The Bulwark Podcast XX
[0] Welcome to the Bulwark podcast.
[1] I'm Charlie Sykes.
[2] It is August 22nd, 2023.
[3] It is the day before the first Republican debate, two days before the former president of the United States does his fourth perp walk.
[4] And we are joined once again by Professor Emeritus, Tom Nichols.
[5] I'm sorry.
[6] Tom Nichols, a staff writer for The Atlantic.
[7] How are you doing, Tom?
[8] It's been a while.
[9] I'm good, but I'll thank you not to laugh at Professor Emeritus.
[10] I don't know it's the emeritus thing.
[11] It's sort of like, Professor Old Guy.
[12] Professor, that's exactly what it means.
[13] Professor Crank.
[14] Let me tell you what I was thinking this morning that I wanted to talk to you about.
[15] I wonder whether or not there are millions of people who maybe are much younger than us who do not realize how surreal our times are, who have grown up in this time of crazification and looking around and going, yeah, this is the way things are.
[16] I mean, you know, I mean, political parties can be.
[17] political cults.
[18] And yeah, you know, somebody who is being arraigned on racketeering charges and 91 felonies, of course, he's going to be surging in the polls.
[19] And yeah, it's like, this does happen on a regular basis, right?
[20] We have presidential debates and the frontrunner doesn't show up because he's in a jail down in Atlanta posting a $200 ,000 bail and the judge is warning him not to intimidate or threaten witnesses.
[21] I mean, Tom, even you and I, once in a while that we have to step back and go, okay, the full insanity of this moment, you and I have been doing this now for seven, eight years.
[22] I don't think we ever thought it was going to last this long.
[23] I don't think we ever thought that the stupidity would seep so deeply into our culture.
[24] I think once a day, once a day I have to step back and say, this can't be happening.
[25] Yeah, right.
[26] And it's going to keep going.
[27] And you're right, you know, that for younger, of course, you know, being a professor emeritus, everyone is younger than I am and you.
[28] You know, if you're 25 or 30 years old, yeah, for most of the time that you've paid attention to politics, oh, this is just normal.
[29] This is just how it is that we don't flinch.
[30] And I think, you know, the phrase that I've used so often in writing and in discussions, you know, you and I have talked about it is, how have we just gotten used to it.
[31] And I think that is, you know, the bad guys in the world, not just Donald Trump, but, you know, Vladimir Putin, right?
[32] There's a huge war raging in the middle of Europe, something 30 years ago we would have thought of as an existential danger.
[33] And we've just gotten used to it that Trump and his guys are being arraigned for racketeering charges, which, John Eastman this morning, you know, we've crossed a Rubicon.
[34] I'm being prosecuted for my First Amendment.
[35] I mean, there was a time, I think, a better, we always have to qualify when a better time was, but a better time when people like this would have said, on advice of counsel, I am not saying anything.
[36] And they would be ashamed.
[37] Not only do we live in a time where our politics have become so completely hallucinatory, but we're living in a time without shame.
[38] What blows my mind about the current situation we're dealing with, you know, with Trump and all these other guys getting hauled up on charges.
[39] They're not really disputing that they did the things they did.
[40] They're just disputing that they're illegal.
[41] And again, in a better time, first of all, on a better time, there would have been somebody in the room to say, you guys, we cannot plot to overthrow an election in the United States.
[42] You know, it sucks.
[43] We lost, but we can't do this.
[44] But also, in a better time, you know, there would be people who would say, hey, you don't want to admit that you were part of a slate of fake electors?
[45] You know, I actually think it's worse than that, though.
[46] I'm sorry to even go down to a darker road here, but there are millions of Americans who, according to the polls, are saying that, yes, it is illegal, yes, there are crimes, and I'm okay with that.
[47] And I'm going to vote for you anyway.
[48] And that's part of the culture of shamelessness, right?
[49] I mean, part of it is that we've always had, you know, spasms of idiocy, of, you know, extremism, of crackpotism, of cruelty, but there's always been the correction there.
[50] There's always been, you know, saner voices, I won't use the term adults in the room anymore, but saner voices, you know, the center will hold.
[51] It doesn't feel like that right now.
[52] It used to be that if you were caught committing a crime or a lie, there would be consequences because people would not tolerate it.
[53] Now when you're caught committing a crime or telling a lie, it just doesn't matter.
[54] In fact, people like you even more because it's a fucking cult.
[55] The thing about adults in the room, because the other thing that I think really contributes to this is the juvenileization of our culture.
[56] Oh, yeah.
[57] And I don't mean a youth culture.
[58] I mean a juvenile culture.
[59] I was thinking of this the other day.
[60] You know, of course, I worked on the Hill 30 years ago, and you've started in politics when, you know, men wouldn't leave the house without wearing a jacket.
[61] You know, those days.
[62] This is actually true.
[63] I was thinking of this watching Kat Kamik.
[64] you know, jumping around barefoot on stage at some young Republican thing.
[65] My wife was looking at this and I, and she said, who's that?
[66] And I said, that is a member of Congress of the United States.
[67] And by the way, Kamik was just the most recent version.
[68] There are plenty of Democrats who do things where I just kind of put my hand to my temple and say, you understand that you're like a senator, right?
[69] That you're a member of Congress, that you're an adult, that you are a handful of the most important leaders in this country.
[70] And they're all, you know, like teenagers.
[71] And I think that reflects this juvenile culture we live in that says nothing matters.
[72] There are no consequences.
[73] Nothing's really dangerous.
[74] No decisions really matter one way or another.
[75] Nobody gets really hurt.
[76] Nothing can go wrong.
[77] And, you know, I think part of it is that the small number of people who do make the country work on a day -to -day basis, it's kind of like putting toddler bumpers on all the sharp edges.
[78] And so we have everybody else kind of crashing around and making asses of themselves while, you know, there's this small handful of people who make sure that, you know, the airports are funded and that clean water comes out of your tap and that your passport still works.
[79] And I think people just don't understand that anymore.
[80] They think everything's just a big fucking joke at this point.
[81] Man, we went dark fast.
[82] We're not done yet.
[83] We don't usually get this dark this fast, this early, Charlie.
[84] I'm just saying.
[85] I woke up kind of dark today.
[86] Every few years, people circulate this Carl Sagan quote from 1995.
[87] His rather uncanny prediction, it was in 1995 in the book called The Demon Haunted World.
[88] You're familiar with it.
[89] It seems like it's like sort of ripped right from the pages of your death of expertise books.
[90] Right.
[91] He wrote, again, this is 1995.
[92] I have a foreboding of an America in my children's or grandchildren's time when the United States is a service and information economy, when nearly all of the key manufacturing industries have slipped away to other countries when awesome technological powers in the hands of a very few and no one representing the public interest can even grasp the issues.
[93] When the people have lost the ability to set their own agendas or knowledgeably question those in authority, when clutching our crystals and nervously consulting our horoscopes are critical faculties in decline, unable to distinguish between what feels good and what's true, we slide almost without noticing back into superstition and darkness.
[94] The dumbing down of America is most evident in the slow decay of substantive content in the enormously influential media, the 30 -second sound bites, now down to 10 seconds or less, the lowest common denominator programming, credulous presentations on pseudoscience and superstition, but especially a kind of celebration of ignorance.
[95] Mr. Nichols, I think we are there.
[96] But enough about Elon Musk and Vivek Ramoswamy.
[97] Yeah.
[98] How can you not listen to that and think that, you know?
[99] And I thought as well, and that brings us to Tommy Tuberville, right?
[100] I mean, there are millions of Americans.
[101] Marshall Blackburn, Carrie Lake.
[102] Right.
[103] Marjorie Taylor Green.
[104] But that inability of the public to understand the problem.
[105] I mean, Tuberville is having the time of his life with this.
[106] And people don't understand that we now have several of our top military posts.
[107] I mean, there's a war going on in Europe.
[108] We're competing with China.
[109] There's all kinds of bad things going on.
[110] And, you know, Tuberville has literally held up hundreds of these positions, including the first female chief of naval operations.
[111] My old job, right, at the Naval War College.
[112] The Naval College reports right to the chief of naval operations.
[113] In theory, they don't have one right now.
[114] They have an acting because Tommy Tuberville has decided that he's going to abuse the Senate hold power, which, you know, at this point should be trashed.
[115] That rule should be thrown out.
[116] And if Mitch McConnell were doing his job, this would have been stopped by now because he, you know, Tuberville is one of his guys.
[117] But the public's like, he was a football coach, right?
[118] He's cool.
[119] You know, what's the big deal?
[120] And I think we just don't understand that, you know, these consequences.
[121] And we have people running for office who are completely ridiculous that in an earlier time, they would have been an asterisk.
[122] But in the television age and the Internet age, especially, where there's just so much bandwidth that you can have Marianne Williamson and Vivek Ramoswamy and Robert Kennedy Jr. I mean, some of these people are complete crackpots.
[123] Before we move on from Tommy Tumberville, why is the rest of the Senate allowing him to do this?
[124] I understand that they have procedures and norms, but I mean, at some point, you know, WTF, first of all, why is Chuck Schumer, who is the majority leader?
[125] Why does this happen?
[126] Why does Mitch McConnell allow this to happen?
[127] For two reasons.
[128] Until you've ever been inside that body, you don't realize how true this is, but the Senate is very much a club, and it operates, everything operates on consent and collegiality, which means that any one senator who wants to be enough of a jerk can hijack almost any process.
[129] I mean, remember that every morning the Senate begins with, you know, the guy in the chair, who has no power, by the way, the Senate president, unlike the Speaker of the House, the Senate president's just a traffic cop, which is why they always give that job to like the most junior senator, so you can go learn parliamentary procedure.
[130] And every morning, they start by saying hearing no objection, so ordered.
[131] And all it takes to screw that all up is some senator saying, well, I object.
[132] And then the day is shot.
[133] But the other reason I think, Charlie, is because the Senate is so closely divided that neither of them, no side wants to trigger any nuclear options about stuff like this, because at any moment, the majority can be the minority again, and they have to keep flipping.
[134] Now, that was less of a problem when there was a little more trust and collegiality among the two parties to say, you know, we disagree about a lot of stuff, but, you know, you're going to be in charge for all, we're going to be in charge for all, we have to live together.
[135] Unfortunately, they don't think that way anymore.
[136] understand that they won't want to railroad it, but you would think that there would be a meeting between Chuck Schumer and Mitch McConnell, who they would basically say, you know, they would sit down the room and going, you know, Chuck would say to Mitch, like, this is bullshit.
[137] We're not going to let this happen.
[138] I mean, how do we fix this, right?
[139] Well, it would start by Mitch sitting down with, I'm from Massachusetts, so I don't know if it's Tuberville or Tuberville and I don't really care, but sitting down with Senator Tommy and saying, before Schumer even has to ever be involved in this, say, okay, Tommy, this is bullshit.
[140] Yeah.
[141] And you've had your fun.
[142] And now it's time to take care of the national security of the United States.
[143] You're going to cut this shit out.
[144] But nobody's going to do that.
[145] I mean, if McConnell sat down with Schumer to do this, the immediate howl from the GOP would be that McConnell's a traitor and he sold out his caucus and, you know, all hell would break loose.
[146] The problem and the fundamental problem, and now I get to go dark, Charlie, is that Tommy Tuberville can get away with this.
[147] because the people of Alabama let him.
[148] Because this is what a significant number of voters want.
[149] They want this chaos and hold up, and they don't care if the national security of the United States is endangered by it.
[150] I would normally completely agree with you.
[151] I'm just not sure that if they understood exactly what it meant to our national security, the attack on the military, I'm not sure that this would be a winner for him.
[152] But maybe you are right.
[153] Okay, so speaking of dark, I want to go back to how I started this entire podcast, which was my sense that I wonder whether people understand how surreal and bizarre the times are that we're living in.
[154] And also how thorough the transformation has been.
[155] And I think it's going to be lasting for a long time.
[156] We talk about the Depression generation.
[157] Well, how long did the Depression last?
[158] What years would you say, you know, 1929 to, let's say, 1940?
[159] What do you think?
[160] Yeah, 29 to 40, basically, or at least, you know.
[161] Okay.
[162] We talk about the impact of the 9 -11 generation, which, again, you know, people who grew up and their entire world was shaped by that decade after the attack on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, right?
[163] So you had the Depression generation, the 9 -11 generation.
[164] There are other generations, obviously, we could throw in here.
[165] I think now we're seeing the growth of the Trump generation.
[166] Now, there may be some positive developments.
[167] You know, young people may be permanently turned off to conservatism in the Republican Party for.
[168] decades, but there's also going to be a class of people who have been formed in an era where insanity is the norm, where shamelessness is the norm.
[169] Well, I think shamelessness, and here I'm going to throw some shade at our friends on the left, because I think the emergence of shamelessness actually begins in kind of the moral relativism of the left 20, 30 years ago.
[170] The left may have pioneered it, but the Republicans have perfected it, and they've weaponized it and turned it into a political movement.
[171] But I will look for one sliver of light here and say, I think if Donald Trump is decisively beaten and taken off the political board here as an option in the future, that this almost decade that we've been living with this madness can come to an end.
[172] Because I think, and I've been saying this now for a few weeks, watching the polls and watching, you know, how people are dealing with Trump.
[173] I think there are a lot of people who want to be let down off that cross, that they are up that tree, they don't know how to get down, they don't know what to do, and they won't be the ones to vote against Trump and end his career.
[174] But if Trump would somehow lose without their hands on it, I think that there are people who would be just as happy to just let it go, because I think he's exhausted them as well as us.
[175] And I think that that could be the beginning of something different.
[176] Now, the one thing that I think you're right about, Trump will be gone, but there will always be a Marjorie Taylor Green, you know, there's going to be these other people in office who are going to be.
[177] But I really think that we're heading for a realignment.
[178] And I also think that that means that the Republicans basically become this kind of rump party in the South and the West and some pockets of upstate New York for a long time to come because they can't get people to buy what they're selling, either in terms of their candidates or in terms of their programs.
[179] And so I think they're entering that period, that once Trump has gone, they're also going to face the problem of, you know, no matter how many labels we put on this dog food, you know, the dog doesn't like it.
[180] And I think that right now that's getting blocked out by a lot of noise generated by, you know, Trump and his alleged crime spree that he's now under four indictments for.
[181] I do think if, Trump loses.
[182] This is why I find it so maddening when people like Bill Barr, you know, sit there and say, well, you know, he's a terrible guy and he did all these illegal things.
[183] It was awful and blah, but I'd still vote for him if I had to.
[184] Well, at some point, the way a party recovers itself is to say, look, I will not do this.
[185] There are things, you know, it's that old joke about lawyers and rats, right?
[186] That, you know, there are some things even rats won't do.
[187] And you just say, I'm not going to do this.
[188] And until some of these people, get to that point, we're not out of the woods.
[189] But I think the first step is that Trump has to be beaten and, you know, at the ballot box and just driven from our public life.
[190] And I think that's within reach.
[191] So let's talk about this week because since we're talking about the surreal nature of our politics, we have the first debate.
[192] Donald Trump will not be showing up because he's going to be down in Georgia being booked, had his mugshot taken and then released on $200 ,000 bond.
[193] So let's talk about it.
[194] You always watch these debates.
[195] Why are you tuning in?
[196] What are you looking for in this debate?
[197] Well, I was talking to Julie Mason yesterday, and I, you know, I worked for years for the military, and I said, my feeling about the debate is like the joke officer evaluation that said his men would follow him anywhere, but mostly out of morbid curiosity.
[198] You know, it's like, yeah, I'm going to watch the debate in part because I'm going to write about it.
[199] And, you know, like you, I'm a writer and a morbid commenter and all of that.
[200] But also, there's a part of me that just, you've got to be kidding me, that we're going to have a debate between Chris Christie and Vivek Ramoswamy and how is this even possible?
[201] A lot of people, and I know, Charlie, you and I have dealt with this for years.
[202] How could you guys have ever been Republicans and everybody knew and the blah, blah, blah.
[203] There was a time when the Republican Party was the boring adult party that was all about, you know, the kind of the get things done party.
[204] I guess I'm going to tune in because I can't, I still can't accept that the Republican Party has turned into a freak show.
[205] It is a freak show, obviously.
[206] You know, every now and now, even after all these years, after almost a decade, every now and then I'm kind of still in denial.
[207] I mean, let's be more practical about it.
[208] First of all, I am curious to see if someone solidifies, you know, if the excalibur of fighting directly with Trump gets passed to someone who will actually wield it.
[209] Because every time I take of the debates, I think of Christine and Ramoswamy and, you know, some of these other, but the person, you know, who has fallen out of all this is Ronda Santis.
[210] You know, DeSantis was supposed to be the Trump Slayer.
[211] He's barely, you posted that video the other day of him grinding his teeth.
[212] Next to a picture of Homelander.
[213] And again, that's kind of a deep eye for some people, because that that is spooky.
[214] It was creepy.
[215] Because once you see Ronda Sandus as Homelander, and that's from the show the boys, you're not going to be able to unsee it.
[216] Just trust me. It's like Homelander without the charisma or the superpowers, but yeah.
[217] So you said he was supposed to be the 10 -foot -tall Trump Slayer, and now he is walking in with chunks of his campaign falling and burning globs out of the sky.
[218] Well, yeah.
[219] I just love reading these things, you know, that he needs to have a strong debate.
[220] He needs to hit it out of the park.
[221] I just don't think that's going to be happening.
[222] I am sorry.
[223] Now people are going to be staring at his jaw, but I think the question is, if the sword is going to pass, you know, from him, where does it go?
[224] And also I'm fascinated to see who aligns with whom, and I'm glad Asa Hutchinson's going to be there.
[225] I'm kind of hoping Hutchinson's the guy who just throws, is kind of our surrogate there, right?
[226] The Charlie and Tom guy who throws up his hands, he says, what are we doing here?
[227] You know, what the hell is going on here?
[228] Because he's kind of been that guy.
[229] I'm just curious to see if there's any flicker of integrity or truth -telling or honesty, because, you know, there are still plenty of Republicans who don't want Donald Trump, and I think, you know, it's kind of curious to see who picks up that torch.
[230] Yeah, and, you know, the problem is people to keep talking about, you know, the breakout moments.
[231] I mean, there's a couple of problems with that, number one, you know, how many people are actually going to be watching?
[232] I don't know.
[233] Number two, where there are eight people on stage?
[234] And so I'll be honest, the way that I watch and listen is that I put it on mute when certain people are talking because I don't care what Doug Bergam has to say.
[235] I'm sorry.
[236] You know, if somebody asked me about him, you know, tomorrow, I'll just say, yeah, I wasn't paying any attention.
[237] Sorry.
[238] But you're undercutting the possibility of Bergamentum.
[239] Obviously, I want to watch Chris Christie who is, I mean, Chris Christie who has become, I think is, you know, sort of found his own rhythm to, you know, return to the one of the most impressive performance artists in politics.
[240] And he has, he has no bleeps left to give.
[241] I am interested to see whether they go after Vivek Ramoswamy, because I think that they will.
[242] I think that he's going to be the punching bag, because if you're Nikki Haley and you want to show that you can, you know, kick with those sharp heels, but you don't want to go after, you know, the Maga Precious, you know, beat the crap out of Vivek, who every single day says something not just deplorable, but bad shit crazy, whether it's about 9 -11 or whether it's, I mean, he just, it is really a sign of the degradation of our politics that Vivek Ramoswamy, who is a complete fraud, phony is the hot new thing in our politics.
[243] You want to talk about the trivialization of our politics?
[244] Right.
[245] A guy who never voted and who I think crossed the line.
[246] I mean, you know, he could sell himself as I'm, you know, sort of charmingly naive, rich guy, you know, kind of the younger Ross Perrave.
[247] Well, you know, I don't know a lot about all this crazy stuff.
[248] You guys do.
[249] But I think he crossed the line with the 9 -11 thing.
[250] That is a sacred and horrible thing that Americans, you don't, you don't mess with 9 -11.
[251] And the only people that can mess with 9 -11 are people that by definition, I think the vast majority of Americans have just defined away as crackbots and conspiracy theorists.
[252] That's not even a MAGA thing.
[253] Right.
[254] It's that even the MAGA folks, you don't go down that road about 9 -11.
[255] You can come up with all kinds of terrible things about COVID and vaccines and UFOs and all that other horseshit.
[256] But when you start talking about 9 -11, you've really crossed the line.
[257] And I'll be curious to see if anybody calls him out on it.
[258] And then, of course, there's Mike Pence, and we don't know which Mike Pence will show up, whether it will be the guy that, you know, will take on Donald Trump or we'll forget to say his name.
[259] Oh, he won't say it.
[260] Nobody's going to beat up on Tim Scott, I'm guessing.
[261] So there's an advantage that he has, right?
[262] He's the one guy that nobody's going to say anything about.
[263] He'll be a vuncular and charming and funny, and everyone will nod politely and say, you know, great guy, too bad he has no chance of all.
[264] I have a question for you.
[265] I talked about this in our other podcast that I do with, with Mona Charon.
[266] And I could argue both sides of all of this.
[267] You know, the conventional wisdom is that, you know, part of Donald Trump's reptilian genius is knowing that being arrested the day after the debate will suck all the oxygen out of the room.
[268] And because he's such a genius, he knows that he will be able to knock down any bump that anybody gets out of the debate.
[269] I mean, that's the conventional wisdom, you know, the new normal now.
[270] I sort of have this residual before times thought, though, that, you know, the split screen is going to be pretty stark, where you have these candidates standing on stage running for president, some of them occasionally talking about things of substance, versus Donald Trump walking into the Atlanta jail to be arrested in charge with 13 more felonies, including racketeering.
[271] I understand that cliche that, you know, no publicity is bad publicity.
[272] I don't know, some publicity is bad publicity.
[273] And if you're Rhonda Santos or you're Mike Pence or Chris Christie, this split screen of, okay Republicans this is one future these people who are alternatives versus this guy who is going to spend the next year and a half in and out of jails and courtrooms and arraignments and you're going to see his mugshot i don't know that this is the genius move that some of the smart kid pundit class is saying it is what do you think you're one of the smart kid pundits i don't buy what the other cool kids are saying breaking with a cool kids i know it's kind of a to underestimate the MAGA base, you know, you can rarely go wrong on that.
[274] And they're going to say, they're going to tell pollsters and they're going to say, we like him more now that he's been indicted a hundred million times.
[275] But nobody likes that.
[276] Trump doesn't like it by reports that we're seeing people near him.
[277] He's scared out of his mind.
[278] If possible, he's become even crazier.
[279] I mean, at some point, he's just going to violate the terms of his release.
[280] I mean, that's going to take all of 10 minutes before that, before either Tanya Chutkin or the judge in Georgia is going to haul him in for threatening witnesses again.
[281] Absolutely.
[282] I guess part of the reason I'm going to watch the debate is wouldn't it be awesome, and this is just my wishcasting, wouldn't it be awesome if someone says, look, while we're here, like that line from Dr. Strange, oh, we're here chatting so amiably, you know, that Donald Trump is going to be arraigned.
[283] Is this our party?
[284] I want to know around this room, who of you, you know, why aren't we together?
[285] And I understand millions of people want this person, but it's time to speak truth to our own voters, even if we lose.
[286] And then for all the joking about somebody like Doug Bergam, you know, there are a lot of people who have the complete freedom to say this out loud in this debate.
[287] But I think that that split screen, Charlie, you know, it's not just that it'll rattle, I think, MAGA world.
[288] Because I think it does, and I think they're just really good about bamboozling the press into saying that it doesn't.
[289] But the more important point is that all of the other millions of people who are not Republicans, who are independents, who are Democrats who could have been moved either to stay home or to kind of take a flyer the way they did in 2016.
[290] And, you know, we already saw it in 2020 that there were just millions of people so I can't go through this again.
[291] And I think with this much drama, you know that I've been banging this gone for a while.
[292] Put Trump on TV 24 -7, let people see exactly what they're getting, you know, make them have to listen to him.
[293] Don't let anybody out there ever say, well, I didn't know that was happening or I didn't hear that or I didn't see it happen because I think, you know, by fall of 2024, people are like, look, you know, I don't care if Joe Biden's old.
[294] I don't care if I don't particularly like Kamala Harris.
[295] I can't live through more of this guy and his hijinks.
[296] It's embarrassing.
[297] It's humiliating and it's dangerous.
[298] I don't know that a majority of Republicans will think that way, but a significant enough minority to make a difference.
[299] To make a difference in the general.
[300] I mean, give you mind that this is on Fox.
[301] So in terms of the hermetically sealed alternative reality silos, you know, when Chris Christie says something along those lines, when Aza Hutchinson calls him out or any of the other candidates, when Mike Penn says, though he was wrong, that is going to be beamed out to listeners of Fox.
[302] Not to mention that Trump's whole deal here was basically to say, screw you Fox.
[303] Now, look, he's got the experience of 2016 knowing that he can insult Fox, boycott Fox, and that they will come back.
[304] you know, like beat puppies to him.
[305] So, I mean, you know, he's got reason to believe that he's not going to pay a price.
[306] But it is interesting that his counter programming is going to be this interview with Tucker Carlson on Twitter.
[307] And that feels, I'm sorry, diminished.
[308] It's a diminishment for Tucker.
[309] And it's a diminishment for Trump, who's then going to be doing, you know, It ought to be a walk of shame in Atlanta.
[310] So I'm just not sure that this is the genius move that everybody attributes to him.
[311] And the choice of Tucker is interesting because the minute he announced it, a lot of the stories about it and a lot of the social media announcements about it were prefaced with Tucker's immortal comment.
[312] I hate him passionately.
[313] You know, I mean, it's like, oh, right.
[314] Let's not forget that one.
[315] You know, Trump is going to go to the guy who obviously hates him, but now they're going to pretend.
[316] to like each other.
[317] Tucker's going to grovel because he has no choice now.
[318] Somebody in there can have a viral moment that will swamp this Tucker thing.
[319] I mean, nobody, there's not going to be a lot of coverage, I think, and I could be wrong about this, but because of the venue, because it's Tucker Carlson, not a lot of people are going to want to spend a lot of time trying to find stuff to pull out of that Tucker Carlson interview.
[320] And people just, people don't watch Twitter.
[321] They watch television.
[322] Let's spend about five minutes on this question of Twitter X and Elon Musk because you've been a dead ender on all of this hanging on by your fingernails.
[323] I don't know what's going on with Elon Musk.
[324] I don't know whether it's the drugs or some sort of decomposition.
[325] I don't know what's happening.
[326] But it does appear that his business model is to vandalize the site to make it as unusable as possible.
[327] He's now saying that he's going to make it impossible to block people.
[328] He's going to eliminate headlines from articles.
[329] I don't even know where these ideas come from.
[330] Now, you've been hanging in there.
[331] And you're a big user, but Twitter, it feels as if it is imploding in real time.
[332] First of all, again, it's that morbid curiosity factor, right?
[333] That I'm sort of curious to watch, again, kind of a Dr. Strange Love image.
[334] I'm sort of curious to watch Musk ride the bomb all the way down to the end.
[335] Now, that's a great image.
[336] That's a good one.
[337] Yeah.
[338] You know, with a hat, woo, you know, like the rodeo.
[339] clown going down on the bomb.
[340] But I'm also curious to see if at some point, you know, Twitter is a valuable thing.
[341] It's a valuable service.
[342] I'm just wondering if anybody ever steps in to return it to being some sort of news source.
[343] But I think what's really interesting about it, your point about him vandalizing the site, I don't think that's it because if he really wanted to just trash it, he could have bought it, trashed it, sold off the parts, done what he could to recoup his money, and then gotten back to dealing with the problem, that Twitter stock is like worth what, you know, 60 % of what it was.
[344] Yeah.
[345] And that SpaceX is having all kinds of problems and, you know, that he himself seems to be, as you pointed out, kind of decompensating somehow.
[346] I don't know that he set out to do that.
[347] But I think what you're really seeing, and the Ronan Farrow piece that came out yesterday, I think was pretty damning in this regard, you're seeing somebody who it's kind of like when Trump couldn't take being mocked by Obama.
[348] that we're now dealing with a whole group of politicians and rich guys who are just determined to punish everybody in some way because at some point in their lives, they got stuffed into a locker.
[349] And I think, you know, Musk comes across that way.
[350] Well, you know, these news sources, they're not friendly to me, so I'll throttle them.
[351] And nobody will leave because you people want to be with me because I'm the cool kid.
[352] And I can do this.
[353] And of course, everybody says, what the fuck are you doing?
[354] And he goes, okay.
[355] And he sort of turns it back on.
[356] And he says, well, I'm an eliminate blocking.
[357] And everybody said, I mean, James Woods, he gets into a pissing match with James Woods, who has two and a half million followers.
[358] And in a fit of peek, he says, well, delete your account.
[359] Well, okay, that's a great strategy.
[360] You know, tell the right wing, tell the right wing influencers with two and a half million followers who have supported you up until now to go fuck right off.
[361] That's incredible.
[362] And I think, again, it's because he's such a fragile and immature guy.
[363] He can't take anybody criticizing him.
[364] He just can't deal with it.
[365] I think that's true.
[366] And I think that's what you're seeing.
[367] And again, I'm sort of watching it out of a kind of morbid fascination to see a 50 -odd -year -old man. At one point, I tweeted something like, I wonder how everybody at Twitter feels that their salaries and their pensions and their futures are all dependent on what is, in effect, a nine -year -old billionaire.
[368] Well, I mean, the political significance is that as Twitter is kind of teetering on the edge, and I don't know about you, but I mean, a lot of people are, you know, saying they get a lot less engagement, it's a lot less influential, a lot less useful.
[369] I mean, there's a lot of problems with it.
[370] But it was at this moment that Ronda Sanders decided to basically run a Twitter campaign.
[371] He announces with Elon Musk.
[372] And you can see that every one of his talking points is appealing to Twitter.
[373] And where's Donald Trump?
[374] Donald Trump is back on.
[375] on Twitter with a guy that's been fired at the moment when people are going, this is hard to use this is like what?
[376] I have to say one of the big failed predictions, I will totally own that I thought that Trump would not be able to resist coming back to Twitter.
[377] I thought so too.
[378] And I agreed with you and who knows whether he will at some point.
[379] Right.
[380] And we'll see what is ongoing relationship with Fox because, you know, very clearly, you know, if he thinks going back onto Twitter will screw somebody that he doesn't like Hugh will do it.
[381] I mean, in a way, truth social is even better for him because he does it and then people just put it on Twitter as a screenshot.
[382] And that way it doesn't have to put up any shit from people that own the platform.
[383] He doesn't have to worry about, you know, people that run the trust section, if there are any left.
[384] But I think it's been a fascinating kind of dance here watching Musk really not understand any of this and just, you know, like this is what happens when you do things in a fit of peak?
[385] And I think that today, apparently, well, you know, today is Tuesday here in radio world.
[386] So Zuckerberg.
[387] And by the way, what a rehabilitation of Mark Zuckerberg because of Elon Musk.
[388] You know, up until now, Zuck was like the dark prince.
[389] You know, everybody hated Zuck.
[390] And now they're going, hey, Zuck, if you get that cage match, kick his ass, you know.
[391] He's got to get threads up and running.
[392] He's rolling up a desktop version today, apparently.
[393] Okay, good, because it's not going to be a thing until there is something like, okay?
[394] Okay, so I want to get your take on another big, big mega issue here, okay?
[395] There is a huge amount of, shall we say, resistance wishcasting, I'm kind of giving away where I'm going on this, about the disqualification of Donald Trump.
[396] Now, I devoted an entire one of my Morning Shots newsletter to this original law review paper that says that argues very, very forcefully and very persuasively, the Section 3 of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution prohibits, clearly disqualifies Donald Trump from ever being president again, and disqualifies them from being able to run.
[397] And this was written by two very, very prominent conservative legal scholars, members of the Federalist Society.
[398] It is a very powerful argument.
[399] I think that they are right on the Constitution.
[400] So does Judge Michael Ludig, conservative former federal judge, and Lawrence Tribe, Harvard Law professor who write in your publication, the Atlantic, that they agree with this, that the Constitution bars Donald Trump from ever serving again and suggesting that there'd be legal action to kick him off the ballot or to go to the Supreme Court, whatever.
[401] What do you make of this?
[402] Where is this going?
[403] I think it was a marvelous, and thank you for reminding folks, that they can read the tribe -blooded piece in the Atlantic.
[404] I thought it was remarkable and heartening to see a very conservative and a very liberal jurist both agree that this is true, but I don't think it's going to mean a thing.
[405] I don't think it matters at all unless, unless and until some group of secretaries of state who control the ballots, right?
[406] They control ballot access basically go to federal court and then all the way to the Supreme Court in the next 10 minutes and say, we want a ruling on this 14th Amendment issue and that we want to be.
[407] able to decide this.
[408] And until somebody does that, it's a great talking point.
[409] Okay, one share for the Federal Society.
[410] I'm sure that the writers, I don't know them personally, so I'm going to say, I'm sure they are men of probity who believe what they wrote.
[411] But I also think that there are a lot of guys at the Federal Society saying, you know, another four years of this, we might get some more judges.
[412] And then the whole conservative movement is pretty much over.
[413] I mean, back in 2016, you and I were warning about this.
[414] If you are a Republican, if you care about the conservative movement.
[415] If you care about conservative ideas at all, Donald Trump is going to end that.
[416] And I think we're seeing that right now that the country is moving to the left, some ways that I agree with, some ways that I don't.
[417] But I think that there are a lot of conservatives out there saying, you know, this guy has to be stopped before he completely destroys whatever was left of conservatism in America.
[418] Because Donald Trump is not a conservative.
[419] He's not a Republican.
[420] He's, you know, Donald Trump.
[421] He's a Cadeo.
[422] He's a buccaneer.
[423] He's it for himself.
[424] And I think, you know, okay, it's great that it came from the Federal Society, but thank you for the opinion.
[425] Now, tell us how to enforce it.
[426] Tell us how you actually get this done.
[427] This is my problem.
[428] I want to make it very clear that I think this is a, you know, fantastic work of scholarship.
[429] I think that they are right about this.
[430] I think that they are right on the law.
[431] I believe they understand, you know, the real meaning and the import of the 14th Amendment.
[432] But the key word is, okay, so what is the mechanism to enforce it?
[433] Because as we know, the Constitution does not enforce itself.
[434] Something has to happen.
[435] In short of a majority ruling by the U .S. Supreme Court next week, however that happens, that in fact Donald Trump is disqualified.
[436] I don't see that this goes anywhere.
[437] Also, I do think it's legitimate to say, how can he be disqualified before there's an adjudication that says that you committed these acts?
[438] I mean, I think that that's not a small detail.
[439] And I guess I'm also concerned that this wishcasting is going to lead people down some dangerous political paths.
[440] So, for example, let's imagine that some progressive activists here in the state of Wisconsin brings suit against elections officials saying that Donald Trump, you know, because of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, is disqualified from being president.
[441] And therefore, they are suing to have him excluded from the Wisconsin ballot in a swing state like Wisconsin.
[442] And let's say that the Wisconsin Supreme Court that is now dominated by liberals, agrees with them.
[443] Now, wait, you can see the backlash on this, if it's a state -by -state thinking, particularly if we are arguing that we need to preserve democracy.
[444] This is going to be an on -fire talking point on the right.
[445] Now, I'm not endorsing it.
[446] I'm just saying, you know, they're saying, wait, you are taking away our right to even vote for this candidate.
[447] You are taking him off the ballot.
[448] How is that not anti -democratic?
[449] So in some ways, that creates an issue that I think, now look, I understand that we are not actual democracy, that there are reasons why we have the Constitution.
[450] There are reasons why we have the rule of law that basically says that, yeah, the majority doesn't get to do anything.
[451] There is accountability.
[452] And I understand all of those intellectual arguments, but the enforcement could be very messy and in some ways could be counterproductive.
[453] What do you think?
[454] I'm worried about that.
[455] I think there's two problems.
[456] One is I disagree with you that there needs to be an official adjudication because giving aid and comfort to insurrectionists, you know, there's no federal code about that.
[457] The Constitution put that in there in some sense that we would all know it when we saw it.
[458] Well, but there has to be a finding that it happened, though, right?
[459] I mean, there has to be a finding that, yes.
[460] And somebody needs to make that finding.
[461] And of course, that somebody is probably Congress.
[462] And that's not going to happen.
[463] No. My wish casting, by the way, on this, when I had too many margaritas after the beach, is when I sit back and say, you know, a handful of Republicans join with the Democrats, impeach Trump again.
[464] It goes to the Senate.
[465] The Senate convicts and rules him ineligible for any further, you know, federal office.
[466] And it's all done by the book.
[467] I have a question, Professor.
[468] My hand is up.
[469] How many margaritas did you have to have to come up with that idea?
[470] Yeah, yeah, that's, that's, um, That's usually when I'm sitting there talking with Eleanor Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln, I think barring that, you're going to need the Supreme Court.
[471] Yeah, no. And you would need a bunch of secretaries of state.
[472] And you're right, because then the next move, if this actually happened, is that in 2028, you'd have a bunch of people saying, well, we don't want Kamala Harris on the ballot or we don't want so -and -so on the ballot.
[473] But the saddest part of all this is that the real mechanism of enforcement for this kind of issue should be, and I'm going to go all James Madison here, should be the virtue and decency of the American public.
[474] Our Constitution does not rely as much as people think it does on black letter law.
[475] We have learned this.
[476] It relies on a basic decency.
[477] You know, I've been throwing this quote out over and over again with Madison talking about the Constitution.
[478] If there is no virtue among us, you know, if there is no virtue of, you know, if there is no virtue among us than we're in a terrible place, that no checks, no balances, no legal promises can solve the fix we're going to be in.
[479] And the problem is that millions of people who in an earlier and better time would have said, look, I don't agree with Joe Biden.
[480] I don't like, you know, I don't like abortion.
[481] I don't like big government, whatever it is.
[482] But a basic circuit breaker of decency would kick in to say, but no matter what, Donald Trump cannot being the nominee of a major party.
[483] It's just not, it can't happen.
[484] It's not allowable.
[485] And that circuit breaker is completely blown now by people who say, you know, I don't care.
[486] There was an interview that Jordan Klepper, the invaluable Jordan Klepper did with a Trump supporter, where she finally admitted, okay, he did it.
[487] And he said, if I could show you that he did these things, would it change your mind.
[488] And she said, sure.
[489] And so he says, well, here's what he did.
[490] There was this long pause.
[491] And she nodded.
[492] And she said, I don't care.
[493] There's nothing you can do.
[494] There is no legal decision or Supreme Court case that can restore a sense of fundamental decency to the voters until they make a decision that they don't want to be that kind of person anymore.
[495] And I don't know what to do about that other than...
[496] And the founders didn't know either.
[497] I mean, clearly, James Madison was not naive about this.
[498] Remember, I mean, he wrote in the federalists, you know, if men were angels, no government would be necessary.
[499] If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary, which is why you had all those external and internal controls.
[500] But even with that, no one imagined that someone like Donald Trump would ever be elected president.
[501] Well, Hamilton kind of did.
[502] He and others worried about it.
[503] But even John Adams was like, I wonder if we can hold this thing together for, you know, one or two more generations.
[504] Because without basically, you know, a decent public, this whole thing, you know, our constitution is made for a religious people, you know, it's, and not this kind of, not this kind of cultish, you know, sort of religion as my cudgel to bash other people, but people have some sense of, you know, transcendence, of that some things are transcendently important, that you are part of a community that, where there are people who came before you, there are people who are going to come after you, we are the stewards of our institutions, we are the stewards of our government, that we inherit it, and then we pass it on.
[505] That's gone.
[506] This is now in the hands of people that are like, look, I'm playing a, you know, it's a reality TV show and I'm playing a game.
[507] And I don't care what happens, you know, 10 or 15 or 20 years from now.
[508] And I don't care about the Constitution because I've never read it.
[509] And I don't care about the law because I think, you know, everything's rigged against me. It's people who are just cosseted in this cocoon of rage yelling me, me, me, why doesn't anybody listen to me when, in fact, they're being taken to the clean.
[510] I was talking about this with somebody yesterday.
[511] I said, these people who love Donald Trump, if they knew someone like Donald Trump in their daily life, they would hate him.
[512] Absolutely.
[513] These are working guys who, you know, Trump walked in and said, hey, I'm stiffing you on your paycheck and I'm going to grab your sister.
[514] These guys would lose their mind.
[515] They'd punch him out.
[516] But when he does it from a stage, they say, that's my guy.
[517] Or all the soccer parents out there, we're hearing a lot about parents' rights and how hard it is to raise a kid these days, what parent would want Donald Trump to be a role model?
[518] I know in terms of sportsmanship and all of those things.
[519] I guess it's the experiment, whether you can sort of have a bifurcation, whether or not you can live lives of virtue and responsibility in your personal life and hope that your political positions don't leak out.
[520] The founders did not think so, Charlie.
[521] The founders made the argument that if you live an unvirtuous private life, you will eventually bleed into an unvirtuous public life.
[522] conservatives used to believe that.
[523] Right.
[524] We used to talk about character, the character issue, that, you know, the thing that was more important than your position on any one issue was that you had the appropriate character to hold public office.
[525] And they have completely thrown that out the window.
[526] I had hoped that any number of things would kind of snap us out of this narcissistic coma.
[527] But I think, again, to end on that same dark note, I think these are people have just climbed way too far up that tree, the psychic cost of that climb down for them.
[528] They would rather watch the world burn than deal with the psychic cost of having to admit that they were taken.
[529] I mean, are their lives any better after four years of Trump?
[530] Did he change anything?
[531] Did he save their communities?
[532] Did he build factories in, you know, Ohio?
[533] He did none of that and still drains money out of their pockets, a billionaire, nominally a billionaire, draining money out of their pockets to pay his legal bills, and they write those checks with a smile on their face.
[534] Okay, so to your point before, in your personal life, you've known people who have lied to your face.
[535] This affects your relationship, and you don't trust them, right?
[536] You probably terminate the relationship at a certain point.
[537] If somebody rips you off, if somebody cheats you out of money, you don't do business with them anymore.
[538] It is this weird thing.
[539] that, and I wrote this for your publication, the Atlantic, that we right now at this moment have the lowest possible standards for the presidency of the United States, that we would not apply to anything else in our life, the coaches, the people we hire, the people we would hire to walk our dogs or look after our children, or would run the local car wash, none of that would apply.
[540] So the problem is going to be long term, since we're now taking the long term here, is after Trump, after all of this is all done, we have to rebuild that civic virtue.
[541] We have to rebuild all of those qualities.
[542] And the institution that would be essential to doing that would be, I think, churches.
[543] And wow, I'm cringing to saying that because this one institution that we will ultimately have to look to, you know, to make people understand the difference between right and wrong and the importance of virtue and everything, we've seen the complete corruption of the churches in this era of Trump as well.
[544] So that also, Right.
[545] I think creates a long -term lingering problem.
[546] Some of that is alien to me. People that have followed us know that I'm Greek Orthodox, and so, you know, I come from a religion that doesn't do a lot of politics from the pulpit.
[547] And in fact, we've been, I can remember even 30 years ago that my church was criticized for not being kind of more activist and, you know, good works out in the world and all that stuff.
[548] But I think there is something, you know, very American about this problem that religion gets turned on its head, that you go to church, not because you believe in what's going on there, but you go for this sense of power of political, but you go there for worldly power instead of going there to let go of the world for an hour, you know, that you go there because it puts you even more in the world, that the sermons you're getting are about the world and not about, you know, being a good person and, you know, the sacrifice of Jesus Christ and, you know, all of these other things.
[549] People, a lot better versed than this than me, have written great stuff about it.
[550] People like Pete Wainer and Russell Moore, you know, have written with great passion and pain about this.
[551] But I think the other thing that can do it, Charlie, I think, is people letting go of nationalizing everything and kind of restoring some sense of moral order and cooperation in small communities.
[552] How about instead of arguing about Donald Trump, you work with your.
[553] neighbors to get the potholes filled, or that you know, that you have enough police in your community or that you have, you know, a public park that's cleaned out.
[554] People don't do that.
[555] Because of this narcissistic nationalization and heroic narrative, everybody wakes up in the morning and say, I'm going to save the world.
[556] Well, you know what?
[557] How about you save the park down the street?
[558] And I think that these small -scale projects are places where state legislators, But again, you know, I'm sorry I was optimistic for a moment.
[559] Let me now remind you, however, that the state Republican parties have been completely captured by Trump and Trumpists.
[560] And, you know, maybe that's where you start.
[561] It's just flush out these, you know, there's no point in being a Trumpist on the city council.
[562] Because in the end, that doesn't matter.
[563] You've got to pick up the garbage, you know.
[564] This is a non -trivial point that you're making here, that if you take out some of the top line, you know, Trump versus or, you know, some of the cultural issues, the reality is that people aren't that divided.
[565] Right.
[566] And they can work.
[567] And then you begin to focus on actual real world things as opposed to your identity, the attitude that you strike.
[568] And I've noticed that you can have, you know, really interesting conversations with people who disagree with you on a lot of things.
[569] as long as you don't focus on those top lines.
[570] So, anyway, Tom, it has been a great conversation.
[571] Hopefully it has not been too dark.
[572] And if it was too dark, it was still, it was still pretty good, Tom.
[573] I mean, it's, you know, I mean, it is what it is.
[574] It's hard not to be.
[575] We're not the crazy ones.
[576] You know, part of the problem is that when things look this dark, it means you're absolutely and properly comprehending the current political situation.
[577] But, you know, we're still here and there's still that, you know, there's still a chance that this age of Trump ends sooner than we might think.
[578] I think, you know, I always hope that with a cult, the way cults often end is that the fever breaks.
[579] And I think that that's the hopeful thing, is that somehow this ends, and rather than a kind of big reckoning and all that, that Trump just goes off and he deals with all his court cases and millions of Americans say, well, okay, you know, kind of back to work, back to real life.
[580] Maybe I'm too optimistic about that.
[581] We can't end on a total dark note, but I'm hoping that that's what happens.
[582] Well, there is a difference between hope and optimism, which we have discussed in the past.
[583] I'm not necessarily an optimist, but I am a, you know, hope means that we will continue to work for a better future.
[584] And thank you so much for joining us today.
[585] I appreciate it, Tom.
[586] My pleasure, Charlie.
[587] And thank you all for listening to today's Bullwark podcast.
[588] I'm Charlie Sykes.
[589] We will be back with the Trump trials tomorrow.
[590] We are scheduled to talk with former Congressman Adam Kinzinger on Thursday to recap Wednesday, tonight's debate.
[591] And of course, Tim and I will wrap up the whole week on Friday.
[592] Thanks for listening.
[593] The Bullwark podcast is produced by Katie Cooper and engineered and edited by Jason Brown.