Disney Sues DeSantis, Meta's Good Quarter, and the Case Against TikTok with Senator Michael Bennet
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hi everyone this is pivot from new york magazine and the vox media podcast network i'm kara swisher and scott i did not find doja cat last night with my son louis swisher i'm i have no idea what that means and i'm scott galloway I went to the Time 100, which, you know, is a big event in New York by Time Magazine.
Mark Benioff was there.
And Doja Cat was one of those on the 100 list.
And so was Elon Musk.
He wasn't there.
Thank goodness.
Louis would have had to intervene.
Oh, you wrote the thing up on Elon.
You had a great time.
Yeah, I did.
You had a great line.
The last line, you said something along, what is the opposite of progress?
Elon Musk in 2023.
I thought that was a great line.
I only had 175 words, so I had to be choice.
Anyway, it was really cool.
I wish you were there.
You would have liked the party.
It was fun.
Natasha Leone was there.
I was invited last year.
I wasn't invited this year.
Oh, you have to write something, I think.
I think that's what I do.
Anyway, it was really great.
I went with Louis Swisher, which was really fun.
We were.
That's nice.
You're one of those people that brings your kids.
It's incredibly indulgent and spoiled.
That's nice.
Yet, that's who my date was.
That's who it was.
Do you guys go drinking afterwards?
He's 21 now.
He's not 21.
He's 21 in a few weeks.
Oh, he's not 21.
Okay.
He's going out with the dog.
He is.
You and me are going to be.
He's going to roll with the dog.
Optionality.
I can teach him how to endure rejection from home.
And show him how it's done.
Okay.
You've now become like a little dad figure to my Jeff Swisher's going to be mad,
but they do listen to Scott Galloway.
They like Scott Galloway, I have to say.
I know it's a really bad influence.
After years of lesbian child raising, you're going to come and ruin it all.
I've made these nice men.
First off, I'm an enormous fan of lesbians.
I get that.
Just don't.
Just through a different lens.
Just through a different lens.
Don't.
Don't.
I've gotten a lot of emails about your penis jokes.
I'm supposed to bother you about it, but I'm not going to.
Just tell your friends I'll help them on the hard parts.
No,
that was good.
A penis joke on a penis joke.
These are emails from listeners.
Do you know it's lesbian appreciation week?
By the way, I went out with my friends from the Yellward, including Jennifer Beals.
It's lesbian appreciation week.
You should appreciate the lesbians.
They were at the White House.
Every week is lesbian appreciation week.
That's a fair point.
Anyway, I appreciate lesbians for sure.
We have a lot to talk about.
Earnings are in for tech giants.
Guess what they're talking about?
Also, Disney ramps up its bike with Ron DeSantis and we'll speak with Senator Michael Bennett, one of our favorites, about TikTok, Twitter, and the Supreme Court.
But first, First Republic Bank may be collapsing after all.
The bank reported an over 40% drop in deposits.
As you predicted, Scott, that this was going to be a problem.
Stock of First Republic has fallen almost 95% year to date, and trading has been halted several times this week for volatility.
According to the latest earnings call, the bank is pursuing strategic options and taking actions to restructure its balance sheet.
Reminder, last month, 11 larger banks gave First Republic a $30 billion attempted rescue.
Scott, I defer to you.
Yeah, but this is, I don't want to say it's a good thing, but when the crisis erupted, there was a fear that it was going to take down the entire economy.
And then it got ring-fenced to regional banks and SVB went away.
And now it looks as if it's ring-fenced to one bank.
You're not seeing headlines about the next bank to fall and seeing its stock creator.
So I actually see this as the,
I'm hoping, kind of the remnants or the
seventh or eighth inning in what is a, you know, a short-term crisis.
The other thing that was shocking, it lost, it lost a dramatic amount of its deposits, but it said 97% of its clients were still with it.
So, how does this end?
I can't imagine that the Treasury Secretary isn't on the phone with a lot of different bank CEOs saying, who wants a deal here and we'll facilitate it?
And banks are calling around saying, okay, most of the bad news is out.
Would you like to acquire this bank on, you know, for pennies on the dollar?
And you can bet that the folks at the Fed and Treasury are trying to facilitate a transaction because they just want this out of the news.
Because the last thing they want is someone else going, Oh, wait, what about this bank?
And the kind of the next potential shoe to drop is which banks are most vulnerable to what people see as the other real soft tissue in the economy right now, and that is commercial real estate.
But I would argue that this is slowly but surely, the circumference of the ring fence is getting tighter and tighter and tighter, meaning that the crisis appears to be in its late stages.
Aaron Powell, Jr.: And just when that happens, the debt ceiling fight with Kevin McCarthy deciding to play chicken with the economy.
But we'll get to that in another show as it moves forward.
But yeah, I agree.
I think I'm a little less panicked.
But with the debt ceiling talks and other things and the signs of more recession, it makes me a little more worried than you.
Another thing that happened, Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard continues to face hurdles.
The antitrust regulator in the UK has blocked the purchase, not unexpected, over competition concerns, saying Microsoft already holds 60 to 70 percent of the global share in cloud gaming.
Both companies plan to appeal the decision, with Microsoft President Brad Smith saying it reflects a flawed understanding of the market and the way cloud technology works.
I have to say I agree with Brad Smith.
They're so much bigger, and they're all Chinese-owned companies in this area.
Shares of Microsoft are up almost 6% in the last five days, while shares of Activision are down almost 10 percent.
What do you think?
They are appealing it, and they think they have a good case, but you don't tend to win in Europe on these things,
historically speaking.
Thoughts?
Well, two things.
I now believe there's a decent chance it's not going to go through.
And two, I think it's good for Microsoft.
If you look at the stock, the stock's up.
The stock, I mean, basically, Activision stock is off 11%,
but Microsoft is up.
Microsoft is firing on all 12,000 cylinders right now.
And my colleague, Asawato Motorin, always says that two-thirds of acquisitions don't work.
They don't need to do anything to keep winning.
Everything is working right now.
So you're going to inject new risk with an acquisition.
Now, granted,
Microsoft is in such a position of power here.
And that is, you know, heads they win, tails they win.
Because if the acquisition goes through, okay, fine.
If it doesn't go through, the market seems to be down with that.
They seem to be absolutely fine with it.
I had someone tell me the money was better spent elsewhere.
That's what someone pretty high up said.
And I was surprised.
And they're like, well, they can take that $70 billion and focus on AI where they're winning and this and that.
And they don't need need it.
And it's small now.
Before they needed a little bit of juice, and now they don't need juice.
And so I thought of people, it would be interesting.
They will have to pay a breakup fee.
And then that company,
in that regard, that company, which had a lot of sexual harassment allegations around a lot of bad culture, that's been cleaned up a little bit.
Like people have passed that.
So they may be able to sell it again to someone else.
Well, it's a great company.
I mean,
you know, the takeout premium, they'll lose the takeover premium, but it's a great company with great titles.
Yeah.
And it will get a breakup fee, big breakup fee.
Is it a big breakup fee?
Yeah.
So I don't, I mean, nobody, it just sounds to me like everyone's going to be just fine.
Although I have to say the regulators are wrong.
The big companies are Chinese-owned, all the big companies in this area.
They are not the biggest player here.
If you look at the real overall markets dominated by Chinese companies and Japanese companies.
And I think you're right.
They're going to abandon it, would be my guess.
Peter Thiel is also speaking of abandoning over culture wars.
The Republican mega donor reportedly won't be donating to any politicians in 2024.
Why?
Because of the party's focus on culture issues like abortion and transgender bathroom laws and all kinds of anti-trans bills and anti-gay bills.
Peter Thiel obviously is gay.
People know that, but I think he just doesn't like the culture issues being focused on.
He's an economic kind of guy.
In the 2022 election cycle, Thiel donated over $35 million to 16 federal Republicans, 12 of whom won their races.
He had some big losses, obviously, in Arizona in particular.
What do you think?
What do you think about this?
He's not going to be a player.
He's been a big player in the Republican Party.
Yeah, but it's more spectacle than significant.
And the thing that this highlights is that our elected officials,
I mean, I'm saying this in a very reductive way, are not only whores, they're cheap whores.
For $35 million, which in the context of being a billionaire isn't a lot of money.
So for $35 million, you can basically become more powerful than any senator or congressperson by just spreading the money around.
And the thing that's always really disappointed me about these individuals individuals is not that they're pay-for-play, but they're so fucking cheaply bought.
I mean, shouldn't they raise their prices?
And I think so.
For 35 million bucks, I mean, Peter Thiel literally makes 100 million bucks or loses 100 million bucks in a good or bad week in the market.
And for 35, he can be a player on a federal.
I mean, it's just, it's striking how cheap it is to be this kind of player.
In any case, I think he'll return right back in if he needs to with Trump.
He'll probably back Trump.
He was one of the first and early backers of Trump.
Agreed.
I think he'll just come right back in when he needs to because he's so cynical.
100%.
I think this was, he woke up with weird blood sugar and said, I'm out.
I'm done.
Well, I suspect he thinks it's stupid.
I don't think he cares about abortion.
I don't think he cares about gay rights necessarily.
I don't think that's his issue.
I think it's like, oh, this is a waste of my time.
I want them to do other things like destroy the EPA, right?
That's where he is.
Like, that's, I think he's just not getting what he's paying for for cheaply.
You're right.
We should have that.
We should start doing this.
Spread our money around.
Let's start doing influence.
Yeah, let's start a pack.
What would we call it?
Spread our money around a whores.
I do that.
Oh, you mean politicians?
Let's call it whore pack.
Let's call it whore pack.
Who are pack.
Amen.
Amen.
No, let's call it Les Pack.
Les Pack.
Oh, I think I have a core pack.
I don't know.
We'll see.
We're thinking of it.
Everybody, get ready for Scott and Kara in the political arena.
Sorry, Peter.
We're going to take your place.
We got to make money first.
You know, us together makes a Peter Thiel, I think.
I'm not sure.
Let's Let's think.
Anyway,
let's get to our first big story.
Earnings are in for some of the largest tech giants, and there's only one thing they can talk about on the earnings call: AI.
Microsoft mentioned artificial intelligence 50 times during its victorious earnings call, as you noted.
It also beat expectations for quarterly revenue, but AI wasn't what put it over the top.
It was actually strong growth in cloud computing.
The two aren't totally distinct.
Microsoft says that in the next quarter, AI will account for 1% of its growth in the cloud business.
Meanwhile, Alphabet also had good things to report on cloud computing.
Sales rose for Google Cloud and shrank slightly for Google's ad business.
Again, not a surprise.
But AI was still a huge talking point for Alphabet CEO Sundar Pishai.
He talked up the company's barred AI and other efforts.
Alphabet also announced a $70 billion stock buyback.
That certainly helps the stock.
Even Meta had a good news this week.
Its revenue jumped this quarter after three straight quarters of losses.
In his opening statement on the earnings call, Mark Zuckerberg spent six minutes discussing AI and what happened to poor little metaverse as for the metaverse he gave it 90 seconds.
90 seconds.
What do you think?
I was trying to discern through or muddle through the earnings report.
And it looks to me like there's been some sleight of hand here in that as they've taken some costs and reallocated them out of cloud and into other things such that for the first time they could report that their cloud division is profitable, which is a really exciting thing to say on an earnings call.
But they have to come up with
a certain amount of
jazz hands here because they've been caught flat-footed by microsoft and others with
ai 100
and also i thought the more interesting earnings call and the stock uh acceleration is meta and if you look at meta stock in the last six months has doubled but that only takes them back to where they were 12 months ago because the stock crashed so much and i believe that the stock's comeback is based on a few things one
First and foremost, people believe that Mark Zuckerberg is coming to from this big gulp ayahuasca Grande Grande Venti hallucination around the metaverse, which is, as far as I can tell, just a giant incel panic room that no one's going to.
And I mean, this is my favorite stat.
MySpace will get more traffic today than Meta's Horizon World, than its metaverse.
Check out these numbers.
Okay, I'm still laughing about that joke.
That's a good joke.
And by the way, Twitter has turned into a 50-plus incel panic room as far as I can tell.
Anyways, but the number that really stuck out, $4 billion loss loss on $300 million in revenue in
reality labs.
And their revenue's down 50%, meaning no one's even buying an Oculus anymore.
And this is what the market is so excited about, Kara.
Everyone goes, the news is so bad.
And Mark is talking about other things.
They're like, oh my God,
he's at a rehab.
He's back.
It's the mendacious fuck, but the smart mendacious fuck we know
who's back focused on the business that's growing.
And also the other thing here you got to give it to them you know who's benefiting more from people going after tick tock meta specifically reels reels business was way up and and if you look through the numbers while their impressions were up 27 percent i think they're
um the costs or what they were able to charge were down 17 so they're able to grow the revenues while uh making the product much cheaper and what it looks like here is they have used I don't know if it's AI or something else,
they will claim it's AI, to do a workaround the privacy regulations imposed by Apple that hamstrung their efforts.
It looks like they've kind of figured it out.
Reels is firing, taking advantage of a weakened and distracted ByteDance slash TikTok.
And investors are like, oh, thank God the old mark is back focused on this cash volcano.
Now, look, what if the
quarter AI doesn't live up to the hype, right?
If it doesn't bring the year of efficiency that he's hoping for besides doing layoffs, that's one of the things.
If they lean too hard into AI before it's a real business, that's, I think, an issue.
You know, there it was a stronger quarter for advertising, and Google's ad business was better.
Is that a good tell for the strength of the economy?
Because every indication is recession, recession, recession.
We've been a month away from recession for 18 months.
And I'll say it again.
If the media wasn't telling you a recession is impending, you wouldn't think it's...
I mean, where do we see the recession coming from?
Is it unemployment at historically?
Amid new recession periods, U.S.
economy grew at 1.1% in early 2022 and pointed to significant slowing.
So there's a lot of indications.
Meta, I think,
I mean,
it's so interesting.
Twitter and Elon Musk have provided so much cloud cover.
I think the number of the percentage of Meta's workforce that has been laid off is 24%.
Meta, under the cover of dark has laid off a quarter of its workforce.
That is
enormous.
And all of that flows to the bottom line.
And let me ask you this.
Does Instagram feel any different for you?
No, no.
I think it's quite good.
I've been using it a lot lately.
Again, I can't believe I'm returning to Mark.
I got to say, it's so good.
And let me just tell you, the ads are, I want to buy like pretty much every ad.
Everything.
And when I go to Twitter, I'm like, get the fuck off my feed, you weird little
companies.
Like they're weird and they feel like late night, you know, cable, like real late night.
Like I had such a disturbing moment on Instagram.
It served me this reel for a cruise and I thought, I'd like to take a cruise.
And I'm like, oh my God, I'm old.
I've officially become old.
We should do a cruise.
Here you go.
We should go on a cruise together after we start our pack.
I was just saying.
People love us.
We would have a cruise.
I know that.
I know.
People love us.
I know.
They do.
I was in a restaurant in New York, and the hostess
as I was leaving.
This is what she said.
She goes, I love you.
And Scott, this is the hostess.
It's Greek Fancy Greece Restaurant.
And I was like, thank you.
Yes.
I'm just telling you.
We should do a cruise.
That would be great.
I feel like we should.
That's on the back side of our career when we start being the entertainment
cruises.
Just so you know, that's our winter.
And next up, dinner theater with the dog and the jungle cat.
I'm just trying to increase our relationship.
I want to do whore pack.
I want to do a cruise.
I just feel like it's.
I'll do a whore pack.
You love that.
You like that idea.
I can see it.
Anyway, let me ask you about the stock buyback.
That feels like an old company thing to do.
President Biden called for a tax increase on stock buybacks in the State of the Union.
Google's going for a $70 billion one.
Stock buybacks are currently taxed at 1%.
So
what do you think of buyback?
Look, buybacks are a great way to return, they're a very efficient way to return money to shareholders because rather than a dividend, you don't have to pay, or the taxes on your stock going up are deferred until you sell it.
And sometimes a mature company needs to realize it's no longer 18 and should return money to shareholders.
Having said that, there is some truth to the notion that when companies are constantly,
here's how a company behaves.
If you really want to try and predict how a company is going to behave, you think, well, what's good for the company?
Nope, that's not how they behave.
What would be good for growth?
No, that's not how they behave.
What drives behavior at companies is what will get the stock up in the next 12 to 36 months, because that's how the people making the decisions get compensated.
And quite frankly, the fastest way to get a sugar high in the stock price is to do a share buyback with your cash on your balance sheet.
And there has been so the
literally the volume of capital that's been allocated to stock buybacks has been so extraordinary.
And people are worried, rightfully so, that shouldn't we create more incentives that balance CEO desires for greater compensation where 97% comes from the stock price such that they invest back in the economy where they say, all right,
we need to hire more people.
We need to find investments we can make to try and grow the economy.
So I do think it probably makes sense to increase the taxation on buybacks, but it's still a very efficient way to return money to shareholders.
I get it.
I also think, don't they have something to do with the $70 billion that's not?
Well, that's the argument.
That's the argument.
They're still too young.
It's like a grandpa move.
It feels like a grandpa move.
Here, here's a dollar for your birthday, that kind of of thing.
And I think they also missed the boat.
And again, I like Sunar Pachai, but on this AI stuff and search, never innovated search.
Search has not been innovated, and they're going to pay the price for that.
But we'll see if they can do it.
And they could use that $70 billion to do so.
Anyway, let's go on a quick break.
And when we come back, Disney versus DeSantis goes to the feds.
We'll speak with Senator Michael Bennett about TikTok bands.
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Scott, we're back.
Don't mess with the mouse.
That was Disney's message to Governor Ron DeSantis this week.
The company filed suit in federal court, accusing DeSantis of engaging in a, quote, targeted campaign of government retaliation after the company came out against the so-called don't say gay bill.
That's what it was, as it's turned out.
Disney says that the governor's actions violate the company's constitutional rights, including protected speech.
This is amazing that he did this.
I'm not surprised.
I think Iger, I know, has nothing but disdain for DeSantis.
He thinks he's a piker.
And it was interesting.
And let me point out: a lot of people call, there's a joke on the internet, I can't remember who said it, but a lot of people said Disney is a law firm that runs a theme park around IP and all kinds of stuff.
So I wasn't surprised they did this, but the antipathy they have for DeSantis is quite significant.
What do you think?
Oh, I think the mouse, specifically Bob Iger, is going to rip the governor limb from limb on this.
This is just,
Disney has so much goodwill, biggest private employer in Florida.
This is overreach.
This feels like political retribution.
I mean, there's just so much wrong with this.
It's just so, it's really,
as much as I hate his policies, Governor DeSantis has been very disciplined around messaging.
I think this is the beginning of the end of his presidential campaign.
Oh, most people do.
And because
I don't think he has the presence or the maturity to walk it back and try and make peace with the guy.
The best thing he could do right now is figure out a way to fly to Burbank and kiss and make up and swallow his pride and say, we've come to an agreement.
He won't.
He can't.
He's gone all in on Disney.
He's really.
He should walk.
I don't think Biger would meet with him.
I think he thinks he's an imbecile.
He thinks he's an imbecile.
You're probably right.
And
why would you?
And I think everything feels emotional.
It does not feel calculated.
And I think Iger has been quietly analyzing it and then
doing this.
They don't do things with, Disney does things with total calculation.
And I think they know what he's doing it for Iowa, the base in Iowa.
And they find that
repugnant.
And they don't care.
They don't care what he does.
It's just not
against them.
Like they're not using Disney as a, as a, you know, to smack around.
And you just can't smack around Disney.
I don't, I just feel like this is so outmatched in terms of quality of intellect and quality of just execution.
The judge in the case has struck down DeSantis' laws in the past, including one that restricted voting rights.
The issues around their employment in the state is they're the biggest employer, big taxpayer.
And, you know, you can argue about this Reedy Improvement District all all you want, but there hasn't been a real problem with it.
That's the other thing.
He has a solution in search of a problem.
And he doesn't need to then put a DeSantis board who's unqualified to run it.
Disney's been running it rather well, right?
They've been running it rather well and paid taxes, et cetera, like that.
And so, and there's lots of special innovation zones that tech companies want.
No one was complaining about Disney.
Nobody.
Nobody.
And people were complaining about an overreaction to COVID.
He ran through that.
People were complaining that a certain woke narrative had overtaken our schools.
Whether you believe those in those things or not, he stepped into, he ran a truck through those opportunities.
This was a bridge too far.
This will be seen as his undoing.
Even Nikki Haley had, I thought she had a statement on it.
She said about the Disney, she said, she said, come to South Dakota.
We're not woke, but we're not sanctimonious either.
South Carolina.
South Carolina.
South Carolina, excuse me.
South Carolina.
That's Christy Gnome or whatever.
Yeah, there you go.
Anyways, I just, this is, he's in serious damage control right now.
And
all I have to say is I want an Iger Bennett ticket in 2024.
Oh, yeah, that would be.
You know, he told me we don't need another white guy, and them's two of them.
So he said that explicitly on stage.
But, you know, I think this culture war stuff works only so far, right?
They've got to find the right targets.
Like they spent years on the bathroom thing that didn't work.
And then they went for the athlete thing with trans people.
That did work.
I think the boycotts on Disney, they used to always say this when they let gays in.
But what killed me, which I thought was so funny, is the day that he was doing this, Disney announced a massive gay event at Disney World.
And I was like,
you're not even trying not to troll this guy.
And, you know, this has been a fight for years, but Disney just has been very consistent on being friendly to gay and lesbian customers.
So what?
They are happy with all kinds of customers.
And also, I think Florida, distinctive, our governor, who is passing these, I mean, there's something quite depressing about this.
And that is the end of Governor DeSantis might be that he took on Disney.
Not the fact that he's trying to send women back to old Spain with what is a primitive
abortion law.
Not the fact that you can now, he passed under the cover of dark a law that says you can carry a concealed weapon without a permit.
If you want to terminate a pregnancy because of incest, you have to get a police report.
I mean, this stuff is just so vile.
And yet, and yet it's like, well, the thing that's actually going to take him down is taking on Disney.
And it's true.
The month doesn't work.
And the other thing is that he just, I think, underestimated.
Florida has a really robust and wonderful gay community.
And they drive a lot of business.
There's...
I mean, there's whole parts.
I've spent a lot of time in Key West, and the gay community is thriving there.
And I just can't believe at some point, the demo in democracy does does kick in here.
One would assume, but I'm thinking of the Weimar Republic where it was a huge Berlin gay community and then they killed them.
So, you know, I think it can go a lot of terrible ways.
But I would agree, this is dumb.
This is so that escalated fast.
Sorry, I'm sorry.
But there was, haven't you seen Cabaret?
Haven't you seen Cabaret Berlin stories?
Yeah, you're right.
No, people think it couldn't happen here.
It can.
I agree.
They can come at you.
But I do not think that that's where the country is.
We have obviously a much more vibrant democracy, a much more diverse democracy than they had in Weimar Republic.
And they had all kinds of economic issues post-war, all kinds of differences.
But they can come at you.
When I told you they were going to come at 12th graders, you said, no, they're not.
It's young kids.
And I was like, no, they're not.
It's everybody.
They're trying to win what they lost back.
And
they will stop at nothing.
They never go away.
They're like mold, these people.
I don't know.
But as it relates to Disneyland, Disneyland is exactly like sex with my ex.
I'd have to wait in line for an hour, and then I was told I wasn't big enough.
That's good, Disney humor.
Okay.
All right.
On that note, anyway, bye-bye, your nice work.
I got to say you're, oh, God.
And just thinking, the same show we'll have a senator on.
Yes, exactly.
All right.
Let's bring our friend to Pivot, speaking of which.
Senator Michael Bennett represents Colorado in the United States Senate, where he serves on the Select Committee on Intelligence.
He's also co-sponsor of the RESTRICT Act, which, if passed, could ban TikTok.
And full disclosure, Scott donated to the senator's 2020 presidential campaign.
I did not, Senator.
I'm really sorry, but welcome to Pivot.
Well, Scott's one of the only people in America that noticed that I had a presidential campaign.
I'm not sure.
Oh, yeah.
Which I deeply appreciate, and the donation as well.
Thank you.
In any case, you probably did a lot better than Ron DeSantis is about to do.
Anyway, ah, little joke, little tech joke.
Can I ask you this about Ron DeSantis?
How you can, I don't know.
Scott lives in this state part-time, but how you can claim that you're the freedom guy when you're banning abortion at six weeks when 75% of Floridians, including 60% of Republican Floridians, say they're against it, I don't understand.
That's the world we're living in right now.
Yeah, he's a conundrum, as they say.
He's a mystery wrapped in a conundrum.
Anyway, before we get into tech, we want to ask you some of the biggest news facing the Senate right now.
There are ethical concerns around two Supreme Court justices, Clarence Thomas, around Harlan Crowe and the travel and his mother's house, and et cetera, and Neil Gorsuch sold property to the head of a law firm shortly after confirmation.
Senators Markey and Blumenthal have called for Thomas to resign.
A handful of representatives have said the same.
Chief Justice Roberts has declined to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on the topic.
Should the Chief Justice testify, and does the Supreme Court need an enforceable code of ethics?
I mean, I think that's the most important thing: is that they should have an enforceable code of ethics, and they should be standing for that.
And the Chief Justice, I think, should have a particular responsibility for that.
One of the reasons why he's not testifying, I'm sure, is that he views it as an incursion
on their prerogatives as an independent branch of government.
Well, if they are going to be an independent branch of government, maybe they ought to think about setting up some rules that could give the American people some much-needed confidence in the Supreme Court.
So I hope they will do that.
I am a lawyer myself and really, really discouraged about the point where we've gotten, not just in terms of where the Supreme Court is, but where the Senate confirmation process has led us, which is to create just one more partisan food fight that the American people
aren't even paying any attention to anymore.
I think we collectively, we've done done damage to our own reputation and the reputation of the court as well.
Wouldn't you think it would be a food fight there, given how important the Supreme Court has been in abortion, for example, which you mentioned?
It should be.
Well, I'm not saying it shouldn't be a food fight, but I am saying that
it should.
There was a time.
at least when I was in law school, which wasn't actually that long ago, where these issues would be debated.
But if
a justice was qualified for the court,
they could get 95 votes or 98 votes.
And every time we did that, I think we reestablished the idea of the independence of the judiciary, something separate from our hopefully temporary and sane partisan politics.
And so I think that's an issue.
And I would say on the point of choice,
the true travesty here is that a 50-year campaign that was started when Ronald Reagan was president, that was was supported by Justice Scale and a bunch of other people for 50 years, has put three so-called originalists on the court, people whose ideology would have banned them from any service on any court in the land, and now they form a majority of the Supreme Court of the United States.
And on the case of abortion, taking the position that if it wasn't a right in 1868, it's not a right today.
If I had read that in a judicial
opinion when I was in law school, I would have thought I was reading the onion, not Justice Alito's opinion for the court, but that is Justice Alito's opinion for the court.
And the point I'm making is not just to bitch and moan, but to say that is the result of a 50-year effort that's been waged by national Republicans to put those folks on the Supreme Court of the United States so they could demolish Roe versus Wade, which is what they've done.
Should Justice Thomas resign?
I'm not.
You're not making a comment.
I'm not going to get into that.
No.
Okay, this is something something that Scott's talked about.
Diane Feinstein missed a vote that came out 50 to 49 with the Democrats losing.
Had she been there, the vote would have tied, and Vice President Harris would have been the tiebreaker.
Just for the sake of advancing the Democratic agenda, including judges and especially judges, should Senator Feinstein move aside and let other Democrats finish out her term?
Gavin Newsom would appoint a replacement, by the way.
Look, obviously,
that also, that's up to Senator Feinstein.
I serve on the intelligence committee with her.
I do think it is important for the United States Senate to be able to operate.
It's important for the Democratic majority to be able to put judges on the court.
And
we're going to have to come to
some sort of agreement that moves us forward on this.
And
I'm not in a position, thank goodness, to be in a place to make that decision on behalf of Dayed Feinstein or anybody else.
Well, if you were, what decision would you make?
Well, I'm not.
So
good job.
When Chuck moves somewhere else and there's another, you know, yeah.
I'm not going to make his job any harder than it already is.
Okay.
Good to be with you, Senator.
Before we talked about
the Restrict Act, there seems to be a lot of momentum around legislation involving age gating, social media.
Any thoughts?
Yeah.
I mean, as you know, Scott, I was a school superintendent before I was in this job.
And if you had asked me before COVID, like, what's the big change in schools from the time you were superintendent until today, I would have said mental health, mental health, mental health, mental health.
And that's before COVID.
Then we had COVID
on top of
the social media and what it's done to our kids over these years.
And now, you know, when I hear somebody in my office, which is not infrequently, tell me that somebody the age of my own kids, who are now 23, 22, and 18, that somebody's died, I no longer wonder whether that was a car accident or
leukemia.
My questions are, was it a suicide?
Was it
fentanyl?
Or was it guns?
That's the country we live in today with our kids.
And a massive amount of that.
You know, I had a mom who, you know, one of many, many, who said, I don't blame social media for everything that happened to my kid, the suicide that they have, but it had something to do with it.
And I think that you're seeing people in
Washington finally start to respond to the epidemic that exists today, that is ripping through
our young people.
And
we have to address it.
Do you think this bill that was just introduced by Josh Hawley and Senator Murphy, Chris Murphy, you know, the Communist Party in China just dictates and says young people can't do this.
And I know we age gate all kinds of things, you know, liquor, guns, movie going even.
Is this more problematic given it's speech-related?
Look, Look,
here's what I would do.
I mean, I wrote the first piece of legislation that would create a new regulatory body to
regulate these big digital media platforms.
And I still believe that's what we should do.
I think Congress will never do it well.
We will fuck it up.
if you excuse the expression.
And we would be much better off having something like the FCC
with
staffed by experts to help us us think about all these issues: the constitutional issues, you know, the civil rights issues, the antitrust issues, the mental health issues, the national security issues.
These are all today completely unregulated by the United States of America.
People are mad at me at my town hall sometimes because they've seen me talking about TikTok and they say, What about these other platforms?
What about these other platforms?
I say, you know what, you're right about that.
And that's why we should have an agency to do that.
And I think think until we do, we're going to have a hard time not legislating in a way that doesn't create unintended consequences or doesn't anticipate
every single permutation.
Even with a regulatory agency, we're going to have those problems.
Well, that gets us into TikTok and the RESTRICT Act.
Let's just say this RESTRICT Act, the bill would give the Secretary of Commerce the ability to ban foreign technologies and companies from operating in the U.S.
if they pose a threat to national security.
For some reason, I feel like foreign ownership rules are already in place, but talk about it because there's speculation, but we need the evidence.
And obviously you've seen evidence, but I guess everyone else has to in some fashion, correct?
So talk a little bit about that.
I think, yeah, everybody else has to.
The Restrict Act isn't targeted at TikTok, but it does make it possible for us to
consider inbound technology and inbound platforms like TikTok rather than just thinking about export controls of stuff going from the United States to other other places.
And that is what I'm a member of the Intelligence Committee.
That is in a sense what we're trying to address here because export controls are not enough when you're thinking about things like the importation of Huawei's technology or TikTok.
And I think that considerations for the
Commerce Department would include national security considerations, privacy considerations.
I think, you know, as people have talked about on your podcast before, you know, I think it's really legitimate to consider the way that the Chinese government might try to manipulate TikTok's users here to see, you know, issues like Hong Kong and
Taiwan their way.
And frankly, you already see that in my mind when you've got these television advertisements that are now running every single day in Washington, D.C., that are targeted at Congress saying, oh, my God, we're going to destroy every small business in America
if we turn off TikTok.
And this is a Beijing-controlled enterprise we're talking about who's lobbying on behalf of small business.
You think that's a problem, or I think that's a problem when there are 150 million people on TikTok?
Think about what that might look like six months from now or six years from now.
And that's why I hope the Commerce Department takes a very hard look at this.
So none of this legislation, there's fears of national, of overreach under the umbrella of national security with the Restrict Act, First Amendment rights with banning a platform.
But we've always had imperfect legislation or regulation, and it seems like there's one industry that's bigger by market cap than any industry in the world that more of us spend more time on, and yet there's a total absence of any regulation.
How did we get here where Democrats control or have controlled, you know, several houses of government for a long time, and yet we have been unable to get anything through.
Why is this unlike any industry with respect to our inability to have any type of regulation?
Well, it might not be like any industry.
I mean, it's possible.
We don't know the end of the story yet.
And it might feel a little bit today like the cigarette industry when that was something that just couldn't be regulated by anybody.
And these guys, you know, Scott, in a way,
your question answers itself because we have never seen, probably in human history, but certainly not in our history, we have never seen enterprises go from the size Facebook was when Mark Zuckerberg founded it, if he did, in his dormitory at Harvard,
to the size that it is today.
We've never seen Google
and the other companies that today comprise
50% of the market cap of the American stock market.
We've never seen that today.
So to me, I'm not surprised that Congress would be behind the eight ball.
And then, on top of that, you see the economic
domination that these firms are wreaking on the American economy.
But all of that suggests to me that we have to regulate.
But the reason to regulate, in my mind, is not for the sake of regulation.
It is for the first time in America to put the American people in a negotiation with Zuckerberg about our privacy rights, to put the American people in a negotiation with Zuckerberg about our economic rights to decide how we want to monetize our identities or those of our children and our families, to put the American people in a negotiation with these firms about our values around
the algorithms that they have imposed on our children, around our mental health, around our national security.
That's what we have to be in the business of
working on here.
And so I'm concerned as anybody is that we would legislate or regulate in a way that violated the second, the First Amendment or legislate or regulate in a way that wasn't aligned with American values.
But today, I believe these enterprises are acting in a way that on a whole host of issues are completely unaligned, not just with our values, but with the mental health of our children and with our national security.
Are you more worried about TikTok than you are them?
Because there's different issues.
They have an advertising business.
This is a foreign-owned entity.
I think I'm worried about them all.
I'm worried about them.
I'm worried about them all.
No, I just think, look, I think to Scott's point, these guys, look,
this may sound a little bit like an exaggeration.
I'm not, I don't think it is an exaggeration.
The small businesses in Boulder, Colorado are subject to more regulation than these guys are subject to.
And by by these guys, I certainly mean our own platforms, but I also mean a company that's owned by Bright Dance that could be reporting back to the CCP.
I sat in this office with you years ago, Karis Wisher, when you said to me that part of the problem here was that it's like we've, this was years ago, like we built a city that had no
regulation in it about how the sewers would work, about how the how the infrastructure work.
Well, I have to say, you were 100%
right in what you said.
Yes.
But the cost has been much higher than I think
any of us could imagine.
Much higher.
Speaking of costs, one of the nation's most influential social media networks is owned by a man who removed the state-affiliated labels from Russian and Chinese news accounts, proposed a Ukrainian peace plan that read like a Russian talking point, does billions of dollars in China with another one of his companies, controls a game-changing technology in the Ukraine war, misrepresents the relationship of his social network to U.S.
intelligence agency.
Does Twitter pose a threat to national security?
Could it be banned under the Restrict Act?
I'd love your thoughts on this because I'm sure you're watching carefully.
I don't know.
It could not be banned under the Restrict Act because it is not
coming from obnoxious.
Yeah.
Well, but it's look, I mean, we should be,
Twitter has had a profound effect on our democracy, And it's not obvious to me, may have been to other people, may have been obvious to you.
It wasn't obvious to me that social media was necessarily going to have as detrimental an effect as it has on our democracy and on our democratic way of life,
that it could have been a democratizing influence in our society.
And I still think that's possible.
I was with college students yesterday where I was begging them.
I said, somebody in your generation has to figure this out because nobody in my generation can figure it out to make it into something that
can actually support and strengthen the democracy instead of eroding it or sending a whole bunch of people to Washington, D.C.
to invade the Capitol under false pretenses.
But I really do think, I mean, I know that
I have maybe a different view than my children have about the right to privacy.
That's possible.
We may have a generational difference on that.
I'm asking about this particular owner, Elon Musk.
I mean, he's got a lot of influence all over your areas.
Just love your thoughts on that.
All the reason more why we've got to,
I think the most, the thing that we could do that would be most substantially or most significantly important, whether you're talking about Elon Musk or anybody else, is having a regulatory body in Washington, D.C.
staffed by experts whose job is to put the American people in a negotiation with Elon Musk,
in the negotiation with Mark Zuckerberg.
None of these people have ever had a negotiation with anybody about privacy, about the economics of their entire business model.
They never have, and they should.
And they're treating it like, you know, the robber barons of old who got to dictate all of this for the American people.
I don't think the American people are going to take it anymore.
And the reason is not the same kind of environmental toxins that we faced in prior generations, but the kind of toxins that have affected our children's mental health.
That's something that parents aren't going to stand for anymore.
I know you have,
your emotions run deep here.
Your mother was separated from her parents in Nazi-occupied Poland.
What are your thoughts on America's role in supporting Ukraine and what is another invasion of Europe?
You know, it's such an interesting question for me because my mom is still alive, Scott.
And I appreciate you talking about her.
She's 85 years old.
She just spent a month in the hospital and she's out of it.
She's at home.
She can't believe she's lived long enough to see another land war in Europe.
But what she would say is we have to stick in there.
We got to make sure we're doing everything that we can do to support
the courage of
the Ukrainian people.
And I think we do.
And by the way, all these threats, these are all related.
These are not unrelated questions.
All these threats we're seeing
to our democracy and the fragility of our democracy, we have all that on the one hand.
And on the other hand, you have, in the case of Putin's invasion of Ukraine, a stumbling,
incoherent, despotic action on Putin's part that was caused in part because of who Putin is, but also because he's sitting on top of a totalitarian society.
And that society wouldn't tell him the truth about the quality of his army, about the way the Ukrainians would fight back, about how the rest of the world would come together.
Wouldn't tell him the truth.
And now the world has come together.
And you've got people living in free countries all over the world in democracies who are saying to their elected officials people like me do more do more do more so what i would say is the fight is on that democracy is rising to the occasion that it's a demonstration that we might be fragile we might be down but we're not out and i think the elections last november in the united states say the same thing so i think we ought to be hopeful about about where we're headed.
I think that we ought to be supportive of the Ukrainian people who have stood up here in ways that never could have imagined.
And only they could maybe have imagined, because like my mom, they went through the brutality of the Second World War, and they know what's at stake.
When you have a tyrant on the march, we need to stand with them.
Given all the huge issues we face,
given this moment in time, given that 70% of Americans do not want to see Biden run again and the majority of Democrats do not want to see him run again, don't you think it would be
in the spirit of democracy to have several people throw their hat in the ring here and say that we need the American people to decide who should be the Democratic nominee for president?
I think the practical reality of this, Scott, is that he's the one guy out of 330 million people who beat Donald Trump.
I think that he has a record that is better than virtually any record in modern American history to run on.
I just ran on that record myself running for re-election in Colorado.
It was nice to have a chance for once to be able to run on stuff like capping drug prices for seniors, like requiring Medicare to negotiate drug price on behalf of the American people, like the most important bipartisan infrastructure bill since Eisenhower was our president, like the CHIPS Act, which is bringing back an industry the first time since Reagan was president, like our climate bill.
And Joe Biden has been president during all that stuff.
I think that he's got a record to run on, and I think that he's going to beat Donald Trump.
And so I'm glad he's running, and I sure hope he wins.
All right, Scott's, it's not going to work, Scott.
Scott keeps trying to get him to not run.
Come on.
Anyway, Senator Bennett, you'd have made a great president, too, and maybe you will.
Keep running.
Keep running.
Thanks for having me, you guys.
Keep fighting the good fight, Senator.
All right.
Thanks, Senator Bennett.
I appreciate it.
See you down the road thanks guys isn't he smart he's so smart i like that senator bennett every time i i mean this sincerely every time i i hear from or have the opportunity to spend any time with senator bennett i just feel better about america yeah yeah all right scott one more quick break we'll be back for predictions
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Okay, Scott, we're going to do do some bridges.
I have a prediction.
I have decided to have one today.
So I was fascinated by Tucker Carlson's video on Twitter.
It looked like it was from Wayne's World, like he was down in the basement.
It was little, he's so small on Twitter.
He's such a tiny little thing.
He's like, and I thought, oh, Elon's going to fund him.
That's what's, he's going to, you know, he's been talking about having a media company and voice.
I feel like there's something going to, I don't think Tucker knew this was happening.
So there weren't necessarily plans in place, but if I had a guess, that's one of the, you know, and of of course he got an offer from RT, the Russian news, of course, because
he's their best friend.
But I thought, oh, Elon will do something with him.
He's an opportunity because he's got a big following and he could be like Joe Rogan.
And if he brought into Twitter, I just, I don't know.
I can't stop thinking about it.
And I've heard, you know, you've heard rumblings of it and this and that.
So some people were telling me there were some talks.
I don't know.
What do you think?
We, great minds, right?
It must be, we must be destined to go on a cruise together and announce Horpak because
I agree with you.
My prediction was going to be that
Elon and Twitter are going to launch a TV show or some sort of media property
centered on Tucker Carlson.
I think he was setting it up for that, saying that traditional media is lame.
We don't have a voice.
And also, I just, I feel as if Twitter has gone so red pill and
that Elon is fine with that.
And I think no, I think he's a perfect opportunity for Elon.
I think he's a perfect opportunity.
100%.
And he'll say to Tucker, look, I claim it's worth $20 billion.
I'll give you 1% of it.
That's $200 million.
And I want you to start a daily 30 or 60-minute show on Twitter.
Yeah.
It makes totally.
You know what?
It's a good idea.
It is a good idea.
Someone was saying, I like Tucker.
I don't like, I think Tucker Arlen is vile, but you can't deny he's got appeal to the audience that he has.
They're terrible people, but nonetheless.
And I do think that
I think it was interesting, though, I don't think he'll still have the same impact because he's small.
Like he looks so small in that little thing.
And I thought he doesn't have the same thrust, so to speak, for rockets as he does on a big platform like Fox.
And so I'm not sure the Fox audience will find him necessarily.
So he's got to really do some heavy lifting to
become sort of Joe Rogan-esque.
And I don't think it's as easy.
What I really was irritated by in that particular little speech he gave, besides wearing his weird clothes that he wears, he should loosen it up, was that he used to talk about, no, I've spent the past few days looking at TV and it really is stupid.
I'm like, you were in the center of stupid.
You were like king of stupid.
The other thing you notice when you take a little time off is how unbelievably stupid most of the debates you see on television are.
They're completely irrelevant.
They mean nothing.
In five years, we won't even remember that we had them.
Trust me, as someone who's participated.
And yet at the same time, and this is the amazing thing, the undeniably big topics, the ones that will define our future, get virtually no discussion at all.
And so him just pretending like, now I see that it's the debate is not really that, was kind of disengaged.
I'm not, he is disengaged.
What am I talking about?
He says he hates Trump and then he praises him in person on the air.
So that was interesting to me.
I think he's small in the thing.
Do you think it'll work?
I don't know.
What history tells us is that these individuals without their platforms become
become increasingly small.
And
that they're just, well, let me put it this way.
Name a Fox host that has gone on to bigger and better things.
I think they've made a lot of money.
I think Bill O'Reilly does pretty well, but he doesn't have influence, right?
Megan Kelly screams away from her.
He's got a book franchise.
He's got a book franchise.
Megan Kelly's got her podcast.
I think it does pretty well financially.
I don't know, but you never know.
You know, Glenn Beck, he's sort of screaming away somewhere into the abyss.
You know, we'll see what happens with Dan Bongino.
Maybe, maybe he ropes a couple of these people in, right?
And makes a new fan.
Everything they do is a different version of Troop Beverly Hills.
And that is, Shelly Long decides she's too big for the greatest sitcom in history at that point.
Cheers.
Shelly Long.
Come up with a better.
Okay, Shelly Long.
You got to move on from Shelly Long.
So, so do you think, so could he rope in more people?
Dan Bongino just got fired.
You could bring in Maria Bartaroma, who's still at Fox, but there's lots of rumors.
No one who's there is going to, they're going to let, they're going to ride out that whole Fox thing, recognizing at some point they'll probably get fired and get a big severance payment.
No one's going to leave under their own volition, but 100%,
Dan and Tucker and Elon will structure an interesting deal for them and say,
I've got 350.
I mean, the thing that's so amazing about, or I find so striking, is that these audiences,
Tucker Carlson had the biggest audience in cable television at 3 million.
Anderson Cooper, who's the star of CNN, is a million.
I mean,
we talk about CNN,
and this goes to Senator Bennett's point about the need for regulation.
We are obsessed with CNN and Fox.
And the reality is they're a dumpster fire compared to what happens on Instagram and Meta every day in terms of actual influence.
TikTok, 1.7 billion people.
Okay, Lucky's on Fox two hours a day.
Two.
Try eight, but go ahead.
But she's one of, she's one of a couple million people.
Relative, we are obsessed with cable television.
And you know what?
It's a pimple on the elephant of actual media and influence.
I agree.
Anyway, we'll see.
We'll see if he has influence.
I don't know if he will translate.
I think others will, right?
I think we had Joe Rogan of this, and I wonder, or someone like that, who it is.
And we'll see.
But that's where he's headed.
It's so odd.
That thing was like, it was a big sign.
Anyway, good luck, Tucker.
We want to hear from you.
Send us your questions about business tech or whatever's on your mind.
Go to nymag.com slash pivot to submit a question for the show or call 855-51-PIVOT.
Scott, that's the show.
And an excellent show we've had.
We'll be back next week for more.
Can you read us out?
Today's show was produced by Larry Naiman, Evan Angle, and Taylor Griffin.
Ernie Andrew Tott engineered this episode.
Thanks also to Drew Burroughs and Meal Severio.
Make sure you subscribe to the show wherever you listen to podcasts.
Thanks for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine and Box Media.
We'll be back next week for another breakdown of all things tech and business for PAC, making the world a better place and embracing Scott's hobby.
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