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Podcasters of the Caribbean

Dec 05, 202559 min
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Episode description

Two thirds of the earth is covered by water and the other third is covered by our intrepid trio of Steve Hayward, Charles C.W. Cooke and James Lileks.

We start the week in Minnesota where federal officials believe over $1B of taxpayer money was lost in multiple instances of fraud. Then we run the gamut of the J6 Bomber arrest, the Pentagon's actions in the Caribbean, Texas redistricting and the eye-popping price Netflix is spending to acquire Warner Bros.-Discovery.

Finally, we ask you to contribute to a GoFundMe project for our old friend Jon Gabriel who announced earlier this week that he's battling "The Big C."

Transcript

Speaker 1

Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.

Speaker 2

Mister Gorbachoff teared down this wall.

Speaker 1

It's the Ricochet Podcast with Stephen Hayward and Charles C. W. Cook. I'm James Lilyax and today we're going to talk about everything from the Caribbean to cable TV. So let's have ourselves a podcast.

Speaker 3

President Trump and Secretary Hegseth have made it clear that presidentially designated narco terrorist groups are subject to lethal targeting in accordance with the laws of war. Secretary Hegseth authorized Admiral Bradley to conduct these kinetic strikes. Admiral Bradley worked well within his authority and the law, directing the engagement to ensure the boat was destroyed and the threat to the United States of America was eliminated.

Speaker 1

Welcome everybody, It's the Ricochet Podcast, Episode number seven hundred and sixty seven. You love the Denser plane, You'll adored as a podcast and you can join us at ricochet dot com. Why well, you can be part of the most stimulating conversations and community on the web period. I'm

James Lylex here in cold and snowy Minnesota. Whereas instantly Christmasy and Stephen Hayward joins us from somewhere some booklined place, and Charles C. W. Cook in I imagine Florida, which probably I don't know who the tempts dipping down into the lower seventies or something. I don't want to hear about it. I hate you, gentlemen. How are you today? I'm good, warm, okay, thank you, thank you very much, warm warm. It was one below yesterday as I was walking the dog, and the dog did not want to

have any of it. Frankly, So the thing where the dog does his business against a tree and you hear a snapping sound because his stream is frozen and he ties to disengage. But enough of that. I live here by choice, and so do a enowfull lot of other people, including Tim Waltz, who's our governor. Do you guys find it interesting somehow that all of the things that are being said now about Minnesota by everyone from the New

York Times, Christopher Ruffo too. The President himself didn't seem to come up very much when he was a vice presidential Kennedy, why was that?

Speaker 4

Well, I hope you're not suggesting, James that the American media is in some way biased toward one of the major political parties, and say suppresses or refuses to cover stories that it thinks might hurt that party.

Speaker 1

No, I wouldn't say anything that's treason, that that's that's calumn near that I will not hear of such words spoken against my former profession. But it might actually be something that people consider suspect. Stephen were you. We keep being told that this story is being told. I mean everyone's been talking about the fraud, that the fraud has vetted, the fraud was baked into the cake. Everyone knew about it, did.

Speaker 2

You, well, I did, only because you know my former writing partner power Line Scott Johnson has been reporting on this for several years, even attending most of the trials in the courtroom, which you know, not many other reporters are doing. I put this in a larger context. The latest issue of the New York Review of Books just landed in my mailbox. Now I read it so you don't have to. And it's good opposition research. And the lead review is of Kamala Harris's one hundred and seven Days,

and it's absolutely savage. And this is not the first review from the left trashing Harris, and I think Waltz is now fair game too. I think Democrats want to demonize Biden, Harris and Waltz for their obvious mediocrity and worse, so it's to put them behind us. And so now it's open season on them because it's safe for them to do so, and maybe they think necessary.

Speaker 1

What are the exact criticisms in remarks that they have to say about Harris. Are they critiquing the book for being banal and obvious and boring and yes, and unburdened by what was? Or are they actually going after the individual herself as being an insufficiently marvelous inspiration.

Speaker 2

Well, they don't say that directly, that's certainly hinted at, and that she lacked courage certainly to push out Biden earlier, along with the rest of the party of leadership. By the way, it's a very broad gauge indictment of the sort of upper reaches of the Democratic Party, which, as I say these days, I like to read the left attacking Democrats with a bowl of popcorn handy because it's fun.

Speaker 1

Person So this is all, however, water under the bridge. Tim Waltz isn't running for vice president again? Eyes will shift from Minnesota, or has the president's remarks on the Somali community here? Actually I don't know, lit a fire or rekindled a fire under the whole immigration, assimilation, et cetera debate to Charles, or is this just going to be something that is waved away, placed in context of

previous waves of immigration? No reason to question our gorgeous mosaic, et cetera, et cetera, Which is my suspicion that it will all be generally forgotten here except here in Minnesota, where I think Wallves is going to have a little bit more difficulty than he thought.

Speaker 4

Yeah, I would be savaged by chext notes Mike Lindell.

Speaker 1

Right, which is not going to happen. The GOP in Minnesota consistently puts up the strangest artist and most ineffective candidate. It's been a long time since they put up somebody who I think could even make a bit of a hint of an inroad into into Minnesota. I mean Minneapolis, the metro area solidly blue, so blue, very blue. But beyond that the outstate, well we'll see once again, Yes, Minnesota focused the world and I hate it.

Speaker 4

I think that they will try and sweep it under the rug. I think they are trying. One of the things that I have found the most annoying about this.

Speaker 5

Is that.

Speaker 4

While many of the Democrats who have criticized Trump's rhetoric have a point at the edge, that is to say, I don't want to hear a president describing people as garbage, and he has painted too broad a brush, I've heard none of them lead with this is a disgrace and a disservice to the taxpayers of Minnesota, and we're going to prosecute it because it's wrong.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I mean, there's seventy seven people.

Speaker 5

I know they have.

Speaker 4

But what I'm saying is that it is all pushback against Trump, and that's the only part of the story they will not acknowledge Tina Smith, is that her name and Amy Klobasha and Tim Walls, they won't come out and say, yeah, this is really bad, and it is really bad. And the other part of it is they've adopted a standard here that they don't adopt in any other circumstance. So I obviously don't follow this as closely as you do, Jenn, because I don't live in Minnesota.

But whenever I hear this general topic discussed, I hear this phrase the Somali community, and they always talk about it as if it is uniform. It is a thing to which politicians can ascribe other things or from which they can deduce things. The Somali community, How dare you, et cetera. But now they're all atomized individuals. You can't possibly generalife. We can't refer to the Somali community. That's an attack on the American idea. Well, okay, I'm open

to that. I'm an individualist, but pick one. Don't in one circumstance say the Somali community thinks we must do this for this amount, and then in the other circumstance say, well, you can't refer to this assay Somali fraud ring, which it is. That's very annoying to me.

Speaker 1

Yes, well we'll go back, go on.

Speaker 2

So I think there's a second subtext at work here. Then, one reason they don't call it out, Charles, I think

is at some point in the last fifteen years. I think it actually dates back to the aftermath of the financial crisis in two thousand and eight, the left decided that all these social welfare programs were airsats redistribution of wealth, and they severed the link between you know what we used to call either deserving poor or you know, people who were genuinely needed government assistants, which Democrats used to pay lip service to at least and sometimes actually took action,

like Bill Clinton thirty years ago with welfare reform. And you started seeing after the Great Financial Crisis that the number of people on disability doubled. There weren't that many more disabil but this is a welfare program that people could apply to and we give them out. And we learned here during the government shutdown. I thought I kept up with these things, but I was shocked to learn that there are forty two million Americans on SNAP, which

we used to call food stamps. And by the way, maybe the fact that it's now a card that you get and so you look like the next person with a credit card of the checkout line, instead of having to pull out those stamps out of your wallet, which you know, the ever sensitive leftists and social workers said

stigmatize people who were on food stamps. Right, Well, you know, we have extraordinary numbers of people on all all these different public assistance programs, and I think for a lot of people on the left, you say fraud, and they don't think of it that way, because I think this is long overdue redistribution of wealth. It's not as direct as we might like with a wealth tax and all the rest, or you know, an official universal basic income, but it's so rough substitute, and they're all for it,

and that's why they're uninterested in policing fraud. By the way, Minnesota is not the only state. We have a similar scale out. In California, going back several years now, unemployment claims during COVID and other COVID programs were massively oversubscribed in a fraudulent way that even some of the state auditors have flagged. And nothing's happened to anyone, as there's been no accountability for it.

Speaker 1

Part of it, maybe you know, in the back of their heads, I think you're thinking, you're right, that it's redistribution, and that's necessary to get good, eat the rich, kill the billionaires. That's part of it. A little bit more in the forefront is the idea that we should not be too questioning of the people who are doing this and these organizations, because that would seem to be I don't know that would have a racialist aspect to it,

so they're kind of squeamish about that. But the thing that strikes me over and over and over again is that Minnesota has been eating its seed corn for so long we've been throwing it in the microwave and dousing it with butter, forgetting that what this state had ever since, Well,

trace it back however long you wish. But it's got that Scandinavian Nordic social welfare model where everybody contributes a high amount and is guaranteed of a sane, civil, sensible run society because there's high social trust, there's cohesion, there's cultural cohesion, and we're all part of that completely breaks down when you introduce into it people who just simply

do not share that particular mindset it does. And you can't say that what we need cultural diversity on one hand, and then on the other hand to say, oh, but the other diverse cultures will regard this fountain of money, this corniacope of cash, the same way that the other previous Minnesotans do, because they won't. That's just not the basic culture from which they come. So yeah, yeah, and

it won't change. It simply won't change because of the monolithic nature of the DFL and the people who will vote for it no matter what, because to vote for an R is to be Oswald Mosley. Yeah, well you

mentioned a disability. One of the things that I found interesting this week is not just the people who claim disability in order to get the government benefits, but a study that showed that on several major prestigious US campus, twenty thirty forty percent at Stanford, I think of the students regard themselves as some form of disabled, and here

it's a completely different thing. Here it is you know, the disabilities are more neurological in for more psychological or gender relator to the rest of it, and they're ending up having to craft these innumerable compensations and accommodations for

people who basically are fine. But it's a badge now of your specialness to have one of these diverts, to have a disability, as it actually elevates you to some to a more exalted status, and between that and the government largest for claiming yourself to be so is not good anyway.

Speaker 4

That's can I give a slightly more cynical take on that.

Speaker 1

I would love it. I'm not exactly sure. I've been all rainbows and unicorns and happy pink past els, but go ahead now.

Speaker 4

Well, I think that part of this, as you say, is that people want the badge because they think that it puts them in the special category. But I think a lot of it stems from the left's inability to understand the immutability of human nature. It's good old fashioned

advantage seeking. It's people who are often from good and wealthy families, who have high ikes, who are in no way the types for which these programs or dispensations were set up, recognizing that their faculty and the bureaucracy around them are weak and pliable, and that if they say a bunch of magic words, then they can eke out a little more space between them and the next guy and come out with better job prospects and higher salary.

Speaker 5

I think it is.

Speaker 4

The same sort of human conduct we would have expected two thousand years ago and ten thousand years ago.

Speaker 1

If these things existed. There's probably a Sumerian stone at which somebody has hammered some hieroglyphs about how they are a broken leg and therefore are entitled to a crutch that the state should provide. I'm Greg Corumbus, joined Jim Garrity of National Review and me each weekday for the Three Martin Lunch Podcast. We'll give you the good, bat and crazy news of the day and lots of laughs too. Find us right here on the Ricochet Audio Network at

ricochet dot com or wherever you get your podcasts. Well, let's move on to something a little bit happier. Stranger Jay six Bomber. All of a sudden, All of a sudden, they got the guy. All of how that happened? Do you think that a fire was lit under some agencies or some new information suddenly surfaced? And is he? Is he who we thought he would be?

Speaker 2

First of all, I think there is a legitimate question of why the FBI wasn't actively pursuing this case under Biden. I mean they were saying at the time that we think this is a sideshow. It was you know, hoax, It was not serious, and it turned out that it was. And apparently the investigation involved a lot of that old fashioned deep digging that the FBI can do. What I mean, they pay something like two hundred thousand transactions to trace, to try and ferret out this guy, you know, buying

the parts to make these bombs. This guy wasn't like the unibomber who made his own screws. If you remember the way that guy made his bombs way back when, and so you wonder why that didn't happen, and I hope somebody asked that question of the of the previous FBI regime. But then the guy looks like and it's early yet, but he looks like he's kind of a nut. He's saying, I thought the election was stolen, and so he's gonna plant bombs outside both the r n C and d n C. H it's a bit strange. I

think we're gonna find this guy as a nutcase. Yeah, and not part of a conspiracy, I'll put it that way.

Speaker 1

But not an inspec I mean, but not you know, in that case that he thought odd things, but not an insane man, because if you can do all these things and get undetected, I reserve insanity for the people who are running naked with long hair through Times Square screaming about the demons that are clawing at them.

Speaker 5

I mean that.

Speaker 1

I don't say a guy who believes peculiar things is mad. He's just.

Speaker 2

Well, when I say that, I didn't necessarily mean that in the usual psychological sense. But he's one of these persons who has odd, contradictory and unconventional views that don't make rational sense to a normal person.

Speaker 1

Gerald, do you agree or did you think that he is been looking over his shoulder all of these years, wondering why these guys aren't coming for him or what.

Speaker 4

Well, I assume he's been doing that. I do think it's possible to be crazy and then to latch on to political messages that you didn't rationally arrive at. And I often tried to draw that distinction when talking about people who commit crime. So there's the sort of person who says, well, I'm being controlled by my toaster, and then there's a sort of person who is crazy and then reads in the newspaper that a boat sank and becomes obsessed with that and decides that he did it.

And you know, he's not a maritime expert. You wouldn't blame people who in boats. It just so happened that he came across that as an explanation. I don't think we know enough about this guy to know whether he was either of those, or the third category, which is the sane, if evil political actor who concluded that the election had been stolen and they tried to blow up the government. And there are people in that category.

Speaker 1

They You're right, the early twentieth century, in the sixties and seventies abound with completely rational people who believed evil things who were content to bomb away. The people who bombed the you know, the the capital back in the days. They're not nuts and not crazy. They just believe this is the most efficacious way to make their point. I mean, you mentioned the unibomber for Remans as.

Speaker 5

Yeah, he was.

Speaker 4

Rational, and you know, the distinction you would draw, maybe is between the man who attacked the navy yard ten years ago, who thought that he was being controlled through the walls of his apartment by the government crazy and the man who killed Charlie Kirk, who I think was a political actor who decided to advance his political agenda with a murder. And I just don't know enough about this guy yet to decide which one he was.

Speaker 1

Well, we'll find out elsewhere around the planet. We're having a big debate about whether Pete Higsseeth should go because they're double tapping the guys who are bringing the drugs in, and as we're informed, Venezuela is not bringing an awful lot of fentanyl in. These guys are probably bringing in

something else like okaine. It's one of those those issues that had it been Obama, I tend to believe that we would be talking about the bold and decisive potesst steps that were being taken to keep Americans safe and healthy. But we're having a big debate about these guys because the New York Times, I think, ran a story about one of the other boats and took a look at the guys who were on it, and you know, they

weren't really carteil guys. They were just you know, they loved soccer, They went to church and the rest of it, and just happened to find themselves in his boat bringing drugs into the country. Charles, I know that you are a stickler for such things, that even though something we may say good, good, blow them up. That you are one of the types who will, you know, differ and demure, so defer in demure away.

Speaker 5

Because I love them.

Speaker 4

I love Pedro. I love Pedro, the cocaine trafficker. I hate the US. I hate it some military. I want Javier and Pedro to succeed and to bring in as many dangerous and perhaps fatal drugs as they can.

Speaker 5

And that's, as I've.

Speaker 4

Learned this week, James, the only reason that anyone could possibly have any objections to this action. Now, look, I object to this for a couple of reasons. One, there is no congressional authorization for this action.

Speaker 5

There's none.

Speaker 4

There's no declaration of war, there's no authorization for the use of military force. It's not even a statute that in some tangential way provides the executive branch with the capacity to preemptively kill those it suspects suspects not proved suspects of drug running. I object to it because, while this is not always the case, those boats do not

pose a threat to the US military. Thankfully, the US military is extremely competent and powerful and is entirely capable of stopping, boarding, and searching these boats without opening fire first. If those boats open fire on the US military, then blow them out of the water. But that isn't the case. This is not a threat, and I object to it because we are seeing the abuse of language here from the apologists in a way that usually and rightly upsets conservatives.

We're seeing those drug traffickers described as terrorists. We're seeing cocaine described as chemical weapons.

Speaker 5

These things are not true.

Speaker 4

So I am not all jokes to the contrary, a fan of drug traffickers, But I don't think that's the material question here. I think the question here is under what circumstances are we going out into the Caribbean and opening.

Speaker 5

Fire without questions? I have a big problem with it.

Speaker 4

Yeah, And to me, the question of the double tap in Pete's Heggs's role, which I am skeptical of. The Post reporting, which I think was largely superseded by the Times, is reporting. It is secondary. It's important because it's now been raised, but it's secondary to the material point here, which is, sorry, at what point did we get involved in this?

Speaker 5

And on whose authority?

Speaker 1

Well, Stephen, can you tell us the big leaf of authority under which this is being Well?

Speaker 2

Yeah, So I disagree to a large extent, but not completely with Charlie's point of view. By the way, about the double tap, has anyone seemed to notice what happened by focusing in on this second strike? The objection up till now has been the first strike for some of the reasons Charlie and others make. But suddenly this is given. Oh, it's almost as though the premise here is, oh, the first strike, I guess is okay, but not a second one. I think it's kind of a You almost wonder if

Trump thought of that on purpose. I think that. Here's why I different with Charlie. I do think that it is within the Commander in chief's powers to order these strikes with the military. I do think more should be done to justify it, though that's where we agree. I did check with our pal John Yu, because I'm easier than doing the research myself. When President Jefferson sent out the Marines to go after the Barbary pirates in eighteen

oh three, there was no direct congressional authorization. They did, however, make an appropriation or some resolution to say the Marines can go on a training exercise, which isn't exactly what they did, but it's better than nothing. So I think the larger context here, and here's where I think I probably a closer to Charlie's view, is, you know, we have this slow tilla down in Venezuela. We don't need

all those boats to chase these drug runners. It's pretty clear that we are trying to affect regime change in Venezuela, although we don't want to say that directly because that phrase is toxic. And by the way, I think I've said this before. If I haven't, I'll just say it again. I'm convinced that Venezuela is a dedicated enemy of our country and has been collaborating closely with the Iranians, among others,

probably the Chinese and who knows who else. In other words, I suspect if we knew all the facts, there would be a reasonable causes belly on our part. However, we aren't being told these facts. We're not being given a case. And you know, once again, my mind runs back to nineteen eighty three, when out of the blue, we invaded Grenada to rescue some American students the medical school and essentially get rid of the crazy regime that was further

to the radical communist side than the existing community. It was a confused scene, right. However, what people should know is remember, because I do, is in March of that year. The Grenada invasion was October. In March of that year, Ronald Reagan gave a Oval Office address. Presidents don't seem to make those anymore. Talking entirely about Central America. It was actually his first major speech about Central America, and he was laying out the case of why we need

to contain Nicaragua. But along the way he said, you know, it turns out that the Cubans are building this huge military installation at Grenada. What are they doing that for? It can't be any good. So Reagan had told us ahead of time what the reasons were for for watching out for Grenada, and if you remember that, when the invasion happened, it made some sense. So we're not getting an explanation for what we're trying to do in Venezuela, and I think that is a mistake.

Speaker 1

Agreed, But to the two points that Charles made, I want to know whether or not these ships have sailed and suck. The first is finding some sort of congressional action that justifies these things. We like to think that they The President goes to the Houses of Congress, makes the point, makes the point of the American people. There's a vote that seems to be the way we think things ought to be, but they aren't, especially when it comes to things like budgets. We don't sit down and

discuss individual items in the budget. We just pass yay or nay a blob, which again is not how we think things should be. And when it comes to the language, I agree with Charles. They're not terrorists. They're bad guys, but they're not terrorists in the sense of people who are trying to use violence to achieve a political means. And if you want to recategorize fentanyl and cocaine as chemical warfare, it's not because that denudes the original items

of their power. But at the same time, everybody people will tell idealists like Charles is that if we don't start, if we don't start using their tactics, then we're never going to win. That the time for holding fast to these ideals is gone because we have to we have to do things. Things must be done. So you're quibbling over little things like language when they're wibbling when they're trying to make the country and the people straight safe and healthy.

Speaker 4

I just don't think anyone who had found that argument would be very pleased with it if it came at them at one hundred miles an hour after they've been arrested and accused of crime.

Speaker 1

Of course, not that that's the whole you know, these are the new rules. You're not gonna like them. But everybody always thinks that. But again they will say, and I'm not making this argument because I don't agree with it, I'm just phrasing it. They will say that we are in this mess precisely because we refused to fight in the same way that the other side did. And I find it hilarious that the Democrats believe that they're out

of power because they didn't get as nasty. And you know, as each side seems to accuse themselves, accused their own side of not being as bad as the other guys. But you know, you've heard this on the right from time to time. It's the people who stand there with their principles who get mauled every time, and the end result is the end of a society that allows them to have their principles.

Speaker 2

Right.

Speaker 4

It's just a little bit odd, isn't it that that argument in the realm of foreign policy is coming from the people who said that they were America first non interventionists and being thrown at people such as myself who are accused falsely for the record of being neo con adventurists.

I mean, I'm the guy who, as a matter of record, I've written about this has been uncomfortable on constitutional grounds, with the bombing of the Iranian nuclear facilities, with Trump's bombing of Syria in twenty seventeen, with Barack Obama's attempted military action in Syria in twenty thirteen, which he canceled, with the invasion of Libya in twenty ten. So I'm

not what some people assume. I am some sort of foreign interventionist gung ho type, but I'm nevertheless accused of it, of people who say, listen, we have to deal with things at home. We can't go running around the world playing policemen.

Speaker 5

And now I'm the naive. I know you're not accuse me of this. Of James. I'm just saying I have been told this. I'm now the naive.

Speaker 4

John Lennon imagines singing pacifist who doesn't understand the imperative that is the United States policing It's waltzs. I find this bizarre. I honestly I can't quite believe that this has happened, given well, the rhetoric of the last decade.

Speaker 1

It is Stephen. Let's put it this way. While people like to say good good drug boats blown up stuff that's bad doesn't get to our shores. Good may not be a lot, but it's a start, and somebody's doing something, and we always like to see something being done. But if we really wanted to do something about this, there's two things that we have to address, and that is supply and demand. We don't like to talk about demand a lot because demand puts the onus on the people

in America who are taking it. They're not all helpless fix There's nobody coming from Venezuela and prying their mouth open and shoving down a pill and then using a plunger to make sure it's absorbed in their stomach. There isn't. But by the same token, most of it doesn't come

from Venezuela. I think that's why a lot of people are surprised, like really, drug boats out of Venezuela, because it's Mexico, because it's coming through Canada, because it's coming from precursor plants that you know, Chinese provided precursor chemicals. There are other places to start, and maybe we're kind of wondering why or not necessarily contradicting my first point.

Do you think that there actually is a lot of stuff going on that we just don't hear about because the Seals don't issue an after action report after they've taken out a cartil lab in a Mexican jungle.

Speaker 2

Well, I mean, in the case of Venezuela, I started wondering about them more than fifteen years ago when you started having direct flights from Tehran to Caracas, and you don't need direct flights for people to coordinate their oil output as part of the whole OPEC drama that happens every year. I think this was And there's been other periodic reports here and there of Venezuelan support for a conduit to loss and some of the other bad actors in the world, and I think they're all four Uh.

I mean yeah. I dimentions of where the drugs come from, who's using them, and what's the most effective way to reduce it. I don't know what the answers to those are. We've talked about drug treatment and stuff forever. Uh. And I was skeptical about the war on drugs for a long time, but I'm now not so sure seeing the results of of legalized marijuana, that the idea of legalizing hard drugs is such a good idea anymore. Our libertarian friends still think so very much. But I don't know.

I think it has a solitary effect if if it's if what I'm saying is correct, I think there would be a solitary effect if Venezuela were halted and turned around.

Speaker 1

Yeah, we'd like to see them better. I just find a damned odd. I was in Boston over the last week for Thanksgiving, and what do you see in Boston in the skyline a big sign for Citgo. Sidgo is owned by Venezuela. Yeah, yeah, it's it's a bit complex. They're I mean, they're they're head quartered in Houston, but they are owned by the by Petroleum of Venezuela, you know, and so so yes, it's a state owned company, which is just bizarre.

Speaker 2

Yeah, well remember just we're just briefly, I mean, the Biden administration relaxed sanctions against Venezuela and Venezuelan oil in return for a Venezuelan pregs that they would have an honest and free and fair election that they would follow, and they didn't. And to my knowledge the Biden administration did not put the sanctions back on. I'm not sure that Trump administration has entirely done so either. I think

we've made some exemptions. I think it's for Chevron to work on some oil projects in Venezuela in part because Chevron has a I think or maybe Exxon has a big commitment to the new oil fields in Guyana, which apparently Venezuela covets. And that's an interesting little subtext going on too.

Speaker 4

Can I ask one more question on this topic if we put aside my constitutional objections and assume we would need a congressional butte to satisfy the rules, and is there a case for the United States more generally getting involved within its sphere a la the Monroe doctrine that is consistent where the fear of foreign interventionism? In other words, is it reasonable to say we don't want the United States going into the Middle East or Vietnam, it's too

far away, it ends in disaster. But yeah, if Mexico or Venezuela or Cuba become a problem, we're going.

Speaker 5

To take him out.

Speaker 4

Is that a strand of thought that could come back from the early nineteenth century.

Speaker 2

Or the early nights. Yeah, the nighting A's or nineteen well, actually, that's kind of when it started to change a bit. James Robald Reagan's views on this evolved and were quite curious by the time he left office, because you know, the great story of the left was that we what was at Guatemala, We invaded to bail out United Fruit

Company or something stet That whole old story persists. But by the time he got to the end of Reagan's last term, there was the big agitation to invade Panama because Manuel Noriega wasn't implicated the drug trade and money longering and all kinds of terrible things.

Speaker 1

He was waving around a machete on television. He had he had the complexion of a pineapple. He was a weird guy waving around a machete, and you.

Speaker 2

Know, right, but they all, you know, the whole National Defense establishment came to Reagan said we got to invade Panama. Take this guy out. He's a bad guy. And Reagan said, no, I'm not going to do that. I don't want to

do that. Reagan was really quite forced averst on optional things like Panama, and he wrote in his diary he says, you know, my travels in Latin America, which were extensive during his two terms and really have made me sympathize with the view that we Northern Yankees have been too aggressive in overseeing their countries and that we should we should take a lighter approach to Latin America. And no,

I don't think he was wrong. I do think I guess sorry, I haven't been around about I think the creative answer to your question, Charlie is is we ought to conceive of something that I'm not Those examples are going to be bad ones for a lot of listeners. We ought to have something that resembles well, we have

the Organization of American States. I'm not sure whether we're really a part of that, but I think something that's like NATO or like the European Union but not brustlized would be the way to go forward with Latin America.

Speaker 1

Yeah, there are two things to remember about that time. One is Jen Kirkpatrick saying that there is a distinction between totalitarianism and authoritarianism. And she had a point, and people made fun of her at the time and talked about how this was a distinction without a difference. It was just used to justify. But totalitarian states do not evolve.

They crack and sunder and fall apart. Authoritarian states, under her view, do have the potential to evolve in something more civils and more more or less onerous to the people.

Speaker 2

And then many of them became democratic in the age too, right, right.

Speaker 1

And the other was the break f doctrine, which says that any you know, any state that went communist, there's no going back from that. So you combine those two things, and you combine Soviet aggression, aggression, yes, diplomatic military sneaky whatever, in the care in the in the in Central America in the eighties, and the fact that the Cold War

was still going on. You can well understand why the United States had a keen eye on the composition of the governments there because you had Cuba, Nicaragua falls, El Salvador falls, and the rest of it. It means you have to get him with a lot of unsavory characters that that you know that Oliver Stone doesn't like. But the alternative is to see the entire lake to uh, you know, to the Russians in that case, Now, that just seems absurd because as we all know, they were weak,

Gorby was going to come along. He was Gorby loved peace. He wanted nothing more than you know all that bs. But at the time it was I keenly remembered these things occupying the American psyche for the entirety of the eighties. It was a big deal. So for Charles to say the nineteen you know, should we get back to the nineteenth century idea? I mean no, to me's that's that's my twenties right there is caring what goes on there? Now?

Do we really care whether or not Daniel Ortega is in charge at this moment at Nicaragua, which still to this moment they pains me amazing. Probably not? Probably not? Or should we worry that much about you know else? Should we look at El Salvador as an example perhaps that the other states can follow if they want to, you know, reclaim their streets and the safety of their people. Yes, But do we invade if El Salvador as president goes

it falls to a military coup? No, it's not the same because we're not dealing with the Ruskies, and China is much better at just sort of getting what they want with a little money. In Belton Road, and getting people on the hook for that.

Speaker 5

So that's what I have.

Speaker 4

To plead extreme youth and beauty from my parents.

Speaker 1

Well, I was there, young man. I was there, and I remember.

Speaker 2

Well, my my favorite joke from that time, James, was from m Stanton Evans who said the Falklands lore between Britain and Argentina. It was really difficult for conservatives because on the one hand we like imperialism, but on the other hand we like military dictatorships, so it's hard to choose.

Speaker 1

No, no, we didn't. All I know is it made. It made Elvis Gustello very sad and he wrote a lamenting song about it.

Speaker 4

Hi, this is a young Culter.

Speaker 1

Welcome to my Ricochet podcast.

Speaker 2

And Coulter every week on Ricochet. You're home to center right conversation.

Speaker 1

Hey, that was pretty good. All right, Well, let's step away from the lake in our backyard and go to something else. It's a Texas SCOTOS has given a green light to that Texas redistribution map, and we know that jerrymandering and redistribution is a big thing right now because various states are either depending on whether you like California or Texas, control and drive out the opposition or create

things that allow diversity to flourish, et etcetera, etcetera. I have not I know virtually nothing about this, so I'm going to throw it out to you guys, who no doubt have been absorbing its details keenly and can tell us all what to think. What do I think about this?

Speaker 2

Well, two quick thoughts. One is I think I said this before that jerrymandering was never a scandal or a threat to democracy until Republicans got good at it. Then suddenly the media and everybody fell into line. But I do think what this Supreme Court order means is that the Voting Rights Act case that was argued a couple months ago has been decided. I mean, the justices always vote on a case the same week they hear them.

They can change bouts later, but usually not. And so my guess is that the the lower court ruling that struck down the Texas attempted map redrawing was going to fall prey to the Voting Rights Act case, which we probably won't get the opinion on for several months yet, because I think the liberal dissenters it's probably a six'

to three, vote it's my. Guess and the liberal dissenters are going to want to screen from the rooftops about how this is all terrible because it's attacking fundamental voting. Rights SO i think that's the hint THAT i take from how quickly the court moved on.

Speaker 1

This, Charles i'm gonna ask you to combine two, things one your thoughts on redistricting and two your thoughts on warm. Sheets And i'm going to get to you about that in just a, second BECAUSE i have to tell you. Something, folks we are coming up, to you. KNOW i think the holidays is what they call, Them christmas or something like. THAT i hear the songs in the. Mall It's. December we all know what it, is and you, Know thanksgiving

us a little past. Us. Now you're probably, relaxing but you're gearing up because it's going to be a month of doing, stuff the, hustle the, bustle and in all of the time you had ahead of, you you, think what do you look forward to the. Most, well it's the, parties it's the, family it's the. Friends but it's also those moments where you can just slow down and not do anything and take a, breather cozy up and just

be present in the. Moment oh and speaking of, presents he said with a segue That Rob long would have stepped on years. Ago ask, yourself who's on Your christmas list this? Year and who on your shopping list deserves a gift that helps them Relax, now whether you're a, parent you're a, partner or even if you're doing a little shopping for yourself like, me Because i'm in the sheets.

Market there's no going wrong With Cozy earth's luxurious, Bedding Cozy earth's lounge, Ware, Oh Cozy earth's pajamas and, no you can't wear them on the. Plane you'll want to, though because they're that. Solved maybe you'd like to hear from someone who can tell you a little bit more about redistricting and The Cozy earth. Experience that would Be.

Charles And i'm going to give him a break, here and he doesn't really have to combine the two topics BECAUSE i know he'd rather tell you about how great these sheets. Are.

Speaker 4

Charles they are, great, Right they're, breathable they're, comfortable they are up to my wife's exacting, standards which is very. Important they can be slept in and are slept in in the cook household. All, yeah around all though of course only by people who live in the cook households that don't show up trying to get into those. Sheets

you won't be allowed. To you want, to, though because they are fantastic sheets that we have enjoyed in the enormous amount of time we spend a, sleep, which when you think about, it is actually kind of.

Speaker 1

Alarming, yeah, WELL i WISH i had a more enormous. Time i'm you, Know i'm going to get these sheets for the next. Bed and one of the great things about, it here's the deal you. Get and WHEN i say, DEAL i you, know get this rest assured that Knowing Cozy earth comes with one hundred nights sleep trial and a ten year. Warranty how to tell you how good these things are and how much they stand behind, them and how much they know you're going to love, them

and now you're going to get them. Cheaper give the gift of everyday luxury this holiday. Season head to cozyearth dot com and use the copon Code ricochet for up to forty percent. Off i'm not. Lying ricochet code forty percent. Off just be sure to place your order By december twelfth and that'll guarantee that it gets there By. Christmas if you're listening to this a little bit, later don't. Worry the goupon Code ricochet still works year round for

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Podcast and now That i've completed the, ENDORSEMENT i wanted to, say and if you come to the cook household and attempt to sleep in their great, sheets you will be. SHOT i.

Speaker 5

Quite.

Speaker 1

Possibly. So, well here's something That, CHARLES i know is not in your wheelhouse, necessarily But i'm going to ask you. About it has to do with media. Consolidation netflix set to Buy Warner brothers And, discovery WHICH i find very strange because it's the channel THAT i don't watch in

a credit card That i've never. Had but for some, Reason discovery And Warner brothers are worth seventy two billion dollars that's a lot of, money and it feels like one of those end of a boom things where companies are changing hands for tons of, money like When Warner brothers BOUGHT, aol OR aol Bought Warner brothers and they moved into The Twin towers In Columbus circle and a new era had. Begun and, then of course two years later they're trying to unwind the deal and everybody's lost.

SOMETHING i don't get, IT i do not, understand but a lot of people are saying that this is a, nail, no the last nail in the CABLE tv. Coffin so where do you? Guys are you bothered by additional media consolidation and what do you think the media landscape is going to look like cable? Wise is this the? End and are we happy about that or?

Speaker 4

Not, WELL i will agree with you That i'm not an expert in. THIS i am somebody who cut the cord WHEN i moved To florida in twenty, seventeen And i'm not actually saving any money from this.

Speaker 1

Anymore, really, really did it somehow work out that by piling all those streaming services on top of the things you ended up paying just what you had, before in addition to paying for a service that gives you the broadcast channels and the local news and all the other stuff you don't.

Speaker 5

Watch, REALLY i THINK i may be paying more now one.

Speaker 4

Another i'm okay with this BECAUSE i don't have to run coaxial cable around my house and of those big bulky, boxes AND i do like the way my network works and so.

Speaker 5

Forth but it clearly.

Speaker 4

Has not continued as a cost saving. Proposition it seems to me that there is at some point going to be a burst bubble and a few of these are going to disappear or they're all AND i get merged into. One but the federal government's gonna have a problem with. That i'm not quite sure that that's the implication of this, deal, though Because Warner brothers And netflix are different entities now

you will know about. This i'm given to understand that there's Some Supreme court case from the forties that means that studios can't own movie. Theaters, well it has to all be, separated which was very interesting to me because WHEN i was growing up In, Cambridge, england the movie

theater there was The Warner Brothers. Multiplex now they showed movies from all the, studios but it was owned By Warner, brothers AND i think it then got sold To, Universal so that's how it changed hands in the way movement parks,

do and that's not allowed. Here so there's a factor here that is obviously at some point going to have to be reconsidered by The Supreme court and or by cons which is that the rules that were set up in the forties don't seem to properly tally with the way that the industry is now, working where the delivery mechanisms and the production mechanisms are getting closer and closer together by by, Definition BUT i don't know enough about.

Speaker 1

That, well this is why we NEED. Ej hill And gary, McVay two of our extremely savvy guys when it comes to the history of the, industries to weigh into the. Comments and believe, me those guys are good and they'll give us what. For it is funny, though when you consider about, it is that if they can't own movie theaters, anymore but if our house is now the movie, theater then are what are The what are our obligations as

movie theater owners at? Home SHOULD i be wearing an usher, uniform Because i'm sort of the height that you would expect that to. Be to get the little Cap, dad SHOULD i before a movie somehow apply a little light adhesive to the floor so that my you, know my feet stick to it like they do in the old multiplex. DAYS i don't know If i'm in the. Theater, Well, STEPHEN i don't know what configuration you. HAVE i Know america is desperately knowing wishes to know if you have

the cable and the rest of. It But Charles, WRIGHT i mean getting rid of the coax. Great WHEN i got rid of my satellite great five years, BEFORE i, thought look at, Me i'm getting my entertainment beamed clear and crisp from. Space and then five or six years later that's like you're still getting YOUR tv from, space. MAN i, mean the shift to that paradigm was just. Stunning AND i was so happy to get rid of cable with a plethora of channels THAT i don't, use

and be able to select these bespoke little. Services but the end results of this is THAT i have no idea where anything is that show THAT i? Watched what was it on that series that my wife was watching? It and it's not Because i'm older AND i can't figure out where it. IS i can't hear people, Talk and it's just because it did not turn out to be the sort of thing that saved us money and

made our lives. Easier and as a matter of, FACT i think a lot of people sort of feel about old cable television the way people in their sixties and seventies In russia feel about The Soviet. Union it had its, problems but it was good and well storm.

Speaker 2

WELL i THINK i can Channel Rob long here a, bit because he used to talk a lot about how all these big tie ups promised these great, synergies that wonderful bezz word from the management, consultants and how they always then were desynergized a few years. Later so you mentioned Aol Time Warner paramount had a couple of different tie ups that have recently been, unwound And i'm wondering

about this. ONE i think maybe it's the case That netflix is simply by the Way netflix stock has just roared the last couple of, YEARS i, mean way beyond WHAT i think you might have, expected and it's hard to imagine that trajectory. Continuing maybe they have more capital or access to capital than they know what to do. WITH i don't know what they ration off of this is it surprises me that you'd want to have more

of these. Mergers but speaking of being so, Old, JAMES i can, REMEMBER i guess it now is thirty years ago when the big issue was we need to regulate cable television because they're exploiting. Us and of course we PASSED i think it was nineteen ninety two we passed a new cable regulation, bill after which cable rates went up, predictably, right because that's what often happens with that kind of government. Regulation, now is there anybody, seeing, gosh we got the regulators

have got to crack down on these cable. Companies, no the other. Way any minute NOW i Expect President trump to say we need to subsidize the cable companies to keep them from going. Broke probably not, literally but you see the problem here Is. Yeah, Now i'm With. CHARLES i cut my court a long time, also AND i THINK i probably spend about the. Same the big opening here for me for cable, television if they want to

stay in the, game is to unbundle. EVERYTHING i, mean the problem with cable is they have so many must carry, rules And i'm not sure if those are industry, rules broadcast network, rules or actually government. Rules i'm completely ignorant about all of. That BUT i think cable couldure a lot of people back if they, Said, okay what channels do you, want here's what we'll charge you for. Them.

Speaker 4

YEAH i think the one problem with, that as far AS i can, see again not an, expert is that the thing that people actually want to watch is, sports and they don't really want to watch anything. Else and so all of the other things that are on cable, news including SAY msnbc now MS now is cross subsidized by.

Sports and if you get rid of the, bundling Which i'm in favor of, too all of those other channels oh way, right because all you, want if all you wants THE, Nfl Major League, baseball and, hockey well then you were just buy that and.

Speaker 5

Kaboom.

Speaker 1

True but the number of shows and channels out there devoted to the murder of young of the murder of wives is far greater than you. IMAGINE i, mean if you put together a package that is The Whollmark channel and The Murder victim of The Week Stuff dateline. Style believe me that there's as many people who want to watch that want to watch THE. Nba the last Thing i'll say about that is, this when they talk About Warner, brothers they, saying, Well Warner, brothers it's got all this GREAT.

Ip they've got all this great. Ip people are talking they Got Harry, potter they Got batman and the rest of. IT i don't want any more of THE. Ip i'm tired of all of it and the idea that we're going to continue to exploit these, things to take these, limping lame horses out in the back and beat them some more and extract even more out of The potter verse and THE dc verse And, batman endless iterations of.

That i'm tired of the lot of, it AND i wish we could just up in the edge of, sketch start over and sort of invent a popular culture out of out of our. Imaginations at the, moment just a. THOUGHT i, know, well the other great, news, Well i'm sure it's. Great the other news was, Great but this is. Great is that in a stunning blow to climate change and a sure sign that the planet is doomed and the seas will soon. Rise pular bears will be. Snorkeling

The president, said, no, electric forget about. It we're going. Gas gas cars are. Great gas cars are. Good how do you guys feel about? THAT i am a firm believer in the power and the superiority of the internal combustion, engine AND i love, it even though electrics can be. Cool but, yeah go.

Speaker 2

Gas, Well, JAMES i think what should appeal to you is that it may bring back car design to where you actually can make cars right.

Speaker 1

Exactly you know the?

Speaker 2

Point, yeah, right.

Speaker 1

Go, ahead you make it Go, no you make it go?

Speaker 2

Ahead, WELL i mean the reason all cars look alike these, days they're all her tear, shop tear drop shape and rounded office because they have to make them those shapes to meet the feel economy. Rules that's the only way they can do. It and so you, KNOW i wasn't always a fan of the old Boxy, volvos BUT i was glad you had that option for a. CAR i like cars that have angles and edges to. THEM i

don't like the roundedness of. Everything it annoys. Me so let the designers now make cars that look great and let people decide if they want to lose a mild gallon of gas mileage and in return for a car whose style they.

Speaker 1

Like AND i believe we were speaking to a man who has a golf cart with tailfins on. It does he? Not?

Speaker 4

Absolutely you, know the way That New York times has reported on this is really annoying because it has made it look as If Donald trump has put his thumb on the scales in favor of gas. Cars and What trump has actually done is Repudiated biden's attempt by Passing congress to make it impossible for car manufacturers to economically produce gasoline, cars and has removed a lot of mandates that make cars artificially expensive and cause all of the

design issues That steve. Mentioned so What trump has done is the opposite of. This and it's especially annoying given that When biden put out that, rule The New York times insisted till it was blue in the face and it was just a. Guideline and anyone who said this is a flagrant attempt to put the federal government's thumb on the, scales The New York times would, say, no, no, no, no, no it's just a. Suggestion and Yet trump undoes the

suggestion via the same, means which is totally. Legitimate and the time, says, ah look at him in the pocket of big.

Speaker 5

Oil no, no, no no, no no no no.

Speaker 4

No what he has done there is say do what you. Want this is the market, working this is not the government. WORKING i think it's. GREAT i also think it's going to go some way critical THOUGH i have been of him on this question to alleviating some of the concerns around, affordability because the combination of cash for clunkers and some of these mandates meant that both the second and new car, market secondhand and new car markets were artificially, expensive and that's been really bad for.

Speaker 1

People, yes putting the thumb on the scale, somewhere or taking the thumb off the. Scale some ouquates to putting the thumb on the. Scale it's like the spokesman for, allichical, hierarchical you, know, collectivism Or brian in nineteen eighty four is saying To, winston imagine imagine a boot lifting from human face For, yeah before we, Go old friend of the, Show John, gabriel old friend Of, ricochet one of the finest writers out there on the. Internet funny, guy king of.

Stuff if you've been Around. Ricochet you know how much we Love. John john's have an issues and there's a post up At ricochet that talks about it in his usual inimitable, style and he could use some. Scratch he's got a GoFundMe. Going there's a goal he's getting. There but we love him and we want him to be healthy and around, forever and if we can do something about, that let's do something about. That so, well CAN i?

Say ricochet is the kind of place where people join and, yeah it costs a little bit here and, there but you join a community and you are able to, comment which gives, you As rob, said skin in the. Game it doesn't mean it's one of those cess pools of people just yelling and screaming at each. Other it means that there's places real people with real names that kind of feel like you know because you. Do and we want to help Out, John so.

Speaker 2

We kind just add. That you, Know i've never Met john in, person BUT i do feel LIKE i know him for a couple of. Reasons, one we've done a couple of podcasts together and we've been reading each other for. Years and, second and this is a special bond here AND i have that we've talked, about you know, online is we are co religionists to a somewhat rare sect In.

America we're Both Eastern, orthodox and you know we meet in the phone, booth but that's not quite that small a. Subsect but the point is, is you, know so this has struck me a little bit close to. HOME i heard it.

Speaker 1

Right So ricochet is The orthodox and the The lutheran deist here and the atheist on the other. Side we contain. Multitudes that's that's. Wrong that's. Whitman isn't it about the containing multitudes of?

Speaker 5

THINGS i?

Speaker 1

Think or AM i? Thinking the demon who says my name Is? Legion, well come To ricochet yourself and find. Out we want to thank you for listening to. This we want you to give us five stars At Apple. Podcast we want to Thank Cozy earth for sponsoring this podcast as. Well you can do your life so much

better if you avail yourself with their fine. Goods and we want to remind you That ricochet is there twenty four to, seven And charles is actually one of the men who make sure that it is because he's not just a podcast, host he's not a great writer. Himself In national. Review but he is the man who at this moment is probably thinking about a way that he can improve the cabling at his. Home you, know the way he's the way he's got. IT i, MEAN i don't know if you're A cat six or A cat seven,

man or if you've made that. Upgrade But, charles what version of ricochet are we on at the?

Speaker 4

Moment, well we're on the same honess we were before IT i think is four point fourteen point, fourteen and then it recurs.

Speaker 5

Forever but this is because we're dealing with.

Speaker 4

Some tweaks at the, moment and the next version will have fewer numbers with the dots and a bigger, number not the first, number but the second number.

Speaker 1

Will Be pick the second, number and eventually the first number will change to. It in the, meantime always behind the, scenes always under the good making sure that your experience is, better glitchy. Fun but what, counts of, course is the. Content go, there read, it, enjoy. Gentlemen it's been a. Pleasure enjoy the rest of your, time and we will take this up again on a day THAT i hope is not as snowy as this, one but it might. Be It's. MINNESOTA i knew WHAT i was getting.

Speaker 6

Into Bye, Bye Bye.

Speaker 2

Ricochet join the.

Speaker 1

Conversation

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