like, why is this happening?

Speaker 2

Why Overnight your subscribers you know on YouTube dropped from like hundreds a day to like five, and you're like what what And then you know they just tell you they're like, that's normal, it happens. I'm like, really, we've been doing this for four years and never seen it happen. Also happens around the time you're covering discord leaks. Who knows, you know, it's one of those where like, right, you

just don't know whether it's real, whether it's not. And I think that's the most pernicious aspect of it all.

Speaker 4

I think that's right, and that's part of why.

Speaker 1

You know, if we had some rules around really clear transparency, that would be helpful, so you could at least have journalists digging into this company.

Speaker 4

Journalists was actually interested.

Speaker 1

I mean, there are some in the independent brass so of course we'll be taking a look at that.

Speaker 4

That would be useful. You know, the fact that you had this.

Speaker 1

Federal judge go against the Biden administration and basically say, listen, you have to stop doing this, like you can't use your government power to try to censor the speech of American citizens.

Speaker 4

That's a good direction to go in.

Speaker 1

But you know, getting granular here on exactly how this works, and there's always two levels to it. On the one side, it's very dystopian and very nefarious and really clear cut on the issue of like lab leak, where even the Facebook employers are like, why were we doing this again this idea that it was you know, potentially man made.

So it's very dystopian nefarious. And then it's also sort of ridiculous because they're trying to sensor like memes about vaccines that are pretty innocuous and probably not really you know, changing anyone's minds in particular, or in the case of Twitter, we know they were censoring these accounts that had like two followers and some tweet that got like one like on it, and it's like, why are you spending your time doing this? Don't you have bigger fish to fry.

So a lot of that absurdity also comes down in these.

Speaker 2

Wa well and their censoring true information. I mean, look, and that's the problem on lably, even on vaccine. I mean, listen, you know, you can say, you know whatever you want, but like at the time, they were actively pushing to go against anybody who was like, it doesn't stop transmission. Remember that from Fauci, you know, the clip of him walking around. Guess what, that's false. It's just not true.

And so you know, at the time, it definitely would have you should have aired on the side of actually free and open, because if we'd had that discussion, maybe they would have changed their vaccine, maybe they would have been more honest, you know, and maybe sure it may not have had the desired immediate effect, but that's not your job, and that's just not They refuse to come from a place of first principles, and instead they come from a place of immediate power, and what they want

to try and hack the mind of the electorate. This is really what Fauci was a master at. And what they never really understood is that in a long enough timeline that the more that that happens, that you always come back to a default position, effectively of I feel like I'm being lied to and I'm not getting the full story, which means I don't trust you at all, even when you do say things which actually are true. That's the end result. I think that's where we're at now.

That's why people don't believe anything that's being said here. I think that's right, all right, So let's go to the last part here, given, I guess an update on President Biden and his seventh grandchild, who he'd refused to acknowledge previously. In the past time honored Washington tradition, if you want something to just get lost in the ether, you got to do it on Friday afternoon. So Friday afternoon,

the middle of nowhere. For some reason, President Biden doesn't release his statement to the press, doesn't release a statement to everybody else. They somehow the White House calls up People magazine and issues a statement on their seventh grandchild, who they had previously refused to acknowledge. Let's go and put this up there on the screen, they said, quote, this is not a political issue. It's a family matter.

Jill and I only want what is best for all of our grandchildren, including Navy Hunter's daughter, the four year old with an Arkansas woman who Hunter met in a strip club and has sense actually contested multiple times legally on grounds of child support around grounds of whether she could take the Biden family name or not.

Speaker 3

And that is why.

Speaker 2

Look, some people gave him benefit of the doubt. Everyone's like, oh, he was shamed by Maureen Dowd because of her column. And I actually do believe that is true. But we shouldn't just sit here and validate that this is somehow enough, because we can't forget what Hunter and presumably the Biden family did to this young girl of four years old and to her mother.

Speaker 3

I mean, let's put this up there on this.

Speaker 2

As part of the child support settlement that they had with Hunter Biden, she was not allowed to actually take the Biden family name.

Speaker 3

And that is one where you know, he says, quote.

Speaker 2

He also promised to discuss planning for college education fund with his child's mother, and even though that she had requested to change the last name to Biden dropped that request as part of the agreement. And that's why actually in the statement, you know, Biden refers to her as Navy and he doesn't refer to the last name that she has since taken I believe.

Speaker 3

Of her maternal grandfather.

Speaker 2

But you know, that is one where you can see that Hunter went out of his way to not pay, you know, and do his due diligence or sorry, his duty in terms of providing for them, and then also effectively treated her as like a political pawn his own child, and that for some reason, President Biden effectively deferred this disgraceful behavior to his son and just said I'm going to take his lead on it, which is why he refused to even acknowledge her exist existence until she was

a four year old, which you know, we talked about this previously, Crystal, but genuinely might be one of the most personally disgraceful things that we've seen from President Biden that he has not received due criticism for.

Speaker 4

I one percent agree.

Speaker 1

And the way that you know, we played how the view is trying to cover for our feeling. Oh well, this is a Hunter issue. This is really not on Joe. It's like really, yeah, And it's very relevant when you're talking about a man who puts family front and center, and it's a core part of his political pitch is that he's this great family man and he talks about his family all the time, talks about his other grandchildren all the time. That they had to be shamed even

into even acknowledging this child's existence. I mean, I'm sorry, I don't care what you say at this point that Staine does not get removed and the real feelings come out in this child support arrangement where yeah, Hunter Biden first of all fought them tooth and nail, and second of all, as part of the agreement, made them accept that she could not have the Biden name because apparently they didn't want the Biden name tainted by some commoners

from Arkansas. It is the height of elitist snobbery. It is heartless and yeah, no statement to People magazine is going to put that back in the box. The other thing I would say here, though, is you know, it does show you when the liberal paper of record decides to do any sort of scrutiny that it does have power. Imagine if they, you know, took this kind of critical lens to Biden, the Democrats more regularly, what sort of things,

what sort of change might come from that? Because they were not going to They explicitly had told the Biden aids and everybody around him, like, we are not acknowledging this grandchild. He has six grandchildren, not seven. So this was explicit White House policy coming directly from Joe Biden, and you know, a New York Times column had the power to at least shame them into acknowledging.

Speaker 4

This child's existence.

Speaker 1

You know, it's also worth recalling when Biden was first asked about this little girl what his response was, and you can see I think the tone and judge for yourself how he really feels about all of those takeisms.

Speaker 9

I'm wondering if you have a comment on this report and court filing out of Arkansas that your son Hunter just made you of grandfather.

Speaker 11

Against No, that's a private matter.

Speaker 12

I have no comments.

Speaker 3

Thank you, guys.

Speaker 1

We have so just flashing out there, lashing out no comment. It's that, I mean, that was the first reaction, and it took four years and a New York Times shaming for them to even say that this child exists.

Speaker 2

What's classy asking the current presidential candidate whether he wants to acknowledge it or like, what's going on with his publicly like shameful son or you know, just refusing to acknowledge your fourth grandchild. And so she's four years old, cognitively functioning enough to know that her freaking grandfather as president of the United States. And then if you know that, then you also wonder why haven't they called me?

Speaker 3

How come nobody cares about? Yeah, why haven't I met?

Speaker 4

So?

Speaker 2

I can see them on television, but nobody has the But I mean that can really screw you up as a kid.

Speaker 3

I said it last time.

Speaker 2

I believe Look, and this is the other thing about Hunter. I think you said this last time. So when Hunter decides to divorce his wife and date his dead brother's wife for some reason, they were willing to issue a statement of support, and they're willing to acknowledge that and be cool, you know, with his But why on this one were they not willing to just come out and be like, look, whatever is going on between her and Hunter?

That's fine, you know, in terms of the mother. But we're not going to take this out on an innocent child. I also said this politically. How many people in this country grandma's grandparents are raising the kids of their son's daughters. You know, who fell into a bad situation because of drum, Millions of people are in the.

Speaker 3

Exact same situation.

Speaker 2

It would only make you more empathetic and connective to a lot of I think especially you know, white working class and poor voters who disproportionately have been affected by this exact same arrangement. And they would say, you know what, he's doing the right thing. You know, I was fifty five years old. I didn't want to step up. I

had to do it. There's a lot of people in this country in that situation, and he could have stepped up in the same thing, but instead he chose the wrong way to go about it.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I think that's all well said. All right, Tager, what are you looking at?

Speaker 2

The media in this town love to talk about democracy. Everything's an attack on it, it's under threat, it's going away. In a sense, they're right, but not for the right reasons for them. It's when they're usually talking about things that are bad for Democrats. Or are about Trump. They always fail to miss the actual picture. What does it

look like for democracies that are in trouble. One of the first and important signs of one that is not doing well is a permanent elected class which does not respond to the wants of a dynamic pop sound familiar. It should, especially after this week, when the world really

got to see how robust our democracy is. Our eighty one year old Senate minority leader, one of the most powerful, praid people in the entire country, freezes for twenty seconds on camera during a medical event, brushes it off, refuses to tell the public what the issue was, didn't even

commit to stepping down. Twenty four hours later, the ninety one year old senior Senator from California, Diane Feinstein literally had to be scolded by her colleagues to quote, just vote I when she got confused as to where she was.

Speaker 3

If you haven't seen it, take a listen, Senor.

Speaker 10

Feinstein, pardon me, yeah, to say I would like to support a yes vote on this.

Speaker 13

It provides eight hundred and twenty three billion. That's an increase of twenty six billion for the Department of Defense, and it funds priorities submitted.

Speaker 10

Yeah just say okay, just.

Speaker 11

Hie, thank you.

Speaker 2

Presiding over that system is our eighty one year old president running for reelection, who is now forced to use the tiny stairs on air Force one to avoid tripping and falling.

Speaker 3

Because at his age he could actually die.

Speaker 2

When I say our democracy is dying, I almost mean it quite literally, considering that an actuarial table tells us one of these three individuals has a very high chance of dropping dead from natural causes in just the next twelve months. With the real problem with our garontocracy is not just those three individuals, it's the dying system that they represent. Our current Congress is the third oldest Congress

since the Founding Fathers convened in seventeen eighty nine. The issue that we have, as you can see from the graphic in front of you, is not the six percent of the Congress that is currently in the silent generation, but to put it kindly, they're not exactly long for this world. The issue is the aging baby boomers that make up almost fifty percent of Congress that are fully internalized into this modern system where competitive primaries are basically dead.

Social norms no longer force people to retire through any sense of duty to the public. And as you can see in front of you, the median age of Congress right now in both chambers is at an all time high. It's crazy to consider this, but there was a time in the early eighties where the median age of a senator was mid fifties. The median age of a representative in the House was in the forties. What happened, well, they stayed. They refuse to step down, not only from

leadership but from their general seats. They've enjoyed the perks of office, nice fat stock market returns. They have taxpayer funded staffs that do everything for them. As the graphic in front of you here shows you, there have been two major breaking points in the history of the country from normalizing old people on Congress. The first time that the percentage of people over the age of seventy spiked

above ten percent was nineteen forty six. That time period in Congress is very significant because it came upon the tail end of the absolute power that the South had built up through Jim Crow. Effectively, the way that it worked at that time was that Southern states became uniparty political machines. They sent the same man to Congress year after year, very few competitive primaries, and it enabled them both to stay until they died. But also because they

amassed immense power through the seniority system. The entire Congress of that time ran only on senior privilege, where the chairman of the most powerful committees was not decided by party bosses, but entirely through how long you've been in office. So for those who have read one of my favorite books, Master of the Senate, you know that it took a singular force in American history to change all of that.

Speaker 3

Lyndon B.

Speaker 2

Johnson somehow slowly wrestled power away from the geriatric Southerners, slowly chipped away at the seniority system, and culminated eventually in the destruction of Jim Crow under his presidency and the Voting Rights Act. And wouldn't you know it, destroying the voting hold of power on Jim Crow overnight destroyed the percentage of people in the Senate over seventy. The previous high of people over seventy was eleven percent in nineteen fifty eight. That fell to a near all time

low four percent in nineteen eighty one. But as with all political changes, the new Guard seems a lot like the Old Guard. Slowly but surely, the Reagan Revolution turned into the Reagan Establishment between nineteen eighty one and the early nineteen nineties. Suddenly we are right back to almost where we started. It was exactly during this period that some of the worst defenders in our politics entered the Chamber.

Mitch McConnell eighty nine year old Chuck Grassley, Dianne Feinstein, Nancy Pelosi eighty six year old Representative Napolitano in the House, many many more. After two thousand and four, we were truly after the races. We broke the all time record of eleven percent, skyrocketed hire and hire every year since. We now stand at a stunning twenty five percent of the entire Chamber over the age of seventy. Little chance

of change anytime soon. Take the Senate, for example, the two people who were standing behind Mitch McConnell during his health episode to potentially take his place, Senator John Thune and Senator John Cornyn. Cornyn, he's already seventy one. Thune, I guess he's a spring chicken. He's sixty two years old. On the other side of the aisle, Schumer is one of the most is one of the youngest most powerful people in Washington. He's seventy two. His number two Dick Durbin,

he's seventy eight. We have an epidemic in Congress of not only extraordinarily old and infirm people hanging on at the top, but really of the median senator being much closer to nursing home age than at any time in modern history. No internal dynamics that forced these people from office. Unfortunately, as we have all seen, public shame. It's not enough to get someone like Feinstein, who look at this point

fully has lost her mind to step down. Shame doesn't work on people with that much ego and from a machine state like California. There's really only one solution in need, an age limit for all all federal bureaucrats and elected representatives.

Speaker 3

Call me ages if you want. I don't care.

Speaker 2

In my opinion, if you're a day old or seventy five, you gotta go.

Speaker 3

Just walk.

Speaker 2

Don't take it from me, Take it from Chuck Hagel, he's actually a former US senator. When he was asked about this, he's currently aged seventy seven, he said, quote, it's heartbreaking embarrassing, But it's up to the individual to come to grips with the reality. He's a former Nebraska senator who left office in two thousand and nine. The reality is quote, we are not going backwards. We are all getting older at seventy seven versus sixty two when I left the Senate, I have pains.

Speaker 7

Now.

Speaker 3

I didn't even know that I should have take it from him.

Speaker 2

That's the thing, Crystal, I mean that quote, Christal, what are you ty going to look at?

Speaker 1

Well, guys, if you watched a Trump rally on the right wing outlet Newsmax recently, might have looked a.

Speaker 4

Little bit like this.

Speaker 1

You can see here you've got Trump on the left side doing his Trumpian thing, and the entire right side on the screen taken up by an ad for American Hartford gold Coins Trump speech special to add for offer details text Trump to this number.

Speaker 4

Now.

Speaker 1

This ad was particularly intrusive and notable, but far from one off for Hartford or the entire sketchy world of

gold iras. In this world, salesman hucksters try to shake down scared seniors and get them to shift their retirement from funds from their traditional iras and four oh one k's into gold coins that these companies sell at an exorbitant markup, according to analysis for The Washington Post Quote, since October twenty twenty, email newsletters distributed by newsmas have included more than eleven hundred ads for gold IRA companies, nearly a quarter of all NEWSMACS email ads reviewed by

The Post at one thousand dollars of five thousand dollars each. According to Augusta financial records from twenty sixteen, also reviewed by the Post, the ads likely generate more than a million dollars a year in revenue for that company. Now, conservative influencers and politicians they also regularly haf these products. One email that went out from American Hertford that same company, and fluted endorsement from Bill O'Reilly. Ted Cruz's podcast has

featured ads from the company. Rudy Juliani called Hertford quote the experts I trust. Most companies like Hartford prey on real economic anxiety triggered by both actual and hyperbolic claims to offer a supposed solution that in reality is just robbing seniors blind. The Post talked to one retiree named Ed de Santo, who was lured in by the ads he heard on some of his favorite channels and shows. He was persuaded to invest one hundred thousand dollars lump sum payment from his pension into a.

Speaker 4

Hartford Gold Ira.

Speaker 1

Little did he know gold and silver he was purchasing it been marked up ninety two percent. That means that his one hundred k only netted him fifty three thousand dollars in actual value. In other words, they basically just stole about half of his money. A recent sec complaint against another similar company, red Rock Secured, reveals even more

details about exactly how these scams work. According to a company email that was obtained by the government, red Rocks Secured specifically targeted people who were quote right wing conservative, fifty nine plus years of age, male and female, interest in retirement investments, owns a four h one K or I or right and anyone who works for the government and owns a thrift savings plan. This type of fraud

targeting is called an affinity scam. You portray yourself and your company is having some sort of shared interests or belonging to a common group. In this instance, it's conservatives. You're opposed to Joe Biden democratic policies. Companies in the space use trusted right wing figures and networks for their advertising,

places like Fox News News mex conservative podcast hosts. Affinity scams really prey on the natural human inclination to trust people who are in your in group, and allow political influencers to monetize their audience trust profiting up of scamming the very people who are most.

Speaker 4

Supportive of their careers.

Speaker 1

Given that mainstream advertisers increasingly steer clear of hard right content, the ad space is cheap and the audience of disproportionately elderly people ripe for scamming. In the specific case of red Rock Secured, the government alleges that the company outright lied to their customers. In one instance, they told a customer they would be charging him a mere one point eight three percent fee and that the customer would also

be receiving fifteen percent in quote bonus medal. In reality, red Rock charged the customer a one hundred and thirty percent markup and there was no bonus medal, whatever that is. The government also claims that, in order to establish credibility, a top Red Rock executive claimed he had a phing economics and a PhD in international markets, and he compelled other employees to refer to him as doctor Tony Spencer

when transferring customer phone calls to his line. He also claimed that he had been working with clients for over twenty five years. Of course, in reality, he had no such degrees and had been working the space for at most eleven years, and that work appears to have mostly entailed scamming people. These goldbug scams go back a long time, though, and they significantly predate even the Biden era.

Speaker 4

Back in the heyday of Glenn.

Speaker 1

Beck's Fox News Show, following the financial collapse during the rise of the Tea Party, Beck leaned hard in to gold as a safe haven for troubled times. In an article that was written at that time, Mother Jones documented how his program, increasingly facing mainstream advertiser boycotts, would not only host goldbug ads, but would also feature entire segments

dedicated to the importance of hoarding gold. As they wrote, quote tune into Glenbeck's Fox News Show or syndicated radio program, you'll soon learn about the precarious state of the US dollar currency on the verge of collapse due to runaway government spending. A ballooning national debt and imminent Zimbabwe style hyperinflation.

To defend yourself against the coming financial holocaust, Beck explain on his radio show last November, you need to quote think like a German Jew in nineteen thirty four, maybe nineteen thirty one, and that means thinking about buying some gold. Intellectual framework for these scams, though, goes back even further more than one hundred years, to debates over the gold

stand the association of gold with libertarian politics. The gold standard, in this ideological worldview, is meant to check the excesses of the progressive welfare state, gold being the pure store of value versus paper money, which can be corrupted by crooked politicians. So couple this ideological inclination with genuine economic procarity, partisan fear mongering, and sell it from the mouths of trusted figures. You've got a personal financial disaster just waiting

to happen. No accident that these gold scams are back with vengeance at a time of massive anxiety among our elderly about how they're going to afford to live out their retirement, something many say they actually fear more than they fear death. According to a recent study, eighty percent of American households with older adults are either currently financially

struggling or they are at risk. The rise of market base where retirement plans over defined benefit pensions, means that seniors genuinely do find themselves more at risk to the whims of the market and vulnerable to potential disaster and crash than previous generations. Desperation and fear, of course, breeds vulnerability. These influencers taking advertiser cash to scam their own audience

without any scruples, they should be ashamed of themselves. The government needs to do a lot more to crack down on these scams, to protecting inns and more importantly, to ease the procarity that has left so many such easy prey.

Speaker 4

For all of you out there, just don't be an easy mark.

Speaker 1

Just because someone you like is selling something, that doesn't mean they have your best interests at heart. And these things SAGA have so proliferated. And what was amazing in that Washington Post.

Speaker 3

Thank you guys so much for watching. We really appreciate it.

Speaker 2

As a reminder, you can go ahead and sign up watch the full show on Spotify guaranteed ad free over there for right now, so Breakingpoints dot com.

Speaker 3

Otherwise, we'll see you.

Speaker 12

All tomorrow, b Stupi.

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