TDS Time Machine | President Elon

36m

Take a look back at the decade the last month has felt like, with coverage of unelected billionaire bureaucrat Elon Musk, and his quest to remake the U.S. government. 

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Runtime: 36m

Transcript

Speaker 1 This is an iHeart podcast.

Speaker 2 You're listening to Comedy Central.

Speaker 4 What do you think of when you think of the future?

Speaker 4 Is it space travel?

Speaker 5 Robots?

Speaker 4 Trucks with the word cyber in front of them? Whatever your vision, there is one man working to make it a reality. He's part Thomas Edison, part Iron Man, part annoying dude in the group chat,

Speaker 4 and he's anything but your standard CEO.

Speaker 3 I changed my title to

Speaker 6 Techno King.

Speaker 3 And by the way, this is a formal SEC filing. I'm legally, I'm formal, whatever, Techno King.

Speaker 3 I just did that as kind of like a joke.

Speaker 4 Yes, he's the Techno King, but as a joke. And soon we'll all be his serfs.

Speaker 7 But in a funny way.

Speaker 4 Because while he may be an eccentric, satellite-launching, terminally online billionaire who wants to plug people into computers and build a vast network of underground tunnels, it's not like he's some kind of super villain.

Speaker 3 Eventually you can transform Mars into an Earth-like planet.

Speaker 8 Drop thermonuclear weapons over the poles. Well, maybe a little.

Speaker 4 So strap in, turn on the autopilot, but keep your hands on the steering wheel in case of pedestrians.

Speaker 4 Because this is the daily showography of Elon Musk, visionary future man. Man.

Speaker 4 Elon Musk was born in Pretoria, South Africa in earth year 1971. His father made a fortune in construction and emerald mining because Africa's resources are like free money for white people.

Speaker 4 Badly bullied in school, Elon overcame many hardships, although unlike other South African celebrities, he didn't make his childhood into a whole thing.

Speaker 4 By age 10, he was learning to program computers. At 12, he built a video game he called Blastar, which started his lifelong love of inventing things that already exist.

Speaker 4 Soon after, he left South Africa and made his way to a booming Silicon Valley, where he launched his first company, Zip2, which he eventually sold to Compact Computer for $305 million.

Speaker 4 Like so many tech entrepreneurs, he earned his unimaginable wealth by doing something invaluable for society, selling a startup you've never heard of to a company that doesn't exist anymore.

Speaker 4 Musk celebrated by buying himself a million-dollar supercar.

Speaker 3 There are 62 McLarens in the world, and I will own one of them.

Speaker 4 Yes, Musk was so rich, he could afford to have a midlife crisis while he was still in his 20s. Sadly, his new toy wouldn't last long.

Speaker 3 I didn't really know how to drive the McLaren because it's like a difficult car to drive. And I floored it and did a lane change, and the back wheels broke loose, and the car spun around.

Speaker 3 And then we hit the embankment and knocked the car into the air, which continued spinning like a discus, like three feet in the air.

Speaker 4 That's right. Musk's McLaren crashed worse than Dodgecoin after Saturday Night Live.

Speaker 4 For his next act, Musk created X.com, which would later become PayPal, the app your uncle had to use because Venmo and Cash App won't work on a Zenopia.

Speaker 4 Musk took the money he made from that business and built an empire of cool-ass shit.

Speaker 4 Rocket ships, electric cars, solar farms, artificial intelligence, neurotechnology, and underground highways, all while dating celebrities and starting a record label to release his own EDM track.

Speaker 4 A banger all the more impressive considering Musk had clearly never heard music before. Yes, Elon Musk refuses to stay mislane, much like a Tesla on autopilot.

Speaker 9 Download is changing lanes by itself.

Speaker 4 Tesla's groundbreaking cars, looted for speed!

Speaker 7 Go!

Speaker 4 Brought unprecedented power range and sexiness to electric vehicles, a market previously reserved for nerds who cared about the environment.

Speaker 4 And Musk even promised the dream of full self-driving technology.

Speaker 3 No hands, no feet, nothing.

Speaker 4 Like promised repeatedly.

Speaker 3 I'm confident that in less than a year, you'll be able to go from highway on-ramp to highway exit without touching any controller.

Speaker 6 Holy shit, it just ran that red light.

Speaker 9 I'm confident that within three years,

Speaker 6 the car will be able to take you from point to point, and you can be asleep the whole time.

Speaker 5 Holy f

Speaker 6 Jesus!

Speaker 6 I think we're basically

Speaker 3 less than two years away from complete autonomy.

Speaker 7 Oh, shit.

Speaker 6 Shit, we hit that.

Speaker 3 Cross-country from LA to New York by the end of the year, fully autonomous.

Speaker 11 I'm extremely confident of achieving full autonomy and releasing it to the Tesla customer base next year.

Speaker 4 But Musk can't stop dreaming big, even when he probably should.

Speaker 4 Oh, my f ⁇ ing God. Like when SpaceX made history with the world's first reusable rocket technology and then used it to launch the first car into space?

Speaker 4 Technically the second if you count Elon Musk's McLaren. Musk's special brand of achievement has won a totally normal and healthy fan base around the world.
But success didn't come easy.

Speaker 4 He had to overcome a lot of doubters, starting with himself.

Speaker 9 I don't want to give the impression that I thought Tesla would be successful from the beginning. I actually thought we would fail.

Speaker 3 We were only a few days from bankruptcy.

Speaker 9 It was literally two days.

Speaker 4 It pushed him to the brink. Musk could have gone from being a multi-billionaire all the way down to the very lowest rung of society.
Millionaire.

Speaker 4 But through the years, Musk kept his many ventures going with little more than his can-do attitude.

Speaker 12 Oh, oh, Jesus, sorry.

Speaker 4 And billions of dollars in government subsidies.

Speaker 4 Today, Musk isn't merely the richest man in the world. His net worth is higher than the GDP of most countries.
Should Musk be a country?

Speaker 7 He does have a national anthem.

Speaker 4 But don't worry, it's not like he's got an army or anything.

Speaker 3 I went to Russia to look at buying a refurbished ICVM, which is a very trippy experience.

Speaker 4 Okay, maybe worry a little.

Speaker 4 And he's not just great at making money, he's also an expert at saving it by paying almost nothing in taxes for three years and then actually nothing in 2018.

Speaker 4 Of course, there's always haters who like to nitpick Musk's business methods.

Speaker 13 There are charges of unreported injuries, excessive hours, abusive conditions, injuries on the job, breathing toxic fumes, over 100 ambulance calls.

Speaker 7 I don't think that's correct.

Speaker 7 I mean, I was literally living in the factory.

Speaker 7 If those like toxic fumes, I'm breathing them.

Speaker 4 Okay.

Speaker 4 Exactly. Does Musk seem like a man who is inhaling toxic fumes?

Speaker 4 But Elon Musk also understands that all work and no play make X Ash A12 a dull boy. And like any well-adjusted person, his favorite pastime is spending 12 to 14 hours a day on Twitter.

Speaker 4 So it made sense when Musk announced that he would buy the social media platform, and even more sense when the deal spun out of control and crashed into an embankment.

Speaker 4 But Musk doesn't only use Twitter for fun, he uses it to make the world a better place. Or at least promised to.
It's where he promised to solve world hunger, end traffic.

Speaker 4 fight COVID, and fix Flint's water. And when a Thai soccer team was stuck in a cave, Elon even promised to rescue those kids from the guy who rescued them.

Speaker 4 That's why Musk is such a champion of free speech. If you can't randomly accuse someone who is saving people's lives of being a pedo guy, does civil discourse even exist?

Speaker 4 Elon Musk is dedicated to building a brighter future for all humanity. It's why he backed the most futuristic presidential candidate of 2020.

Speaker 4 It's why he's so dedicated to turning every aspect of our lives into a platform for his dumb jokes. From robots to cybernetic implants to AI

Speaker 4 to space travel to unfettered social media, Elon Musk is building a future that humanity only imagined in the movies.

Speaker 3 And who wouldn't want to live there?

Speaker 9 You basically have to hate humanity if you don't like that future.

Speaker 4 And that's why Elon Musk truly is a visionary future man.

Speaker 14 Zuck, Bezos, Tim Cook, Elon, Tic Tac guy,

Speaker 14 Google guy,

Speaker 2 the six guys who control maybe 20% of the world's wealth and 100% of your nudes.

Speaker 2 You don't need to pretend with me.

Speaker 2 I don't know what he's talking about.

Speaker 2 Delete, delete, delete.

Speaker 2 Populism, ladies and gentlemen. Shouldn't this gathering be happening in a volcano's lair near Zurich?

Speaker 2 Or are we just open source Illuminati now? Where's the conspiracy fund in that? Honestly. There is not a useful app of communication not controlled by at least one of these individuals.

Speaker 2 And you may not be concerned that they've all ponied up a million dollars to be sitting there and are kissing the ass of a president who openly threatens non-ass kissers. But trust me,

Speaker 2 shit's gonna get weird.

Speaker 7 Even by that afternoon, shit got weird.

Speaker 17 This appearance of Elon Musk at an earlier Trump rally is getting loads of attention because of a one-armed gesture he made.

Speaker 15 This one really matters.

Speaker 16 And I just want to say thank you for making it happen.

Speaker 15 Thank you.

Speaker 15 Okay.

Speaker 2 Charitably, I'm going to say that was just an awkward, my heart goes out to you gesture.

Speaker 2 Any of you might have done it like this.

Speaker 2 You know, even Taylor Swift has done that, you know, my heart, but she almost never does the goes out to you.

Speaker 15 Like,

Speaker 2 just always stays with, but you know, listen, it's

Speaker 2 nerve-wracking day.

Speaker 2 You're not normally a public speaker.

Speaker 2 It's a one-off gesture. Please try not to use it again.

Speaker 2 Son of a bitch!

Speaker 2 You really want to make sure the people in the back see it, I guess.

Speaker 2 I'm just going to be generous and say, maybe that was Elon's attempt at dabbing on the haters.

Speaker 7 I don't.

Speaker 2 By the way, do people still dab on haters? Is that...

Speaker 2 Was that a very old man? Okay.

Speaker 2 Wasn't that a thing at one time?

Speaker 2 no I think I think it's important in these troubled times to continue to dab on the heaters

Speaker 1 we all know Donald Trump isn't a details kind of guy we elected him to come up with big brilliant ideas like renaming the Gulf of Mexico No one else could have thought of that or should have thought of that but it's okay that he's not big on details because during the campaign he promised us that he knew a guy.

Speaker 18 I'm going to appoint Elon Musk, who's a fantastic guy, to lead a government efficiency commission tasked with saving trillions of dollars in fraud, waste, and abuse. We have tremendous fat.

Speaker 18 Tremendous fat.

Speaker 1 Don't take the bait, Desi, don't take the bait. Be the bigger person, be the bigger person.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 That's right, Elon Musk, the world's richest man and guy who cheers in the wrong parts of saving private Ryan.

Speaker 1 Trump promised us that he'd give Elon full access to the federal government, pull it to the side and get all up in it.

Speaker 1 And unlike his wedding vows, this is a promise he kept.

Speaker 21 Elon Musk's sweeping push to make over the federal government, sparking Democratic panic and warnings of a constitutional crisis.

Speaker 23 Now we have learned that his team has gained access to something extraordinarily sensitive, the system that the Treasury Department uses to disperse almost every check and expenditure of any kind made by the U.S.

Speaker 16 government.

Speaker 21 That is a vast database with millions of Americans' personal information on it.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Yeah, Elon Musk has access to your social security number, and that is not cool. If you want our personal data, Elon, you go buy it off the dark web like everyone else, okay?

Speaker 1 Now you might be thinking, I don't want white nationalist Tony Stark to have sole control of the inner workings of the federal government, but relax. It's not just Elon.
He has a fully equipped team.

Speaker 20 Longtime government employees this week were shocked to find that their new supervisors from Elon Musk's Doge department include recent college and high school graduates between 19 and 24 years old.

Speaker 20 One of the young men is apparently a former intern at Musk's Neuralink company, who goes by the online handle Big Balls.

Speaker 1 Great! Big Balls has my social security number. Now I feel better.

Speaker 1 I know we complained about our leaders being too old, but doesn't this go a little too far in the other direction? Surely there must be a middle ground somewhere between crypto bros and cryptkeepers.

Speaker 1 Not only that, Musk has been installing his big balls in a whole bunch of little-known agencies that are crucial in actually running the government, the GSA, the OPM, the OMB, the OC, and SVU.

Speaker 1 And of course, the big question about this takeover, and the question we'll be asking ourselves a lot over the next four years, is: is this legal? Which brings me to our news segment: Is that legal?

Speaker 1 To help us out, we go to our very own Troy Iwata.

Speaker 1 Troy,

Speaker 1 thank you for acting as our resident legal expert.

Speaker 24 You can count on me, Desi.

Speaker 25 I'm versed in legal statutes. I have access to a network of law professors, and I'm wearing a bow tie.

Speaker 5 Perfect.

Speaker 1 Can you help us find out if it's legal for Musk and his lost boys to access the sensitive information of the federal government?

Speaker 25 That is a beautiful question, Desi.

Speaker 24 It doesn't sound legal, but nothing does anymore.

Speaker 25 Let me tell you what, I'll do some research and I'll get back to you.

Speaker 16 Oh, okay, great.

Speaker 1 Well, we'll check back in in a minute. Thank you, Troy.

Speaker 1 Now, Elon Musk isn't just going to get full access to the federal government just to sit back and watch it function like he's some sort of cuck. No, he's going to jump in there and do some cutting.

Speaker 22 This weekend, Musk taking aim at the U.S. Agency for International Development, or U.S.AID, which is in charge of dispensing tens of billions of dollars in foreign aid.

Speaker 23 USAID employees are waking up this morning to an email notice telling them not to show up to work today as Musk says he is shutting the agency down.

Speaker 1 Yes, the richest man in the world is cutting off aid to poor countries. Why can't you just be a normal billionaire and co-host Shark Tank or run an NBA team into the ground?

Speaker 1 Now, I'm not saying there's not some cuts to be made in foreign aid spending. You just don't want to throw the baby out with the bath water.
Or

Speaker 1 what's the expression I'm looking for?

Speaker 26 As we dug into USAID, it became apparent that what we have here is not an apple with a worm in it, but we have actually just a ball of worms.

Speaker 26 And so at the point at which you don't merely, like, if you've got an apple that's got a worm in it, maybe you can take the worm out. But if you've got actually just a ball of worms,

Speaker 26 it's hopeless. And USAID is a ball of worms.

Speaker 26 There is no apple.

Speaker 26 And when there there is no apple,

Speaker 26 you've just got to basically get rid of the whole thing.

Speaker 1 Okay, we get it. We get the metaphor.
You don't have to keep saying worms over and over again. You know, I have a metaphor too.
Elon Musk's charisma reminds me of a ball of worms.

Speaker 1 Of course, USAID was codified by an act of Congress. So if Trump thinks thinks he can have Elon Musk kill it, he must have a strong legal reason for why he can do that without an act of Congress.

Speaker 12 Will it take an act of Congress to do away with USAID or people in the USA?

Speaker 7 I don't know. I don't think so.

Speaker 1 Or not. Why should he know? He's just the president.

Speaker 1 Fortunately, we have a legal expert who can help answer that question. Let's go back to Troy Iwata.

Speaker 16 What?

Speaker 1 Troy, I got another one for you. Is it legal for the president to shut down USAID without an act of Congress?

Speaker 24 Oh, I'm not done looking at the Treasury Department thing.

Speaker 1 Well, Troy, we kind of need to know this now. We have to keep up with Trump.

Speaker 17 Okay, okay, so should I do that question first?

Speaker 1 No, do both first.

Speaker 25 Okay, this is just, it's going to take a lot of work, so I have to.

Speaker 1 Thank you, Troy. Thank you.

Speaker 1 Now, obviously, Republicans are standing by Musk for the most part. They say that Trump ran on cutting spending, and this is all just a part of that.

Speaker 1 But is there perhaps a senator who could make that point in the weirdest, creepiest way possible?

Speaker 27 I like omelets. I mean, I really like omelets.
I could eat an omelette at every meal.

Speaker 2 I like omelets better than sex.

Speaker 15 Not really, but you get the point.

Speaker 27 I like omelets.

Speaker 15 You can't make an omelette without breaking some eggs.

Speaker 1 Did we really have to learn all about this guy's sex life just so he could get to a common expression?

Speaker 1 I can only climax when someone steps on my balls.

Speaker 15 Anyway, there's no use crying over spilt milk.

Speaker 1 Look, I don't know if I understand Senator Kennedy's metaphor, but I definitely understand why he's been banned from Denny's.

Speaker 1 Anyway, if you're looking for Senator Kennedy's wife, she's the woman in the grocery store yelling at the eggs. You stay away from my husband, you pastry slut.

Speaker 1 I'm just kidding. I'm sure she prefers eggs to having sex with him, too.

Speaker 1 But Elon Musk isn't the only one having people finger-banging their eggs Florentine with excitement.

Speaker 1 Donald Trump is also reducing the government workforce, although his interests seem to be less about cost-cutting and more about sweet, sweet revenge.

Speaker 19 Tremendous unrest inside the FBI as prosecutors and agents who worked on the January 6th investigation are being targeted.

Speaker 7 It looks like a wholesale purge of the FBI.

Speaker 23 As you know, already the eight top officials at the Federal Bureau of Investigation have either been fired or forced to resign.

Speaker 23 Now, the FBI is being asked to produce a list of every employee who worked on any case related to January 6th. I am told this is some 6,000 FBI employees all told.

Speaker 23 What the f?

Speaker 1 These agents were doing their job enforcing the law and now they're getting fired? That is not how it works. I cannot believe I have to explain firing to the star of the apprentice.

Speaker 1 That was your whole fake job.

Speaker 1 And this is obviously just the beginning because Trump is going to be targeting everyone that's ever come after after him. And I just want to say, I'm not scared.
So Mr. Trump, bring it on, okay?

Speaker 1 Bring it on.

Speaker 1 That's coming from me, Jordan Klepper, K-L-E-P-P-E-R.

Speaker 1 Now, obviously, of course, the big question over

Speaker 1 Trump firing the FBI agents is, is that legal?

Speaker 7 Troy? What?

Speaker 16 I'm still doing the other stuff.

Speaker 1 Don't worry about that stuff, but also finish that stuff and add on this new stuff.

Speaker 1 Find out if the president's executive powers include the termination of officials ordered by the former Attorney General to investigate the criminal actions of his accomplices.

Speaker 25 I didn't get any of what you just said.

Speaker 24 Okay, I need to get my notepad.

Speaker 1 The truth is, practically everything Trump is doing these days is in a legal gray zone. Just today, he announced an executive order dismantling the Department of Education.

Speaker 1 He started a sovereign wealth fund. He's considering deporting U.S.
prisoners to El Salvador, and he's ordered billions of gallons of water to be wasted in Central California. Troy?

Speaker 18 Oh my God!

Speaker 16 You can't be serious.

Speaker 1 Is the sovereign wealth education citizen deporting water wasting legal?

Speaker 14 How many more questions are there going to be?

Speaker 1 Eight more every hour for the next four years.

Speaker 15 Jesus Christ!

Speaker 16 You're going to find out in a second if it's legal for me to blow my brains out on the air.

Speaker 16 Well, is it? I don't know.

Speaker 1 Troy, look, I know, I know this is a hectic pace, but it's important that we find out the answers so we can be as informed as possible about whether this administration's administration's actions are legal.

Speaker 1 Don't you agree,

Speaker 1 Troy?

Speaker 1 Wait.

Speaker 7 Yo,

Speaker 8 what's up?

Speaker 8 Troy got fired by Elon Musk.

Speaker 1 What?

Speaker 1 Is that legal for Elon Musk to fire one of our employees?

Speaker 8 Of course it is. Everything Elon does is legal, bro.

Speaker 1 Wait, who are you? Are you Big Balls?

Speaker 8 No.

Speaker 8 Of course not. Big Balls was my fraternity brother.

Speaker 8 You can call me Floppy Taint.

Speaker 5 God damn it.

Speaker 1 Floppy Taint, everyone.

Speaker 16 For weeks, people have been raising alarms about how Trump seems to be handing way too much power over to Elon Musk. And yesterday, Trump replied, I hear you.

Speaker 16 You want me to give more power to Elon Musk?

Speaker 28 President Trump's setting new guidelines for hiring in the federal workforce while giving more power to Elon Musk and his team at the Department of Government Efficiency, or Doge.

Speaker 28 A new executive order directs government agencies to pursue large-scale cuts, saying they now need hiring approval from Doge.

Speaker 16 Yes.

Speaker 16 Elon Musk is now in charge of all government hirelings. Hirants.
Hirants.

Speaker 16 Sorry. I didn't say say that right.
Right. I didn't say it right.

Speaker 16 Yeah, okay. Okay.

Speaker 16 I don't know why I keep Hitler misspeaking.

Speaker 16 I don't know why I keep misspeaking.

Speaker 16 So this was already a pretty unusual thing for a president to do. But Trump being Trump, he had to make it even more ridiculous by introducing it with a full-on circus act in the Oval Office.

Speaker 16 And look at this scene. Musk is holding court with his hands tinted like a Bond villain, probably to stop him from doing a Nazi salute, with

Speaker 16 his four-year-old child in tow. I mean, that poor kid, his dad literally runs SpaceX, and Elon took him to a meeting on federal spending.

Speaker 10 Dad, are we going to get to see the rockets?

Speaker 16 No, son, we're going to discuss budgets because I'm a shitty dad.

Speaker 16 I mean, everything about this event was so bizarre. Trump was sitting quietly for half an hour, retreating to his happy place, thinking about Arnold Palmer's giant Doge.

Speaker 16 And I mean, and who thought cloning Stephen Miller was a good idea? I mean, is it for spare parts?

Speaker 16 I mean, they look like a before and even more before picture.

Speaker 16 Okay? I mean.

Speaker 16 Okay, but all right.

Speaker 16 Leaving aside this Renaissance painting done by the dogs playing poker guy,

Speaker 16 it's good that we have Elon Musk here because we've been watching him slashing programs and shuttering agencies for a month now and we can finally ask Elon, why are you doing this?

Speaker 3 If the people cannot vote and have their will be decided by their elected representatives in the form of the President and the Senate and the House, then we don't live in a democracy.

Speaker 3 We live in a bureaucracy. So it's incredibly important that the President, the House, and the Senate decide what happens, as opposed to a large unelected bureaucracy.

Speaker 5 Wow.

Speaker 15 What? Wow.

Speaker 16 I mean, you see why this guy's a genius.

Speaker 16 You don't want an unelected bureaucrat running the country. It makes a lot of sense.
No questions here. I do have one question, though.

Speaker 16 Is it that you?

Speaker 16 I mean,

Speaker 14 am I going crazy?

Speaker 16 Because it feels like I'm watching Drake sing not like us at karaoke.

Speaker 15 Does he not know?

Speaker 16 Is having this one unaccountable bureaucrat in charge better than having those other unaccountable bureaucrats in charge? Because

Speaker 16 at least the others have to follow transparency laws. The only thing transparent about Doge is Elon's skin.
I mean,

Speaker 16 his financial disclosure is being kept secret.

Speaker 16 Doge is exempt from open records laws and when someone on Twitter merely identified some of the people who work for Doge, Elon suspended their account and said, you have committed a crime, which we tried to fact check with career officials at the FBI, but they're all working at a Panera now.

Speaker 16 So,

Speaker 16 Elon. I gotta tell you, I don't think you're being that transparent.

Speaker 3 So all of our actions are are maximally transparent.

Speaker 15 In fact, I don't think there's been,

Speaker 3 I don't know of a case where an organization has been more transparent than the Doge organization.

Speaker 3 And I fully expect to be scrutinized and get a daily proctology exam. Oh!

Speaker 3 Well,

Speaker 16 I did the exam and what an asshole.

Speaker 16 You know what?

Speaker 16 I don't want to give you a proctology exam. I just want to know what you're doing.
Because another advantage of federal bureaucrats is that they can't have conflicts of interest.

Speaker 2 Whereas you seem to have every conflict of interest.

Speaker 16 SpaceX has government contracts. Tesla is under government oversight.
X is under government investigation. And his hair plugs are being investigated by the Department of No One's Buying This.

Speaker 16 You're basically a walking conflict of interest. Is that not a huge

Speaker 10 problem?

Speaker 7 Well, all of our actions are

Speaker 3 fully public. So if you see anything, you say, like, wait a second, hey, Elon, that seems like maybe that's, you know, there's a conflict there.

Speaker 3 It sounds like people are going to be shy about saying that. They'll say it immediately, you know?

Speaker 6 Uh-oh! Good!

Speaker 16 Okay, if we see a conflict, we just need to say something.

Speaker 16 Hey, Elon, I know there's a conflict!

Speaker 15 Did that work?

Speaker 15 No, no, nothing happened.

Speaker 14 There's no accountability and nothing matters. Great, perfect system.

Speaker 16 Well, f ⁇ it. He's not going to be transparent.
And he's riddled with conflicts of interest, but at least he's a genius. And the work he's going to do will be flawless.

Speaker 29 Mr. Musk, you said on X that an example of the fraud that you have cited was $50 million of condoms was sent to Gaza.

Speaker 29 How can we make sure that all the statements that you said were correct so we can trust what you say?

Speaker 3 Well, first of all, some of the things that I say will be incorrect and should be corrected. So nobody's going to bat a thousand.

Speaker 16 Nobody's going to bat a thousand. You made up a $50 million conspiracy of sending condoms to Gaza.
You're not grounding out to third. You're puking into the umpire's mouth.

Speaker 16 And just for the record, of course the United States didn't send $50 million worth of condoms to to Gaza.

Speaker 16 We sent $5 million of vibrating sex swings to North Korea, and I believe it stopped nuclear war. But don't quote me on that.
I'm not going to bat a thousand.

Speaker 16 So, to summarize, he's not transparent. He has tons of conflict.
He believes any lie he hears, and he spreads false rumors that go global.

Speaker 16 Honestly, I'd be pretty mad at him right now if he didn't have so much gosh darn charisma.

Speaker 15 So,

Speaker 3 you know, there's crazy things like just cursory examination of Social Security and we've got people in there that are 150 years old.

Speaker 27 Now, do you know anyone is 150? I don't know.

Speaker 7 Okay.

Speaker 11 They should be on the Guinness Book of World Records.

Speaker 3 They're missing out.

Speaker 3 So.

Speaker 7 He's old.

Speaker 14 He's like a tough crowd.

Speaker 15 Tough crowd.

Speaker 14 Is this thing on? Is this thing on?

Speaker 14 Anyone here from Washington, D.C.? Anyone? Oh, you're all from Washington, D.C.?

Speaker 16 Look, if you want to see more of that kind of comedy, then don't worry because there's a new special coming out that's just for you.

Speaker 16 Live from the Oval Office, it's the Musk-C Comedy Special that will have you dozing in your chair. It's Elon Musk, Loligarch.

Speaker 27 Now, do you know anyone is 150? I don't know. Okay.

Speaker 11 They should be on the Guinness Brooklyn World Records.

Speaker 3 They're missing out.

Speaker 16 Oh, Snap. He's the ceo of comedy i have detractors

Speaker 16 you'll want to neuralink these jokes straight into your brainstem featuring an opening act by the balding brothers order now and you'll get even more of elon's most hilarious bits black milling with money

Speaker 17 go yourself

Speaker 16 The one thing he's not cutting is the laughs.

Speaker 3 I'm aspirationally,

Speaker 3 you know,

Speaker 3 aspirationally funny.

Speaker 3 So,

Speaker 3 yeah.

Speaker 16 Sponsored by Doge. Doge, we use the HIV prevention money to pay for this.

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