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Country on the Wire

Jan 26, 202459 minEp. 676
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Episode description

The GOP primary is basically dunzo. Time to look ahead towards the general election, the future of the Republican Party, even on to the generations that will take it over one day. To do so our merry Ricochet gang is joined by Governor Scott Walker, now the president of Young America's Foundation.

Peter, James and the Reverend Dr. Long also cut into the razor wire debate.

Transcript

They're all just they've all just put their manhood in a been a blind trust, not what your country can do for you and what you can do for your country. Mister garbachofw Tear Down This Wall. It's the Ricochet Podcast with Rob Long and Peter Robinson. I'm James Lilyax and today we talked to former Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker about the YAF and what is that. Well, let's

ever use as a podcast. It's unfortunate that there is a governor in Texas, Governor Abbott, who has politicized this issue of what's happening on the border, and it's not making people's life safer. It's actually making a harder for law enforcement at the border to do their job. There's really only one person in America not doing their job, and that's the President of the United States who's not enforcing immigration laws. America is a nation that can be defined in

a single word. How's going to put him to put? Excuse me? Welcome everybody. It's the Ricochet Podcast, number six hundred and seventy. I'm James Lylex. Here in Minnesota, cloudy, foggy, Drusie, but yet the day is ever brightened by the thought of ricochet dot com a beacon in the night. Well, it is your place with the most stimulating conversations and community on the web, and you had to go there, and you had to join. You got to see what all the fuss is about. You

know. I six hundred and seventy six episodes didn't do it. Maybe six hundred and seventy seven will. But in the meantime, Rob Long and Peter Robinson, the August founders, the man whose visages are chiseled on a rock somewhere thanking them for their contribution to Internet dialogue, are with us. Peter in California, Rob in New York. Gentlemen, welcome, Thank you, James, Thank you, James, I Suspenice to be here. Always good

to be here as well. But you know, equidistance between you two and the coasts is Texas, and Texas is having a bit of a oh,

I don't know, start of the civil war. Perhaps that's what people are saying, because we have Texas government governor versus the federal government over the issue as to whether or not Texas can do the audacious thing, the obviously illegal against the state of the Statue of liberty, putting razor wire on the border to keep people from doing the god given right to come in whenever they want and do whatever they please. How do you think this is going to play

out well? The politics of it? First of all, legally, the legal question, I have to say, I don't quite grasp. The governor of Texas claims that he has declared an invasion and that the state, under the Constitution, is the right to defend itself. On the other hand, we do have a civil war that we fought, and I just I have to go into this, or at least listen to somebody who actually knows what he's talking about, Bill Barr, perhaps somebody with a legal background, to

sort out the legal issues. The politics of it are, as far as I'm concerned, terrific. The governor of Texas is doing something about the border, and now job what Biden is saying, no, no, no, you have to open that border up. It just puts into un stakably clear light exactly where everybody stands. We now have governors of As, I recall the latest figures, twenty five or twenty six states have signed statements supporting Governor

Abbott. So we've got an issue extremely clearly squared up before the public in which Republicans and the state of Texas are clearly in the right, and the Biden administration is now being shown for exactly what it really truly wants, which is to appease the left in its own party by establishing open borders. Well, we'll see if Wisconsin is one of those states that actually signed that thing. We buy some coincidence. Would like to now go to Scott Walker,

forty fifth governor of Wisconsin and president of the Young America's Foundation. Autist Walker, Welcome, I'm over here in Minneapolis at the moment. There's no razor wire betwixt Minnesota and Wisconsin, even though there's a cold piece that exists between us and I see I see behind you. You have a crawl on the video screen that says the long game, which is what it seems the right is going to have to play. Primary is over right, it's done.

Tell us where you think the party is going to go short term and long term, and you got about four minutes for the both those questions. Now, the primary has been over for some time. It was just a matter of going through the formality. Obviously, Governor Santis, big shot was having to perform well in Iowa and didn't come close. And Nicki Haley, both of these people are friends of mine. I think Desanta's to the fabulous job

is grown in Florida. Nicky Haley was a strong ambassador United Nations, but neither of them. I mean Nicki Haley had to perform in New Hampshire. She had to have a win or at least an extremely close second. Didn't have that. And when she gets to North Carolina, all the numbers show it's going to be a big win for President Trump there, so it is

done. I think the reason, not only in the primary but arguably looking ahead to the long game in November, why it's to be competitive voters in the primary, and I would argue voters in swing states like Minor Wisconsin have had it with politicians who say all the right things, who say it just the right way or very appealing, but then go to Washington and completely melt

down and don't do what they say they're going to do. And they're willing to take a president or in this case of former presidents, potentially future president who doesn't always talk or tweak the way we do, particularly in the Midwest, but who delivers, who gets things done, And as I point out in the Washington Times this week in my column, I think people are willing to take a little bit of political costs in return for some economic stability and

some national security stability, both with the economy and as we were just talking about with the invasion that we really do see happening on our son boarder. Governor. You ran for president and your campaign lasted your formal campaign. I assume you were planning it for months beforehand. You're formal campaign lasted a couple of months before you decided to withdraw from the race. How does a candidate

decide that it's over. What's your advice for Nicki Haley? And also, is there an argument I sort of think there is, so maybe you're gonna have to argue with me a little bit about it. But is there an argument that by staying in the race, she forces Trump to become a better candidate to do what Trump most needs to do, which is to learn how to appeal to the very people to whom Nicki Haley is appealing, independents, old fashioned Republicans. Let's say, I don't know. I don't want to

sound as though I'm insulting any bit but Bush Republicans. Let's say, George H. W. Bush Republicans. Donald Trump has to unify his party to have any chance. He's got a lock on the base, that's clear, but he also seems to have a ceiling in the forties. You cannot get elected president without bringing in more people. So the question is advice, did you decide? What should she decide? And is there an argument that she makes him better by staying in for a few more primaries? Well, a

couple things. One, I say this juocantly, but it's largely acurate as well. I got out before I got a nickname, so I was one of the smarts. But here I was in that second debate at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Museum. CNN did the debate and in three hours I got about two questions, and at that point I realized, even though I was pulling up there not too far behind then candidate Trump, former Governor Jeb Bush, and I were right there in the center. You know it was they

did it by polling. People in politics at the time were shocked that we got out. But I just looked and I said, unless I you know, stand up side of my head and do something really radical. At the next debate. It was all about Donald Trump, I would argue, I contend time. I think many of the national media were doing that because they

thought Donald Trump was the only can who couldn't beat Hillary Clinton. So that was a bit of their fascination of propping him up, giving him more time, and in part because he was good for ratings then as he is now.

But in the end, obviously he showed them that he as well as the rest of us, probably could have defeated Hillary Clinton because of the disdain out there for I got out because I thought there needs to be a positive conservative alternative because we're in Earth. At the time, I didn't know what to expect out of Donald Trump. I heard what he was saying, but he'd never been elected. We didn't really know what kind of a track record.

I remember Check Todd a few years ago in twenty twenty tried to call me out on that and say that how could I possibly then support Donald Trump after having said that? Well, because I was wrong. I didn't know what to expect. Even though I don't often agree with his tone or some of his tweets, the reality was in terms of substance. I mean, the guy was stellar. He put tremendous jurist on the Federal Court, both

in the Supreme Court. At the other levels, he reigned in regulations, he cut taxes, he put more money back in the and the American people on so many issues, with a few exceptions, but fairly rare. This was someone I like substantively, in fact, in a weird sort of way. People trick to hear this. Obviously style substant our style was very different, but he got many of the same sorts of things done that Ronald Reagan talked about generations before. So I like that. But how I got out

was I just realized this is where the media was going. I could see where things were headed and said, I'm not going to waste the money of my supporters trying to drag things out any further, Which really is the key Nicki Haley question. I like Nicki Haley. She and I were governors together. As I said, I thought she was a good ambassador. But she

really has to decide, you know, how where does this end? Because you know, if you're looking at people or investors saying before New Hampshire, there were many who thought maybe just maybe a New Hampshire way to breakthrough, and you'd have a change that's not going to happen. She may be able to make a case and some issues here or there, So I think she

needs to think long and hard about what's her end game. And then your last point about making her better normally in a normal cycle, which this is anything. But I think that's a fairly solid argument. But I would say the reverse is the case now, and give me a minute to explain that. I think Donald Trump, when he is in the primaries, Donald Trump's a fighter, right or wrong, he's a fighter, and so if you're in his way, he's going to attack you. He's going to attack anyone

associated with you. The sooner he's the nominee and no one else is running,

the more he can turn his attacks towards Joe Biden. I think that one part in particular starts to bring the rest of the tent together that doesn't want Joe Biden to be president, even if they're not all big fans of Donald Trump, focusing on what the contrast is, and the last thing I would just say on that, beyond just Niki Haley's decision is Donald Trump to win has got to be more like the Donald Trump fighter in twenty sixteen and

less like the one in twenty twenty. What I mean by that is, in twenty sixteen, he was the guy fighting for the men and women of America who felt forgotten. We saw this about a year ago in East Palaceine, Ohio, and Joe Biden was in Europe. Pete Buotachet was nowhere to be found. Donald Trump showed up at that train to room and said, you're not forgotten. He brought in supplies, he brought in water, he did things that really made them feel connected. That's the guy that won in

twenty sixteen. If, in turn, though he talks about other Republicans where he talks about the twenty twenty election, I think that's the guy who lost in the last cycle. So for him to win in Wisconsin and a handful of battleground states, voters have to see him as a fighter for them, not as someone who fights for the sake of fight. Okay, you have, I've got one more question. I asked your advice for Nikki Haley.

You were too polite to say get out, but it seems as though that is about what your advice comes to for Trump and for the Republican Party generally. And let me give a piece of your background that often gets overlooked. You did remarkable things as a Republican governor in a state where it's a close call between the Republicans and the Democrats. But what often gets overlooked is that your political career began in Milwaukee, and Milwaukee is a still even now,

a largely blue collar and an overwhelmingly Democratic town. You figured something out. You figured out how to do what Donald Trump claims to do, which is you appeal to the what do we want to say, the Truman Democrat or the Reagan Democrat, some of the decent, working, patriotic people who want their schools to work, who want businesses to hire. All right, can Trump do what you did in Milwaukee? Can he pull he lost millwa Halaukeey

to Biden? What do you think? I'm using Milwaukee as a test case because it's it's good human beings who tend to vote Democratic, and they're exactly the kind of people the Trump needs to win in order to do what he has to do to truly govern, which is carry the Senate and carry the House and send a big message to everybody, including the media, that he

has built a governing coalition. The key, yeah, the key is he's got to do that in a way that not only appeals to them, but doesn't turn off the suburbs at the same time, because part of the key to the difference between twenty twenty and twenty sixteen was that because of his tone and the contrast of voters somehow thinking that Joe Biden might be reasonable, but it was that one two punch. The suburbs somewhat Republican, but they were

somewhat deflated. I think again they it's both with traditional blue collar voters, which are historically in the South side of Milwaukee. Those are people that were mind bread and butter. When I won, people thought I could never win first Republican maybe only Republican there to win. I won with Reagan Democrats,

Tommy Thompson Democrats. And I would say one other voting block I picked up on where people who voted for Ross pro in that ninety two election didn't like Bill Clinton because they thought he was a draft dodger, but thought George Herbert Walker Bush was a decent guy, but too much country club Republican. Those people wanted a blue collar kind of lookout for you know, everybody who felt forgot. I think that's actually an area that Donald Trump does well if he's

focused. I've told him this repeated. He's wasting his time if he's attacking particularly other Republicans, but just in general. If he's attacking people personally where he does well, and not only with those blue collar voters, but where he doesn't lose suburban voters. If he's taking on the establishment, if he's taking on the problems of Washington, if he's saying, I don't mind stirring

the pot, I'll take those people on. I'm standing in a way to defend every day, hard working people like you be doaes that he can win. Forget about the last election, don't look backwards. Elections are always about the future. If he can have the discipline to do that. I also told him the best payback for whatever he thinks happened to him in the last election is to win the next one. That's more important than trying to litigate

the last one. So I know James wants to come in, but you used the word or Rob wants to come in, you use the word discipline. Okay, here we go here we go, Governor. Let me just tell you a tale of two victory speeches, Donald Trump and Iowa. I think he spoke for about twenty minutes. He spent the first ten minutes doing exactly what I'm sure you did over and over again as governor. You call out the people who helped out. You mentioned people by name. You say

thank you to this person, and thank you to that person. Come on up here on the stage and take around of applause. You helps it. That sounded like a politician who wanted to win. And then he goes on in the next ten minutes and talks about the importance of unifying the country. Thanks Ron and Nicky for running good salid. Oh my goodness, I thought to myself, Donald Trump has decided to act presidential. This guy is not

intent on vengeance. This guy is intent on winning. Eight days later, victory speech in New Hampshire, nasty, divisive, insulting, this sneering comment to Nicki Haley, insulting the dress she wore. Oh my goodness, my wife almost came out of her skin when she's sitting on the sofa next to me heard that. Which one of these guys are we going to end up with and do. Isn't it legitimate for all of us to say, wait a minute, he's a seventy eight year old man. He's been in politics

for a good long time now. If he hasn't got just the rudimentary political discipline, by now, what are we buying here? Oh, there's no doubt about it. And those are the two I say. That's the difference between the twenty sixteen and the twenty twenty. The twenty sixteen was the Iowa speech. The twenty twenty was the New Hampshire speech. There needs to be enough people who talk to them, family, friends, confidence, others out

there that need to repeatedly. And part of this, someone once told me from New York years ago, is, you know, part of his instincts, having been in Manhattan real estate, is if you attack me, I punched back twice as hard and then move on. He doesn't view it oftentimes as personal long after it's done. But at that moment, like you say, it stings, and in politics that sting, you know, you do enough of those and you start to break apart your winning coalition. He needs

the folk. Every day, someone needs to tell them you can win. But here are the things you need to do now. I tell people, we're never going to make him into a round regul We're not going to make him into the happy warrior. What we have to do is take what we have and what we have with them that that hand win that I actually think is a good thing, is that fighter. I'm willing to fight the establishment,

willing to fight the problems in Washington. I'm willing to take on the things that other politicians won't do, and I will follow through with them. That's the guy who won in twenty sixteen. But if he gets into these individual battles or anything else for him, the best thing he could do is just say keep saying that. And then, in fact, if I was coaching him, as I hoped previous vice presidential candidates, if I was coaching him in the debates, I'd say those simple things and defer the rest of

my time to Joe Biden. Because the more people here Joe Biden speak them, less likely they are to vote to him. You know, I was just with a little bit ago a group of students that are here at our headquarters for training from Young America's Foundation, and I was talking to you know, a number of them from swing states across the country, and I told them, to their surprise, we just did a national poll and found the number one issue of college students isn't what you think it is. Certainly isn't

what the media talks about. It's the economy. So even college students are feeling the pain that so many other Americans are out there. If Donald Trump reminds people of what things were like before Joe Biden and where you can take them going forward, and then pens the tale on the donkey figuratively and literally, I guess in this case to Joe Biden, that's a winning combination. But it's like you say, it's that discipline that sometimes gets drawn off the

mark. Governor. Thank you for joining us. Man. If I had a dollar for every time somebody said, you know, if Donald Trump could just due Donald Trump could just hold him, I'd be as rich as Donald Trump says he is. That's how rich I would be. But but let me just push back on it a little bit. I'll tell you why. I'll tell why I've been run out of the publican party by Donald Trump. He told me he didn't want me. I don't think he did any of

those things you said he did. I think Obama built more wall on the border than Donald Trump did. I think he blew it in a renegotiating a trade pack he didn't to with Mexico and Canada basically gave us the same thing. Trade deficit went up, by the way. I think he blew it going head to head with China. Trade deficit with China went up by the way. And I don't think he drained the swamp. I think he gave the swamp over during COVID, and he shut down the government and the economy

without a thought to the plan there. I think he's a weak man, and I think he's a weak leader, and I think the world is a very serious place, and I think he has failed. And the idea that the Republican Party is in a suicide pact now and it's going to tie its future to this man who has shown himself to be unfit. When it really mattered in COVID really mattered, he blew it. And we're going to hope that at seventy eight years old, a man who has never changed one iote

is going to change. I think that's insanity. How am I wrong? Well, well, I in those sorts of arguments are the ones that I think a lot of supporters are run to. Sad Is, who I think was a fabulous governor would be had he been the nominee and outstanding president. The very things you talked of, at least many of them, are things they wish DeSantis or Nikki Haley or some of the other candidates would have made

more Forciblly and would have connected with throughout the campaign. The reality is for a number of reasons, but not the least of which is the perception of voters about what they have versus what they might get. Is set down that pass. So you're going to have a choice between Joe Biden and Donald Trump.

Donald Trump, unlike the past choice where he'll be a one term and a really important decision he's going to make is who is his running mate, because that person not only will be vice president, but could very well be queued up to be the front runner in the next election in twenty twenty eight, which really will ultimately be the future not just of the party but of

America in that regard. But I think most people look at this, not only on the right, but manly swing voters and say, you know, I hear from so many voters who told me they were either swing moderate voters or even some lifelong Republicans who said they couldn't take it anymore of Donald Trump and voted for Biden, who now tell me they're either voting for Trump if he's a nominee, or as many told me, they're just not going to vote at all. Is that what happened wis Consin in twenty twenty, twenty

three thousand people were the difference that could be the winning margin. Yeah, I mean twenty thousand people in Wisconsin voted for Bid. I mean he won by twenty thousand votes. Right. It's a high wire iract, whatever you go go for, but a high wire act in twenty sixteen. I mean, I'm eliminating the popular vote from this. Because we're all Republicans here. We understand selectro calls, right, but it's a high wire act. What

is it about conservatives? I consider myself a conservative, but not a Republican. What are about conservatives that they see in this high wire act that's worth giving up their principles for? I just I'm just baffled by it. I mean, I cannot imagine everybody listens podcast already knows cannot imagine I'm going to vote for this man. I can't possibly bring myself to do that. But

I'm still conservative. He's not that's my issue. He's not well. And again that's where I think when you look just purely looking at the numbers here, it's way in a state like Wisconsin, I would argue in Georgia, in Michigan, where those two states just had polls put out by the Atlanta and the Troy papers, respectively, who showed amazingly former president of having an

eight point lead in Pennsylvania, in Nevada, in Arizona. You've got a handful of states via the electoral College who elect argue with the next president. And in those states, I think, more than anything, voters have had it with Joe Biden. It's kind of the inverse of what we saw in twenty sixteen, where people have had it with Hillary Clinton and then voted for

Donald Trump. And the case of twenty twenty, you had to flip the other way where a lot of swing voters and even some Republicans didn't like the tone, the style, the substance. In some cases, tone, style and substances, all you got easible but now they don't they Now they say I talked to voters all the time who say I'll take the chaos again in return for not having Joe Biden messing things up in the federal government. Sorry,

mister Walker. We know that national reconciliation is possible, just by evidence, by the fact that I was supporting the Packers. I was rooting for the packers after this year. So I know that we can get past some of our big schisms here in the country. But it requires having a set of ideals that are passed on to the next generation, which I take it

that your foundation is all about. Now, when you mentioned that you talk to the young people and they're concerned about the economy, imagine if you talk to young people of a leftist bend, they too are concerned about the economy. But their solution is to nationalize everything, to socialize everything, and to

embrace it all into the big loving arms of Uncle Sam. We need a cadre of people to march through the institutions, as the Moist used to say, in order to bring about free enterprise, notions, notions of political individual liberty, and so forth. Tell us more about your foundation and how you hope to train the young minds of tomorrow to do the right thing. Yeah, YAF dot org. If you're a student under attack, we've got your

back. Your parent and grandparent joining us here today. We love to send one of your kids or grandkids to one of our conferences, beat at the Reagan Ranch out in California, the Ronald Reagan boy at Home and Dixon in Virginia and Washington, or even some of our regional conferences like one that sounds pretty nice these days in Orlando, Wisconsin coming up, Actually in Atlanta,

Florida, which is coming up. And we do conferences. We have the largest conservative lecture series in the nation, helping out students in some two thousand campuses, and then we broadcast this so YAFTV on YouTube now has one point six million subscribers and last year we should pass one point two billion views, with great names like Ben Shapiro and many others out there talking about those very

conservative principles. We're not exclusively a Reagan institution, but we very much are proud to be aligned with him, not just because of those historic presidential properties, but because we talk that we're not political, we're a nonprofit, but certainly right of center, and we talk about things that Reagan cared about, free enterprise, individual liberties, strong national defense, traditional American values are so important. And you're right, there's a lot of folks out there who think,

you know, buying to Bernie Sanders free everything. We like to say we're for free things as well. We're for free enterprise, freedom, religion, freedom, association, importantly freedom. And I think, you know, for young people, the bad rub that this generation gets is that you know, they're all crazy, that all radicals, they all buy into this. But I tell them there's nothing wrong with young voters. I'm not afraid of

them. I'm afraid of young voters. We only hear one side of the story, and sadly, on too many campuses, they're only hearing one side of the story. If given a chance, I'll give you a quick example then. So Stamford one of the places I spoke at right before COVID a few years ago. I was not present at time, I was just a speaker there, but Yaffiff had organized the event with the college Republicans on campus.

I came and spoke was used to some protesters because I hadn't many in my own state, but it was a great event, great great q and a great, great opportunity to engage with the students. But of the three students who organized, and two of the three very normal backgrounds, but once said, oh, both my parents are Democrats, but I'm a conservative. It it was because he'd been exposed to consider the thoughts in high school. He's one of the rare few that got that. And when he got to

Stanford he was a full blood of conserve. He understood that true freedom and opportunity don't come from the clumsy hand of the government. They come from empowering people through the dignity that comes from hard work. And that's a great story. But what makes it really powerful, you guys appreciate John's mother just happens to be Susan Rice. So John Rice Cameron is a full blood. He's

now graduated, works in finance. But to me, he's a great pretty so conservative he is that he went straight to Wallstown, right, Yeah, And that's great. Stories like that are great. The job that we have, and I'm sure the YF is conscious of this, is changing a culture that is now just sort of automatically leans left and its language and its attitudes and its positions and the rest of it. And that's that's a big job. I mean again, I mentioned the words that are marching behind you the

long game. Doesn't that record not just putting people in finance, but putting people in positions where they're able to shape and inform the culture in a way that is more that is friendly or to freedom. Let's just put it that

way. Yeah, yeah, part of our long game plan. Knowing the left has done this for decades, it was enhanced with Saul Lensky's efforts, you know, the march through higher education these days argue if you shut down a college campus, it would do more to stop the spread of communism than that of COVID. But it is one of those where higher education we've got

programs to help the few. But there are some not just conservative professors and educators, even in twelve and senior dealing with high school and middle school students. There's not only conservative educators. There's many of their just quietly out there trying to be objective, and so providing support to them is part of our long game proposal. We have a journalism center that tries to teach fact based, you know, objective, true seeking journalism. That's good. Let me

stop you right there. That's that's the thing, the journalism part, because the language matters, and the crop of journalists that is coming in today, if you survey them, you will find that they are opposed to the idea of objectivity because objectivity treats both sides as if they're the same. You know, that is critical. And you know, newspapers where I work come here

at the Star Tribune, we aren't exactly the most going concern. But when it comes to online journalism and internet, you know, and when people get on the Internet, I would say, don't concentrate on putting people in the newspapers. Concentrate on putting people into positions where their tiktoks can get to kids, because that's going to be the more effective information distribution platform in the future

than the old just you know, dead Tree newspaper. Absolutely. In fact, most of our placements now increasingly are on digital media outlets, and it's why we put such a focus on on our YouTube channels, on broadcasting our lectures and our conferences and really perfecting a form. I give credit to Bench Shapiro for doing this. When he speaks on a campus for us, about

half of his time or more is taking questions of that. He allows anyone who disagrees with him to raise their hand and go to the front of the lawn. Why that's powerful is it's just good TV or good YouTube in this case because of that engagement. But the other part is both in person but particularly online. I believe this generation more thing. It's two key things. They like authenticity with that kind of echange does not pre package format, but

real live interaction friction. But then and Ben and others speak for us, do this well like Reagan would have just you know, polite but simple and aggressive replies, you know, explaining the truth, the counter to the radical nonsense. They've been here on campus. So authenticity is part of it. The other Bard's fairness. You know, the left does a good job of common doing that, but as conservatives, we should embrace the concept of fairness.

You know, I don't care what you look like where you come from. I don't care you're black or white, rich or poor, younger old. I don't care whether you were born in America or you legally came here from somewhere else. I want everyone to have the same freedoms and same opportunities that were passed on to me by prior generations. We talk about those core

things, not only to Americas in general, but even young people. They get into that not hearing that, and we've got to expouse that, as you said, on formats like TikTok and YouTube and others, which are really at least for this generation, the places they're getting in information. Yeah, I mean, Governor, I think that's a really powerful point. I mean, universities used to be a place you went to hear ideas and arguments you had never heard before. Like you went to the college and you came back

and your head was all turned around and you were filled with ideas. And now you go to college to never hear ideas that might challenge the way you think. So I guess my question is that, I mean, whenever I'm talking about, especially at ed institutions in general, with conservatives, there's really two camps. There's one that says we've got to go in and reform.

We've got to go in reform right that. You know, people argue, even in the media right now, Well, you know what, the La Times wouldn't be in such trouble with they had a few conservatives writing for it. Right, it wasn't so such a monoculture. And the other part, the other half of that conservative conversation is always to hell with them, to hell with Harvard, Princeton, Yale, to hell with the La Times, let them sink, let them die. We got to build our own.

What side of you on? I'm a missionary. I believe missionary mindset in this movement that we're cell under attack now on higher ed in social media and traditional media outlets, that we have to have the mindset of a missionary, that we're going to go out and spread the word. We've got the truth on our side. We shouldn't be afraid to go anywhere and everywhere. It's why, you know, we fought a lawsuit in one at the University of

California, Berkeley. It's why we're in the Ivy League schools, or the University Wisconsin Madison or anywhere else out there. We'll fight in every campus anywhere across the nation. We have YAFF chapters, uh for example, at Hillsdale or Liberty or other places like that. God bless them. That's more about really, but I need, you know, I need a voice. And all these more radicalized campuses as well as you know, in places like TikTok.

I'm not personally on TikTok. I think there's real problems with the CCP and connection with TikTok. But Yaff has got a voice on TikTok because we're going to go where they're at. And until there are young people out there that haven't heard the truth or that we've all we covered them all, well well then maybe we can retreat. But right now our only chance for success is to go on their territory and make breakthrough. We can't just sit back

and do it all by speaking to the choir. You know, I'm just sorry. I kept thinking about the the yafft chapter at the Hillsdale. That must be the easiest post ever. It's like being one of those Mormon missionaries you get assigned to Salt Lake City. Yeah, okay, we can kind of take it easy here. How I mean, just because I know Peter wants to jump in before I how tough is it? Or I guess I should say the other way round. I said, how brave are they right

now? Twenty twenty four college campus, young American Freedom member? What are you looking at? How tough is it going to be for them? Oh, the abuse, the pushback. We were just talking to a massive hall full of them earlier, and they're just so inspiring because they're so courageous. I was talking to Jasmine Jordan, who heads up the chapter University of Iowa,

when she brought a speaker on this past semester. They've had multiple speakers, but she brought someone in and the left was so unhinged that they put out thirty thousand marbles on the steps that go into this auditorium. Oh nodding that. I said, it's proof positive the left has lost their marbles. But it's just, you know, these are the things they do. It's the hatred, the pushback. You know, it doesn't matter what they're talking

about, it's all the same tactics. You're racist, you're sexist, you're transphobic, or whatever. Jazz's a good example. She'd been called a white supremists, Jasmin's a black woman. I mean, it's it's incredible the stuff that they push back on. But it's part of the reason why we have these conferences. Isn't that we're necessarily converting kids at these to think more consertive ideas. It's that these students come and they realize, hey, I'm not

alone. There actually are other people like me. Because the left's winning strategy, and it's true in elections as well, is to make those of us who are conservative feel like we're alone. Thankfully, there's more of us than you'd think, even on college campuses. The University of Wisconsin at Madison, it is a great public institution, but every time you see the electoral map in Wisconsin, Madison is voting for the other side and I'm and it's publicly

funded. I mean, as governor, you're the guy who was right assigning the bills that funded that darned place. I don't know. At some point I'd like to hear you address the essay question my life with the act, my life with the people who ran out, who ran the University of Wisconsin and Madison man to have the state government and the university centered in the same

otherwise beautiful town was just a lot. But well, I mean, if you want to take a couple of sets, we've now got Rhonda Santis and the As governor, he appointed Chris Rufo to the board of trustees of a small college down Florida, the state institution, and the trustees of the University

of Florida have just brought in Ben sass. I mean, it feels as though the slowest most insulated market in the world, which is the market for higher education in the United States, at prestigious institutions such as the University of Wisconsin. He's finally beginning to respond, Is it is it? Yeah? I think it is, hope. But again, it's that long game that

you see back there. It's not just a couple of quick wins. You know, when I was governor, we put on regions that put in place inforcable measures to protect free speech because like many campuses even today, you'll see Heckler's vetos where you know, protests can come up and shut down a conservative speaker or sometimes even with the blessing of the administration, as we saw with the Stanford Law School issue. But that's great, but that's still not enough.

I say, we got to take it a step further. If there's any regret I had as governor we did the free speech stuff, we should have gone much much further. I love pointing out on college campuses and with boards and trustees and regents that you know, the faculty and others will claim academic freedom. But I love to point out the counter that if you truly

believe in diversity, how about diversity have thought? You know why is most arts and sciences programs in most of our iley schools either have little or none in some cases of the people on their faculty who are even remotely right of Stalin. That's the trouble with your institutions, with your foundation's name. I hate to say it because to a lot of kids, a lot of kids

today Americans eh nationalistic freedom, freedom to do bad things. You need to call yourself the foundation of world citizen diversity, and that will bring them in. When I was in college, a friend of mine had a Soviet dissident that he wanted he wanted everybody to know how bad the USSR was in the college, and of course they didn't believe that those case, so he called it the nuclear freeze movement in the Soviet Union, and we packed the auditorium

with people who were there eager to hear about what it was. And of course the dissident got up and said, there is no nuclear freeze movement and will not be until Russia is free, and sat down to great you know, to the applause of all the the dps. So yeah, we're at a point on campus where if you say young Americans for Freedom, people recoil like a like a vampire to garlic because you because those concepts are are questionable and sus uh good luck is all like you say, is from all of

us, and and our thanks as well for joining us. Unless Rob had one more thing with which he wanted to do, thank you, Thank you for coming and great work with YAF. Give us that website address again through which they can see all of your social media and your youtubes and the rest of it. It is why YAF dot o RG and y F tv is our YouTube and all the other stuff is right there on our website terms of

social media. Well, by the way, I we're talking to, we're talking to a former governor of considerable accomplishment, who could himself be sitting on boards and working on Wall Street. YAF is a labor of love for Scott Walker, and he actually governor. I don't know. I sort of asked around when you took the job, and everybody said no, no, no, no, this is full time for him. This is really what he is doing with his life. So thank you. And also in the future.

You know, the Reagan Library is nice. Florida is nice, but so is Ryan Lander in the summer. Dude, you know you have a conference, have a conference there, you know, and I'd be happy to show up and speak just a couple of just a couple of hours. Scott Walker, thank you so much, thank you, thank you, Governor. Bye. Before we, uh, we went to the governor, we were talking about Texas and Rob did not have the chance to chime in on how

he believes the razor wire debate is going to shake itself out. Razor wire debate. I love that. Oh yeah, that's good. That's great to put. You know, I have no idea how to shake out. I mean, I guess I understand the constitutional argument, right that the federal government is supposed to guard the border of the Federation of States that we have and it's derelict in that right. So I guess I understand the constitutional argument. I mean, if that's what it is, I just I don't understand the

logic. I just don't. You know, sometimes you try to think it's that old, you know thing, the Godfather and the Godfather that Michael Corleone says to Tom Hagen. He goes. Dad Pop always taught me to try to think the way the other sides thinks, think the way that people around here, your competitors think. Like I don't know what they're thinking in the Democratic Party, what are they thinking. I mean, it's funny because I

remember years ago. I'm just how old I am. I remember years ago Colorado Democrat, Colorado congressman named Tomton Tankrado ran for president, and he ran for president Desions maybe ninety two thousand, maybe two thousand and four, I think two thousand and It was on the illegal immigration issue. That's what his big issue was immigration. And I knew a lot of people in the Publican party then who said, yeah, he's right about that. But like you

know, we do these focus groups in these polls and nobody cares. There's just no interest in this. This is just not something that people care about. And then you know, twenty thousand and four rolled around, two thousand and eight rolled around, this is not something people really care about, and they would show you not so many people care about. Twenty twelve rolled around,

same thing. It's hard for me to believe that there's a person paying attention in politics on any side who thinks that this is something to ignore. I understand the idea of saber rattling. If I was a Democrat, I'd be you know, screaming bloody murder about it and then try to pass something This is sort of useless and toothless, right, you know, kind of like when Republicans talk about the environment, they don't really care about it,

but to pass something, right. But the idea of going to court so that you can you don't, so whoever is protective board must not do that seems insane, just baffling to me, Like I just don't get even the politics of it. And I can't imagine that the you know, the normal American person somewhere there in the middle there somewhere doesn't look at this and think, we, well, what else are you supposed to be doing if not

protecting the borders of the United States. This seems bananas to me. And I just don't know who's in that meeting, Like, who is there anybody in that meeting in the in the in the clown car that's the Biden administration saying well, wa wait, wait a minute, we can't actually we got to do something. Okay, these aren't smart people, These aren't brilliant people who are crafting behind these doors the eventual replacement of all Americans with people from

the other part of the world. They're generally mediocre, banal minds who are looking at optics and saying, you know, I feel bad about the fact that there's razor wire and you could have some family that just wants to improve their lot in life and the kids get their dress stuck on the razor wire.

That's horrible. It shouldn't happen. I know somebody who was as ribbon conservatives that they come down in Arizona, who was driving around and saw a whole bunch of people, families whatnot, standing on a corner looking for jobs or hands out of the rest of it, and she just said, you

know, oh, I feel so bad. We should just let them all in, right, And she's as you know, as hardcore concern, But at that moment, there was a swelling in the breast of fellow feeling and empathy for these people, and how can we not, how can we not? We've got so much it's not so unfair. And so that's I swear,

that's what motivates a lot of these people. At the same time, you may ask what are they thinking when they have judges who will say, well, you know what, I know, it's your seventh attempt for carjacking with a with a with a pistol and you're a felon, but I'm gonna give you one more chance. What are they thinking? They're thinking that the empathy and thea of what these people have been through and disparities and equities and the rest of it, and they're not it's not a smart, calculated gamble.

I think I think that they're acting with their hearts in the in the stupid space the way, because the end result is what you see now in Chicago in New York, where you have places that are full, the hotels bursting into the gun wales with all of these illegal scooters out front. The guys are door dashing here. Yeah, I mean you know about this rob

right and the money that has to be spent. So we're going to get to the point eventually where the people who are citizens of these cities will say, wait a minute, hold on, you've got to house all these people. You're going to actually they're going to build housing at some point to house the people who are not citizens, and in order to do so they will take money from the people who live in those cities and give it to them

for because because it's because of the wonderful things. Yeah right, it's such a bananas thing. You have that in a New York City. It was like this, this electric moment when people saw for they saw the actual choice being made. We're going to close a school to house illegal immergrants. It's such a bizarrely stark choice. It's like if you if you had said to somebody, you know, five years ago, ten years ago, twenty years

ago, this is going to happen. They say, come on, come on, I know, I mean, you know you guys, and you're crazy. Fantasies is not gonna happen. And they had it did and the and the and. But's what's strange to me also, is this this weird misunderstanding of the way. Look, I mean, I think we are the most general I mean, I did a show on it's on Fox Nation. It's called six History of the World and the Six Classes. By the way, it's great. You should go look at it. It's really a lot

of fun. And uh. The host was Dan Ackroyd. Dan Akroyd, famous comedian guy and he's Canadian, and and he would we talked about their couple couple uh is history of the World, six classes, and and and and six kind of drakes so so beer, wine, spirits, coffee, tea, soda and in the soda part was essentially kind of a vodka. Yeah, right, drinking and he said he said something like you know, I think he was he was, uh. We were toasting at the end of the show, and he goes said, and we have to raise a

glass too to United States of America. Good for the most the most generous nation on earth. He said it a couple of times Canadian, right, And that is true. It is absolutely true, and worse the other guys, says Jim Belution. Somebody eftery who else was like, we're noding, Like, you know, we rarely hear that, but it's true. So I guess I agree with you. There probably are some people who look at those hordes in the border and think, oh, you know, what do

we do? But there's still got to be a process, right, It's still got to be a procedure. You still have to have some kind of like you know, crowd control, which they don't have a policy. That's that's uh, that's clearly identified, which they don't have, and it just seems to me that like that's what that's. Look. I understand that Biden is is is uh is in earlier, mid or late stages of dementia,

but that doesn't mean everybody else gets to be that way. Like somebody's got to be you know, dry a driving the bus here, and to not even show interest in busy work seems to be crazy. Yeah, the person driving the bus is actually not a citizen because you're giving them licenses. Now, Peter, you wanted to say something, No, no, I mean all this is absolutely fascinating to me. I mean, even if you kind

of I'd be very happy to explode and be angry. And I can do that because I sort of participate in the actual participate in the politics of this thing. But if I take a step or two back, it really is just fascinating because it raises two questions. Rob has already raised one of them. Well, actually Rob has implicitly raised both of them. Who is making the decisions? We know that Joe Biden, throughout his political life, which

I believe has ended, he's just not in charge. He's spending three three day weekends at home in Delaware to rest up, and who knows what kind of transfer. I don't know, but he's not in charge. And we know he's not in charge because throughout his career he understood that he had to champion the ordinary working Democrats, exactly the kinds of people that Scott Walker was talking about in Milwaukee. When Joe Biden was sentient, he understood that was

his base. And those people are as upset about open borders as we are. So there's some the people around him, somebody around him has made a political calculation that it is less damaging to his reelection prospects to leave the borders open than it would be to begin to close them. And that is because they have a sophisticated or think they have a sophisticated understanding of their supporters. And their supporters include the squad aoc Rashid, whatever her name is, and

a hard we call it the progressive left. It's actually very hard left that really does want open borders. And they have decided they've made a political calculation that as messy as this is, they need that piece of their base. That's the first thing. And I can understand the Department of justice. You get those lawyers over there, they get a state acting in defiance, and they feel they can't help themselves. They've got to go to court against it.

But here's my next question, which I put to you two guys. I can't think of a bigger story in the country right now than this story. You have a governor of what is Texas, the second most populous state in the country, now engaging in an act of open defiance against the president of the United States. You have the governors of twenty four, maybe up to twenty five other states signing statements in support of him. You have this

thing headed to the courts. It's the most politically explosive issue immigration. And I have been scrolling down the site of The New York Times online at this hour. Not a single word about it. One They are pretending it doesn't exist, or they're making it a datorial judgment in the room's newsroom. It's not news. That's what I can sort of understand. The somebody around Biden. I can sort of understand the political I think they're wrong about the political

calculations, But I think I understand the political calculations. I do not understand the journalistic decision here. Well, I'm let me. I have two possibilities here. One is I don't understand the political calculation when for some reason I'm more nervous or I get more disquieted when people espouse not when people espouse ideas or politics or policies different from mine, but when they when people in politics are bad at politics, it's like I kind of want them at least to

you know what I mean. Yeah, but I think what they want. I think it's what happens when you're a you're a bad teacher or headmaster, and you see rule breaking going on, and you can't do anything to stop it, so you look away. You got to look away from what the

governor's doing because you can't stop it. Because even people who disagree with the with the governor of Texas, you end up saying things, well, on a constitutional level, it's probably not a good idea, which is not a full throat It's not the same thing as saying over the borders, right. And I feel like the probably what's going to happen the smart move, I mean, maybe they'll do it politically. For the Bide administration to get out

of this is simply to ignore it. Because you cannot stop it, and if you try to stop it, all you'll do is remind people that you have But you have one national leader who has a border policy, which is border security, and you have another national leader, federal leader, who has no policy that he will articulate except let chaos reign. And that is not a winning formula. And I think what they want to do is they kind of want to, you know, shrug and dance and tap dance their way

through this problem and hope that we all move on to something else. But the governor of Texas, to his great credit, is not letting him do that, and he's going to probably his argument is you want you want me to stop doing this, come and stop me. Come and stop me. I mean, I thinking you've got the governor of Texas saying come and stop me, although he's doing it in a more ill elegant I mean, I

actually been watching him on television. I think Greig Abbott is he sounds in control, he sounds calm, he sounds rational, his statement was constitutionally reasoned. He's got twenty five other governors supporting him. That's happening on the southern border of Texas up north we have the Mayor of New York saying to the Biden administration, help, I can't handle this. We've got the mayor of

Chicago making noises that there are troubles in Chicago. But you have the democratically elected mayor of New York, an African American man, saying help, I can't handle this. And then you've got Mike Johnson, Speaker of the House of Representatives, saying, I don't know what they're cooking up over in the Senate, but if it comes to our chamber and it doesn't address the wall, we will, excuse me, doesn't address the border in some really serious

way, we will not pass it. And that means you don't get your aid for Ukraine and you don't get your aid for Israel. Now that's by there are good questions about whether that's the right way to go. But this thing, I've never seen, I can I say never, well, not that I can remember at the moment, anyway, seen an issue teed up in this way where the two sides are so stark in every regard North South dramatic images at the border. New York Times refusing to acknowledge that it's even

taking place. What nothing to see here. Move along, move a law. How the Congress it's teed up across the country. And into this strides the figure the beloved to Rob Long figure of Donald J. Trump saying I want a wall and you want open borders. That's a pretty simple message, and it's a pretty powerful one. I okay, so now I've talked myself right into Rob's position, which is, these guys don't even understand how how the game is. These guys whoever is around Biden, they have no idea.

I don't know. I mean, I'm almost willing to say it's because they're so coddled. There's such members of the elite that they've been back and forth to Wall Street. They have no idea what's happening in the rest of the country. It'll be interesting to see how It'll be interesting to see how Donald Trump builds a wall, because I think he had four years before to sort of craft how he was going to do it and didn't quite get around to it there though, So maybe this time he'll do a little bit more

out of the gate. Actually, to tell you the truth, I don't believe he'll do any more in a second term. They needed in the first, right, this is Revenge Tour Dan to hear Scott Walker talk about how he fights for and he's a fighter. I don't want to end that, No, I just don't want to end the podcast on that sort of division.

We don't. I'm good for him, and I hope somebody talks to him about the background that he uses when he's doing those video calls, because the top of the Capitol was coming up in this point behind him, and it almost made him look like a conehead to go back to the Dyanackroyd thing. But he's not from France, He's from Wisconsin. Anyway, We thank you for for being along. And I would like to note that Rob Long, who was calling him governor the whole time, I thought we were against

the sort of permanent honorifics or we are we are? We I am? But you know I like him, so I get it. You know, it's all completely well. Rob is headed Divinity School, and he's laying the predicate for forcing us to refer to him as the Reverend doctor the reverence the Reverend doctor Lloyd. Oh you think I'm insufferable? Now just wait, okay, all right, sat Anne Selman, the making we'll talk to you. Then listen, everybody, Go listen. Go go to ricochet dot com check

the link out for Rob's new show. I'm going to watch it starting at lunch. I forgot about it and I can't wait. And also, while you're there, join Ricoshet and you get access to the member feed, which is just so much fun. And also we'll see you at the diner later coming up this week and all the other places in the Ricochet Audio network. And that about wraps it up. Gentlemen, It's been fun and we'll see

everybody in the comment said Ricochet four point zero. Next week, Fellas, next week Ricochet Join the conversation

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