The Trump Assassination Attempt: What Now?
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Speaker 2 Imagine going to a restaurant where they don't give you the meal. They just keep giving you like one ingredient as you're sitting at the table.
Speaker 2
And so when you sit down, you're like, oh, I'm having rice. Oh no, wait, wait, I'm having a rice stew.
Oh no, wait, I'm having a rice stew with beef.
Speaker 2
Oh no, wait, I'm having a rice stew with beef and also some chili. Oh no, wait, I'm having a rice.
That's exactly what they do with the news.
Speaker 2 You're listening to What Now, the podcast where I chat to interesting people about the conversations taking over our world.
Speaker 2 This week, we're talking about the story that has been on everyone's minds, the assassination attempt against Donald Trump. And now, we're here asking, will this change the way Americans vote?
Speaker 2 Will this change Donald J. Trump? And will America learn from its past? or just continue the story of American exceptionalism?
Speaker 2 Now, the only thing I love more than peeling back the layers of a story is doing it with my favorite thinkers.
Speaker 2 So, once again, I'm joined by writer, journalist, and professional hater Christiana Mbakwe Medina and one of What Now's very own executive producers, Jodie Abigan.
Speaker 4 Do we want to game plan?
Speaker 2 I am recording on my side.
Speaker 2 This is What Now with Trevor Noah.
Speaker 2 Happy Podcast Day, everybody.
Speaker 5 Happy Podcast Day.
Speaker 4 Happy Podcast Day.
Speaker 2
This is a fun one. Yeah, there's an extra voice joining us.
We've got a... Jodi, who's usually running the back end of everything.
I don't even know what you do, Jodi.
Speaker 2 I think you just have a bigger computer than me.
Speaker 4 Yeah, I like to keep it that way. An air of mystery.
Speaker 2 This is fun having you on. Christiana, how are you?
Speaker 5 I'm hanging in there. Got back from London.
Speaker 5
I hate British Airways. Just want to shout them out.
They lost my buggy, but they got it back to me. But everything's good.
Everything's good.
Speaker 2 Oh, nice. Nice.
Speaker 2 Everyone back in the look at all of us. We all came back to the United States at the
Speaker 2
most, one of the most interesting times to come back to the United States. Let me ask you a question.
Where were you when the shooting happened?
Speaker 5 I was where I always am in my house with my kids.
Speaker 2 I was never doing anything.
Speaker 5 I have the most boring life.
Speaker 4 Trevor, I believe I was texting with you
Speaker 4 at around that moment, but I don't know. I may have, I may have broken the news to you or at least said something like, hey, have you, are you seeing this Trump news?
Speaker 4
And then you, I think, responded with, oh, God, this is bad. This is bad.
This is bad or some version of that.
Speaker 2
Literally, it's funny. The two people I was speaking to about when I was speaking to you, like, like literally around when it happened.
Yeah. And I was speaking to Josh.
Speaker 2 It was so crazy that, you know, like, like all the people I was talking to are the people that I speak to around the podcast and the conversations we have.
Speaker 2 So in an assassination attempt, the first thing everybody said
Speaker 2 was,
Speaker 2 Ha, Trump's going to win.
Speaker 2 He's going to win now. In most places in the world,
Speaker 2 when a well-known figure who, yes, is political is the subject of an attempted assassination, the first thought in most people's heads wouldn't be about the politics.
Speaker 2 The first thing people would think about is the human being, oh no, how hurt is the person?
Speaker 2 Was somebody else shot next to them? Who was shooting? Is everyone okay? It was amazing to me how.
Speaker 2 The shooting happened.
Speaker 2 There was a picture of Trump, like,
Speaker 2 he's grazed by the glass, I guess, from the bullet fragment flying or whatever it was.
Speaker 2
And a lot of people, their first reaction was, oh, well, now he's definitely going to win. And I was like, damn.
So is everything, is everything in America now about politics?
Speaker 2 That's what I found myself wondering.
Speaker 2 Like even coming into this podcast, I was like, is this the end of America?
Speaker 2 Not in like a doom and gloom way, but can a country function in a meaningful way if everything in that country is always reduced to its politics?
Speaker 5 Do you know what I mean? Yeah, but I'd say like my observations as an outsider, I think it's because like violence is so ambient in America.
Speaker 5 But I think, and I say this as a mother of a young son, I think this is a deeper story about disaffected young men.
Speaker 5
And I think they normally hurt women, but this one hurt one of the most powerful men in the world. I think to me, that's the biggest story.
I'm like, how was this kid in his parents' house?
Speaker 5 And they missed that he was going to try and kill a former president. And that's kind of been lost, you know, mental health in young men.
Speaker 5 I think that to me is a more concerning thing because I think there are a lot of young men like the killer and perhaps they will not harm a presidential candidate, but I think they're going to harm the people around them.
Speaker 2 Oh, damn.
Speaker 5
Like America has had other presidents assassinated. It's had other recent attempted assassinations.
I think Obama had like a bomb intercepted to his house sent in like 2018.
Speaker 5
So it's just like, I think violence. and America are hand in hand.
So that wasn't like the peculiar thing about it, I think, for most Americans.
Speaker 5 The peculiarity is that it actually happened in an election year. Cause I think with Reagan, it happened like three years before he was running.
Speaker 5 And so it was just like, well, there are some sort of stakes. And America is a country that just runs on plot and vibes so people are like what does this do to the plot yeah
Speaker 4 so i just think they were just like business as usual and the business right now is an election but your your notion of it as what does this do for the plot i mean gets at the way that we've turned politics into this kind of spectacle and reality show and so this lands as like a plot twist, right?
Speaker 4 And it's like, okay, now what? What does it mean? As opposed to asking these more fundamental questions that you're getting at, Trevor. But I mean, I'm curious for the two of you, like,
Speaker 4 since you don't have to cover the election day to day, do you get the space to think about what this really means at a bigger level and not immediately have to go to, okay, what does this mean for the next plot point?
Speaker 2 When I was watching the news coverage on this,
Speaker 2 I realized that we are deep in the depths of experiencing
Speaker 2 every single symptom. of having 24-hour news.
Speaker 2 Like, when I was growing up, I don't know about you, we used to see the news when the news came on, right?
Speaker 2 It was both concise and broad at the same time.
Speaker 2
They did their research, they covered things. I don't know if you tried to watch the news when this was happening.
These people
Speaker 2 planted the seed for every single conspiracy theory you can imagine. I mean, every single conspiracy theory.
Speaker 2 And I go, How do you expect a country to interact with their reality when their reality is constantly being shaped in like micro moments and changes. You know, it's somebody he was shot.
Speaker 2
There were multiple shooters. There were five shooters.
There was two shooters. There was one shooter.
It goes back. The Secret Service saw him.
They didn't see him. The police were with him.
Speaker 2 They weren't with him. And I was just going, like, what do you think
Speaker 2 this is going to lead to other than chaos? That's, to be honest with you, that's probably my
Speaker 2 thing I'm enjoying most now
Speaker 2 is that in my life, I get to just pause for a moment to think
Speaker 2 before having to do or say. And I,
Speaker 2 man, I wish America gave itself that luxury because after an event like this,
Speaker 2 the thing that people need the least is speculation and conspiracy.
Speaker 2 It doesn't make the situation any better. All it does is, you know, leave people in a space where like a week later, you have
Speaker 2 every single idea about this shooting out there. You know, the government did it, Biden did it, Trump did it to himself.
Speaker 5 I felt that like just journalistically, the news did the best job it could possibly give given it's like an ever-changing situation. What I found exhausting was the analysis machine.
Speaker 5 And I think, Trevor, that's what you're talking about more. Like the hot take machine that seems to be part of the media universe right now.
Speaker 5 Like the news was just like, I was watching Anderson Cooper is like, it's developing.
Speaker 5 And then every time they would get something that was verified, I think CNN, everyone's verification was very good on this.
Speaker 2 Yeah, but I'm, but I'm saying even the developing is not necessary. We've been, we've been lulled into this, this idea that we need to see news developing and we don't.
Speaker 5 I would object, I would say this is like
Speaker 5 a former journalist.
Speaker 2
No, you don't. I'll be, I'll be honest with you.
This is where maybe like we'll fight with a bunch of people. Maybe we'll disagree.
You don't you.
Speaker 4 Surely this is a big enough story, Trevor, no?
Speaker 2
Jody, it doesn't change your life. It doesn't affect your world.
It doesn't, again, I'm not saying like now you can undo the news.
Speaker 2 You know, maybe I'll save that for one of our episodes of If I Ruled the World, but like, I just, I just, I don't think that it helps anybody because here's the problem. If it's always developing,
Speaker 2 it means that you leave each viewer and each listener at a different state or in a different place of knowing or not knowing because that's what they got at that time.
Speaker 2 As opposed to just saying, hey,
Speaker 2 this has happened. We'll let you know when we have concrete details.
Speaker 4 Look, Trevor, I feel like what you're getting at, and I completely agree, is that cable news is built to take every story and make it feel as big as something like this, right?
Speaker 4 It dials everything up to an 11.
Speaker 4 But then some stories are an 11, and this was an 11. But because everything has been flattened at that height, it's hard to kind of know what's real, what's not, and so forth.
Speaker 4 But I mean, this feels like, you know, top five stories that we've lived through, this kind of rises to that bar, no?
Speaker 5
But actually, to Trevor's point, because of the nature of the American-U.S. news cycle in this country, there's just so much plot in this country.
It's hard to keep up.
Speaker 5 The half-life of stories is so short that this story already feels almost old because, like,
Speaker 5
he's got the patch on his air. He looks like a gangster, by the way.
You know what I mean? It's just like, oh, he's recovering pretty well. He's picked a VP pick.
And we're discussing J.D.
Speaker 5 Vance now more than the fact that Trump got shot out.
Speaker 2 Yeah, I think, you know,
Speaker 2 to your point, Jodi, I'm not saying the thing isn't an 11,
Speaker 2 but I'm saying,
Speaker 2 you know, when we think about the purpose of news, I would assume, and now it's a business, but the purpose of news should be to inform people.
Speaker 2 If you were flying in a plane and a pilot told you about every micro moment of what he was possibly experiencing, that would not be a comfortable. That's my dream flight.
Speaker 5 I love information, Trevor. I'm so anxious.
Speaker 2 I want to know everybody. You want to be overwhelmed.
Speaker 2 Are we going to die?
Speaker 5 I'm like, why is the pilot not speaking to us?
Speaker 2
Oh, wow. Yeah, no.
Okay, so I'll give you guys a story. I was on a flight once.
And it was a small plane. And we were flying back from, I think it was like
Speaker 2 New Hampshire or one of these places. And
Speaker 2 we were in a storm. And it's one of those flights where you pray to every God you've ever thought existed, and
Speaker 2 you lament every mistake you've made. You atone for every sin you've ever even considered in your life.
Speaker 2 And this plane, I mean, we shook for at least 20 odd minutes, which was a long time in that kind of weather.
Speaker 2 We land,
Speaker 2 we're fine.
Speaker 2 And when we're disembarking, I stop and I ask the pilots, I say, hey,
Speaker 2 how bad was that? And the pilot said, I'm going to be honest with you, for a second, I thought
Speaker 2 it might be over for us.
Speaker 2 The events still happened, Jodi. This is what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 Nothing changed in my life.
Speaker 2 But what the pilot prevented me from experiencing was the up and down of him developing in the imagine him saying mid-flight, I think it's over. I don't know if we're going to make it.
Speaker 2
Okay, maybe we are going to make it. It's gotten really bad.
The wings, the strain on the wings. Oh, okay, guys, I think I've got this thing.
Oh, we're all going to die. Call your families.
Speaker 2
Actually, no, I think I'm going to stay. That's not necessary.
And I get what you're saying. It is developing.
It is factual. These are things that are being verified.
Speaker 2
But for the passengers, and that's what people are in a society. That's what people are in a country.
You are the passengers.
Speaker 2 And so to the point that you're making, you then walk out on the other side with people who are more terrified than they should be, less terrified than they should be.
Speaker 2 You know, because now when the plane lands, some people walk off going like, ah, just another day in the air. And you're like, no, no, this is one of the craziest things that's ever happened.
Speaker 2 A former president of the United States in an election year, a few months away from an election, was almost assassinated. It is not another day.
Speaker 5
But Trevor, can I say that like most people are like me? They're like, give me the information. They actually don't care if it's wrong.
That's the dangerous thing.
Speaker 5 They just want to be satiated they want information i hear you even someone like myself who i consider myself quite informed and measured i'm like okay did trump get his shoes like
Speaker 5 like where's my shoes which i yo that was amazing can i just say can i best thing about him so relatable he was just like i need my shoes give me my shoes i was like to my friend did trump get his shoes you know but it's just like it's such a stupid little detail but like you just fixate on something and you want there's an information vacuum and i think the media just plays to our lowest selves.
Speaker 5 Like, and I admit, that's my lowest self, who just like wants to know if Trump has his shoes, and you know, where was Melania?
Speaker 2 This, you know, you're about to start another conspiracy theory. Which, can we just talk about that for a second?
Speaker 2 How, how is it that everything is conspiracy now?
Speaker 2 And I mean, what I mean by everything is
Speaker 2 I don't remember living in another time or another time in my life when
Speaker 2 everything was conspiracy. Like every, and I mean everything.
Speaker 2 You know, even if you take a step away from this Trump, like coronavirus, everything was conspiracy. You know,
Speaker 2 the election, everything is conspiracy. In this shooting, I know people personally
Speaker 2 who think that Trump did this himself.
Speaker 2 He set this up because he wanted to show that he's stronger than Biden. That's what I know some people have said.
Speaker 2 I know some people who believe that this was the Secret Service doing this to Trump to stop him.
Speaker 2 I know people who think that this was Joe Biden and the deep state coming for Trump because they realize it's inevitable that he wins.
Speaker 5 Do you think Biden could remember to order an assassination attempt? Like, I just think he would forget.
Speaker 2 Oh, Christiana. What a scary world to live in where everybody is witnessing the same thing and nobody believes it.
Speaker 2 From every angle, nobody believes it. That, my friend, scares me.
Speaker 4 Trevor, I'll just point out, you know, it is in the same environment that you highlighted earlier, where there's more news than ever and yet somehow less certainty than ever.
Speaker 4 And that, I think, is the real toxic moment we've reached to, where it's just like we're swimming in information, but it's been degraded to a point where no one knows what's real or can sort of actively choose to believe anything and believe nothing at the same time.
Speaker 4 But did you, to me at least, this specific incident, the conspiracy theories coming out of them just didn't feel like they had the juice like I just felt like people were going through the motions of doing the conspiracy theory thing Which is a problem in and of itself But I felt like a lot of those just kind of got dispensed with pretty quick Jody I will say what kind of concerns me is how many of my same friends think it was staged really still yeah like people are still lingering with that?
Speaker 2 Yeah, no, no, full of people.
Speaker 5
I was like, hey, wait, you're my smart friend. You're the person that got me to do the vaccine.
What do you mean you think it was staged?
Speaker 4 And what's behind that?
Speaker 5 I think it just feels so surreal. Perhaps, maybe that's it, Trevor.
Speaker 2 Can I, can I also? Okay, now here's something that I'm going to throw in as well.
Speaker 2 Sometimes, in a moment, you're experiencing the culmination of many small events that have led to this moment.
Speaker 2 It does not help Donald Trump's cause
Speaker 2 that he's the same guy who held a press conference with his tax returns that were stacked like little skyscrapers on a table, and it was all blank pieces of paper.
Speaker 4 Those are actually how he files his taxes, Trevor. Just blank pieces of paper.
Speaker 2 Yeah, I mean,
Speaker 2 to shame, my friend, actually.
Speaker 2 Yeah, it doesn't help that Donald Trump is the same guy who held a press conference when Hillary was like winning, you know, in one of her primaries and he had Trump stakes and Trump water and Trump, and none of it was actually Trump stakes or Trump water or any of it.
Speaker 2 He had taken stuff and just put a Trump label on it.
Speaker 2
I'm not saying that he wasn't shot at. I'm not saying, but I'm saying that like Trump also plays into the theater of things.
You've watched a magician do a thousand tricks. Yeah.
Speaker 2 Why would you not think this is a thousand and one? I get where these people are coming from, even though I don't agree with it.
Speaker 2 I get where they're coming from.
Speaker 4 No, I will also point out that next week, the two of you are having a conversation with a disinformation expert who I think will be able to pick up a lot of these ideas.
Speaker 4 But yes, like we've reached this point where no one knows what to believe.
Speaker 4 And I would say that is actually the project of disinformation, misinformation, is to completely destabilize what you think is true rather than sort of plant a specific wrong idea in someone's head.
Speaker 4 And so, I mean, I'm just curious for the two of you if you feel like there's a way to unwind.
Speaker 4 any of that and whether a moment like this, which brings out all the conspiracy theories, in theory, could it be a moment?
Speaker 4 I'm not even believing this as I ask this, but in theory, could it be a moment where people kind of take stock?
Speaker 2 Why have I asked you? You were doing so well, Jodi. You were trying.
Speaker 2 It was admirable watching you, actually. You were...
Speaker 4 Well, you know, when Joe Biden says, lower the temperature, gosh, there's still that part of me that says maybe we can.
Speaker 5 If you had asked me this like a year ago, I probably would have given you a different answer.
Speaker 5 But now we're in like an AI world because funny enough, that was one of my immediate thoughts when people were sending me, you know, the photo with the blood and he's got the fist up i was like oh this must be in because it was such a great shot pun unintended i was like there's no way that like this is real i was like this must be the ai version of the thing that happened and then people telling me no it's real it's like an ap verified image yeah now we're in this world of ai
Speaker 5 i just don't see how we put the genie back in the bottle because it's like so much that is true feels like disinformation and disinformation looks like the truth.
Speaker 2 You know, it's interesting, Jodi,
Speaker 2 I don't know if I'm going to answer your question or maybe I'll ask a question back to you. Does it matter?
Speaker 2 And here's what I mean by that.
Speaker 2 This
Speaker 2
event, I'm going to be honest with you, I don't think it shifted anyone in any direction. This is a crazy statement.
I know I'm making a crazy statement, but I don't think it shifted anyone in.
Speaker 2 Like, I know some people go like, ah, Trump's definitely going to win. And I'm like, okay, who, who?
Speaker 2 Who's going to, you know, they're like, oh, well, Elon Musk, he now came out and he said, please, Elon Musk was a closet Trump supporter the whole time.
Speaker 2
And he wasn't even doing a good job of like hiding in that closet. Like Elon was like, I will remain neutral and I will no longer participate in the.
Yeah, but we all knew, Elon. We all knew.
Speaker 2
You know what I mean? Quacks like a duck, walks like a duck. Come on, Elon.
So the question I ask is like, does it matter? Like in terms of elections, I think
Speaker 2 the activities matter.
Speaker 2 You know, what's happening matters. But
Speaker 2 even with all the AI, Christiana, even with all the,
Speaker 2 it feels like America is now getting to a place where its politics is so metastasized that
Speaker 2
there is no movement. There is no surprise French election in America anymore.
There is no surprise South African election in America anymore. There is no surprise UK election in America anymore.
No.
Speaker 2 Americans are like, hey, we are 50-50, Democrat, Republican, and then there's going to be a few hundred thousand people who decide who the president is.
Speaker 2 But otherwise, we don't switch, we don't flip, and until the population itself changes, I don't know if it matters, to be honest with you.
Speaker 2 Don't go anywhere because we got more. What now after this?
Speaker 5 Do you guys want to laugh? I text Trevor. I was just like, I hope the shooter is not black.
Speaker 2 And what did I say?
Speaker 5 No way.
Speaker 2
Yeah, there's no zero. Yo, let me tell you something.
Zero, zero chance.
Speaker 5
Let me tell you something. There's a certainty that made me laugh.
He was like, we don't do that shit.
Speaker 2 My friend, you are going to text me a message when a former president, someone has tried to shoot them with a rifle from a rooftop somewhere. And you're like, I hope it's not a black man.
Speaker 2
I was like, there is zero. Christiana, I didn't even say, I hope so, too.
I was like, no. no there's no way no there is no way let me tell you something there is no chance
Speaker 2 that a black man is climbing up a building that the secret service is in or around
Speaker 2 be careful now yo yo yo
Speaker 2 yo let me tell you something let me tell you something i'll say this first of all on a human level i was really happy that Trump was not shot.
Speaker 2
I was sad that somebody behind him was shot. Like, just, it's like, it's not fun in any way.
Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 But I know, I saw some people who were saying, like, they were like, oh, man, I'm not going to lie. I'm a little sad that that guy missed.
Speaker 2 I'm a little, and I was like, genuinely, I said to these people, I was like, you should thank every lucky star that you can think of that that did not happen.
Speaker 2 Because I don't know about you,
Speaker 2 but I
Speaker 2 do not think I would be as comfortable after Trump had been shot and killed. Yo, Trump's people,
Speaker 2 after seeing their guy, in many ways, think about it. Like, think of like how much Obama inspired hope and change in black people and young people.
Speaker 2 And then imagine like if he got taken out before he was going to be president or before his second term or whatever, the groundswell of
Speaker 2 hopelessness
Speaker 2 that could then calcify into revenge. I don't think I want to be, I don't want to be, I don't want to be witness to that.
Speaker 2 I was so happy.
Speaker 2
First of all, just on a human level, I was like, man, thank God. Okay, it didn't happen.
Great. All right.
Didn't happen. But then I was like, yo,
Speaker 2 thank goodness for a lot of people, it didn't happen because
Speaker 2 I really feel like America could very quickly become a tit for tattiness place where it's like every other politician
Speaker 2 would just have to cancel all their public speaking events, you know? Yeah.
Speaker 4 I mean, that's like, you know, World War, Civil War level stuff if someone gets killed. And yes, I will always be glad glad that we don't go down that path.
Speaker 4 But the vengeance, retribution, martyrdom angle is really interesting because Trump was already playing that card a ton already.
Speaker 4 And I'm just curious what the next few months are going to look like with him now dialing that way, way, way up.
Speaker 4 And then seemingly also Democrats really being unsure how to criticize the man while still trying to play the civility politics in this moment.
Speaker 4 And I just feel like we're going to get, you know, like really asymmetrical soul searching over the next few months.
Speaker 5 He can't bring it up too much because I think, like,
Speaker 5 whatever you think about Trump, I think he's like a brilliant political animal with
Speaker 5
great political instincts. And he knows that if you talk so much about that type of harm, you look weak.
So I'm.
Speaker 5 I'm interested in about when he'll deploy it and why, because I don't think he's going to, he's not going to wear the patch on his ear forever.
Speaker 2 Like, he's not going to be vanguard forever.
Speaker 5 Like, he's going to know, like, I I need to stop at a certain point.
Speaker 5 And I'm just curious about how he will deploy it because I don't think he'll exploit it constantly because he's just like, it's also a picture of you on the ground with blood on your face.
Speaker 5 Even if you have your fist up, you're in a weaker position.
Speaker 2 Yeah, I also think,
Speaker 2 you know,
Speaker 2 there are times in life where
Speaker 2 we can forget. that the people we disagree with are actually human beings.
Speaker 2 Yo, say what you want about Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 If somebody tries to shoot your head off and a bullet flies past your head, like you, did you see that shot, by the way, in the New York Times where the bullet is like right behind his head?
Speaker 2 Incredible. Let me tell you something.
Speaker 2 There is no human being, unless you are really crazy, there is no human being who does not have a little bit of their life altered
Speaker 2 by the whisper or the introduction of your instant mortality.
Speaker 2
That moment there, like, yeah, you go like, oh, he raised his fist. And guys, adrenaline is a mother.
Don't even play games.
Speaker 2 Like, I've done things when I have adrenaline in me where I'm like, yo, good.
Speaker 2 Yeah. And then you know what comes after adrenaline? Shock.
Speaker 5 Yep.
Speaker 2 And you know, because I'll tell you now, if Trump was as
Speaker 2 maybe callous is the wrong word, as callous and calculated as people think he is, like only on that level, yo, this guy would have put out a video quick, quick going like, hey, donate.
Speaker 2
We're going to beat the Democrat. They try to kill me.
Come on. But he's been uncharacteristically quiet about it all.
Speaker 2 Even at the Republican convention, you know, when people were clapping for him and when they were, he smiled in a sheepish way that you don't normally see Trump.
Speaker 2 And now, please, I'm not saying that now, all of a sudden Trump is going to turn around and be, you know, all kumbaya and whatever.
Speaker 2 But
Speaker 2 I think on a psychological level, we should never take for granted that this human being has experienced what he's experienced. And now the question will be, how does he respond to that experience?
Speaker 2 Also, to add to that,
Speaker 2
does he think it's less of a game? Because we, remember, everyone still thinks it's a game. Everyone is like, let me tell you what this means.
And we're going to do, oh, and the polls and this. Yeah.
Speaker 2 But for the person where the bullet was coming for them, it's not a game. They're the person who goes, damn, if I'm divisive, do I get shot in, am I going to get shot in the head? Yeah, also.
Speaker 5 Trump has always spoken like someone that's never been punched in the face like i can tell like you grew up in an environment where you could say what you want but there was never a threat of like i'm from south london you listen you say the rock there's a saying that we say chat shit get banged which basically means like if you say the wrong thing someone may slap you or tump you up chat shit get banged but it's like i think this is probably the first time he has been attacked in a very visceral way because he's always been like guarded and protected from that.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 for that to happen at his age, it's definitely going to take a psychological toll.
Speaker 5 But it could just be fuel for more insanity, which I think he may use it for that because I think he thrives off fear and trauma in a dark way.
Speaker 4 Trevor, I agree with you. I think I want to agree with you that this will be, but I will just point out people have been asking the, will this cause some soul searching for Donald Trump?
Speaker 4
They've been asking that question basically every three months for the last eight, nine years. And it still hasn't happened.
And so maybe this is different.
Speaker 2 Yeah, but I'm saying like to those people, I go, I don't understand why they were asking about everything else.
Speaker 2 And I mean this honestly, I just go like, why would he soul search and what would he be soul searching for?
Speaker 4 No, I agree, but I'm just saying that there's a little bit of ongoing sort of wishful thinking about Donald Trump's capacity to do that kind of soul searching. I also agree that if there's any...
Speaker 5 Don't you think getting shot at is like so crazy?
Speaker 5 Totally.
Speaker 4 I will also point out the other dynamic though, which is a little bit more of the sort of politics of it. But yes, Trump has been restrained.
Speaker 4 And maybe that is even he realizes at a personal or a political level, that's the sort of right mode to be in. But, you know, a lot of Republicans, Donald Trump Jr.
Speaker 4
included, their first reaction was, look what the Democrats have done. They tried to jail us.
They tried to kick us out. Now they're trying to kill us.
We got to get after them.
Speaker 4
And Donald Trump just picked J.D. Vance, who was the most forceful senator on that line, you know, coming out right away saying, this was the Democrats that did this.
And he picks J.D.
Speaker 4 Vance to be his vice president.
Speaker 4 So maybe he's tactically, you know, playing this game where it's, okay, I'm going to surround myself by people who are going to say the thing that I don't, you know, feel like I'm in a position to say.
Speaker 2 Yeah. But
Speaker 2 I don't know.
Speaker 2 As somebody, it's funny, as somebody who has spent way
Speaker 2 too much of their time and life like studying and watching and learning about Donald Trump. Like I, you know what I mean? I, I've spent, I've been in the doldrums of Trump.
Speaker 2 I agree with Cristiano, first of all. The man's never been punched in the face.
Speaker 2 And secondly, people take for granted how much of a showman Donald Trump is, like, how much he thinks of politics as a game.
Speaker 2 So there's this element of Trump that, yes, you're right, Cristiano uses fear, uses anxiety, uses anger, uses those things, but oftentimes he's not using his.
Speaker 5 Yeah,
Speaker 2
he's not using his. He's stoking your fear.
Yeah. He's using your anger.
He's using your anxiety.
Speaker 2
But he's not the one who's being shot at. And I'm just saying, I'm not saying that this will or won't be soul-searching time.
I'm just saying
Speaker 2 you, you, you,
Speaker 2 I struggle to believe that on a human level, this man, because we don't live in like a crazy like country in the world where people are getting assassinated all the time, I think
Speaker 2 it's hard for me to believe that this person will not be moved one way or the other by this.
Speaker 2 Now, he could become like, you know, he could go, it's not a show anymore, actually, which might, to be honest, scares me a little bit. You know, Trump might come out of this thinking,
Speaker 2 you guys want, you actually do want me dead, and actually, I'm coming for you. It might turn into that, or he might go, man,
Speaker 2 you know, maybe I temper myself, or maybe I, I, I don't know, but I, I, I struggle to believe
Speaker 2 that this type of thing leaves you walking away emotionally unscathed. Yeah, and I, I, I, I think think Donald Trump is human enough that there will be some sort of
Speaker 2 like effect or ramification. That's, I mean,
Speaker 2 that's how I see him as a person.
Speaker 5
I agree, Trevor. Like when I say he's a political animal, but like a political animal, he's been wounded and he's traumatized.
Like there's no way you get shot at and you're not traumatized.
Speaker 5 How he metabolizes that remains to be seen, but I don't think he, the idea that he's just going to be, it's Trump as usual, I think that diminishes his humanity.
Speaker 5
And not in a way I'm like, Oh, he's so human. I'm like, He's still a human being.
This is not a God, it's a human being that went through a very human experience, and that's going to change him.
Speaker 5 Now, Jodi, if it's like, I don't think it's going to be a come to Jesus moment, but I think it'd be
Speaker 5 diminishing his humanity to act like this. This isn't going to have like a really huge impact on his psyche because getting shot at is not a joke at all.
Speaker 2 We'll be right back after the short break.
Speaker 4 Can I ask the two of you a question about the people who
Speaker 4 were worried about Trump becoming president the day before he got shot and are still worried about Trump becoming president and how they now lodge those same critiques?
Speaker 4 I mean, from my eyes, Democrats are having a real hard time finding and owning that language.
Speaker 4 What do you see?
Speaker 2 You know,
Speaker 2 it's actually funny you say that.
Speaker 2 Whenever I think about that,
Speaker 2 the baby Hitler paradox,
Speaker 2 I always think about what makes it a paradox is,
Speaker 2 you know, people simplify it and you joke about it and you're like, oh, if you could go back in time and kill Hitler as a baby, would you? And some people are like, of course you would.
Speaker 2
And then you're like, but you're killing a baby who hasn't done anything. And they're like, Yeah, but that doesn't matter.
You know what they're going to do.
Speaker 2 And in this case, if Trump is showcasing many of the traits that could lead to a country, a republic, or whatever, where people have their rights stripped away, people don't have free speech, people are
Speaker 2 terrified of the government. I think people are not wrong to highlight the similarities
Speaker 2 of that person to historical figures who have led their countries to a similar place.
Speaker 2 I think, to be honest with you, too much time has been spent on vilifying Trump as a character, like other politicians, as opposed to like what Cristiano was saying, which is like focusing on the issues that affect the people.
Speaker 2 You know, when you go like, this man is an evil man and
Speaker 2
he will destroy the country. And it's like, yeah, all of that is, it's populism.
And it's like, okay, I get its messaging.
Speaker 2 But to Christiana's point, if you really go to people, hey, this guy and the people he's coming into power with firmly believe that women should not decide what happens inside their own bodies.
Speaker 2 And so this is what your reality is going to be.
Speaker 2 I still think you're able to have a thrust without making the person the devil.
Speaker 2 And so I think if Democratic politicians are unable to find thrust now, then I go, then you're not a good politician and you're not good at messaging. Because it's not just about Donald Trump.
Speaker 2
The same way, it's not just about Joe Biden, by the way. You know, in the same way they're having the argument where they're like, yes, I know he's old.
Yes, I know he stumbles.
Speaker 2
But remember, it's about the administration and look at what his Justice Department is doing. And look at what he's done for the environment.
And look, yeah, all of that is true.
Speaker 2 So by that same logic, then, why are you only going after Donald Trump? Why aren't you going after the ideas? Why aren't you going after the liberties that people may lose?
Speaker 2 Why aren't you going after what his establishment would essentially mean for people?
Speaker 2 So I think if your only line of attack is him as a person and how vile he is, well, then you also don't have like a good game plan.
Speaker 2 That's not enough to get people mobilized and to keep them mobilized. People want to know, how does it affect my paycheck? How does it affect my gas tank? How does it affect my body?
Speaker 2 How does it affect my healthcare? How does it affect my children? These are the things that most people are actually voting on. And so I think like vile or not vile, I actually, I don't know, Jodi.
Speaker 2 Christiana, do you, do you,
Speaker 5 I think it's probably like our foreignness being kind of like anti-cult of the personality charisma politics.
Speaker 2 Yeah, man.
Speaker 5 just like, we're just like, oh, it's exhausted.
Speaker 5 Like, I think when you come from a country where people tend to vote more for the party than the person who's running that party at the time, it kind of creates a different matrix through which you like view the political system.
Speaker 5
And I think if you say to Americans, forget Trump, think about the Heritage Foundation. Think about the fact that they are reintroducing Bibles into public schools.
Think about bodily autonomy.
Speaker 5 That messaging has actually worked because the red wave never happened.
Speaker 5 If we look at all the midterms, when they've just been like to women, hey, this governor wants to make sure you can't have abortion. The Republican women have come out and been like, nope,
Speaker 5 nope, like that's a step too far for us.
Speaker 5 So I think if the Democrats are able to talk about that and less than Trump himself, that to me is a lot more effective because, you know, Trump, you know where you stand on him.
Speaker 5
If you like him, you like him. If you don't, you don't.
I don't think they're swaying people
Speaker 5 either way. But I agree.
Speaker 5 When you talk about the economy, when you talk about women's bodies, when you talk about what's happening in schools, and I guess as a parent, I know the schools thing is so fraught right now.
Speaker 5 And I think if Democrats can focus on that, it'll make a big difference, you know? Yeah.
Speaker 4 Well, this is where it comes full circle back to, you know, this thing we started with on, oh, this is clearly going to help Trump win, but, you know, I think not so fast.
Speaker 4 And I think anyone who's saying this is going to change the election result in this way or this way is just really doesn't know what they're talking about.
Speaker 4 I mean, we've learned over and over that, like, the best you can do as a journalist or a thinker or someone who cares about the country is just sort of assess the present because it's about all these underlying things you just highlighted.
Speaker 4 And all the people who are kind of deciding this election on whether they like Trump's style or not have probably already made up their mind.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 You know, and
Speaker 2 I think for me, when I wrap it all up,
Speaker 2 I think of it like this: it's like
Speaker 2 one of the things that makes America one of the greatest countries in the world is that its story is punctuated with near-misses where they come out victoriously. You know, it's always near-misses.
Speaker 2 Paul Revere, and if he didn't see them, then this wouldn't have happened. And,
Speaker 2 oh, and almost, and this almost happened.
Speaker 2 While that's great for a movie,
Speaker 2 I don't think
Speaker 2 it's a sustainable way for a country to exist because it then unfortunately means that the country doesn't necessarily have to learn because it keeps believing in its own exceptionalism in every moment.
Speaker 2 You know, so
Speaker 2 like this is this is another instance
Speaker 2 because Trump didn't get killed, because Trump didn't get assassinated
Speaker 2 is America going to learn anything from this lesson or is America going to now sit and say, yeah, more punditry and more fighting around it and more...
Speaker 2 It's like, no, no, no, but, but, okay, but what would you have done if it happened? Would you then have just turned it into this game? Would you have, what would you have learned?
Speaker 2
And, and it's so hard. You know, my mom used to say this to me all the time.
She'd go, life will keep teaching you the same lesson until you learn it.
Speaker 2 And the lesson will become more and more and more impactful each time. And she was like, it will start with a scratch and it'll end with death until you learn that lesson
Speaker 2 and the thing i like as a kid i didn't really understand it and but over time i've i've come to realize what it means is like you really want to try and fix these things when it is just a scratch you want to figure out how to speak to disaffected young men disaffected young white men who have been told that they have no future, everything's been stolen from them, it's all gone to shit, whatever it might be.
Speaker 2 How do you reach them before they grab their parents' rifle and go and try and shoot
Speaker 2 a presidential candidate or former president?
Speaker 2 How do you have conversations about guns before somebody is
Speaker 2 shot like this? You know what I mean? Because people forget, yes, they missed Trump, but they killed somebody. Yeah.
Speaker 2 You know, and in the story, it's weird how like the person who was killed behind the person is almost like, ah, yeah, whew, oh man, okay.
Speaker 2 I guess we, it's like, okay, but why, why is the bullet in that guy's head
Speaker 2 less meaningful than the bullet in Trump's head?
Speaker 2 And I know it's, yeah, president, et cetera.
Speaker 2 But I still go like, yeah, but we should, we should still be learning the lesson, but the lesson doesn't get learned as much because it was near misses, or it almost hit the president.
Speaker 2 Yes, but it did. They've lost a father, they've lost a brother, they've lost a friend.
Speaker 2
And I know that guy, politics, and whatever. Don't get me wrong.
I've seen his tweets. I've seen.
Yeah, but still. Who cares? But still.
Yeah, like, you know,
Speaker 2 still.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2 I don't know, Jodi, it's like
Speaker 2 it's really tough.
Speaker 2 You know, I think of 9-11 and how when you read through the 9-11 report,
Speaker 2 most of the things that could have stopped 9-11 were tiny little changes, small little things that they could have done along the way, lock a door here, a little check there, a person responding to an email, and 9-11 doesn't happen.
Speaker 2 But then what does America do? It responds to the planes smashing into buildings by going and killing a million innocent people in another country in the Middle East.
Speaker 2 Do you get what I'm saying? Yeah.
Speaker 2 And so it's like, once again, I feel like we are witnessing a moment where a lesson may not be learned because it just grazed America's ear
Speaker 2 instead of actually impacting us. That's
Speaker 4 a very depressing thought, Charlotte.
Speaker 4 I mean, look, the last eight years or so for me have been, largely speaking, one in which I've seen this country kind of the veil of American exceptionalism get pierced, you know, and this country realized that like the stuff that can happen in other countries can happen, can happen here.
Speaker 4 It had not occurred to me until you just said it, Trevor, that the idea that there was just a near miss here could somehow, in a twisted way, reinforce American exceptionalism because it wasn't an actual assassination.
Speaker 4 It was a near assassin. That is a deeply twisted and depressing thought.
Speaker 2 Yeah, because I've seen so many Americans say,
Speaker 2
yeah, this is why God saved Trump. And look at how strong he is.
And you can't take this man.
Speaker 2 But I don't see enough people saying, man, I live in a country where the most powerful man in this country.
Speaker 2 And yeah, the former president, let's say one of, one of the most powerful people in this country
Speaker 2 also had to drop to their knees for fear that somebody was going to shoot them.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 2 If that is happening to the top person, I mean, like it's former president, former president, like if that is happening up there,
Speaker 2 man, what hope is there for you and your kid in the street? And your,
Speaker 2 that's a really, really rough one for me. So I think in that regard, I go,
Speaker 2 it's a shame
Speaker 2 that America's exceptionalism will sometimes mean that it does not learn a lesson until it's too late.
Speaker 4 Yeah,
Speaker 5 Trevor, there's nothing to say to that.
Speaker 2 It's perfect. You're right.
Speaker 2 Well,
Speaker 2
a ghost bane in the Euros. I don't know.
Yeah.
Speaker 4 Well, feel free to invite me back on anytime you have a light-hearted topic like this.
Speaker 2
I'm happy to jump in. I don't need to do the If I Wrote the World or oh, the grand news is really fun or whatever.
You just call me whenever.
Speaker 2
Come on. Oh, man.
Well, Well, this was this was, you know what?
Speaker 2 It's still a good conversation. And I hope as an American,
Speaker 2 we didn't depress you with our non-American thinking. I hope we maybe inspired you.
Speaker 4 This is the perspective we need.
Speaker 2 All right.
Speaker 4 I'm serious.
Speaker 2 We'll make sure you're on for a fun one as well, Joe. We owe you one now.
Speaker 2
We're not going to bring you on for Pollock. We're just going to have a fun conversation about, you know, candy.
Halloween episode. Best candy.
Jodi's joining us again.
Speaker 4 You know they put razor blades in that candy, Trevor.
Speaker 2 Well, I tried. I tried.
Speaker 2 What Now with Trevor Noah is produced by Spotify Studios in partnership with Day Zero Productions and Fullwell 73.
Speaker 2
The show is executive produced by Trevor Noah, Ben Winston, Sanaz Yamin, and Jodi Avigan. Our senior producer is Jess Hackle.
Claire Slaughter is our producer.
Speaker 2
Music, Mixing and Mastering by Hannes Brown. Thank you so much for listening.
Join me next Thursday for another episode of What Now?