Terror Attack, Kash, and Homeless

59m

Join Victor Davis Hanson and cohost Sami Winc to examine the recent attack in New Orleans, the explosion at Trump tower Las Vegas, KSM's commuted death sentence, WHO's misguided criticism of Israel, protesting Kash Patel as FBI director, and Newsom's homeless problem still a problem.

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Runtime: 59m

Transcript

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Speaker 2 Hello, and welcome to the Victor Davis-Hanson Show. This is the Friday news roundup, and we've got lots on our schedule.
We've got a

Speaker 2 terrorist attack in New Orleans, and then also the Trump Towers in Las Vegas had a bomb explode right in front of it. So, stay with us, and we'll be right back with those stories.

Speaker 2 Welcome back to the Victor Davis Hanson Show.

Speaker 2 Victor is the Martin and Ely Anderson Senior Fellow in Military History and Classics at the Hoover Institution and the Wayne and Marshabuski Distinguished Fellow in History at Hillsdale College.

Speaker 2 Please come join us at his website, victorhanson.com. We'd love to have you.
A subscription is $5 a month or $50 a year still.

Speaker 2 So come join us. Victor, so we've had an explosion outside of the Trump Tower in Las Vegas.
And then in New Orleans, a terrorist has killed 15 people in New Year's Eve celebrations.

Speaker 2 And I was wondering your thoughts on those things.

Speaker 3 There's two or three or four commonalities to these incidents, both in Las Vegas and in New Orleans, and what happened recently in Germany.

Speaker 3 And even the demonstrations that were happening incredibly right after these horrific attacks, people went to the streets in New York to basically protest in support of Hamas, a terrorist organization from the Middle East.

Speaker 3 But the first is this administration is not up to it, just like the Obama administration is not up to it. What do I mean by it?

Speaker 3 Policing our borders, deterring terrorists. Why do I say that? Joe Biden has been in the Caribbean.

Speaker 3 Then he goes back to Washington. Then he goes right to Camp David.
He's 40% of the time he's not in the White House. He's on vacation.
He comes forward with a statement.

Speaker 3 You think he's going to be able to finish the statement? Because we know that he can be semi-coherent when he's angry. Usually that's when he's angry at Trump people.

Speaker 3 Semi-maga, out of fashion, that kind of stuff. But he lost his way.
It was a tangled mess. He couldn't follow the teleprompter, and we got nothing out of him.
Nothing.

Speaker 3 And so, other than his, you know, don't kind of little bit he-man threats and all that. So, this administration has opened borders, and we know that it has institutionalized DEI.

Speaker 3 Now, what do I mean, number two,

Speaker 3 the FBI is just not up to it either. One of the first reactions from the Federal Bureau of Investigation was this.

Speaker 3 By the way, Christopher Wray didn't say anything at first, nor did his assistant in Washington, which is another argument, by the way, why we should take that headquarters out of Washington and put it somewhere in the middle of the country.

Speaker 3 But the assistant special agent in Georgia, excuse me, in Louisiana, I guess that's where she was, Aletheia Duncan, the first thing she says, without any evidence, this doesn't seem to be a terrorist example.

Speaker 3 It's a matter of IEDs. So in other words, she's confusing causation with methodology.
We don't really care what terrorists do, whether they blow up, whether they use DEI or bullets or guillotines.

Speaker 3 They're terrorists. And she can't even say,

Speaker 3 can't even say, we don't know yet whether it is a terrorist. She says it is not a terrorist.

Speaker 3 Now, why did she say that? And who told her to? And what kind of indoctrination

Speaker 3 has she been subject to that would make

Speaker 3 that her first response? I think I can answer my own question, rhetorical though it is. Do you remember the major Hassan Fort Hood attacks? Killed 13 people, very similar.
He was a U.S. citizen.

Speaker 3 He had been in the military. And as he started to murder these people, what did he say? Allah Akbar.
And what did the Obama administration, military, and officials say? It's workplace violence.

Speaker 3 Workplace violence. Then we go back to the Saarnev brothers.
Remember that? They were tipped off by Russian intelligence that these

Speaker 3 immigrants, who were U.S. citizens, I think at least in one case, were very dangerous people.
They ignored that.

Speaker 3 In fact, the public thought he was handsome and put him on the cover of Rolling Stone after he butchered people.

Speaker 3 I don't even need to get into the San Bernardino, but they were the same type of people, acculturated,

Speaker 3 either legal residents or American citizens. So, what am I getting at is that

Speaker 3 there is a process where people come from the Middle East, immigrants, first or second generation,

Speaker 3 and they start to absorb popular culture. And two things happen.
Number one, they get a sense in the DEI

Speaker 3 mentality that is prevalent throughout the country that they are exempt. In other words, if 50%

Speaker 3 of all hate crime victims are Jews and that Muslims are overrepresented by two to one as the perpetrators, it doesn't matter that the official response will be, we deplore

Speaker 3 anti-Semitism on the

Speaker 3 what we say in Greek is men on the one hand and de on the other,

Speaker 3 and Islophoma, Islamophobia, even though there's very few cases in comparison with anti-Semitism. So by trying to have it both ways or equivocate, you dilute the message.
That's number one.

Speaker 3 They understand that they have plugged into the DEI industry and they are victims. So you cannot criticize them on the basis of what they do.

Speaker 3 Number two,

Speaker 3 when people from the Middle East come over here,

Speaker 3 there is a subgroup that doesn't do well.

Speaker 3 I'm not saying that most don't do well, but whether the Sarnab brothers or Major Hassan or this Jabbar fellow or the people in Santa Barbara, and as they start to absorb American culture and Western culture in general, they start making excuses for the unhappiness in their own lives.

Speaker 3 And we saw this trailer where he lived, right? He had goats and sheep and chickens. It was a mess.
And yet he had cut a video not long before about his real estate company. And yet we learned that he,

Speaker 3 something that does not happen in the Middle East, he had divorced twice and he had to make alimony and child support payments. So then he's getting very, very angry about that.

Speaker 3 So his attitude is, I came over here, I joined the military, I'm not doing well. Join the club.
Everybody has that thing.

Speaker 3 I'm speaking to somebody who made $1.80 an hour for five years farming, I figured out. And one year I paid $10 an hour for the pleasure of driving an Oliver tractor for 12 hours a day.

Speaker 3 And yet I didn't become a fanatical religious zealot.

Speaker 3 But my point is that a lot of these immigrants, a lot, not the majority, but a lot, when they feel frustrated or angry, then they start blame-gaming the system of America. Oh, it's pornographic.

Speaker 3 Just like Mohammed Atta, remember, and they were all saying how decadent we are, and some of them were, what, at Stripsos and Vegas before they murdered 3,000 people. So they start to

Speaker 3 chronicle all the things wrong with America, and then they become, what,

Speaker 3 converts to what had been a latent Islam.

Speaker 3 In other words, they had been born Muslims, they are Muslims, they were Muslims in the extent that a lot of Christians are Christians, but they're not practicing.

Speaker 3 But once they start to see all these wrong things going on in their lives, then what do they do? They rediscover Islam as a crutch, as a refuge, as an escape, and then they start to channel

Speaker 3 jihad against the system that welcomed him in. And no one,

Speaker 3 no one in the mosque, no one in the Islamic movement, none care. Nobody says to them, We are so fortunate to be in the United States.

Speaker 3 Whatever claims or unhappiness or frustrations you have, it pales in consideration to where we came from. So just suck it up, buttercup.
Don't go blame the system and don't go kill people.

Speaker 2 Well, I hope I wish they would listen, and all immigrants would listen to that, to be honest.

Speaker 2 All right. So, Victor, let's take a moment.
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Well, Victor,

Speaker 2 we've had, in addition to that terrible terrorist attack in New Orleans, a woman that was burnt in the subway by an illegal alien.

Speaker 2 And we learned just recently this week that a cop was walking by without any sort of concern about

Speaker 2 what was going on in the subway. So that was very shocking to me.
I was wondering your thoughts on that.

Speaker 3 Well, we're in the era, the aftermath or the exhaust of defund the police. We haven't gotten over the whole COVID, defund the police, George Floyd, DEI woke.

Speaker 3 So these police forces have suffered

Speaker 3 two or three things. Number one, they've been vastly cut back.

Speaker 3 Number two, under the Biden administration and the woke movement, and the woke movement in particular, I'm talking about the Soros-elected

Speaker 3 district attorneys, Alvin Bragg in this case, and the mayor, Eric Adams, and the governor, Governor Hochl.

Speaker 3 There is a sense that the policemen,

Speaker 3 if there is a

Speaker 3 two things. If there's a question whether they were slightly culpable, then they're going to be held responsible.

Speaker 3 Number one, there's no margin of error, is what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 So if those policemen had jumped in there and grabbed him and pushed him away, he might have filed a claim, just like the family of the victim of Daniel Penny. And

Speaker 3 they might have been prosecuted, just like Daniel Penny was. So that's number one.
There is a hesitation, a reluctance, and in police and law enforcement, that split-second means everything.

Speaker 3 And it's not there anymore. That split-second, ready, instinctual reaction because of the possible consequences to your career and your person.
That's number one.

Speaker 3 Number two is

Speaker 3 there's a sense that

Speaker 3 we don't know who's here. There are no borders in the United States anymore.
We have no idea who these people are.

Speaker 3 We have a very vague sense that we don't talk about illegal immigration because, in this case, he was a Venezuelan, I think, or was he a Guatemalan.

Speaker 3 There's a sense that we have all of these people coming from Latin America, South America, all over the world here. They have all broken the law by entering illegally.

Speaker 3 They are residing illegally, and they are being rewarded by a

Speaker 3 guilty

Speaker 3 host that has no self-confidence in its values or tradition. They are being rewarded with free health care, free food, free shelter, and they formulate a conclusion.

Speaker 3 And the conclusion is, hey, I just broke their law. Hmm.
I just came across the border. I've got a felony record.
They didn't ask me. They must feel guilty.

Speaker 3 If they feel guilty, they must feel they've done something wrong. If they feel they've done something wrong, gimme, gimme, gimme.
And I can do something, nothing's going to happen to me.

Speaker 3 This is a society without consequences. I'm living proof.
So

Speaker 3 if I want to go drank and use drugs on the public dole, the taxpayers, and I happen to get a little out of control and burn something, nothing's going to happen to me.

Speaker 3 Joe Biden just, I hear their president just pardoned, what, 1,500 people, and he commuted a death sentence. This is a society without consequences.

Speaker 3 This is a society who suggests that people of color, and I think it doesn't really matter whether you're a person of color, it's just if you fit into that category.

Speaker 3 And when you have a Hispanic name, you do. So he feels that

Speaker 3 I'm part of the victimized binary. And the victimizer other half owes me something.
So there's not going to be any consequences to my drug use, my illegality, and that's where we are right now.

Speaker 3 And so that makes it very hard because the people who created this problem

Speaker 3 and are creating these situations about terrorism and random violence, whether it's the

Speaker 3 person who Daniel Penny apprehended and accidentally killed, or it's this fellow, whatever the particular circumstances is, it's permeating society. That

Speaker 3 we

Speaker 3 Americans have given the message that we don't feel our country is unique. We don't think our borders should be there.

Speaker 3 We don't think that we have the moral authority, much less the legal authority, to say, you can come, you cannot come, you can't. We're all under

Speaker 3 the accusation that we're racist, sexist, transphobic, all of these isms and ologies. And that's the message to people who want to take advantage, sometimes violently so, of our situation.

Speaker 3 Donald Trump's going to come in, and I guarantee you, he's going to start to try to close the border, deport people like this latest murder. And you know what's going to happen from the left?

Speaker 3 They are going to cherry-pick justices. They are going to go to court.
They're going to have the New York Times dig up people within the deep state that are Obama and Biden holdovers.

Speaker 3 They're going to print anonymous op-eds about how racist Donald Trump is and how courageous they are. You're going to get all of the Democratic Congress people.

Speaker 3 They're going to go back and say, we offered them comprehensive reform, and they didn't take it.

Speaker 3 That bogus deal where they would have allowed 4,000 people to come in every year before they did anything, every day, before they didn't anything.

Speaker 3 So my point is that it's going to be wild because we are so inured to this lawless society and this DEI doctrine. that somebody's going to have to break it.

Speaker 3 And it's going to be Donald Trump, and they're going to go crazy. They don't care that this poor woman was torched.
They do not care because they allowed the system to torture. They really did.

Speaker 3 And we're going to have more

Speaker 3 stories, more publicity, more worry about the status of the murder than we are about the victim. Just watch.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I have no doubt about that. Well, Victor, let's take a break and come back after these messages.

Speaker 2 Welcome back.

Speaker 2 So we were just talking about some of the terrorist events in the United States and also the poor woman that was

Speaker 2 in the New York metro. We got another case and that is Khalid Sheikh

Speaker 2 Muhammad who was entering in on a plea deal with the United States that he wouldn't have the death penalty and the Biden administration commuted that and agreed to that

Speaker 2 plea deal. And a court just recently ruled that that can't be taken back.
So Victory, I was wondering if what your thoughts were on that.

Speaker 3 Well, he was the architect.

Speaker 3 Bin Laden's group were the people who carried it out, but the people who dreamed it up, he wanted to blow up a series of airliners in the Philippines, a lot of them.

Speaker 3 A lot more people would have died had he been able to do that.

Speaker 3 So here you have a mass murderer that is responsible, along with the al-Qaeda people, of killing 3,000 people. And he's been sentenced to death.
He's had a fair trial. And it's been,

Speaker 3 what, 20, 24 years, and we can't carry out the sentence.

Speaker 3 And then the Biden administration and the Pentagon that's run by the Biden administrations decides that maybe they might plea deal, commute it, let in, da da da da, and there's public outrage that they have done this and they've gone to court.

Speaker 3 And so then

Speaker 3 the administration panics, and now the judge says, Well, you wanted to make the deal, the deal is done. You can't tell us, you can't renege.

Speaker 3 So it's again

Speaker 3 good riddance to these people. This is, I don't understand the

Speaker 3 psychology of it.

Speaker 3 Why would you try to contextualize a mass murderer who incinerated 3,000 Americans and worry, worry, worry whether you're moral or not by putting this monstrosity to death after he's done all of this?

Speaker 3 And he would do it again if he ever got out. And you're not talking to the same amount of time or labor about the people who were incinerated.
I just don't get the left. I really don't.

Speaker 3 Does it make them feel good?

Speaker 3 What is it about them?

Speaker 3 It's the same thing about why would you go after Daniel Penny when he saved people. This monster would have gone and attacked people, probably hurt them or killed them.

Speaker 3 Or why are we even talking about this arsonist, this human arsonist that does these things? And we don't, this homeless person,

Speaker 3 you know, you saw her school yearbook. She had a, something happened to her.
It was very tragic. And she's just asleep minding her own business.
She may be homeless. And they torture her.

Speaker 3 And yet, now we have all of these convoluted stories about the arsonist. Well, he was under drugs, or he was drinking, or people said that he was angry.
I don't care. He should have never been here.

Speaker 3 He should be brought to trial. And if there's the evidence that he is a pre-planned first-degree murderer, he should be sentenced.

Speaker 3 And if the penalty in New York is life imprisonment without parole, he should be sentenced, done.

Speaker 3 And yet it's not done. And that's why people voted for Donald Trump, because they're tired of this.

Speaker 3 They're just tired of this society without consequences, society without rules, society without responsibility.

Speaker 2 Yeah,

Speaker 2 I'm with you on the just so sad. I don't see how anybody can be on the left with those types of ideas and

Speaker 2 entertain that kind of thing. But maybe we can turn to Israel.
The IDF has renewed operations in Gaza, and they are going to finish off in northern Gaza the Hamas control there. And it's very strange.

Speaker 2 I think another thing that's problematic in our world is that the World Health Organization has weighed in on behalf of Hamas and said, oh, Israel or the IDF has attacked hospitals, and so they're siding with Hamas.

Speaker 2 And they always do this. And I was wondering your commentary on it, that they always come in.
Everybody knows Hamas puts themselves behind these hospitals and these public areas.

Speaker 2 And yet we have to hear again and again from the World Health Organization. organization and I was wondering your thoughts.

Speaker 3 Well in this case,

Speaker 3 Hamas terrorists went into into a hospital, and there were people in the hierarchy, of course, who welcomed them. Maybe they did it under duress, maybe not.

Speaker 3 But they didn't kill people. They emptied the hospital, and they had everybody go out

Speaker 3 in supposedly single file. Some of the terrorists scattered and were dispatched by drones.

Speaker 3 And then they went to another hospital, and they transferred all the equipment, and then they examined the hospital and rooted out the terrorists. No one else would have done that.

Speaker 3 They would have just bombed the hospital, but they're now being blamed by the World Health Organization for attacking a medical facility. Again,

Speaker 3 we wouldn't have this conversation if it hadn't been for October 7th.

Speaker 3 And what's strange about all this is there is a momentum in the Middle East

Speaker 3 that is not as radical, are not as left-wing, are not as pro-terrorist as our international organizations, are the people in the United States protesting on the part of Hamas.

Speaker 3 I'll give you an example. The Palestinian Authority, of whom I'm not a big fan, I don't trust, they kicked out Al Jazeera because they felt that Al Jazeera was brainwashing their own people, i.e.

Speaker 3 pro-Hamas.

Speaker 3 And so when you have

Speaker 3 the Palestinian Authority

Speaker 3 saying to the world, we don't want radical Islam among our own people. Now that we've been defeated, we want to have some kind of reconciliation.
Maybe, who knows?

Speaker 3 Maybe they think that, I don't believe it, but maybe they think they can be Dubai. And they don't want Hamas there.

Speaker 3 So, what I'm getting at is the subtext of a lot of Palestinians, they'll never admit, but those on the West Bank are thinking, oh my God, I don't want to tell anybody, but I am so glad that those Hamas murderers are gone.

Speaker 3 I'm so glad that those Shia nuts in Iran are gone. I'm so glad that Assad and Hezbollah and Allah and the Hu, I don't need those people.

Speaker 3 And I would rather be one of the two million people living as Arab Muslims under the protection of Israel as citizens if they would extend not citizenship the same type of protection and security and leave me alone the West Bank.

Speaker 3 And that's new, and

Speaker 3 it's not a part of the Camp David Accords or the peace talks.

Speaker 3 It's because Benjamin Netanyahu

Speaker 3 flattened Hamas, he's going to flatten the Houthis, he flattened Hezbollah, and Iran has a rendezvous with a come-uppance.

Speaker 3 And so, the whole thing is changing.

Speaker 3 So, the World Health Organization and the Europeans and the EU who will arrest Netanyahu if he goes to Poland or if he goes to Canada or he goes to any major Spain.

Speaker 3 And by the way, just as a parentheses, I think we should tell the Polish foreign minister that if you arrest an Israeli president or our defense secretary, then we're not going to give you any military aid.

Speaker 3 Sorry.

Speaker 3 And send a sharp message to them.

Speaker 3 And I think one of the first things Donald Trump will do is he'll say to the World Health Organization, you know what, you go do it what you want.

Speaker 3 If you want to side with Hamas or you want to go after the Jewish state, you go ahead. But we're sick of you.
We gave you a chance under the Biden administration when they restored the funding.

Speaker 3 And what did you do? You went right back to form. Anti-Western, anti-American.
We're sick of you.

Speaker 3 And we understood that during the COVID, it's not that you're independent and you're brave and you're speaking truth to power. No, you're obsequious and you're corrupt.
Why do I say that?

Speaker 3 Because you knew that the Chinese had let out, maybe accidentally, who knows, a lethal virus out of a virology lab at Wuhan. You knew it, you knew it was gained in function, and you lied.

Speaker 3 You lied, lied, lied, lied, and you carried water for the communist Chinese, and then you posed to your Westerners who fund you more than the Chinese. Oh, you people are this.

Speaker 3 You always attack the hand that feeds you because you're terrified of the other hand, the communist Chinese, and they know that. Their basic argument to these international organizations is this.

Speaker 3 We're not going to give you what they do. They're going to subsidize you, but we expect you in the International Criminal Court, in the World Health Organization, in the UN

Speaker 3 Refugee Relief, we expect you to be politically on the same page as us. And that means you don't criticize the fact that we have a million Uyghurs in camps.
You don't criticize we have forced

Speaker 3 sterilization, but you go after the people in the West because they're guilt-ridden and they will take it seriously. And you're a valuable utility, a valuable asset for the Chinese Communist Party.

Speaker 3 So go ahead. And that's where we are.
And so the only solution to it is for Donald Trump just to say, he doesn't have to be combative. He does not have to seek confrontation.

Speaker 3 All he has to say is, we love the World Health Organization. You do a lot of good things, but we're just going to have to pass.
So sorry. We're just going to have to pass.

Speaker 3 We're very sorry, and we would like to help you, but we're just not in a position now. We have a deficit.
We have other internal problems. Maybe we'll have a parallel course, but we wish you well.

Speaker 3 Just go ahead and help us out, but we're not going to fund you. And that's what he needs to do.
He needs to have that attitude about all of these things he's doing.

Speaker 3 He should tell the Mexican, we love the Mexican government. We love Mexico.
We just can't, I'm sorry,

Speaker 3 we just can't have you killing 100 and 10,000 people a day with fentanyl that's

Speaker 3 a year imported. Can't do it anymore.
Sorry. We can't send back $63 billion in remittances.
We can't have your press, your media trashing us the whole time while you

Speaker 3 violate our border and you allow people from Latin America to violate our border and you think it's cute. So we're not going to do it anymore.
We don't have any hostility.

Speaker 3 We're just not going to do it anymore. And that needs to be the attitude.

Speaker 3 Trade with China, NATO defense, you name it. Don't seek confrontation.
Just say

Speaker 3 tragically, get the tragic, maybe even the therapeutic a little bit. We're sorry, NATO.
We're going to be in the alliance.

Speaker 3 We're not going to quit, but we're not going to up our expenditures or come to the aid of all of your various causes unless you pay your 2%.

Speaker 3 We don't want to be like this, but you forced us to. So please, please pay your 2%.

Speaker 3 And that's what his attitude should be. I think it will be that way by Trump.
Trump doesn't have to say, oh, Mexico, you better straighten up. On World Health, you're corrupt.
No, just,

Speaker 3 you know, say, oh, we didn't fund you. I forgot to fund you this year.
I'll talk to the OMB. You didn't write them a check? Oh, we're sorry.
We just, we,

Speaker 3 yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 I think you're right. I hope that the Trump administration does listen to your advice.

Speaker 2 And then furthermore, though, on the Trump administration, they have the FBI

Speaker 2 director coming in, Cash Patel. and apparently there are snappers out protesting Cash Patel's appointment.
And I was wondering your thoughts on that.

Speaker 3 Well,

Speaker 3 that is very funny because these incidents, and we're talking

Speaker 3 on the second day of January, and in the last week, given the things that have happened in Germany, the mass murdering terrorists, given the terrorist incident in New Orleans, I shouldn't say incident, murdering, given the

Speaker 3 cyber truck that blew up in front of the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas, given all these demonstrations. That is an argument that the people, and where is Christopher Wray?

Speaker 3 What is it with these people? Their tenure is not officially over yet? You know what I'm saying? It's like a professor. If I was, when I retired in 2004, I had a final.

Speaker 3 to give, but I had to give them notice in January, the first week of the semester.

Speaker 3 Could I have just said, I'm sorry, I have four classes and 200 students, but I'm going to go up to the mountain of the Sierra and take off because I'm a lame duck. No.
Well, where is Christopher Wray?

Speaker 3 He should be talking, talking about all of this. He should be telling us and reassuring us.

Speaker 3 Biden had, as I said, a two-minute garbled, get off-my grass rant.

Speaker 3 So, my point is that this, in a very ironic, not deliberately, but an ironic way, has paved the way for the confirmations, I think, of Cash Patel at FBI, Tulsi Gabbard as Director of National Intelligence.

Speaker 3 John Radcliffe was going to get confirmed anyway at CIA, and Pete Heckseth at Defense, because people are going to say, get rid of these people. They're incompetent.
They're dangerous.

Speaker 3 They're going to get us in a war, a nuclear war in Europe.

Speaker 3 They're restricting Israel. They won't let Israel win.

Speaker 3 And they can't protect us. We don't have an open border.
Just get rid of them and bring in their antitheses. And we mean their antitheses.

Speaker 3 What's the antithesis? The worst nightmare of Christopher Wray? It's Cash Patel.

Speaker 3 What's the worst nightmare of the Millie Austin type of defense? It's a Pete Hexeth. What's the worst nightmare of Anthony Fauci or Francis Collin? It's Jay Bacharia.
That's That's what we need.

Speaker 3 And that's why

Speaker 3 it wasn't intent. I don't want to suggest that it was a fortuitous event.

Speaker 3 I'm just suggesting that all of these tragedies have brought home to the American people, especially those in Congress who were going to vote against them,

Speaker 3 that they need an anecdote. And the anecdote is there before them.
And I doubt that any of them now are going to be rejected.

Speaker 2 So be

Speaker 3 palpable.

Speaker 2 Well, Victor, we need to take a break and then we'll come back and talk a little bit about your California and Gavin Newsom's work there.

Speaker 2 Stay with us. We'll be back.

Speaker 2 Welcome back. This is the Victor Davis Hansen show, and you can find Victor at X and on

Speaker 2 Facebook. His X handle is at V D Hansen, and Facebook has Hansen's Morning Cup, so come join him there.

Speaker 2 Victor, so your Governor Newsom is planning on running again for governorship, and he still has a homeless problem that's as bad, if not worse, than it was before, and yet he spent $27 billion on that, and he is having some trouble politically because of that.

Speaker 3 In other words, California could have built two fleet carriers,

Speaker 3 two hundred and five thousand-ton ton Gerald Ford carriers, or could have built,

Speaker 3 I don't know,

Speaker 3 10

Speaker 3 nuclear submarines. And what do we do with it? We spent it on homeless people, but we didn't spend it on homeless people.
We spent it on my organization will come forward.

Speaker 3 We're a nonprofit and we will take care of the homeless problem and offer them warm meals or my company makes small little dwellings and that's what we spent it on. And they were all cronies.

Speaker 3 If you want to know where the $27 billion went, just go back in time and space and do a little time traveling to 2020 when we had the shutdown. And Gavin Newsom was on TV every day in the state.

Speaker 3 Mask everybody, mask everybody. Meanwhile, Nancy Polo...

Speaker 3 Social distancing shut down. Nancy was sneaking into her hairdressers in San Francisco.

Speaker 3 Gavin was down at the Super Bowl without a mask, but my favorite scene was at the French laundry where it's $500 a meal. And who was he with?

Speaker 3 He was with health care lobbyists violating masking, social distancing, and quarantine. Those are the people.
He just bought a $9 million home.

Speaker 3 Is he in touch with the people who pay 40 cents almost a kilowatt for like no.

Speaker 3 So if you do the math and there's various estimates about how many homeless people, it's about $100,000 to $150,000 per homeless. So if Gavin had just said,

Speaker 3 I don't have a clue how to stop the homeless, but I'm going to take $27 billion

Speaker 3 into these

Speaker 3 $200,000 or $300,000,

Speaker 3 I'm just going to hand them, I don't know, $150,000 in cash. You would be no worse off.

Speaker 3 So

Speaker 3 everybody is sick of him, and they all knew that he was trying to run for president, and he didn't, he was sabotaged, thank God, because he would have been even worse than Camilla Harris by this little coup that they staged to put her in and get rid of Biden.

Speaker 3 But I think he's politically inert. Everything he's touched has destroyed the state.

Speaker 3 I was driving on the 99, as I mentioned,

Speaker 3 the day after Christmas, one hour stuck there with the same two lanes lanes that I remember driving when I was a 18-year-old and I drove over from the farm to UC Santa Cruz. The same route.

Speaker 3 It has not changed in 55 years.

Speaker 3 And he's got this Stonehenge $13 billion, $15 billion

Speaker 3 high-speed rail fiasco. We have the highest gas taxes, the highest gas prices.
He's raised it. The Air Resources Board, without a vote, is going to raise it

Speaker 3 60 cents. He shut down a nuclear power plant, Rancho said.
He was going to do another one at Diablo Canyon until finally they warned him.

Speaker 3 Highest income tax, highest sales tax, among the highest, highest gas taxes, income taxes, 13.3% highest in the United States. And yet we're running a $70 billion deficit.

Speaker 3 And our schools are rated in the bottom

Speaker 3 five of the 50 states. Our infrastructure is rated about 48.

Speaker 3 It's almost as if the more money they get and the more money that Newsom demands, the worse everything is. So if we paid no taxes, these services would be better.
So why is it? What's going on?

Speaker 3 Why did we spend $27 billion?

Speaker 3 I think the answer is

Speaker 3 who are the culprits for this?

Speaker 3 They're in a very small radius, everybody. Just go over some names.

Speaker 3 Most prominent San Francisco in the federal government, San Francisco, Nancy Pelosi. She and her husband made a fortune with insider knowledge.
Second most powerful person

Speaker 3 in the Senate for years, third head of the judiciary, Diane Feinstein. Her husband was a billionaire.

Speaker 3 Governor, very wealthy. Gavin Newsom, his wife is very wealthy.
He comes from the Gordon Getty

Speaker 3 circle in in San Francisco. Jerry Brown, governor for eight years, Oakland mayor.
He's up at his estate in Grass Valley. He was from an old, very wealthy political family.

Speaker 3 Barbara Boxer, she's down somewhere, I don't know where it is, Palm Desert, Manchu, I don't know, but she's on a golf course somewhere, another Bay Area politician.

Speaker 3 And then we have Camilla Harris. So this area

Speaker 3 has overshadowed the valley, of course, but it also took over from Los Angeles. And why? Because it's right next to $9 trillion in market capitalization.

Speaker 3 And that has been permeated from La Jolla all the way to Berkeley along this coastal strip. And we create these politicians.
They're very, very wealthy. They're very privileged.
They're aristocratic.

Speaker 3 They're plutocratic. They never have to worry about their power bills, their gasoline bills, getting stuck in traffic,

Speaker 3 going to one of their horrible airports, none of that. They've destroyed the state.
They have no borders in the state, and they're never subject to the idealism or the utopianism of their

Speaker 3 proposals. So what do I mean by that? I mean, Gavin Newsom is not going to have homeless people outside his $9 million home.
He's not.

Speaker 3 He's not going to drive down the 99 every week like some poor Joe who has to go from Fresno to Stockton every day. He's not going to have to do that.

Speaker 3 He's not going to be broken in and robbed as people are in Mendota. Not going to happen to him.

Speaker 3 He's not going to be some farmer trying to make a living and provide food for us and have a state bureaucrat say, there's no water for you. We have to feed the fish.
None of that.

Speaker 3 And that's why they do it. If they were just subject to the consequences of their ideology, they'd stop.
So what is the anecdote? Because we're culpable. We, the state, voted for these people.

Speaker 3 I didn't, but I'm a member of the state that did. You can't vote for these people.

Speaker 3 As a general rule, anybody who is left-wing, wealthy in the Bay Area, do not vote for because they will use you as a lab rat. And they will experiment on green initiatives,

Speaker 3 energy initiatives, DEI initiatives. He's now spending $25 million for a legal fund to stop Donald Trump.
He gave away half a billion dollars to illegal aliens during COVID.

Speaker 3 For him,

Speaker 3 it's not his money. The only thing that counts is that he's got somebody else's money to live in a $9 million home.
He didn't make that money. I don't think he even inherited that money.

Speaker 3 It either came through some corporation that the Gettys fueled, or a joint venture he had, or his wife's family.

Speaker 3 But the point I'm making is that you can't vote for these people and expect that they're going to worry about people in Dainuba, California, or needles. They're not going to do it.

Speaker 3 They're never going to do it. They don't care about your transportation.
They don't care about your rising home insurance. They don't care that your insurance was canceled.

Speaker 3 They don't care about half the accidents in Fresno County or hit and run. They don't care about that because they never have to deal with it.

Speaker 2 Victor, I'm almost afraid to ask you this. What do you think his chances are of winning

Speaker 3 governorship? I think they're very good. I think they're very good.
It's very important. I can't recall.

Speaker 3 The only thing I can ever remember is of a person who was recalled, and I'm sure that historians will, because I'm not prepared to go through the whole history of California, but in my lifetime, the only time I recall it happening was when they recalled Gray Davis, and they successfully did.

Speaker 3 And then in the special election, they elected a celebrity, Arnold Schwarzenegger, who was his antithesis, and who was good for a couple of years.

Speaker 3 And then he ran into his wife's agenda and the unions, and he was terrible. But the point I'm making is it's very hard to recall a governor.

Speaker 3 And then we saw that when the first time they recalled Gavin, and then Larry Elder ran, and of course, the LA Times said that he was a white person, and even though he was black, he reflected white supremacy.

Speaker 3 So that's a level of vituperation you earn. But the only thing that would

Speaker 3 work, to be honest, if Silicon Valley

Speaker 3 got behind someone other than Gavin Newsome, he's very close to them. And I don't mean Silicon Valley in its totality, but I mean the Peter Tyrrells, the David Sachs,

Speaker 3 the Ben Horowitz's, all of those people said, you know what, Elon Musk, I can't, we can't, the state's destroyed, we can't. And then they got someone who was a working person.

Speaker 3 Someone from Fresno, someone from Bakersfield, someone from Chico, who was an immigrant, second-generation Mexican-American person that was running a labor crew, running a plumbing business,

Speaker 3 running a painting company, somebody who dealt with the real world that they couldn't, they being the hard left, say, you're a racist, racist, racist, racist.

Speaker 3 Not that they wouldn't, they did that with Larry Elder, but I'm not optimistic because the state is almost completely dysfunctional.

Speaker 3 I just had somebody that wrote wrote me and said they went to San Francisco and they thought it was a dystopian moonscape.

Speaker 3 They could not, all the places they frequented and they had happy memories, they were non-existent.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 my only comment is I don't think you should drive in there because where are you going to park your car? Because if it's broken into, they're not going to do anything.

Speaker 3 Maybe the new mayor or the mayor.

Speaker 3 You know, the only thing, the only time things change is when when the people who created the problem suffer from the problem, like the Martha's Vineyard, ultra-liberal, philanthropic, good-willed, left-wing, humanitarians, and then Ruan DeSantis sends them some illegal aliens, and they get their puff jackets for them and their charity boxes, and then they say,

Speaker 3 see you, wouldn't want to be you, get on that bus and get to New York or Chicago.

Speaker 3 And then they secretly will not vote for that if it happens, because they're afraid it's going to happen to them again.

Speaker 3 And I don't know.

Speaker 2 Maybe it is happening to the wealthier classes. There is a whole gang that seems to be invading

Speaker 2 athletes

Speaker 2 and

Speaker 2 media stars' houses now. And so maybe they will get more serious, especially about the illegal immigration.

Speaker 3 Nobody's immune from what they created.

Speaker 3 It's a Frankenstinian monster that's destroying its creator. You can be in Beverly Hills, Pacific Palisades,

Speaker 3 anywhere, Palace Verde's Estates, and they will find you. In fact, if you're very, very wealthy and it's known, they'll follow your work schedule and go to your home.
And

Speaker 3 it's everywhere. That's the manifestation.
As I said to Jack the other day, I walked out here three days ago and I saw the most atrocious thing I'd ever seen.

Speaker 3 It was an ancestral pond that first drew my great-great-grandmother, Lucy Anna Davis, in 1870 to settle here because there was an Artesian pond, a beautiful pond.

Speaker 3 One of my siblings sold it. That's his business.
But I still walk there every morning. The neighbor farms the almond orchard around the pond.

Speaker 3 And you know what it's become? It's been

Speaker 3 a receptacle for the local towns, illegal aliens, to come and dispense their crap. And so there's a washer now on the inside the pond bank.
There is a dryer. There is wet garbage.
There's car seats.

Speaker 3 There's paint. There's toxic chemicals.
It's all thrown there. And when you try to wade out like I did this morning and say, I just want, all I want is one

Speaker 3 bill with your name on it. You can see Mexican literature.

Speaker 3 about

Speaker 3 soccer matches, you can see Spanish language, you can't see one bill. So the the attitude is:

Speaker 3 I'm here from Latin America, I'm here illegally, I don't want, I'm out in the country, I'm not going, there's a law that says every single person, whether you like it or not, at a residence has to have a trash receptacle.

Speaker 3 There are public

Speaker 3 landfills, they cost about $30 or $40 to dump all this stuff. But there's also these stupid people that live around the, and they have all this money, and they're wealthy, and they own land.

Speaker 3 And if you go out and throw all of your trash, nothing happens to you. So you call up the

Speaker 3 state environmental, they'll say, was it on the side of the road? Do you have a witness? No. Well, we're not going to go on your property and remove it.
That's not our fault.

Speaker 3 You have to find the perpetrator. And you say, well, the perpetrator is not stupid.
He goes through all of his garbage and he comes in at two in the morning.

Speaker 3 And then I'll say, well, you better get it out. And I've had this conversation before.

Speaker 3 Oh, by the way, do you have toxic substances there?

Speaker 3 Yes. Well, you better be very careful because you're not going to be able to dispose of them.

Speaker 3 You're going to have to drive 100 miles to the toxic waste dump outside of Kalinga, California.

Speaker 3 That's what you get. And so.

Speaker 3 You get punished for being a fool. Isn't that weird in California?

Speaker 2 Yeah, it sure is. And, you know, you actually, that is a nightmare.
And you actually just wrote a

Speaker 2 Twitter, an ex-post

Speaker 2 called The National Nightmare Its Ending. And I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about that.
That was for New Year's, so the optimistic Victor Day.

Speaker 3 It was on New Year's Eve, and I was just...

Speaker 3 It was about nine at night, and I was thinking, I was just listening of some poetry. I was thinking of Inwictus, that famous poem, Bloodied But Unbowed.

Speaker 3 I thought about Trump, and then I remember that great line.

Speaker 3 I was thinking, I used to really like to read Shakespeare's Julius Caesar at that point when they said that he's come back after his victories, and the Civil War is basically over now.

Speaker 3 They haven't assassinated him yet, but he strides like a colossus, and we are just pitiful between his legs, and we have these unhappy graves.

Speaker 3 It's a great quote. And then I kind of combined two as a title: après mous

Speaker 3 les deluge, after me the deluge. I didn't put the deluge in there, but after me, things changed.

Speaker 3 So I put après mour, and then I put la adaus, la adaus, encore, la daus, toujour, adaus, la adaus, excuse that horrible pronunciation.

Speaker 3 Audacity, audacity, courage, courage, resolve, however, translate adas.

Speaker 3 And that was the theme that we don't have to take it anymore. All of a sudden,

Speaker 3 no one cares that,

Speaker 3 you know, no one cares that you can't say this or you can't say that.

Speaker 3 I think DEI is dead now. People are running away for it.
And you can say,

Speaker 3 yes, the COVID came from the laboratory, so what? I just said it.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 there are only two sexes, and it's wrong to put a person with testicles and a phallus in with young

Speaker 3 preteen girls or any girls in a locker room. I just said it.
And you know what?

Speaker 3 I'm not going to ever listen to Mark Milley again or Anthony Fauci again or Andrew McCabe or James Comey or John Brennan, any of them. They're done with

Speaker 3 and we're not going to allow

Speaker 3 We're not going to allow to be intimidated anymore. It's a liberating feeling.
We don't have to watch what we say or we don't have to apologize, or we don't have to lie.

Speaker 3 Nobody's going to say, Joe Biden is fit as a fiddle. What? Or Joe Scarborough.
I just saw him. This is the most vigorous Joe Biden I've ever.

Speaker 3 No,

Speaker 3 he's not. He's senile.
He's demented. We can say it.
You lied. There's no more Roost anymore.
It's all like some kind of south southernly wind came in and blew it all away.

Speaker 3 I know you're going to say, well, Victor, wait, wait, you don't understand these people. They're diehards.
They're dead-ender. I understand them.

Speaker 3 I'm talking about the psychology of it, not the actual, necessarily the material action.

Speaker 3 So it was a poem of relief and gratitude for the new year and the idea that

Speaker 3 everybody seems to be upbeat. And even people on the left that I talk to, it's sort of like, okay, you caught us lying.
He was always demented. Yeah, Camel Harris, there was no momentum, believe me.

Speaker 3 And she was not joyful. We're kind of secretly happy that we don't have her there.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 yes, Donald Trump is conducting foreign policy and his team has taken over and they're not yet inaugurated. But we're not going to mention the Logan Act.

Speaker 3 We did that with Michael Flynn, you know, when he called talked to a Russian. We tried to do that.
We just can't do it anymore.

Speaker 3 There was a comedian today who apologized for having Trump derangement syndrome. And we have a lot of that lately.
Just like,

Speaker 3 take him, Donald Trump, please get into office right now. Get into office.

Speaker 3 So that's new.

Speaker 2 So that was, I thought that was a really great tweet. And I think everybody should join X and

Speaker 2 Elon Musk and also come to Victor's at V D Hansen. So Victor, this is the end of the show.
And I have a comment from what's so different this time about Trump's election on your website.

Speaker 2 A very nice comment.

Speaker 3 The

Speaker 2 commenter said, Dr. Hansen, you are the most erudite observer of every political ism of the 20th century.

Speaker 2 And then he says, This: in your recent interview with the gentleman from the UK, I think it was the John Anderson interview, you expressed a reversal of opinion on the possibility of civil war in the United States since the re-election of President Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 You now think not only, only, not likely or even possible to occur, alas, we do not concur on this subject. These coalesced extremist groups are going to reemerge as they did in the summer of 2020.

Speaker 2 Unfortunately, this time there will be millions of Kyle Rittenhouses to engage them. And I was wondering, Victor, are you optimistic on that?

Speaker 3 I never thought there'd be a violent civil war. I still don't.
I'm not naive or Pollyannish. Just these people are in hiding.
They're exhausted.

Speaker 3 They've been defeated, the left. They're not over with.
They're licking their wounds. They've gone back to their caves, their ideological caves.
They're strategizing.

Speaker 3 They'll be back in, I don't know, early February. So what?

Speaker 3 The point I'm making is that the moment is not theirs anymore. that people rose up.
And

Speaker 3 when I hear, well, he only won by about 1.6 million votes.

Speaker 3 I know he got more electoral votes than Barack did when we said it was a landslide, but now we don't think it's quite a landslide. It doesn't matter.
You had 95%

Speaker 3 of the media coverage on television, and 95% of it was

Speaker 3 negative. You spent $2.5 billion.

Speaker 3 You tried to take him off the ballot. You tried to put him in in jail under five different civil and criminal courtrooms, indictments.
You indicted him 91 times.

Speaker 3 Two people tried to kill him,

Speaker 3 possibly, probably, likely, because of the rhetoric that suggested it would be okay if you did that. You impeached him twice.
You tried him as a private citizen.

Speaker 3 You took him off the ballot in 16 states, and it didn't work. What more could you do to him? You couldn't do any more.
You tried everything.

Speaker 3 You had all the money, you had all the media, you had all the lawfare mechanisms, and you still failed.

Speaker 3 So

Speaker 3 you not only failed, but you disgraced all the methods that you used. So the DOJ is disgraced, the FBI is disgraced, the CIA is disgraced.
They're all disgraced. The Pentagon is disgraced.

Speaker 3 You did that. Now they're going to have to be rebuilt under different auspices.
The media is disgraced.

Speaker 3 Silicon Valley people are disgraced. They know it.
They're rejoining their antithesis. So,

Speaker 3 yeah, we're not going to have a civil war. They're going to come back.
But I think they're in retreat. And they have a message that nobody wants.
And there's going to be someone like a Bill Clinton.

Speaker 3 It's not going to be sincere. Bill Clinton wasn't.
But he wants to win and gain power. And he's going to start talking, maybe with a southern accent, who knows? But he's going to talk about solutions.

Speaker 3 And we're not going to worry about ideology. We're just going to do stuff from the middle class and balance the budget and have a strong defense, that kind of stuff, just like Bill did.

Speaker 3 And Bill kind of kept his word. He'd balance the budget two years.
You haven't seen that since with Nuke Inreach.

Speaker 3 So if they want to win, they're going to have to get someone like that.

Speaker 3 Josh Shapiro, I think, I'm not a big fan of Josh Shapiro.

Speaker 3 I think he's a leftist, but he's very smart, and he plays as if he's a moderate because he sees his state, Pennsylvania, flipping, flipping, flipping red, just like John Fetterman.

Speaker 3 Now everybody says, oh, John Fetterman, he came to his census. No, he didn't come to his census.

Speaker 3 He looked at that vote and he looked at those county-by-county returns and he said, I will not be returned to the Senate if I go back to my earlier John Fetterman.

Speaker 3 So I've got to recreate the Bill Clinton Democratic Party in the state, because this state is not conservative anymore. Pennsylvania is more conservative now than Wisconsin or Michigan.

Speaker 3 So they had an enormous Republican effort to turn out the vote and register votes, and Fetterman understands

Speaker 3 he's cooked unless he does it. So

Speaker 3 there'll be somebody who tries to reconstruct

Speaker 3 the old Democratic Party just to get power.

Speaker 3 I don't think the squad and Renyu Sanders and Elizabeth Warren are going to be there, the stalwarts. Nancy Pelosi's...

Speaker 3 think about Nancy Pelosi, when she leaves, the people in her own party are going to say, God, thank God.

Speaker 3 And then you're going to learn just about Nancy Pelosi, just the way you did Joe Biden. You're going to hear, just as Joe Biden is now politically inert, and everybody said,

Speaker 3 that Matthew Ecclesiast said, I should have known I trusted the people when they said that he wasn't mentally.

Speaker 3 challenged, i.e., I went after all you people and called you names if you dared suggest that.

Speaker 3 But he was demanded. Well, they're going to say the same thing about Nancy Pelosi when she's out of office.
They're going to say, oh, we love Nancy, but yes, she made a lot of money

Speaker 3 using that position and her husband, federal contracts, stock deals, and we're going to have to pass legislation to stop people like her again because

Speaker 3 she was something else. She became a multi-multi-millionaire on a House Representative salary and a husband that was an appendage of her inside knowledge.

Speaker 3 Yeah.

Speaker 2 Well, Victor, thank you for all of your wisdom this afternoon. I know we're once again on a hard break, so we're all happy to have our audience as well.
You guys make us. So thanks to you.
And

Speaker 3 thank you, everybody, for listening.

Speaker 2 This is Sammy Wink and Victor Davis-Hansen, and we're signing off.