Ep 17 | Giancarlo Sopo | The Glenn Beck Podcast
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I feel a little, I mean, not just because of my size, but I feel a little like Horton.
And I don't know if you are a speck or a who.
You know, Horton, here's a who, the story.
Yeah, Dr.
Seuss.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So are you just an individual
Democrat that has common sense?
Or do you represent,
are there a lot of you?
Are there more people like you?
Yeah.
You know,
it's so crazy.
I measure my political ideology every couple of months just to kind of see, hey, have I changed on something, right?
And I have not changed.
And it's, this is just who I've always been um and I I think there was a point last year where I saw Dave Rubin's why I left the left video and I saw him point out a lot of things that I wasn't really like like conscious of like the stuff that was going off on like going on on college campuses like I had heard about that kind of stuff but I always thought those are like isolated incidents it's like a just it's sort of like a distraction it's really not not happening and so when I started like reading more about it and I started being becoming more like keenly aware of everything that was going on, I was like, hey, there's a lot of problem on my side too.
And
I went to a Catholic school, so I'd always remembered
the verse in the Bible about taking the log out of your own eye before you look at the spec in your brothers.
And I started thinking about what are some things on my side that we could also improve upon.
And it just really became apparent to me that there was a movement within the Democratic Party.
I don't know when it happened.
And I don't want to say just like within the party as an institution, just like in general, like on the left.
I don't know when it happened, but where like we kind of went from like championing like free speech on
free speech on college campuses, like in places like Berkeley and like those protests, to just becoming like kind of like shouting that down.
And that's not who I am.
That's not what I believe in.
My parents fled like a country where
that was like the norm.
And I'm not saying that the U.S.
is going going to become like Cuba or anything like that, but it just kind of seemed really weird to me, everything that was going on here.
So I started speaking out.
As you've started to speak out, have you found more Democrats like you?
Yeah, yeah.
I've had people tweet at me, but it's funny, like most of the people who follow me, when I just kind of like read their profile, they're conservatives.
Yeah.
That's kind of, I was hoping that you you weren't a spec, but you were a who.
And there was a whole little village there of a whole bunch of people like you.
There might be.
There might be.
So in 2008, I mean, you're on the Democratic, what, the Democratic Platform Committee?
So in 2008, I was working for a congressional campaign in Miami, and
I had been organizing before that
Hispanics for Obama.
Probably like one of the first people in the country to do that, like in early 2007, when nobody knew who this guy was.
And so I was named to the DNC's platform drafting committee as the youth representative because I was like 23, 24 years old at the time.
And
I'm, yeah, it was, it was like a really cool experience.
I got to meet like people like Jen Napolitano, Susan Rice, Deval Patrick, the governor of Massachusetts, and like serve on this committee with them.
And
it was a fascinating experience for a 24-year-old.
Yeah.
You must have hated me
watching me because you must have hated me.
So it's funny.
So it's funny you mentioned that.
So
I clearly remember I had a
back then I used to drive a white GMC Jimmy from 1995 with like an old beat up radio and I would only get AM.
So
whenever you would come on, I'd be like,
it's the crazy guy.
So we'd turn it off.
And it's strange is we've kind of become friends now.
Yeah, yeah.
Someone I really have a lot of respect for.
Likewise.
You know, because
it just,
when you're able to put like political differences aside and just speak to people, you realize we have a lot more in common than where we disagree.
That sometimes these
differences that we have in our culture are being peddled by interest groups and they're like manufactured, almost like manufactured controversies.
Some differences are very legitimate, right?
Like,
I don't know, for example, how you feel about the nature of social programs, whether we should have them or anything like that.
I happen to think that they could do a lot of good in society to help people, just because I'm seeing my mom as a social worker growing up and so forth.
But I think like a lot of these points,
there's a lot more common ground, I think, than what people realize.
But because of the way the media is structured vis-a-vis
the political parties and institutions and the people who fund them, It's like they're constantly tearing the country apart.
And I think it's very unhealthy.
And I think we've got to come to a point where we, yeah, we're able to have these disagreements, but bring people together.
So
let's take social programs here for a second.
The problem is that
a conservative is
a A conservative will say about a person that wants a bigger social platform through the the government, you're a socialist or you're a communist.
And the
Democrat will say you hate children.
And neither of those are true.
I mean one of the reasons why I joined the church that I did
is by their fruits you shall know them.
It is, I think it's the second largest welfare organization.
in the world.
But they don't brag about it.
But I believe that's the way it should be.
I give, freely give 10%
for those kinds of things.
You're tiding, yeah.
Right.
And so there's all kinds of things we can do, and government does play a role.
Yeah.
But
we're not only calling each other names that are not true in many cases, sometimes they are,
but it's gotten so bad
we now
We now won't even really truly give the other person the benefit of the doubt to listen, you're not a monster.
You know what I mean?
Show me you're not a monster.
Right, right.
Yeah, so it's funny.
So like, it's funny you say that because like last night, um, I, I, I put something on my personal Facebook page, like the one I just have like like people I know in real life.
Um,
people I know in real life.
Yeah, I don't accept people anymore who I've never met because you never know.
Um, so I published something about Brett Kavanaugh.
I was like, look, I may or may not disagree with this man's judicial philosophy.
You know what the problem is?
I haven't had a chance to even hear about his judicial philosophy because we've been hearing about secret white power signs.
Yeah.
And then it went from there to, I forgot what was the next controversy.
And then now it's like all a sexual assault and then like running a gang rape cartel.
And I'm like, you know, I was like, I may or may not disagree with this man's judicial philosophy.
And frankly, I have to be candid about the things that I know and the things that I don't know.
I don't know enough about law to tell you whether I disagree with this man's judicial philosophy.
I could say I disagree with him on these issues, but in terms of his judicial philosophy, it's not what I do for a living.
You know, I'm not a constitutional scholar.
So,
but now we've gotten to the point where I have to like personally destroy people.
So I put up this thing on my Facebook about, hey,
you know,
this is where I'm at on this.
I think the charges may or may be true.
I didn't see them myself, but I think the evidence isn't there.
And I had like people who I know write to me, like, i like had like some exchanges with those people say i don't know that we can be friends anymore and i was like for what you know like these are people who i've known for years not like close friends or anything but just like acquaintances tell me like i don't think we could like be friends anymore like you've changed i'm like i don't i haven't changed i'm just
like I applied the same standard that I'm applying for Brett Kavanaugh.
I applied it to Roy Moore, and I went to like a different conclusion with him.
Here,
I can't conclude that the man did these terrible things that he's accused of.
When I look at Brett Kavanaugh, I don't think he was Biff Tannen in high school.
I think he was George McFly.
You know?
Maybe.
Yes.
But I don't know.
Yeah, I have no idea.
Yeah.
You were here in the studio when I had an interview with who I thought was the BBC.
Yeah.
Because I said yes to the BBC.
I would have never said yes to CNN International because I have spent five years trying
everything I know
to try to break through to people on the other side in the media and say, do not do this.
Don't do this.
Look, there's
you're You're making things worse.
And
this interviewer said to me, I want to read, because you can judge people by what they read, what they write on Twitter.
And I'm thinking, what have I written on Twitter recently?
She said, this came out from you just a few days ago.
And I'm paraphrasing.
It said, I believe the American people are fair.
And they don't want to condemn Brett Kavanaugh or Professor Ford because there's not enough evidence and they just don't want to be put into that position.
And if the Democrats jam this down people's throats, there will be a backlash at the voting poll.
Yeah.
She said to me, so are you saying Democrats aren't Americans?
I don't know how you could reach that conclusion based off what you wrote.
I follow you on Twitter, so I'm like, yeah,
I think there are people on both sides that I think are trying to break through to the other side.
And there are these like these vested interests that are preventing that from happening right so there are people who also have like other podcasts on on like my side of the aisle who they would never allow you to go on on their show because if you go on their show and you sound like a normal rational person that you are they can no longer turn around and tell their their supporters oh this guy is a crazy conservative loon these people they want to take away your rights and so forth right so there's all these vested interests and i think uh it happens on both sides just to you know to be to be totally fair, to prevent people from talking to one another because we've created these echo chambers because
there are powerful financial interests there, but it's just also,
you know, that's how these people keep the game going.
And it's extremely frustrating because
you are siloing the country apart.
So like, you know,
and I get this all the time.
When in 2016, when I had a job back then that required me me to move to Virginia for a few months for work, I lived in a county that went 74% for Donald Trump.
My wife is very obviously not an American, just by looking at her and by talking to her.
She's biracial.
And when you speak to her, at the time she was just learning English.
And they could not have been nicer to us.
And this is like in rural Virginia.
Our neighbors...
were Trump supporters.
They could not have been nicer to us.
They weren't asking her weird questions about her immigration immigration status or anything like that.
They thought that it was cool that she was Cuban, actually.
They had asked us all sorts of questions.
They wanted to try ethnic food.
And
we're not that different.
And
there are these caricatures that people have propped up, right?
Just like people in San Francisco may not be as tolerant as we think they are, right?
Or they may not be as crazy as as
some people on the right make them out to be.
With the exception of the people who are pooping in the streets.
Yes,
that's kind of weird.
Pooperoni.
Yeah, like my best friend from high school is a San Francisco
normal guy.
Yeah.
Just, you know, like.
What's amazing is people are normal pretty much anywhere.
Yeah.
Pretty much anywhere.
And I think, you know, I've been trying to find our unum.
And our unum, I think, is the Bill of Rights.
That's what.
That's what brought us here.
We were escaping someplace that was violating something in our Bill of Rights.
Yeah.
And that's why people came from all over the world.
And we don't know it.
So people can't defend them.
They don't know what they even mean anymore.
And we've lost that.
And so we're talking about these little teeny things that are so stupid.
They're so stupid.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, these gigantic pillars are starting to crumble.
And it's the pillars, it's the bill of rights that we have to protect because that's what brought us together.
I can, i can
you can believe in anything and i'm going to be totally fine with you if you're not trying to tell me how i have to live my life yeah you don't violate the bill of rights and you'll stand for the bill of rights for the people that you don't like yeah we're good
yeah and that's where i've always been right that's what like
Those were the kinds of things that I would, that I would say around my house when I was like in my, in like my, my mid-20s.
And my family would think I was a communist, you know, just for saying, oh yeah, I think those kids are perfectly fine to protest the Iraq war, you know, and I think it's okay to question the Iraq war.
You know, so like, I was not very political in high school.
And then when I turned 18 at the, at the, when I just to register to get my driver's license, I think it was like 17 or something like that.
And you had to start filling out your voter registration form.
They asked me, what party you want to put down?
I said, I don't know.
My grandfather's a Republican.
I'll just put down Republican.
And that's, you know, and then, but I've never voted Republican.
And then I switched, like, formally switched parties for like around 2004 for that election when I became like, like, politically conscious.
And I was like, you know, it's really weird that these guys are questioning your patriotism just for opposing the Iraq war.
Nothing more patriotic than opposition to a government
stance.
I mean, again, one of the things we were founded on.
Yeah.
So then I, so then I started then becoming much more active in politics.
And the things that I've always stood for, which is like tolerance and acceptance and listening to one another,
those values are right now,
they are under assault.
People like to look at a lot at the right.
And I think a lot of things that President Trump says are terrible that I obviously disagree with.
But those values are also coming under assault from the left.
And I have a serious problem with that because nobody is talking about it.
The only people we're talking about are people like you, people like Ben Shapiro, people like Dave Rubin.
And you guys are being ostracized just like
they're looking at you like you guys are crazy for even like mentioning this stuff.
I hate using the term mainstream media because
it's almost like
it's like a conservative buzzword.
But yeah, sure, like the mainstream media refuses to talk about this stuff.
And it's extremely frustrating for someone like me because I think these are like traditional liberal liberal values and maybe like classical liberal.
They're classical liberal.
Yeah.
They're not like left-wing values or even like right-wing.
Just like, you know, it's like the traditional classical liberal value to have tolerance and acceptance for other people.
And you can do your thing.
I do my thing.
Don't try to encroach on me and I'll leave you alone.
That is stereotypical American.
Used to be.
Stereotypical American
classic liberal values.
Yeah.
And I grew up in a very traditional home.
My parents were like Reagan conservatives almost.
My mom's never been very political, but growing up, she had a picture of herself with Ronald Reagan at an event in Miami.
And my dad, who was a Bay of Pigs guy, he was like, you know,
he was with the cause.
What do you mean, Bay of Pigs guy?
He was in the Bay of Pigs.
On which side?
On our side, on the American side.
He went in.
Because your grandparents were in Cuba?
Yeah.
So
on my dad's side of the family,
my grandfather
was a psychiatrist in the Cuban Navy pre-Castro with Batista.
Not a, you know, just a, he's just a doctor, right?
So they arrest everyone who was in the Batista military, right?
My grandfather was one of them, and he dies in prison within three months.
of like March 1959, right?
Then my father gets arrested and gets released through some family connection.
And then they all come to Miami.
And then about a year later, they start organizing the Bay of Pigs invasion.
And he goes into Cuba six weeks before the invasion to do intel for the cause and set information back.
Obviously, he doesn't succeed.
He almost gets caught.
because he accidentally ordered gasoline and you said the word dollars instead of pesos
and then he sneaks into I believe it was the Venezuelan embassy at the time which obviously you couldn't do now yeah but he sneaks into the Venezuelan embassy as a delivery boy and he um
then he's like there for like almost like six months in the embassy then he gets taken out um so very traumatic and then my mom's side almost like the opposite story my grandparents were living in the United States and then they moved back to Cuba because
my great grandmother got really sick and my grandparents had to go take care of her.
And then, after a few years that they were on the island and things started getting bad, they wanted to come back, but by then it was impossible because my grandparents had American children, and the Cuban government under Castro was like not letting them leave the island, and there were like these long wait lists.
And so, they ended up being stuck in the country for about like 20 years.
So, what did you know about Che
growing up?
What did they know about Che and Castro?
So, it's funny.
Cuban-American kids who grew up in Miami were taught like three things.
Jesus, Santa Claus, and Fedel Caster is a bad guy.
Those are like the first three things you learn.
So yeah, so that
was always very present, right?
Like I,
you know, it wouldn't, it wouldn't ever happen, but like no kid would ever go back into like his Cuban parents' household with like a Che shirt, for example.
It just like would never, like, your parents would disown your family.
Explain
who Che was for people who
are wearing Che shirts.
Yeah, sure.
So Che Guevara was an Argentine, I think it was like a medical school dropout
who was a revolutionary who met Fidel Castro at a party in Mexico.
And then those guys,
you know,
like formed like a little group that went back to Cuba and invaded the island.
I don't know, invasion because it's their own company, you know,
yeah.
Yeah, so they go back to Cuba and they start the Cuban Revolution.
And his role in all of that, once the revolution comes into power, is a guy who has like
no financial education whatsoever, but he was like the head of banking for the country.
And then, but he was also like the Castro's executioner.
So he was executing people without trial at a prison called La Cabana.
And a horrible racist.
Yeah.
Hated homosexuality, killed homosexual.
I mean, he was just everything
that
anyone who is wearing a Che t-shirt thinks they're for, he's against.
Yeah, so I've I've heard stories from Cubans who live on the island of
how like Che Guevara would, you know, went, would go somewhere and then find like, like round up
men who he considered effeminate and tell them, you guys either start acting like a men or I'll execute you.
So stuff like that was happening left and right.
So that's the, that's how my, my family grew up.
So like anything that smelled like communism, my parents are like, like, atomly against it, particularly my dad, who is just like, because of his, his own father died as a political prisoner.
They told,
up to this day, we have no idea how my grandfather died.
He, they just told my grandmother, oh, he committed suicide.
You know, which is like always what they would tell people.
So we're not really sure even how my grandfather died.
I never met him, obviously.
And And so with having that really present in my mind and growing up in a community where you have so many Venezuelans, so many Argentines, so many
Nicaraguans,
you're very conscious of what socialism is and what it's not and what these words democratic socialism, what that is and what it's not.
It's really hard.
It's Norway.
No, it's not.
It's not Norway.
It's just like Norway.
Yeah, right.
I wish Venezuela was just like Norway.
So
that, coupled with all this intolerance on college campuses, like this embrace of democratic socialism and the fact that like Bernie Sanders is apparently now the intellectual heavyweight of the Democratic Party, I was like,
this is insane.
This is not what I signed up for.
I signed up for, you know, hey, we're like the tolerant people who are okay with gay people getting married and who we are,
you know, we're forced social programs to help the poor.
That's the club that I joined.
Now it's become like a club for like the professionally offended and the socialists.
And I'm, you know, that's, I don't want anything to do with that.
You know, it was very interesting.
I watched both conventions in 2016 with my wife, who is like a fresh pair of eyes, knows nothing about American politics.
She had only been in this country for a few months.
And she saw the Republican convention and she was like, wow, this is really bizarre.
You know, this this is really strange.
You know, it's funny.
I've been told my entire life that America is like this imperialist power, and they're talking about the Republicans are talking about like America's military has been depleted.
This is like,
I'm shocked.
And then she
saw the Democratic Convention, and she was like, Okay, oh, these people are, yeah, they're really nice, but why do they speak to Hispanics as though they're like victims or something?
And I was like, I started thinking about that.
I was like, you know what?
You're right.
Like,
I know I'm Hispanic.
I'm like as American as you are, Glenn, I guess.
I was born and raised here, but I'm also fully fluent in Spanish.
I don't need someone to speak to me like I'm a victim all the time.
I hate, like,
who was it?
Elizabeth Warren was giving a speech about, you know, one of the dangers of having a conservative justice on the Supreme Court is that he would, a conservative justice would hurt people of color.
Okay.
First off, I don't know what color she's talking about because I'm like pale, almost as pale as you are.
Okay.
If I go out in the sun, I get like bright pink
but okay fine you know
and then she's you know she's and then I'm like thinking well I might like I might have a judicial philosophical difference with this guy or some ideological difference or political difference whatever right but I I don't feel I don't feel like a victim like what she's implying with her comments is that like we're losers that we need people to take care of us like like get extra care for us because we're we're like small and in danger or something and that's not how I feel at all I feel like I live in the best country in the world, that I could do anything here.
There's nothing that like what my family went through in Cuba and what like my friends' families went through in places that are not Cuba, but even places like Brazil or whatever.
We have it, Latinos have it here better than in any Latin American country in the world.
That's why we have a border problem.
Yeah.
I mean, we have a border problem because people want to come here.
Because, I mean, I went went down to for my 50th birthday my wife
did a surprise party and I think we were in Puerto Vallarta
and we spent time you know
in with the locals not in all of the crap
yeah
and talking to people yeah
There's no way they feel there's no way to change their station.
You know, they want something different
for their children,
but they don't have the money or the ability to get their children out.
You know,
I say this to conservatives all the time.
If you were in the same situation, if you were there,
your children had no prospects, you had drug lords all around,
that was the prevailing way to get out.
You know, you, as a parent, would look at the country up north that was saying, you know, we really don't take this seriously.
Yeah.
You know, you cross the border.
It's no big deal.
Of course, you would come.
Yeah, of course.
Of course, you would come.
Yeah.
You would be crazy not to.
Yeah.
That's like, imagine like Disney World had like free admission for a day.
Everyone would just like collect.
Everybody would go.
Everybody would go.
And you, and how could you blame them?
Yeah.
It's free.
Go.
And that's what, that's what America is.
So I was, and I think, I think you and I, we've talked about this before, but I was in Havana in March to visit a friend of mine who was getting married.
And I stayed with my family who live in the suburbs of the city.
And we,
the fan, the fan in my room broke in the middle of the night.
And so the next morning we went to buy a fan.
Glenn, it took us an hour to buy a fan, right?
Which half, like half of that, half that hour was just like waiting in line and waiting for the lady to bring it out from the back of the store because you obviously just can't grab the one that's there on display.
And then the other half an hour is dismantling the fan, writing down the serial numbers, and then filling out three forms for acquisition of private property.
Oh my gosh.
So people go through that so many times in a day that of course they're not going to worry about spreading democracy in Cuba because they're just worried about
the day-to-days, right?
Like their quotidian problems that that they all have so like multiply it by like 11 million people on that on that island now imagine that also like in a place like Guatemala where you have gangs like threatening to kill your kid yeah so what what people go through in Latin America is horrible and what I tell my conservative friends all the time is like hey these people like the like like Latin Americans, they naturally share a lot of like American values, right?
Religious people, families at the center of everything.
um
and they work hard uh
we should like welcome these people into our country and find it find a logical pathway forward it is amen it is the americans quite honestly like me that are so removed my family came back i i don't even know when but i know that i had relatives in the civil war wow um so
For generations, we've been here.
So I'm just like, I don't know.
It's great here.
Why do you you fix every place else?
And so we don't see it.
And
it's stunning to me.
The three, the last three people I've talked to on this podcast,
as we've recorded them, all three I have found fascinating and inspiring.
And the last three have been first generation Americans
because they see it differently.
They see,
don't squander what you have.
This is great.
We We got a good thing going on here.
We do.
Yeah, this is like a really amazing place.
I don't know if you're keeping track, like what's happening in
Brazil with their elections.
Their conservative candidate just got stabbed into the chest a few weeks ago.
Argentina's currency is another digit again.
Yeah.
Venezuela, I can't.
These,
this is probably
not the way to go for a healing.
But as we, my charity, is trying to get to Venezuela to help people, to get in, it's almost impossible.
Yeah.
Okay.
It's just not happening.
As we're trying to do this, I'm wondering, where are all of the Hollywood people?
Where are all of the democratic socialists that told us this was going to be fantastic?
Again,
socialism fails.
And may I ask you this?
Sure.
Did conservatives,
do we do ourselves a disservice because we have conflated
a welfare program and a safety net with socialism?
Yeah, for sure.
So I'll give you a...
I'll give you a perfect example of this.
Right now it's going on in the Florida governor's race, right?
I don't know how you feel about Andrew Gillum, but he's the Democratic nominee for governor of my state.
He's being called a socialist by his opponent's campaign, which is Ron DeSantis.
Andrew Gillum is not a socialist.
Andrew Gillum is your garden variety liberal.
His big socialist idea, air quotes, is that he wants to raise, Florida does not have a state income tax just like Texas.
We have a corporate tax that's like
5% or something.
He wants to raise it to 7%
to pay for higher salaries for teachers or something along those lines, right?
That's his big socialist proposal, right?
That's not a socialist proposal, right?
That's just like, he's like, he wants to pay these people, these government workers more and he has to raise these revenues.
So
I think it's extremely counterproductive for, and I wrote a story about this.
I was like, I think it's extremely counterproductive for Republicans and conservatives to call any
kind of tax increase or any social program socialism, because there are people within the ranks on the left who want to push actual socialism, and you're conflating just your guarded variety liberals with those people.
You're conflating a safety net
with socialism.
Explain what socialism is and why you're passionate about it.
Not only your background, but your wife.
Yeah, so I've always understood socialism as being
the acquisition of the means of production by the state.
control of the means of production where
and I could I could tell you how I've seen it play out, right?
Where people work for the state, or where private property is no longer private, it's owned collectively, or where companies are turned essentially into like massive co-ops, if you will, right?
So it's like a hybrid.
Philosophers debate the definition of socialism all the time, but essentially that's in the ballpark of where it is.
Would you say that public schools,
the way they are run, where they are controlled by the state,
really owned by the state, that that is a socialist program or not a socialist program?
Well, look,
does it meet the strict definition of
some socialist characteristics?
Sure.
But I think what most people would argue is say,
we cannot have a society where some children go without education because they can't pay for it.
So we need to create this, you know, there are some things that the government has to do because the private sector can either not do them or it cannot do them as efficiently.
In terms of educating everyone, everyone.
So, if you want to have an entire,
like, if you want to guarantee that every single kid in this country goes to a school,
the government can do that, right?
So,
that would be like the response to that, right?
All right.
Yeah.
All right.
So,
Venezuela
is socialist.
Yeah.
Democratic socialism socialism
that actually started in South America.
Did it not?
Isn't democratic socialism?
So my understanding is that democratic socialism is an offspring of
Marxist theory that evolved in Germany at the end of the 19th century.
And then throughout the early 20th century and then halfway through the mid-20th century, they realized that this revolution of the proletariat was not a good thing.
So
they wanted Marxist socialist ideas, which was like the ownership of the means of production,
but they wanted it done in a way that was democratic, if you will,
through the ballot box inserted, which as opposed to like a rifle.
Democratic national socialism would be Nazis.
They voted for Adolf Hitler
and it was a socialist state,
but
it wasn't the ownership of all businesses and all private property, and it wasn't international like like communist russia right is that the do i understand this yeah that's my understanding as well so
the the democratic socialist of latin america would be someone like hugo chavez who's you know passed away in 2013 who is someone who says okay first off when he ran for office he just ran as a normal progressive he actually there was a great interview with with him and jorge ramos where they asked him oh are you gonna nationalize anything nope are you gonna are you gonna only be be in office for five years?
In fact, I'll leave sooner.
And then,
are you going to shut down any media stations?
No, of course not.
Once he's in office, though, he starts slowly but surely nationalizing certain industries, expropriating assets, putting things under state control to make it impossible for his opponents to organize against him, right?
You can't run an ad
on a certain TV station because it's now been confiscated by the state, right?
All the transportation workers are now unionized through a public union that he controls, right?
So he started doing this slowly but surely, and he consolidated his power, and now you have this disaster, which Venezuela is always going to have problems because it was a very oil-dependent economy.
It was not a diversified economy.
So Venezuela was going to have a problem anyway, like in the 2000s, when like early
2010s, yeah, when oil crashed, right?
But their centralized power and the like the fact that everything was like so centrally planned
like it made the country like unable to react to that in a way that was like faster and more pragmatic.
And also the fact that Chavez set these absurd oil production quotas because he thought he could run the oil industry by himself.
And he fired all of the workers for the state-owned PDVSA, which is the
state oil enterprise.
He fired all these people, replaced them with his own goons, basically, to run an oil company, and they ruined the oil reserves of the country.
So,
yes, Venezuela is going to have financial problems.
Yes, sure, but he made it a lot worse.
People will say, and again, where is Hollywood?
Where is Sean Penn and everybody that went down and said oh look at Hugo Chavez
they will always say they always do
well yes it just didn't work this time because this guy what went bad right right yeah they said the same thing about Castro and and Stalin and Lenin yeah yeah I mean so
um there is like this tendency I think to confuse
intent right but with outcomes right where you judge people by what they say they want to do instead of like the outcomes that they achieve.
And I think that's what, that's like a logical fallacy that's very prevalent on some circles on the left.
Because somebody says, oh, I want to cure hunger and I want to cure poverty or whatever.
All the empirical evidence shows that there is no better instrument for doing that than the free enterprise system, than capitalism, right?
Yet they fall in love with these
socialist dictators because they speak of, I don't know know why that's like more romantic and more emotions.
And I think, I don't know how we connected from this to like Brett Kavanaugh, but I think that's like part of what's happening now is that like where people are being, or care more about their, like, their emotions than about just like facts.
Emotions matter, obviously, but they should be like informed by facts.
I might not like Brett Kavanaugh, I might not like some of the things that he says or whatever, but I have to guide myself based on the facts.
And I think that's, there's a huge problem with that now on the left, which is weird because it's always like always characterized themselves as, oh, we're like the enlightened party,
we're the science-driven people.
But in reality, there is a huge gap developing right now on my side of the aisle.
And I'm trying to push people to think, rethink this a little bit more.
And I don't know how much success I'm having, but I'm trying to pull people toward a radical center.
When I first came across you, you were, I think you wrote an op-ed or an essay right
yeah
Yeah for Quillette which I think is great website.
Yeah,
and you wrote about
no no Democrats democratic socialism is not what you think it is.
It's not what they say it is.
Yeah
tell me when you see
When you see somebody like
what's her name?
Ocasio?
Ocasio Cortez.
People here.
It's a great message.
It's a great message.
I just want people to be taken care of.
We just want things to be more equal.
You know, we just, we want things to be more fair and we're going to take care of people.
I cringe when I hear her.
Yeah.
So
what happened was that on the night of her election, I had already been having these debates with like my friends and like text message wars for months and
probably alienated half of them uh so when when when she when she got elected or when she won the primary rather and i heard her oh i'm a democratic socialist and i was like and i like saw the media coverage of of what this work meant i was like this is totally wrong it's it's not it's not a misnomer this is just a complete fabrication they're ascribing a definition to this term
that
is inconsistent with what it truly is.
And it's not just like, well, America, you know, like Americans use the word liberal in a different way than like they do in Europe.
It wasn't that.
It's that she was actually associated with.
By the way, that was the progressives that changed that.
Yes.
Okay, I just want to make sure we're very well aware it was a Democratic president that changed that.
So
there was a piece run by the Washington Post by Elizabeth Brunig on this is what democratic socialism is.
And she did like this whole video explainer for it.
And it was essentially, yeah, democratic socialism is Canada, the UK, and Norway, and Denmark, or something.
It's like, this is not what this is.
So I really started doing some research into this group, the Democratic Socialists America, and what they believe in.
And I was like, holy S-word.
You know, like, what this is, this is like what my parents fled.
This is what people in Latin America fleed.
What's the difference between them and Canada?
Between the Democratic Socialists of America and
the Canadians want a free market system.
They just want some government health care along with that.
But they like their free market system and they have actually a certain level of privatization in their healthcare sector, right?
These people, they want, they like the Scandinavian social safety net programs, but then they want to go much farther with regards to the actual economy.
That bagel shop down the street, government-owned or turned into a co-op, right?
Amazon, broken up and owned by the state.
General Electric, the same.
That's That's what these people think.
It's not, I'm not making this up.
Look at their website.
Look at their speeches.
That's what they believe.
It's an end to capitalism.
Right.
And to their credit, the hardcore leaders of that organization are very transparent about that.
The thing is that
they say it in magazines like Jacobin and they go to other outlets, but this never gets reported in the media.
It's like almost like, oh, no, we don't want people to find out that we have crazy people on our site.
But they will say, because I ran into this with Black Lives Matter.
Yeah.
I'm dead set against Black Lives Matter.
If you read their
manifesto,
if you go to their website and you see what they're actually for,
no thank you.
Okay.
However,
the people that are marching in the streets, many of them have never been to the website.
They don't agree with all of that stuff.
When we had a shooting of a police officer here in Dallas, I had some of them come into the studio afterwards because when that shooting happened,
my crew was covering the march.
When the shots rang out,
people that were marching hid behind a car with my crew.
And they were trapped together for about 30 minutes.
Well, you kind of learn a little about something with each other.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
And so we had this opportunity to say, wait a minute, you're not.
So
you don't want a separate state, you don't want any of that stuff.
No.
And they were just going because
Black Lives Matter was the only one that was listening and saying, hey, there's a problem in the community.
But their goals weren't the same.
So are Democrats kind of in that situation to where they're turning a blind eye to who's actually,
what the leadership is actually wanting?
And they say, ah, well, we don't want that.
This is good.
I think what Democrats see is that democratic socialism gets certain segments of the
young voters excited.
And they're like, yeah, we're going to go along with that.
We'll just ride this wave.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
And I think it's absolutely insane because these people are like hardcore believers.
I'm not saying that every member of DSA is a Leninist, right, or something like that, you know, but
these people are, if you look at the documents of the organization and the vision of America that they see,
it's scary stuff.
So, when I saw this, I was like, holy cow, people need to know about this.
And at the time, I had maybe like 400 Twitter followers.
I was like, nobody's going to pay any attention to what I'm saying.
So,
I started
talking to some friends about it, kind of bouncing some ideas off.
And I thought, hey, why don't I go speak to some economists in Norway?
So, I just started reaching out to different economists at
different universities, and I encountered
a consulting firm in Oslo that advises companies.
And I was like, who better to ask than these guys?
So I emailed the managing partner and I said, hey, can I run a survey with all of your economists?
And I'm going to ask them these questions.
And he was like, you wrote back to me like five minutes later.
Yeah, sure, no problem.
So I ended up interviewing a dozen Norwegian economists.
And I laid out to them, not my own words, copy-pasted it from a liberal website from Vox.
I said, this is what DSA believes.
How does this jive with your country's economic system?
And also, can you talk to me a little bit about, explain to me how Norwegian economics works?
And 11 out of 12 of those people told me, this is far left and fringe in our country, what these people are proposing for the United States.
What'd the 12th say?
The 12th said, these are, some views are mainstream, others are a little kooky.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But 11 out of 12.
But none of them said, yeah, this is what we have.
No, no, no, no.
I'm so, and then I asked them, okay, I give them like different categories.
How would you describe Norway's economy?
Most said it was a mixed economy, right?
And then I asked them, okay, pick between these two, socialist or capitalist.
I think it was like also 11 out of 12 said, yes, we're a capitalist country, we're a capitalist country.
Norway is clearly a capitalist country.
They found oil off their shores, I think like in 1969 or something, and they've done very well for themselves.
They set up a state enterprise to manage that oil sector.
But it's a capitalist country.
You can start a business in Oslo.
It's easy.
And if you go over to Denmark, it's probably easier to start a business in Copenhagen than in California.
Just kind of put that in perspective.
The licensing processes are much simpler.
It's easier to trade within that region.
So these are highly advanced capitalist countries that, yes, every Danish citizen from the time of birth to the time they die, they have government guaranteed health coverage.
That's, you know, Americans can debate whether we want to go that direction or do we want to do something like the Swiss do, which is, I don't know if
people realize this, but the Swiss have 100%
universal health care.
Everyone's covered and it's entirely private.
all through the private sector.
They have some subsidies to help the poor, and they have a couple of state hospitals, but there's no government insurance.
Everything is done through private insurance companies.
Why aren't we talking about that?
And I asked like Democrats this all the time: I was like, hey, what these guys have going on is pretty amazing.
And it would not destabilize our economy and it would actually lower prices a bit and it would cover everyone.
Why aren't we talking about it?
Why are we having these pie-in-the-sky ideas to what would disrupt a sixth of our economy?
And nobody wants to talk about this stuff.
Are you familiar with what Portugal has done with the drug war?
No, I'm not.
I'm pretty sure it's Portugal.
Drug war.
Does the drug war work here?
I don't think so.
I don't think so at all.
I mean, I think it's very clear it doesn't work.
It has to do drugs, but it's, but it just doesn't work.
It doesn't work.
It clearly doesn't work.
Portugal got into such a bad place.
I think 5%
of the entire population was hooked on heroin.
Wow.
Okay.
I mean, it was devastating.
And they realized
this clearly is not working.
So what they did is they legalized all the drugs.
And then they took, I think it was about half of the money and just did
AA programs.
And then they did job training programs.
And
they have completely rid themselves of the drug population.
Why aren't we talking about these things?
Why aren't we talking about...
I talked to Larry Sharp.
He's running,
he was a candidate for New Jersey, New York libertarian, yeah.
Yeah, governor.
He said, our our infrastructure's going.
He said, so why don't we have the George Washington Bridge in New York City?
And I'm the biggest fan of George Washington.
Why isn't that the Staples Bridge?
Yeah.
Why do we sell the naming rights to bridges?
Because
you're on the air with traffic and you're hearing the Staples Bridge, the Staples Bridge, the Staples Bridge.
Who wouldn't want that for the traffic reports?
Of course that would work.
Why don't we think out of the box?
Yeah, I don't know.
I think there are like too many entrenched interests, and we get into these stupid ideological fights instead of almost looking at common sense solutions, right?
And I think both sides are sometimes just very entrenched in
their own cookie-cutter approaches to things.
So like I said, the Democrats obviously
they're the party of government.
They're the party that wants the things that government can work to people's benefits, right?
But we also have to face certain realities in terms of how our economy is structured and where we're at it.
You know, if we wanted to start all over from scratch, okay, fine.
But it would be much easier, for example, to transition this, our country's healthcare system, to what they have in Switzerland than to what they have in the United Kingdom.
It's not even close.
The Swiss system, yeah, the Swiss system would just be like, um, you know, it would essentially be like Obamacare 2.0 or something like that.
You know, just like better, smarter regulations and then a more generous subsidies for the poor.
And perhaps less regulation on state to state.
Yeah, exactly.
Because in
the bigger the pool, the better it is.
Why are they tainting it to states?
It's so stupid.
Yeah.
So, like, you know,
if you try to sign up right now for the Obamacare Exchange for Florida, you can choose from like two healthcare companies or something like that.
In Switzerland, you can choose from like many healthcare companies.
You have a lot of options.
And that helps bring costs down for people.
So smarter regulations, more in some places, less in others.
But we're not not thinking outside the box because we just want to have these stupid debates.
And also, I just think people need to read more into case studies in terms of things that work outside of this country.
But who's covering that?
I mean, nobody wants to talk about it.
I want to go back to the interview I had with CNN International.
You cannot have a rational conversation on television.
You can't have this conversation on TV.
They would have cut the mic ready.
Yeah, I mean, it's just not.
We're going to do the weather now.
Yeah.
And
it's also because there's
the conflict is what drives it.
I think people are done with the conflict.
I really do.
I think people, the people I know
are so tired of this.
I've often thought, have you ever been to Israel?
I have not, but I'm dying to go.
Yeah.
It's an eye-opening experience.
Very small, Jerusalem, very small, especially old Jerusalem.
And it's in quarters.
Yep.
Okay.
And I'm walking down the
street, if you will.
It's an old street with the arches and everything else.
So I'm walking down the street and it's dirty and it's dingy and it's dark.
And then I pass an archway and I get about 20 feet in and it's clean and it's bright.
And I stop.
And I look behind me through the archway.
They are not the same place.
One is slum, one is nice.
And I said to the guy who was walking with me, I said, What the hell happened here?
And he said, This is the Jewish quarter, that's the Palestinian quarter.
Later, I go up on a hill and I'm looking.
Desert, green.
What's the difference?
Palestinian, Jewish.
Now,
I'm sure there's multiple reasons,
but there is also a group of people telling their people,
you can do anything.
Do it.
This is your home.
And another group of people telling their group of people, it's because of them.
You'll never have anything.
We're convinced many times we'll have the same stuff.
But we're being convinced that we can't do it or we have to get them before we do it.
We got to get to get this load off of the top, all these politicians that are using us and
dividing us and just start living because I don't think that there is
with a with an exception of the radicals on all sides, okay,
I don't think it's any different between a Jewish home and a Palestinian home.
Both parents want their children to be safe.
They just want to do their job.
They want to come home.
They want to have a brighter tomorrow.
They're not zealots that want to control everything.
They just want to be left alone.
Let me raise my kids.
Yeah.
And I think a lot of that stuff is,
you know, you can learn a lot of those lessons here as well.
But
there's one point actually where I actually have a lot of agreement with my conservative friends is that I think the role of the federal government has to reduce.
It's too important now.
Politics in D.C.
shouldn't be this important.
The way this country was designed, my local mayor is supposed to be much more important to me than
what's happening in Washington.
Yeah, like, and I think we need to go back to this model, which
the Swiss actually use,
very decentralized model, because
I cannot control what somebody in Mississippi is doing, right?
I shouldn't try to control them.
That's like their community.
It's like their area.
So so long as we have, you know, like, look,
through federal intervention, I think we were able to address, you know,
a lot of social injustices that were happening for centuries, right?
And affirm that everyone in this country is created equal, entitled to equal rights.
We've already done that.
We don't need to relitigate that.
I think we need to move now more toward a phase in this country where Washington starts like taking a step back and where you let these things be settled in local.
We'll never do it.
Do you know how the Swiss handle their immigration?
No, you tell me.
Love this.
I think this is fantastic.
You don't go to, you know, the Swiss office.
You move in.
Okay.
You have to come in the right way.
You move in.
You, you know find a place to live.
You let the government know where you're living.
Then, after I don't know how many years, your neighbors have to testify on your behalf that you would make a good addition to Switzerland.
Yeah.
So it encourages people to get to know each other.
It encourages people to be friendly.
And instead of going to some office that doesn't know you from Adam,
your neighbors know who you are.
Yeah.
It's fantastic.
Yeah.
And I think we need to go more to like these local community models, right?
The fact that everyone in this country has spent like the last week and a half
thinking that the world was going to end because, or like half of the country, thought that Brett Kavanaugh was going to, he was, he was, if he was going to get confirmed, the world, the country was going to end, and like it shouldn't matter that much.
Well,
it's one of the reasons why I spent five years
trying to say, especially the last three, look,
I really thought Barack Obama was going to be detrimental.
I think the legacy
of what we've all done during the Obama years is this.
Okay.
So I think it was damaging, but we made it.
And the people that I know and even me was like, I don't know if we're going to make it.
I don't know if we're going to make it.
He scared the hell out of me.
Okay.
Same thing.
I mean, the march, the women's march, a tea party.
Now, different tactics, sure.
But
you have half the country rising up.
No president should have this much power.
No president should ever scare us, ever.
We should be able to go, I don't care.
He's the president.
Big deal.
Yeah.
My son said to me, I don't remember what we were, we were talking about something.
And I said, you know, when we were a kid, blah, blah, blah.
And he said,
The government let you do that?
That was terrifying to me.
What do you mean the government let us do that?
I never would have thought that way when I was a kid.
Government wouldn't have stopped you.
Yeah, it was so
I reread JFK's inaugural speech recently
where he affirmed that the rights of man
do not come from the generosity of the state, but from the hand of God.
Can you imagine, I cannot imagine anybody from my party saying that nowadays.
That sounds like the most Republican thing that I could probably think of, possibly think of.
I don't think JFK would have been allowed in the Democratic Party now.
Maybe not, but I mean,
we need to go back to, and I don't even know about, I don't even like using the word going back because I'm not, there were a lot of things that were happening in the 50s and the 60s.
Terrible.
Yeah, they were absolutely terrible.
Yeah, we need to move to a place where
we strip Washington of a lot of its power.
I'd love to hear your thoughts.
Do you think a lot of this growth in power in Washington is because of the procurement, like the power of federal procurement, and that's everyone's like pumping money into campaigns because of that.
Woodrow Wilson, during World War I,
we started to have lobbyists.
Yeah, and they set up a lobbyist system for the war for
procurements.
After it was over,
they all went home.
Then in the 1930s, they were like, wait a minute, why did we leave?
We could get money from the government.
And that just grew and grew and grew and grew.
It was so obscene to me in 2009,
2010, when I went down to Washington, D.C.
and the country had stopped, but there were cranes littering the sky of D.C.
What are you,
what do they create?
What do they create?
What value are they bringing that's intrinsic value?
It's just paper.
Yeah, and I think there's people
people are very cognizant of it.
I think of like when like local government wastes because they'll say, oh, why did you know why did they put up all these fancy palm trees?
I didn't need this.
But I think they're far less aware of it of like what happens in DC.
It's like pretty crazy.
It's nuts.
Some of these contracts that go out for things where you think, oh my God, I didn't realize that this was happening.
I think everything should be like SpaceX for the federal government.
Here's an X Prize.
Yeah.
Here's an X Prize.
I'd love to move to a system where we strip, and that's actually
a place where I think even some of the people who are more on the progressive side of the left,
that you can might find some common ground in terms of common people.
I'm not talking about people in office who better defend the system.
They hate the cronyism too.
So I think that is one of the
points where I think there has to be a strong campaign to fight cronyism in Washington because
I think conservatives
and progressives are concerned about inequality different ways.
One of the roots of inequality, I'm absolutely convinced of this, is inequality created through cronyism.
And that's like something where I think there should be a lot of common ground and people should be able to
find agreement and move forward because we need to bring that power back to the people and keep it away from Washington.
These people can't do anything.
I mean,
that's what our founders created.
You know, the one thing, there was a letter between Jefferson and Adams.
They were going back and forth.
And I don't remember which one said, this is after they became friends.
They're old.
It's like 1820.
And one of them said,
you know this is going to fail.
And the other one said, we didn't put enough
Leviticus into it.
We didn't put enough of the old rules into it.
And the other one said,
the voting, we should have put stakes.
And the idea, now we're gerrymandering, which is separating us.
And
what their idea was, it's from the Bible, was everything is a square
and you have, let's say, 300 people.
Those 300 people vote for someone in those 300 people.
That's the representative.
And it's not somebody who lives way across town.
It's those 300 people or whatever the number is.
And as if when it gets to 400, you split it in half, exactly in half in a square.
And if we would, if we would just do logical things like this, but nobody will because they have way too much power and way too much money to lose.
And I think that's one of the things.
I wanted hope and change.
I wanted change.
I wanted transparency.
We just never got it.
I want a draining of the swamp.
We're not getting it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think that was like one of the greatest points of frustration, I think, even with a lot of people on the left with the Obama presidency, which is that this transformation of government and the way government was supposed to work and make it more accountable to the people, that that never really came to fruition.
I'm not saying it's Barack Obama's fault.
It might just be the system.
I talked to somebody who was in the Obama administration, who shall remain nameless again, and said, I was there at the beginning.
And he said,
you know, we were a different organization.
We knew how to win.
We didn't know how to govern.
He said, so when we came in, we had all of this change.
He said, but we were surrounded.
by all of the Clinton people.
He said, everybody who had run these things before
were now running this.
Like Podesta, yeah.
Right.
And he said,
we just got more of the same.
Right.
And he said, you know, two years into it, it's kind of like, okay, well, I guess,
okay.
Yeah, well, because a lot of also like the idealist staffers who went in after like two years are like, all right, I'm, you know, when I, when I started this, I was like 26.
Now I'm 28.
I want to get married or something.
I want to go do something else.
Right.
Yeah.
But it was also,
you know, they had, I think, I'd love to hear your thoughts on this.
I think one of the problems is
term limits, you know, but I don't think term limits, you can't, we cannot focus on term limits just for Congress.
They focused on term limits for the president and didn't do Congress.
You have to talk about term limits for servants.
You know,
the State Department.
You should time out
because there are these groups of people that gain power, so much power over.
I've been here for 30 years.
I don't care who's in office.
Well, that's a problem.
I think, so my only concern with that would be
a brain drain.
Yeah, and there's a certain level of institutional knowledge that comes that builds up after that.
But if it all staggers, yeah, I mean, so, yeah,
I don't mean like every four years.
I mean, you have, I don't know, 12 years or six years, or whatever it is.
And Or it's by age or something.
Whatever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then the second concern that I would have is because you see this happening in Florida where we do have
term limits in the state house and the state legislature, which is that it really builds up the institution that it builds up are the lobbyists.
Then that becomes the most powerful institution.
Now, I guess you could make that same claim now that, you know, the same argument that, well, look, are the lobbyists not powerful in D.C.?
So I guess there's like, there are pros and cons.
But conceptually,
I'm not opposed to it.
I would like to see how it works out.
So, Jeff Flake, the word is that he compromised.
Now, there's two ways to look at him.
He said, no, I want to,
I really think it's right to do, you know, to have an extra week and then vote yes for Kavanaugh a week later.
Or
I'm leaving.
I want to be a bipartisan lobbyist, so I will vote with the Democrats for another week, and then I will vote with the Republicans.
Okay.
I heard that on one of the broadcasts.
I mean, that's so cynical.
Might be true, might not be true.
I don't think anybody in Washington, if you serve, you're done.
George Washington set the example.
You do two terms and then you go home to farm.
Yeah.
You don't, you go back to your job.
You're not,
You're not lobbying.
You're not doing any of that stuff.
Get out of here.
Yeah, well, it you become like these swamp creatures that you still kind of like stick like like stick around and you have the constant revolving door and people who don't leave they they just they they never leave they're always there.
There's always that new contract to get the you know like this new gig that you're gonna like
be promoting.
So I completely agree with you.
I think that the way that that the parties are structured, I think that the way that these advocacy groups work now,
it's by design.
By design, they are created to push people to extremes.
Fear and anger are the things that get people to move.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So
can I go back to Florida?
For sure.
The candidate that just wants just a little more.
You told that story,
and then
you told the story of Hugo Chavez.
Right.
And this is one problem that I think people have on the right and the left.
Okay.
On the right and the left,
70% of Americans believe that
abortion
should be rare
and
safe.
Safe, rarely.
So 70% of the American people say, you know what?
After a certain very early time period, no abortion.
And there are those,
me, and I can't say, I don't know where, I don't know if it's, I don't know when.
Yeah, okay, either.
So I struggle with that all the time.
Yeah, right.
Okay, so, but I'm more on the
none.
However, I've asked myself,
could you say to your daughter after she's been raped,
no?
No, I couldn't.
I could say, honey,
no matter how the child was created, it's still a child.
But I could not see
if my daughter was just tortured by it.
How do you, I mean, you have to be
hard.
I don't know how I would react in that situation.
The way that I've always approached the abortion, the abortion issue is that I agree with you.
I think there's a point in the pregnancy where I think everyone agrees that this is
too much.
So
there's a problem
where
conservatives are viewed as if you put a conservative on the court,
he's going to take away,
you know,
TAM packs.
You know,
it's just so extreme.
Yeah.
And there are those,
nobody's going to take away, you know,
birth control.
Right.
However, there would be some that would say, no, because it's life, I think life is at the moment of conception.
That's possible.
On the other side,
You do have people.
Peter Singer is the most extreme who had to apologize for putting a time limit on it, but he believes you should be able to kill your child up until two years old.
It's until the time.
Okay.
Partial birth abortion.
That is so extreme.
Most Americans are not there.
We get there because there are people.
We were like, we were talking about the Democratic Socialists.
Gun control.
Yep.
They do want every gun gone.
Not all of them.
But I can no longer tell who's lying and who's not.
So I'm not going to give you anything.
Right.
That's unworkable.
Right.
And I think that's, but I think that's a product of the way that Washington is designed right now.
Because you have, because of the interest groups, they keep pushing their respective allies and parties further and further to the extremes because they're just like entrenched.
And nobody wants to lose this battle because then they know, like, they see they see everything in terms of like incrementalism, where
it's not just a background check.
Now, then, this is going to, like, you know, if they do the background check, then they're going to come away for the like come for the handguns.
Um, I don't know that I have an answer to that in terms of how to fix that.
I, I saw
Michael Porter from Harvard Business School put out this wonderful case study on how to fix politics.
Uh, he had like some great ideas that I thought would be kind of interesting.
He found, he analyzed the problem and he identified the problem.
I thought it was spot on.
Some of the solutions are kind of interesting, which is like maybe have these jungle primaries throughout the country, which maybe help push people more toward the center.
I don't know if that works.
And a series of campaign finance reforms.
But is it a push to the center or is it a push to see?
Because
I don't like it if people say to me, like they say to you, you've changed.
No, I haven't.
I haven't changed one principle.
Not one.
I just refuse to go over the cliff with the rest of humanity.
Right.
And
some people will say, oh, you're running towards the center.
No, I'm not.
I am absolutely not.
The center used to be, and this is where I am, but this is no longer our center.
Our center used to be the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
We wouldn't be having these problems with the Supreme Court.
They've been made political.
The Constitution is not political.
It's not.
The Bill of Rights is not political.
So if you have somebody saying, no, I'm sorry, this is what the law says.
Period.
It's in violation of these rights.
Sometimes you have to rule for the freedom of speech with the Nazi.
Sorry.
Sometimes, you know, it goes the other way.
It should be
the court should be when we have to split the baby in half.
You know what I mean?
When we have such a question, we're like, what?
I don't know.
The Supreme Court should be the, I don't know the answer to this question.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're not there.
Yeah.
And one of the one of the most frustrating things that I, that I've seen on like on the left over these past 30, 40 years is that
I saw Justice Galia once give this talk where he said, Look,
if a pro-life group came to me and said,
on a constitutional ground, we need to ban abortions across all 50 states, I would have to say no.
There's nothing in the Constitution that addresses that.
And I'd have to say the same to a liberal group if they wanted to, on a constitutional basis, have it across all 50 states.
So
the founders left those types of questions up to the democratic process.
And they created a way for the Constitution to be amended.
What's incredibly frustrating is that nobody on my side is talking about this.
If you care so much about abortion rights, why don't you work, talk to your fellow citizens, convince them of your ideas, and pass a constitutional amendment?
Do you know that the founders wrote about abortion?
I was not aware of that.
No, this is this will blow your mind
because this is they were exactly where we are now, where you and I are now.
Can you kill the the baby?
It's illegal after what they called the quickening, which is once the baby moves and the woman can feel the baby move,
then you know it's a baby and it's moving.
So, no, can't kill it after that.
If, you know, something happens beforehand, okay.
Yeah.
They discussed this
and they came to that.
Isn't that where we are, where it's viable?
Yeah, yeah.
And I think most people would able, like, like I'm Catholic, right?
I have certain views in terms of like when life begins, right?
But I can't impose those views on other people.
That's, that's kind of where I'm at, where I'd say, you know,
within that first trimester period, right?
You know, like, I can't convince someone.
I'm not saying I believe this, but I'm saying like you're very conservative, like a very conservative Catholic, I don't think can impose on somebody else, hey, you should not take that birth control pill.
Right.
Right?
Like, right.
So I think we need to create, these are the kinds of things, though, that I think the founders left up to the democratic process, right?
Yeah.
So, you know, that was not a federal discussion.
Yeah.
That was a local discussion.
Yeah.
That was, what are we doing in our local?
Is this murder or is this not murder?
You know what I mean?
And I'm not saying they got it right,
but they struggled with this exact same thing.
And they
came to a place, once you know it's a baby,
no.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think people of good conscience on both sides can come to different conclusions on that and agree to disagree and
battle out.
But I think we need to return to a system where that is done through the democratic process, not where we try to get ultra-creative of how we interpret the Constitution.
If we need to amend the Constitution, that's a separate discussion.
Amen.
But we cannot pretend because then you start getting into these situations, which is what I've seen in Latin America, which is where I do most of my work now, where you see that the courts in Latin America have incredibly creative creative interpretations of the laws that are on the books, and there is zero consistency.
And what that creates is unpredictability, because it's not just, we're not just talking about them about political matters, but we're talking about unpredictability in terms like how are contracts enforced, how are labor laws observed.
One of the reasons why we're so successful.
Yeah.
We're stable.
Americans are,
in Spanish,
the word for boring is aurido, right?
So Americans are ahurrido, according to Latin America, because they see them as like very, yeah, like very simple and like, like, they're not that creative with their laws, right?
Right.
And that's a great, that's a great thing about this country.
Yeah.
We need to return to that.
I, look, I'm not one of these guys who thinks that the U.S.
is going to be like Venezuela.
I don't think the U.S.
is going to be like Venezuela.
I think that's kind of crazy to think that the U.S.
is going to end up like Venezuela.
But I can see us ending up
somewhere like between Argentina and Brazil in terms of unpredictability in our laws and unpredictability in our markets.
And I think that would be disastrous disastrous for this country.
That's what both that's.
Could I ask you a question?
You can't see us turn into Venezuela.
Well, Venezuelans couldn't either, and you know that.
Yeah.
You don't see contention that we have now, say, give it two years,
and we're at each other's throats, and then the economy comes to a screeching halt, and people are out of work, and it's trouble.
You can't see that.
I could see that happening, and I can see like a federal jobs program
coming in.
And then you.
Even though the democratic socialists are like a hot new thing.
Yeah, what I could see.
So I could see that exact same situation, and then some kind of like massive federal jobs program.
And then those federal workers start becoming like political pawns of whoever's like that president or who does this, right?
Which is exactly what happened in Buenos Aires, in Argentina, where where the economy tanked the president of the country,
Christina Krishner.
She created all these federal jobs, blew up the country's government payrolls, and then she turned these government employees into political weapons to mobilize them constantly against
her opposition.
That's very dangerous.
I do not, when I say I could see us kind of moving in that direction, that's what I mean.
I'm not talking about the crazy currency stuff, but I could kind of see us moving into that, which is
which then gets us to the crazy currency stuff.
I mean, which might, yeah.
You did the numbers on democratic socialist proposals.
Yeah.
They do not add up.
That's, I'm putting it like much charitably, yes.
Yeah.
I mean, it's to the, in their own,
in their estimates, it's what, a $40 trillion program?
Yeah.
So you had a great guy on your show, Brian Rydell.
I don't know if I'm pronouncing his last name correctly, who he crunched the numbers and they actually let him publish it in Box.
Which I thought was amazing.
Yeah, he did not use any conservative or libertarian estimates.
He used the left and left of center estimates for what these programs would cost.
And even with those numbers, we're talking about like $40 trillion over the next decade.
And that's like a very charitable estimate for how much this stuff would cost, because in reality, it would cost a lot more.
I would like to huge asterisk on something in terms of like a view of mine that has changed because now that I'm thinking about this, it's on education.
On education, I've become much more conservative.
I struggled a lot with paying for school when I was younger.
It took me forever, ever to finish my undergrad because part because I was like easily distracted, also, because I was working, I was talented, and I was making a little bit of money.
And I was like,
I'll take my time with this.
But
look at how our university system
is run.
It's insane.
It's It's grotesque.
If I right now walked into a bank and tried to get a $120,000 loan for Chevy Impala, they'd laugh at me.
They'd say, would you crazy?
That car's not worth that, right?
But you could walk, but you could, it doesn't matter whether you're majoring in nuclear engineering or in non-binary butterfly studies or something, you know, whatever, you'd get the same exact loan.
It's not tied to the value of the degree.
So you create these perverse incentives for the universities to keep pushing up their prices.
But what has created that?
So it's a couple of things.
This crazy notion that everyone needs a college degree, right?
Which is a social stigma that's really peddled a lot by politicians.
Guaranteed federal loans.
I have to be completely honest.
I think
not everyone should go to college.
There should be alternatives.
Not every degree should take four years.
I work as a publicist.
I have to be totally honest with you.
Maybe the stuff that I learned in my first year of college was useful because I took a lot of writing classes and I read a lot, but I haven't needed any of that stuff afterward, right?
So, why did I need to pay for those three extra years?
What good, like, you know,
I could have learned that stuff either through an online course
or paying like $20 in Skillshare.
I have met, I personally believe in the apprentice program,
but I have met more more people that have come out of media studies who are just unhireable you don't know what reality is it's nothing like what you were just taught no thank you yeah
and and I've seen I've seen people come in with a degree and I've seen people come in without a degree who are just doing it yeah you know they just figured it out
I'd bet on these people every single time.
You spend a lot of time trying to undo some of the box thinking that you've been taught.
Yeah, and do you know why I got my degree?
So I had a lot of my friends to push me.
And so that was, I'm glad I did it, right?
You know,
I don't regret it.
But when I was applying for jobs, there was now like everything was automated.
And even for like just a mid-level communications PR manager kind of job,
you now had to check off a box that would, you have to indicate whether you, yes, you did have a BA or no, you didn't have a ba if you didn't have a ba it would throw out your resume and when i realized that was happening i was like all right i need to be able to check off this box that that i that i have a ba
we are creating a system in this country where people who didn't maybe for whatever reason they couldn't study or they they couldn't finish their education and we're telling them you guys are worthless
um for jobs that do not require
if you look at the job itself like what people are doing you don't need a ba to do most professions out there I will tell you that I get hammered all the time.
You never went to college.
Well, no, I couldn't afford it.
I did go to one semester,
you know, and it was a decent college.
It was Yale.
Yeah.
But no, don't have a degree.
Didn't study there.
Were you partying with Brett Kavanaugh?
I limit the stories I can tell you.
However, when I went to interview for private schools for my children,
I went and I talked to all the history teachers who are educated, who have their certificates.
I will tell you that one out of eight
was qualified.
The others,
I could just run circles around them.
They were
unbelievably, unbelievably shallow in their knowledge.
Why?
Why does that certificate mean anything?
Why does it mean anything?
Yeah.
And I think
that's an area of deep frustration that I have with my own party because all we talk about is let's pump more money into education.
I'm fine with you.
If you're talking about pumping more money into education, it's because there are schools that are collapsing or something.
Okay, fine.
You can't have kids going to schools that are collapsing, right?
But if you make college free,
it's done.
You would
strip it out of its intrinsic value, right?
You would create an artificial value for degrees that aren't worth it.
People,
like
that's not a good route to go down.
I talked to somebody the other day who said, here's what should happen.
You should graduate from high school 16.
And then you could take a year or two and do what you want.
And if you want to go to school, you go to school and
you go to college for what you want to do.
And maybe it's two years.
You know, if you want to be a doctor, it's four, six, or eight, but, you know,
you're a regular person, one, two years, depends on what you do.
Take the classes.
I'm okay with that.
Yeah.
And I, why does every degree have to take four years?
I don't understand.
No.
It seems to me like there are some vested interests that are being propped up there.
Are you optimistic?
I am naturally an optimist.
I know.
I'm an optimistic catastrophist.
Yeah, I'm naturally an optimist.
I am deeply concerned, though, about the tone in Washington.
I don't see this getting better anytime soon.
What do you see happening?
What does 2020 look like in America
if nothing changes?
So you are going to have the, so somebody, for example, right?
Like when people ask me, who are the great Democrats?
Like, who are the Democrats that you like?
Because
I punch left often.
I tell them, yeah, look, I think a guy like Bill Nelson, my senator, he's awesome, right?
I like Tim Cain a lot.
Decent man.
But those guys would never, ever win a Democratic primary.
No.
So
it's a battle between the intersectional identity politics and the socialist left.
And that's what's going to come.
And sometimes you have both.
Those two aren't necessarily mutually exclusive.
That's not the Democratic Party, though.
That's a different, that's a whole different part.
That's not what I signed up for.
That's like
some kind of cult.
Did you see the Heartland study that came out?
A Democrat,
don't remember where, a Democrat
that's a lot like you.
paid for an independent study of the heartland and then went to Capitol Hill and said, please, please, what are you doing?
Look at this poll.
Look at this research that we've done.
You are not the party of the heartland at all.
Right.
And at some point, the heartland Democrat wakes up and goes, I'm not these people.
I am just not these people.
Yeah, the thing, though, is that
those people, when you asked me, I forgot what was the term from the term from Dr.
Seuss if I was this or that.
I know a lot of people among my friends who think that the Democrats are going too far to the left, but they are terrified of the alternative because they see politics in binary terms.
So if there was,
because this is my,
I know Republicans in Washington, and I keep saying to them,
go find yourself five Democrats.
Go find yourself five Democrats.
And you five and those five,
you just stand up in the Congress or the well of the Senate and you say exactly what was said in 1863.
You people are not serious.
Either party,
I'm done.
And walk out and hold a press conference and say, we are shedding our party because these people are not serious.
There's too many big problems.
In the
1850s, it was slavery.
And that is what created the Republican Party.
It was Democrats or Whigs
and
Democrats that came together.
Was it Whigs?
I can't remember, but it was the two of them coming together saying, this is disgusting.
You keep talking about changing slavery, but you don't want to.
You're just living with it.
You're just kicking it down the road.
Yeah.
Well, to take a page out of your book, people are addicted to outrage.
Yeah.
That's, that's, that is, there is literally,
I'll sit down with my friends and we'll, we'll talk, yeah, I think it's true.
Yeah, these people are going too far to the left.
But then they say, yeah, but look at Trump.
Look what Trump is doing.
Look at all this stuff.
So it becomes a binary choice, which I think our system in some ways is by design.
So I have a friend of mine
who is studied political science.
He's a professor at the University of Chicago who told me something I thought was very interesting the other day.
I was like, you know, why can't Michael Bloomberg, who's got all this money, just run as an independent candidate?
Why does he have to run with the Democrats?
And he says, because the way our system is designed, you're likely, yeah, you cannot, it's by design, you cannot get a third party.
You're likelier to get four parties before you get three.
You're likelier to get like a moderate Republican and then
a more conservative, you know, and then the same on the left.
I don't know that people care about this stuff.
So like there are these groups like No Labels and Third Way, and
they're,
you know, they're constantly owned by the extremes of both sides.
They're constantly pointed out, oh, these are rhinos, or these guys are corporatists.
They're trying to play.
Look at someone like Corey Booker.
Look at what's happened to Corey Booker over these last few years.
I mean, Corey Booker came into Washington as a guy who was like four charter schools, and he was like this, like the new face of like centrist Democrats.
And it's just an absolute joke.
Like, it's because you don't think he's Spartacus?
I don't know if he's Spartacus, though.
Yeah, I mean, like, I respect the senator, I respect him as a person, but like his political transformation, that's what I'm saying, is a joke.
Like, it's tough to take it to take this stuff seriously.
Uh, and it's incredibly frustrating.
I'm just a regular guy.
I'm not, I have a job.
I have a wife that I go to every night.
I'm just a regular dude.
I have a salary, just like most of your listeners, right?
Like,
as someone who's just like an observer kind of watching this and has like worked in politics, I cannot believe my eyes of what's going on.
And also as someone who's like lived among Republicans before, because I've lived in, you know, I've lived in rural Virginia, I could, I don't see the other side as like my enemy.
I see them as people who like, you know, disagree with me on a few issues, but like, hey, we just still have a couple of beers or whatever, you know?
And I, like, I find, I find the situation in Washington right now is so toxic.
And people are,
just disgusted by it, but they don't realize that their own side is also a part of the problem.
You know, and that's what, that's part of what I found so refreshing about your book, that you were able to talk about your role.
Also,
a few years ago, you said, oh, look, I contributed to this, I helped create this culture, right?
Now we need to fix it.
And I think we need more people who are willing to say that.
People have a lot to lose if you say that.
Yeah.
Well, and that's the purse strings, right?
Because
there's no way I could have gotten away with saying this kind of stuff a few years ago because I was doing consulting work here and there.
And people would like, yeah, why would I risk?
I have friends who think exactly the same way that I do, but they work in government, you know?
I can't tell you how many people have come to me and said, Glenn, I agree with you on this, this, and this.
I'm not going to say that.
I mean, I'm not crazy.
And that's
government's gotten too big.
Yeah.
Because it should not, you should not be ever, you should not be afraid that you're not going, if you say this, you're not going to get this consulting contract.
It's like one thing, like somebody tries to come here to work for you.
And I'm not going to hire this guy because he's an a-hole, right?
But these are people who are like, it's like political fear, which is different, right?
These are people who are afraid to express like, and they're talking about things that are true, not personality differences, just like, hey,
the gender pay gap is not driven by sexism.
This is what it's driven by.
Nobody is willing to say that because they are too afraid of what's going to happen.
They're not going to get hired.
They're not going to work on the next campaign.
I know a guy, I'm not going to mention this person's name, who worked in, I'm not going to see him, because it would be easier, I think, to narrow down.
He worked in a Democratic president's White House.
you know, who's worked at the highest levels of Democratic campaigns.
He cannot get hired now
because he's a white man.
Because he went to go work somewhere and they told him that he was not culturally compatible with the organization after a few weeks.
And I like, I'm Latino.
I could play the brown card if I wanted to.
Although I'm not brown, I'm like really pale, like maybe wider than you are.
Can you stop saying that?
No, it's me.
Like,
really pale.
Like,
I burn up, you know, I'm the marshmallow man.
So, like, but my friend cannot get hired, and that's scary.
And this is someone who's like paid his dues, but he can't get one of these jobs in these organizations in DC because he doesn't fit like this new identity politics mold.
So, um, let's end it here.
Um, in my book, I talk about trying to find our unum.
I say it's the Bill of Rights, but
if we could just start there,
judge me by the content of my character, not the color of my skin or my sex or anything else.
Just what have you done
and what can you do?
And what's your character look like?
Would be a much better place.
I agree.
I agree.