About this transcript: This is a full AI-generated transcript of Tucker Carlson: Trump Has ‘Spellbinding,’ Maybe Even ‘Supernatural,’ Qualities — The Interview from The Interview and 2 more, published May 3, 2026. The transcript contains 20,236 words with timestamps and was generated using Whisper AI.
"You spend a day with Trump and sort of like you're in this kind of dreamland. It's like smoking hash or something. It's interesting. Very interesting. I'm Lula Garcia Navarro, and I'm in Maine to interview Tucker Carlson. For many years, Carlson was one of President Trump's most vocal supporters. I"
[0:00] You spend a day with Trump and sort of like you're in this kind of dreamland.
[0:03] It's like smoking hash or something. It's interesting. Very interesting.
[0:11] I'm Lula Garcia Navarro, and I'm in Maine to interview Tucker Carlson.
[0:16] For many years, Carlson was one of President Trump's most vocal supporters.
[0:21] I mean, I've always agreed with Trump's policies, always.
[0:24] And here I am with a full-throated, utterly sincere endorsement of Donald Trump.
[0:30] But recently, Carlson has publicly broken with Trump.
[0:33] He's not only come out against Trump's decision to go to war with Iran.
[0:38] This is the single most foolish thing any American president has ever done.
[0:42] He now says he regrets supporting the president.
[0:44] You know, we'll be tormented by it for a long time. I will be.
[0:47] And has become a vocal and influential critic of the administration.
[0:51] This whole thing is like dooming anyone connected to it for the foreseeable future,
[0:58] including the entire Republican Party.
[1:00] This puts Carlson at the center of a major battle on the right over Israel,
[1:05] over foreign interventions, and over the post-Trump world itself.
[1:10] Here's my interview with Tucker Carlson.
[1:14] Tucker Carlson.
[1:16] Thanks for having me.
[1:17] Very excited for you to be here.
[1:18] Thank you.
[1:19] In Maine, we should say.
[1:21] Any excuse to come to Maine is always a good reason.
[1:24] Most people don't come to this part of Maine, so I'm grateful that you did.
[1:27] It's all parts of Maine are good parts.
[1:31] I wanted to sit down with you for a number of reasons.
[1:33] You've been at the center of conservative media, obviously, for a very long time.
[1:37] By extension, it's politics.
[1:39] And I want to get your perspective on this moment, on your evolution, your worldview.
[1:46] You recently made quite a dramatic break with President Trump over the war in Iran.
[1:51] And so I'd love to hear about that.
[1:53] I want to start, though, in the lead-up to the conflict.
[1:59] You said that you spoke to the president several times about the plan to attack Iran before it actually happened on February 28th.
[2:08] I'd love to hear a little bit about that.
[2:10] Was it just you and the president in those meetings?
[2:12] Can you just give me a sense of what was going on there?
[2:15] Well, I've been speaking to him about Iran for 10 years.
[2:18] Right.
[2:19] Literally since 2016, maybe 15, because there was enormous pressure on him, as there has been on many presidents, to regime change Iran.
[2:29] And we know, based on our experience with a much smaller country, Iraq, that, you know, that's a tall order.
[2:38] And it doesn't necessarily lead to a place you want to go.
[2:41] And it's not good for the United States.
[2:42] So anyway, and Trump knew that, and that was one of the main reasons, the main reason, actually, that I supported him during, you know, my time at Fox News and campaigned for him.
[2:53] And so it was really central to my views of Trump's candidacy and presidency.
[2:58] And so when it became clear in June that we were starting down this road toward a regime change war with Iran, I was just, well, I was baffled.
[3:09] I was very upset, not because I have allegiance to Iran, but because I thought it would be terrible for the United States, as it has been, worse even than I imagined.
[3:19] But I could see exactly where this was going.
[3:22] And he was under enormous pressure to do this, once again, as all presidents in my lifetime have been.
[3:26] So we talked a lot in June.
[3:30] He embarked on this effort to take out Iran's nuclear program, which was really just the opening salvo in a regime change effort.
[3:37] He knew that.
[3:38] I told him that.
[3:39] Charlie Kirk told him that.
[3:41] We did it.
[3:42] We got out.
[3:42] And then it became clear this winter in January that we were really, we were moving toward this thing that we're in now.
[3:49] And I was just absolutely panicked about it.
[3:52] Did he explain to you why he wanted to take the country into war?
[3:55] I mean, I'm just trying to understand the dynamics of that conversation.
[3:59] What was he saying?
[3:59] Well, there were multiple conversations.
[4:01] I flew to Washington three times in the month before, five weeks, six weeks before, and met with him in the Oval Office alone.
[4:09] And, you know, people filing in and out with the White House chief of staff, the secretary of state, et cetera.
[4:14] I had lunch with him on one of those occasions.
[4:16] And then I spoke to him by phone many times on this topic.
[4:20] And he would begin almost every conversation with, do you want Iran to have a nuclear weapon?
[4:27] To which I said, well, I'm sort of opposed to nuclear weapons.
[4:29] I don't want nuclear weapons.
[4:30] I don't want Israel to have a nuclear weapon.
[4:31] I don't want anyone to have a nuclear weapon.
[4:32] It doesn't seem like a good thing.
[4:35] But that's not the question.
[4:37] The question is, what do you do about it?
[4:38] And that was kind of the end of the rationale for doing this.
[4:43] He never seemed enthusiastic about it, ever.
[4:47] And I would say, well, you know, here are the potential effects of this.
[4:50] Obviously, the geography of Iran being the most important fact of Iran.
[4:54] Iran is not a military power.
[4:55] It's an economic power.
[4:56] That was obvious because it controls the greatest span of coastline along the Persian Gulf, which is the source of a fifth of the world's energy, et cetera.
[5:04] All well-known now and well-known to him then.
[5:06] And he, I think, perfectly understood the consequences.
[5:11] Why was he taking your calls then?
[5:13] Because if he knew your position and he understood the perils, I mean, was he trying to convince you to back the war?
[5:22] No.
[5:24] He made no effort to convince me at all other than to say, it's going to be all right.
[5:28] Everything's going to be okay.
[5:29] And I just didn't feel that way.
[5:32] None of this, I should say, was about Trump or my relationship with Trump or my feelings about Trump or his hair color.
[5:38] Or anything like that.
[5:39] I just didn't want the United States to go to war with Iran.
[5:41] And my strong feeling by the end of those conversations, which was the last one, it was probably a week before it began, the war began, was that he felt he had no choice.
[5:52] And that he was resigned to it.
[5:54] He was unhappy about it.
[5:55] He didn't seem enthusiastic at all.
[5:56] There was no effort to say, you know, once we do this, the United States will be at peace, will be safe, will be more prosperous.
[6:03] There was none of that.
[6:04] Zero.
[6:05] I mean, you speak to many people in the administration.
[6:10] And I'm just trying to understand the fault lines over this.
[6:14] I mean, who was for the war?
[6:16] Who was against it while all this was being discussed?
[6:19] I mean, I'm guessing to a certain extent.
[6:22] I do talk to a lot of people there still, but I don't work there.
[6:27] So, you know, it's hard to really know.
[6:29] You know, there are people with a long record of making bellicose noises about Iran.
[6:34] They still work there.
[6:36] So, specifically, the Secretary of State slash National Security Advisor has, you know, said for many, many years, Iran is the greatest threat we face, which is a ludicrous statement.
[6:46] But has said that.
[6:46] Talking about Marco Rubio.
[6:47] That'd be correct.
[6:48] But that said, I didn't hear a single time from anyone, including from the Secretary of State himself, who I spoke to about this, any enthusiasm for doing this.
[6:59] My strong impression, and I could be wrong because I don't work there, is that no one in the building was pushing for this, at least overtly.
[7:06] That all the pressure was coming from outside.
[7:09] Constant calls from donors and people with influence over the president.
[7:14] Well-known Rupert Murdoch, Mary Mandelson, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
[7:19] And then a small constellation of, I guess they'd be called influencers, beginning with Mark Levin.
[7:27] But there were others, Sean Hannity, you know, pushing the president to do this and telling him that you will be a figure out of history.
[7:33] You will save and redeem Israel or something.
[7:37] I think that was the case they were making.
[7:39] And I didn't hear of anybody making the case that this would be good for the United States.
[7:43] I don't think that was ever a conversation.
[7:46] I mean, there's been a lot of speculation about the president's mindset during this period.
[7:51] Yes.
[7:51] And part of it is, of course, about what happened after Venezuela and the successful, in their view, operation there, removing Maduro from office.
[8:03] And that he felt sort of emboldened by that, you know, the success of that operation.
[8:09] And that he felt that this was going to be similar, that he underestimated the Iranians and what they might do in response to an attack.
[8:18] Yeah, I don't believe that.
[8:19] I think the Venezuela operation allowed him to retreat into a kind of fantasy in which he told himself this is going to be easy.
[8:28] But I don't think he believed that.
[8:30] And I should say, having spoken to him a lot in this calendar year, I detected no evidence at all of dementia, mental decline.
[8:38] And you hear people say, well, he's gone, you know, soft.
[8:41] That was not my impression at all.
[8:43] Trump is not well informed on a lot of topics, for sure.
[8:47] He's proudly ignorant on a lot of topics.
[8:49] But he has kind of remarkable powers of insight into people and power dynamics.
[8:57] Like, you don't get to be president by accident.
[8:59] The guy's smart in the ways that matter politically.
[9:02] And my strong read was that he was doing this against his will.
[9:05] Well, you know, famously, the head of the counterterrorism center, one of the top intel officials in the country, Joe Kent, resigned shortly after the war began and said exactly the same thing.
[9:17] I think this decision is connected to a series of seemingly disconnected events, all of which revolve around violence.
[9:24] And we need to find out more about how this happened.
[9:27] And he was, of course, dismissed and threatened with an FBI investigation.
[9:32] And no one kind of followed up on that.
[9:34] And again, I don't know the answer.
[9:36] But this was not a normal decision making process.
[9:38] And my strong impression was that Trump was more a hostage than a sovereign decision maker in this.
[9:45] Well, so tell me what you're getting at when you say the president of the United States, the most powerful country in the world, had no choice.
[9:52] I don't know what I'm getting at.
[9:53] I'm just telling you what I observed.
[9:54] He seemed, and that's kind of the question.
[9:57] And I'm, what I'm really fascinated by is the lack of curiosity on display into how exactly this happened.
[10:03] What are the mechanisms by which a guy who's supposedly sovereign, in charge, granted this authority by voters, tens of millions of them, can't make a decision in the country's interest or even in his own interest?
[10:16] He knew, and I know he knew because I talked to him about it directly, that the consequences, potential consequences were profound and profoundly bad.
[10:24] The end of his presidency to start, which I think it has proven to be.
[10:28] He knew that, and he wasn't, this is my read, and I could be completely wrong.
[10:35] I don't know what's in his head, and I don't want to overstate my knowledge at all, but this is my strong perception on the basis of many conversations on this topic.
[10:42] He felt he had no choice, and he said to me, everything's going to be okay, because I was getting overwrought.
[10:49] Don't do this.
[10:50] The people pushing you to do this hate you.
[10:52] They're your enemies.
[10:54] This will destroy you.
[10:55] This will gravely harm our country.
[10:58] We've got kids.
[10:59] I'm hoping for grandkids.
[11:00] Let's not go there, and he said, it's going to be all right, and he said, do you know how I know that, and I said, no.
[11:08] He said, because it always is, and I do think there's a kind of, you know, Teddy Roosevelt-y and optimism there, but that's not really what it was, and this is my read.
[11:18] That was more a kind of justification from a man who feels he has no choice, and that is my strong view, and not just my strong view, the view of others who were around him and involved in this deliberation to the extent it was a deliberation.
[11:32] Which is not much.
[11:33] Who are the other people around him who had that view?
[11:35] You know, I can't speak for the views of others, but I will just say once again that I never saw it, nor did I hear about anybody who works for the Trump administration, anybody who was enthusiastically pushing this war on Trump, going and being like, you know what?
[11:52] You want to be a truly great, you want to make this country great again?
[11:56] We need a regime change effort in Iran, and instead, you know, there were a lot of cowardly people, as there always are, and Trump engenders cowardice in the people around him through intimidation, and there is a kind of quality that he has that's spellbinding.
[12:08] And I think it probably literally is a spell.
[12:10] And the effect is to weaken people around him and make them more compliant and more confused, and I've experienced this myself.
[12:18] You spend a day with Trump, and it's sort of like you're in this kind of dreamland.
[12:22] It's like smoking hash or something.
[12:23] It's interesting.
[12:24] Very interesting.
[12:25] And there may be a supernatural component to it.
[12:27] I'm not a theologian, but it's real, and anyone who's been around him can tell you it's real.
[12:30] But whatever the cause, no one around him was weighing in strongly, as far as I know, on either side, for or against.
[12:39] But people from the outside were strongly weighing in, calling him constantly.
[12:44] I'm going to give an alternative view on what may have happened.
[12:49] And you may be right, by the way, because I don't want to overstate what I know.
[12:52] Sure, I just want to just do diligence.
[12:56] We've seen the president in his second term be much more interested in foreign policy, as many presidents are.
[13:03] Much more open to taking action, not only in Venezuela, talking about Cuba, wanting the Nobel Peace Prize.
[13:13] You know, weighing into situations in which he wasn't terribly interested in, in his first term.
[13:21] For sure.
[13:22] And so, could that not be part of this?
[13:26] It's a huge part of it.
[13:27] And there's no question about that.
[13:29] And all presidents decide, at some point, that they're not interested in running the United States, because it's hard.
[13:35] And how do you fix Baltimore and Gary, Indiana?
[13:38] And what do you do about homelessness in Los Angeles?
[13:40] Like, these are hard questions.
[13:41] We can't even make Head Start work.
[13:42] Like, despite, you know, many billions and a lot of sort of well-meaning people working, spending their lives on it, can't make it work.
[13:50] So, these are hard problems.
[13:52] And I think it's universal.
[13:54] It's universal experience among American presidents, but also among U.S. senators, to decide, like, I'd rather run the world because the details are opaque.
[14:02] I don't speak these languages.
[14:04] You know, I can seem—well, first of all, it's a display of male power.
[14:09] Send the bombs in.
[14:10] Kill the bad people.
[14:12] But, moreover, you get to feel like I did something.
[14:14] And that's important.
[14:15] And I get it.
[14:16] And this is, again, as you wisely note, a process that all presidents tend to go through.
[14:21] And so, Venezuela, Cuba, I object to both of those efforts very strongly.
[14:27] But neither one, in my view, risks the future of the United States in the way that the Iran war now does.
[14:34] And so, it's a big deal.
[14:35] But because it is, by the way, a contiguous neighbor of Iraq, and because Trump spent years talking about what a terrible idea of the Iraq invasion was, in fact, defined his candidacy in 2016 on that point, it's hard for me to believe that he just sort of organically reached this place at the end of February.
[14:58] He's like, oh, I think it's a good idea.
[14:59] He did not think it was a good idea.
[15:01] Shutting down a fifth of the world's oil and gas?
[15:06] Of all people, Trump knows that's bad.
[15:08] You said he's a hostage just now.
[15:12] You told the BBC he's a slave to foreign interests.
[15:16] So, I just want to ask you to be sort of explicit.
[15:18] I mean, Trump is being held hostage by whom?
[15:21] By who or by what?
[15:22] By Benjamin Netanyahu.
[15:23] And by his many advocates in the United States.
[15:26] And we know that not simply because Trump started the war on February 28th, but because he couldn't get out of it.
[15:31] He declares we're having a ceasefire.
[15:33] This was three weeks in, four weeks in.
[15:35] He says we're having a ceasefire.
[15:37] And we're having these talks.
[15:39] And they're going great.
[15:40] And we're going to open the strait.
[15:42] And Iran says, yeah, one of our conditions is Israel's got to pull back from southern Lebanon.
[15:48] You can't use the Iran war as a pretext for stealing more land from a sovereign country.
[15:54] That's not your country.
[15:55] Like, no.
[15:57] And it's not just Iran who felt that way.
[16:00] I think the rest of the world's like, what are you doing?
[16:01] I thought we were, you know, fighting the great existential threat, Iran.
[16:04] And now you're taking the opportunity to take Lebanon shore of the Latani River and bombing downtown Beirut.
[16:10] Like, what is this?
[16:11] Anyway, this was all very well known.
[16:13] And within hours of announcing this, Trump announcing this, Israel publicly, in a way that was designed to get the attention of everyone, including the Iranians, starts killing civilians in Lebanon.
[16:27] Now, what was the point of that?
[16:29] Not to secure the Israeli homeland.
[16:32] The point of that was to end any talk of a negotiated settlement, to keep this going until Iran was destroyed and chaotic, which is the Israeli goal.
[16:42] I'm not attacking Israel by saying that.
[16:44] Their goals are different from ours.
[16:45] They're a different country.
[16:46] Yeah, they would argue, of course, that what they are doing is neutralizing the threat that has been persistent in Lebanon through Hezbollah.
[16:56] Oh, okay.
[16:57] But, I mean, you know, they invaded Lebanon in 1982.
[17:03] Okay.
[17:04] So that was 44 years ago.
[17:05] They've had a lot of experience in Lebanon.
[17:07] A lot.
[17:08] They've had a lot of time to fix Lebanon.
[17:10] They killed Nasrallah.
[17:12] They blew up Hezbollah with explosive pagers.
[17:14] Like, they've done a lot since October 7th in Lebanon.
[17:18] They chose that moment to derail the negotiations.
[17:24] And they've done this repeatedly.
[17:25] And so my perspective as an American is, look, we're the United States.
[17:29] We're a country of 350 million people.
[17:31] You are wholly dependent on us.
[17:33] You're a country of 9 million people with no natural resources.
[17:35] I'm not against you.
[17:37] But, like, we're not co-equals here.
[17:39] But the point I'm making is Trump could not restrain Netanyahu.
[17:43] Netanyahu is the one person Trump could not say, hey, settle down.
[17:47] Or we'll just defund you and your country will collapse in about 10 minutes, which is true.
[17:51] Israel can't defend itself without the United States, despite whatever propaganda you may have heard.
[17:56] So, again, it's not an attack on Israel.
[17:59] It's an attack on American leadership for not constraining its partner in a way that helps the United States.
[18:05] Trump said, I want a negotiated settlement.
[18:07] Israel stopped the settlement.
[18:09] Trump refused to even criticize Netanyahu in public.
[18:12] Are you joking?
[18:14] That's slavery.
[18:15] That is total control of one man by another.
[18:18] And it's, you know, that's between Trump and Bibi and God, as far as I'm concerned.
[18:22] But as an American, that's our president, our elected president, whose job is to protect our country and our interests and our economy.
[18:30] And he is looking out for Israel first.
[18:34] That's outrageous.
[18:35] I don't, and no amount of like, oh, you're an anti-Semite, which I'm not, and I'm never going to be, is going to stop me from noting that that's outrageous.
[18:43] It is outrageous.
[18:44] Before we just move on.
[18:46] And I am curious about this one point, which is obviously Israel has tried to exert its influence on a number of presidents.
[18:57] Many presidents have been asked to decapitate Iran, to do a joint military operation in the Middle East, which this is the first time really that this has happened, where the United States and Israel are doing a joint military operation against a Muslim country.
[19:13] And I'm just wondering why you think other presidents didn't have that influence, because they obviously were subjected to the same pressures, the same donors, the same Bibi Netanyahu has been there since the 90s.
[19:30] I mean, what do you think has materially changed that made Trump more susceptible to that influence?
[19:36] I mean, that's kind of the question that I would like answered.
[19:40] And I don't know the answer, as noted.
[19:41] But, you know, one argument could be, well, Trump is just uniquely weak.
[19:47] Okay.
[19:48] But that was not my perception.
[19:49] I think Trump obviously has weaknesses.
[19:53] And a lot of his posturing is compensatory, of course.
[19:57] I'm not interested in psychoanalyzing Trump, but that's just clear.
[20:00] But what was it about this moment that allowed a foreign leader to have this level of influence over an American leader?
[20:07] And I don't know the answer, but again, I think it's worth finding out.
[20:09] I would also note that, and this is not a defense of Trump, hardly.
[20:13] This is the single most foolish thing any American president has ever done, in my opinion.
[20:18] I say that with sadness.
[20:20] But many American presidents have put Israel's interests before Iran.
[20:24] I would say the Iraq War was a very obvious example of that.
[20:27] I mean, Cheney's office was completely controlled.
[20:29] And I knew almost all of them by people who were putting Israel's interests above America's interests.
[20:35] So I think the Iraq War was, to a great extent, a product of that.
[20:39] And I believe that Trump felt exactly the same way, because I talked to him about it a lot.
[20:44] So, like, what changed about Trump?
[20:47] What changed after 10 years, more than 10 years, of telling us our leadership is weak, they act against our interests, they're stupid, they're foolish, they're bought off by foreign powers and by domestic donors?
[21:01] I mean, that was Trump's case.
[21:03] That was his whole pitch.
[21:04] That's why he got elected.
[21:06] To switch on something this big in the space of a few months?
[21:12] I mean, that bears some examination.
[21:14] That's all I'm saying.
[21:15] I want to note, in 2020, when President Trump killed Iranian General Qasem Soleimani, you went on your Fox show and said, and I'm going to quote here, there are a lot of awful bad people in the world.
[21:27] You can't kill them all.
[21:28] It's not our job.
[21:29] And you asked, why are we jumping into another quagmire from which there is no obvious exit?
[21:35] But it wasn't until President Trump...
[21:37] I was not heralded for saying that.
[21:41] I don't think I've ever been more criticized.
[21:42] But I just really quickly note, I'm opposed not simply to foreign interventions, as you said, I mean, most of them anyway, those not undertaken in self-defense.
[21:51] I'm against the whole frame.
[21:53] I'm against the idea that Hezbollah and Hamas are at the center of our domestic conversation.
[21:58] Like, they're the big problems we face.
[21:59] They're not.
[22:00] They're not a bigger problem than, like, the behavior of Citibank.
[22:03] I'm sorry.
[22:04] Credit card debt is a much bigger problem than Hezbollah will ever be.
[22:07] So stop with this.
[22:08] Stop with the brainwashing.
[22:09] This is bonkers.
[22:10] I live here.
[22:11] I'm almost 57.
[22:12] I've lived here a long time.
[22:14] Hamas and Hezbollah, while they're not getting my endorsement, are not relevant to the experience of most Americans.
[22:20] So, like, once you start thinking like that, you've betrayed your country.
[22:23] So it wasn't until President Trump threatened Iran's civilian infrastructure with a profane truth social post this past Easter Sunday that you actually started quite explicitly speaking out against him.
[22:36] Yeah, you can't attack Jesus.
[22:37] How's that?
[22:37] Well, in a monologue on your show, you said, how dare you speak that way on Easter morning to the country?
[22:43] Tell me what you were responding to right then.
[22:45] Because it really is, I think, a seminal moment for you in terms of publicly breaking with the president.
[22:53] So I will say, I don't do monologues.
[22:57] That's ad lib.
[22:58] So that's just, I didn't write it.
[22:59] I don't have notes.
[23:00] It's just like, that's how I feel.
[23:01] So it's probably not as coherent as it should be.
[23:04] But that was really just an emotional reaction to the experience of waking up on Easter Sunday, the holiest day on the Christian calendar, and a day of joy and hope, literally the resurrection of Jesus, and seeing Donald Trump using profanity, threatening to murder civilians.
[23:25] I mean, that's a crime.
[23:26] That's a moral crime.
[23:27] So to brag about that, and then to mock Islam, I don't think you should mock people's faith.
[23:34] I don't care if it's Judaism or Christianity or Islam, but it's especially galling as a Christian, who I voted for Trump in 2024.
[23:45] And one of the main, and I never vote typically, but I voted for him this last election and campaigned for him in a bunch of cities with him.
[23:52] Because I felt that there was clear persecution of Christians in this country, people of faith, and it was demonstrable.
[24:02] And I felt that Trump, and I based this on his explicit promises, would be a protector of, I never thought Trump was a Christian for a moment, but I thought that Trump, I took him at his word, would be a defender of faith, people of faith who need to be defended.
[24:18] And this country exists to defend them.
[24:21] It's in our charter.
[24:22] So anyway, I was just completely outraged by that.
[24:26] Since that moment, you've gone even further.
[24:28] You recently said on your show that you'll be tormented for a long time by the fact that you played a role in getting Donald Trump elected.
[24:35] And you said, I'm sorry for misleading people.
[24:37] That's gotten a lot of attention, as I'm sure you know.
[24:40] I don't know because I don't Google myself ever.
[24:45] I would like to understand exactly what you mean.
[24:49] Can you explain?
[24:50] I'll tell you what I mean.
[24:51] I truly believe that the baseline requirement, the ticket of admission to the conversation is admitting when you are wrong.
[25:00] And I spent 10 years defending Trump on Fox News.
[25:04] I'd probably do it again because on the issues, I agree with him.
[25:07] I never defended a single thing I didn't believe.
[25:10] But at this point, the consequences of this decision are so bad for the United States and for my family and your family that, like, you have to say, you just have to say it out loud.
[25:23] Like, I'm a small reason.
[25:26] I don't think I moved a lot of votes.
[25:28] But I tried to.
[25:30] I told people, this guy will keep us out of the next Iraq.
[25:37] Specifically, we'll keep us out of a regime change war with Iran.
[25:40] And here we are in the middle of a regime change war in Iran where hundreds of Americans have been wounded.
[25:46] Some number have been killed.
[25:47] They won't tell us.
[25:47] And that's just the opposite of what I said would happen.
[25:52] So I'm sorry.
[25:55] So I hear you say that, but I am compelled to question it a little bit because are you simply just going public about something that you felt privately for some time?
[26:07] Because in 2021, through the Dominion lawsuit against Fox News, some of your texts went public.
[26:11] Right.
[26:11] And I'm just quoting from a couple of them.
[26:13] You know, you said there really isn't an upside to Trump.
[26:16] You said, I hate him passionately.
[26:18] I mean, clearly you had some feelings of reservation about the president.
[26:22] Without question.
[26:23] Before this time.
[26:24] There's no doubt.
[26:27] So I'm just trying to understand the.
[26:29] You know, I have a lot of thoughts and theories about things which, you know, may or may not be rooted in reality.
[26:36] So I hesitate even to spring any of my theories on you because, like, they're probably insane.
[26:42] But one thing that has bothered me for many years is the fact that a lot of people in Trump's immediate orbit have been hurt and really hurt.
[26:54] You know, gone to prison, become unemployable, publicly shamed, gotten cancer.
[26:59] And I just am a believer in, like, big picture assessments of things.
[27:04] And, you know, so you're trying to think, like, is Trump good or bad?
[27:07] Like, he's saying things I really agree with.
[27:09] But then people around him are getting hurt.
[27:13] Is the country actually getting better?
[27:15] I don't know.
[27:15] It's hard to know.
[27:16] Because to some extent, you're like, your vision is obscured by the intensity of some of these debates.
[27:23] Mine was, has been, is easily obscured by that intensity.
[27:26] But did I have reservations about Trump?
[27:27] Of course.
[27:30] And, you know, to some extent, I sublimated them or rationalized them away or focused on areas where I agreed with him.
[27:38] All my fault.
[27:39] But I told myself, and I, to some extent, still believe, like, it's the big decisions that matter.
[27:45] And I knew because I know the Democratic leadership really well that they're completely under the control of the same forces and that we would get a regime change war inevitably in Iran if they were elected.
[27:59] And so I told myself, Trump is the way to avoid the really bad thing.
[28:04] Come back to this moment for you, which is, there's the political case against Trump that you make.
[28:14] But I do want to ask you about the moral case that you've been making as well.
[28:19] And that's a word that you've used, you know, in that monologue responding to Trump's Easter post, you said that Trump's comments were evil.
[28:26] And I just want to understand that a little bit better.
[28:29] Do you think only his comments are evil or does the evil extend to Trump himself?
[28:34] Is he evil?
[28:35] I just want to be really clear that there's a lot of evil in me and in every person.
[28:41] So I just don't want to, and I've certainly experienced it in myself, and I've seen it in many, in all people.
[28:48] You know, we're all capable of evil.
[28:50] So I just, I want to pull back on the judgment and be very precise about what I was saying, which is you cannot mock other people's gods and put yourself in their place, period.
[29:03] That is a deal killer for me.
[29:04] That's worse than the war with Iran, in my opinion.
[29:06] Yeah, but I ask because, you know, you've been talking on your show about whether Trump is the Antichrist.
[29:12] I have not said that.
[29:13] On your show, the day after Easter, you noted he did not put his hand on the Bible during his swearing and ceremony as president.
[29:19] You said, and I'm quoting, maybe he didn't put his hand on the Bible because he affirmatively rejects what's inside that book.
[29:25] And then on a recent show, you went further saying, here's a leader who's mocking the gods of his ancestors, mocking the god of gods and exalting himself above them.
[29:33] Could this be the Antichrist?
[29:35] I actually did not say, could this be the Antichrist?
[29:38] Here's a leader who's mocking the gods of his ancestors, mocking the god of gods and exalting himself above them.
[29:47] Could this be the Antichrist?
[29:50] Well, who knows?
[29:51] I don't know where that comes from, but I know that those words never left my lips because I'm not sure I fully understand what the Antichrist is.
[29:59] If there's just one, I actually tried to understand it.
[30:03] I may have said some are asking that.
[30:05] I'm not weighing in on that because I don't understand it.
[30:08] Just to be totally clear.
[30:09] No, and Revelation is obviously the Antichrist is named in different-
[30:12] Yeah, and not just Revelation, but throughout the New Testament.
[30:15] There are references in the prophets as well.
[30:17] So, but no, I'm not speculating about that.
[30:21] I know that people are speculating about that.
[30:24] But I would say it's enough to acknowledge that Trump, like many leaders through history, is putting himself above God.
[30:34] But even on a more terrestrial level, like to send out a picture of yourself as Jesus has got to be a red line for Christians.
[30:43] How could it not be?
[30:44] It has to be.
[30:46] And I wish that Christians would speak up when he attacks Allah, when he mocks the faith of Muslims.
[30:52] So, to be clear, though, that was not what you were suggesting.
[30:57] If I thought Trump was the Antichrist, I would just say so.
[31:00] If I understood what the Antichrist is, I would say so.
[31:03] And I don't really.
[31:04] I mean, I guess, literally, it's-
[31:07] Because you've been discussing it repeatedly on your show, so I'm just trying to understand why.
[31:10] What I've tried to think about-
[31:12] I mean, what do you want your audience to sort of be considering?
[31:15] I want my audience to see what's happening now in terms beyond just material.
[31:24] Obviously, the commodity flow through the Strait of Hormuz is, you know, essential to the global economy.
[31:29] Got it.
[31:29] But I also think there is a world beyond our senses.
[31:35] Every culture and civilization has understood that from the beginning of time.
[31:38] And we're in this weird anomalous moment where we've been trained not to think that.
[31:41] But it's real.
[31:42] And this is a realization that's dawning on me.
[31:44] I mean, I wasn't thinking like this at all until several years ago.
[31:49] So I don't want to pretend that I'm a shaman or anything like that.
[31:53] I just want to make the point repeatedly, again and again and again, that there are unseen forces that act.
[32:00] There is a spiritual realm.
[32:02] And we are subject to those forces for good and bad.
[32:06] And I don't think that any person can deny that.
[32:10] I just want to make the point that you did say, could this be the Antichrist?
[32:14] And then you said, well, who knows?
[32:16] You did use those words.
[32:18] Man, then my apologies to you if there's video of me saying that.
[32:22] I guess what I'm expressing to you is it doesn't reflect exactly how I feel.
[32:28] That suggests a precision that I haven't arrived at.
[32:32] Trump is the Antichrist.
[32:33] Well, you'd have to define, I mean, we're sort of quibbling here, but you'd have to define Antichrist.
[32:38] And I know that I can't define Antichrist.
[32:40] And it's not clearly defined in the New Testament or Old Testament.
[32:43] So you're open to the possibility?
[32:45] I think what we're seeing is evil.
[32:48] Like, are you allowed to kill people who've committed no crime?
[32:51] No.
[32:52] Super simple.
[32:52] You're not allowed to do that.
[32:54] Under no moral standard is that allowable.
[32:57] All of a sudden, it's allowable.
[32:58] It's allowable in Gaza.
[32:59] And our leaders are like, yeah, no, it's just totally fine.
[33:02] It's not fine.
[33:02] But certainly, it's repugnant to the Christian understanding of the world and the human soul.
[33:09] Every person has a soul.
[33:11] That's the Christian view.
[33:12] And not just the Christian view.
[33:13] It's the Islamic view, too.
[33:16] So, and it's my view.
[33:18] Your Easter episode was titled in part, A Warning to Christians Everywhere.
[33:22] Yeah.
[33:22] And sort of my interpretation was that you were warning other Christians sort of not to follow a false prophet.
[33:28] Yes, that's exactly what I'm warning.
[33:29] Um, and that false prophet being President Trump in this case.
[33:34] And Netanyahu.
[33:35] There are a lot of evangelical Christians who are convinced that God wants you to support Netanyahu, which I find incomprehensible.
[33:42] Hmm.
[33:42] You know, Christian evangelicals in this country have been a hugely important part of President Trump's coalition.
[33:48] Many support Israel because they believe the creation of the state of Israel fulfills biblical prophecy.
[33:53] They're called Christian Zionists.
[33:55] I will note, you have said you dislike Christian Zionists more than anybody.
[33:58] You've said they have a brain virus.
[34:00] You have apologized for those comments.
[34:01] Repeatedly.
[34:02] Yeah, I shouldn't have said that.
[34:03] Repeatedly.
[34:04] Um, but would you like to see those Christians stop supporting the state of Israel in the way that they do?
[34:09] Of course, immediately.
[34:12] On many different grounds.
[34:13] But it's really simple.
[34:14] Christians can never support the murder of innocents.
[34:16] Period.
[34:17] That's just, that's just a bright red line.
[34:20] Find the place where Jesus is like, these people are annoying, kill them all.
[34:24] It's not there.
[34:25] So where are you getting this?
[34:26] Now I'm, once again, hardly a theologian.
[34:30] But I just don't, and I've asked many Christian Zionist leaders who will speak to me.
[34:34] Now it's just like, they won't, they won't talk to me.
[34:37] But I, I certainly asked Ted Cruz this.
[34:39] I asked Mike Huckabee this.
[34:42] I tried to ask Franklin Graham.
[34:44] But I sincerely want to know where this is coming from.
[34:46] It can't all be from the book of Esther.
[34:48] Well, I mean, you did have exactly this contentious interview with, um, Ambassador Huckabee.
[34:54] He's the ambassador to Israel, where you talked to him about Christian Zionism for quite some time.
[35:00] Um, and in that interview, you know, it's very interesting.
[35:02] I'm a former, um, Israel-Palestine, uh, correspondent.
[35:07] You were pressing him on if the modern state of Israel as a homeland for the Jewish people
[35:13] today has legal or biblical legitimacy.
[35:17] You were sort of questioning him on this idea.
[35:19] And you went round and round on this for quite some time.
[35:22] And I was just wondering what you were trying to get at there.
[35:25] I was trying to get at an answer, which I couldn't get.
[35:28] And instead was accused of hate for trying to evoke an answer to a very simple question.
[35:32] And the question was, on what basis are you making this claim?
[35:37] People whose ancestors didn't live here now occupy the land.
[35:40] That's very common in history, by the way.
[35:43] I'm not even objecting to it.
[35:44] What I'm objecting to is the claim that it's God's will and that Israel, because of this,
[35:52] has the unique right to exist.
[35:55] Okay.
[35:55] Where does that right come from?
[35:57] Well, the right comes from the Bible.
[35:58] Okay.
[35:59] Well, I'm not a Bible scholar, but I've certainly read it a lot.
[36:01] And I said to him, what are the borders?
[36:04] Because my read of Genesis is that it's a big hunk of land.
[36:09] That's the Middle East.
[36:10] Does Israel have a right?
[36:11] Because you're referring to this text as the basis of the right to have that land.
[36:16] And he said, fine with me.
[36:18] So like on many levels, theological and diplomatic, kind of a big thing to say.
[36:23] The White House was annoyed that he said it out loud.
[36:25] I was grateful that he did, because it's good to know what the terms are.
[36:27] And the second question I asked, which is, okay, if Israel has a right derived from this
[36:34] scene in Genesis, then to whom does it apply?
[36:39] Who are Abraham's heirs?
[36:42] And he said, well, the Jews.
[36:44] And I said, okay.
[36:45] And by the way, just to be clear, these are not conversations that I sought.
[36:48] I was never interested in this topic.
[36:50] Like Israel's a country with borders and sovereignty and a seat at the UN.
[36:56] And it's like, it's a nation state, like ours, like every country.
[37:00] The second you start telling me that as a Christian, I'm obligated to support the government
[37:05] of this country, then I have a right to ask you what you're talking about.
[37:08] It's that simple.
[37:10] So, okay, fine.
[37:11] I flew all the way to Israel, which I didn't want to do.
[37:13] And I asked him, what are you talking about?
[37:16] To whom does this right apply?
[37:18] And on what basis?
[37:18] Shut up, anti-Semite.
[37:21] Okay, now.
[37:22] So from my perspective, that was like the most revealing conversation I think I've ever
[37:25] had.
[37:26] Why, though, were you so interested in those questions about-
[37:31] Why?
[37:31] Because we're now in a war, which is in the process of destroying the United States economy
[37:34] and getting Americans killed because Israel pushed the United States president, who caved.
[37:41] I'm not giving him a pass, but that's just a fact.
[37:44] That's what happened.
[37:44] I saw it.
[37:45] And Israel has that power in our Congress, not because we have so many Jews.
[37:53] I don't know how many Jews live in the United States.
[37:54] Fewer than 10 million, I think.
[37:55] But because we have tens of millions of evangelical Christians who unquestioningly support Israel
[38:01] because they believe it's their theological duty to do so.
[38:05] So on this question hangs the future of the American economy and the lives of American service
[38:11] members.
[38:12] There's no more important question.
[38:14] And the effort to push me away from that question by calling me names, calling me a
[38:19] hater, saying I'm obsessed with Israel, okay, I would be grateful never to think about it
[38:24] again.
[38:25] I find Israel actually geostrategically irrelevant, except to the extent that we imbue it with
[38:30] relevance at the behest, largely, of evangelical Christians.
[38:33] So you can see there's a one-to-one correlation between these questions and the future of my country.
[38:39] Mike Huckabee and the people he represents have made it the nation's business.
[38:43] At which point, it is entirely fair.
[38:46] In fact, it's a requirement of good citizenship to press him on what are you talking about?
[38:52] And he refused to answer those questions.
[38:55] At which point, I say, as someone who's still committed to reason, you've been exposed as a
[39:01] fraud and or a liar.
[39:02] I think one of the reasons why this was particularly notable for many people, that interaction that
[39:13] you had with Mike Huckabee, and the reason you in particular got so much pushback, is
[39:20] because there is an enormous sensitivity around Israel being the homeland of the Jewish people
[39:28] and the attempt to delegitimize that.
[39:31] I have enormous sensitivity about the United States being the homeland of my people and
[39:35] the burial place of my ancestors.
[39:36] I have enormous sensitivity about the future of the United States.
[39:39] Those are my concerns.
[39:41] I'm not dismissing the concerns of any other group, including Israelis or Iranians or Venezuelans
[39:46] or anybody else.
[39:47] Everybody has his or her own set of concerns.
[39:49] But my concerns revolve around my country.
[39:51] And so I'm not going to subordinate my concerns and the concerns of my children to other people's
[39:59] hysteria, no matter what country it is.
[40:02] Why do you think you get tagged so often with anti-Semitism?
[40:06] Because it's, I think there are two reasons.
[40:09] One is I'm not an anti-Semite.
[40:13] And I think that's obvious.
[40:14] I have, and I've expressed this many times and I'll do so again.
[40:18] I have temperamental and religious objections to anti-Semitism or any hate or discrimination
[40:26] based on bloodline that is against Christian theology.
[40:30] It's against my personal ethics and I oppose it no matter who is suffering from it, whether
[40:36] it's whites or blacks or Jews, nobody can be punished for his bloodline, period.
[40:42] I don't believe in collective punishment, unlike the Israeli government.
[40:45] So that's number one.
[40:46] I am opposed to anti-Semitism and that's a threat.
[40:49] But because I'm not approaching this as someone who wants to hurt Jews, I just don't want the
[40:55] United States to be implicated in the crimes of other nations and I'm not intimidated.
[41:01] And number two, that is a much easier conversation than answering very simple questions like,
[41:08] where does the right to exist come from that Israel has, that I've been told for many years
[41:12] has a right, a unique right globally to exist?
[41:15] Where does that right emanate from?
[41:17] Who granted that right and on what grounds?
[41:19] And they can't answer the questions.
[41:20] And they don't want to have the conversation.
[41:22] So just to be totally clear, asking questions is not hate.
[41:26] Telling the truth is not hate.
[41:29] And they don't want to answer the questions and they don't want to tell the truth.
[41:33] And by the way, it's not just Jews.
[41:35] It's, I think I've been attacked more viciously by Christian Zionists than I have by Jews,
[41:39] just in point of fact.
[41:41] It's a kind of nice universalism to it.
[41:44] But I'm not intimidated.
[41:46] I don't know why I would be.
[41:47] In fact, I think it's my obligation not to be intimidated.
[41:50] Can asking questions, though, stir up hate?
[41:54] I mean, language is powerful.
[41:56] Well, sure.
[41:57] I mean, you could pose attacks in the form of questions.
[41:59] I've certainly done that a lot, for sure.
[42:02] But the questions themselves hang in the air.
[42:05] And a legitimate question deserves an answer.
[42:06] The reason I want to press on this a little bit more is that you know that there is an
[42:17] entire anti-Semitic worldview that has been based on the protocols of the elders of Zion,
[42:26] you know, that there is like this cabal of powerful Jews that controls the world.
[42:31] And, you know, that book was written in the early 20th century, but it, you know, helped
[42:36] the Nazis and it really has informed a lot of the views of many people today that there
[42:42] is, you know, this very powerful sect of Jewish people who want global war and global
[42:49] conflict.
[42:50] And I think that there is a concern that I have, and a real concern.
[42:55] I don't mean this as something that people say to slander anyone, but just a real concern
[43:01] that the rhetoric where everything is blamed on Israel, where Israel has these supernatural
[43:09] powers almost to influence the president, to influence the previous president, George
[43:16] W. Bush, to enter into the Iraq war, to, you know, be involved in assassinations, et cetera,
[43:25] that it has echoes of that, and that people are genuinely concerned that it opens the door
[43:31] to this idea that has been debunked and has been used in, you know, absolutely vicious
[43:38] ways to annihilate an entire people.
[43:41] I'm not quite sure what that means.
[43:45] Um, let me tell you my concerns.
[43:47] My main concern is the destruction of the United States, and that is in no way to minimize anyone
[43:53] else's concerns, but I have a right to that concern, and I will not have my own concerns
[43:58] hijacked.
[43:59] I will not submit to being told what my concerns should be.
[44:02] I'm an adult man who pays his taxes.
[44:04] I have a right to come up with my own hierarchy of concern.
[44:08] At the very top is the destruction of my country, which I've lived in for 56 years, and
[44:13] I know that it's not better than it was, and it's not getting better than it was, and
[44:17] there are many reasons for that.
[44:18] One of them is this war, but there are many others.
[44:20] And so people say, well, I'm really concerned.
[44:23] Well, I'm really concerned, too.
[44:25] I'm really concerned that the prime minister of Israel and his many cheerleaders in American
[44:30] media, including at the New York Times, if I can say, pushed the U.S. government into
[44:37] a war that hurts the United States.
[44:39] That's my concern.
[44:40] And I would say that's at least co-equal with anyone else's concerns.
[44:43] So that's the first thing I would say.
[44:44] Second, as the elders of Zion or whatever, I don't know what that is.
[44:50] I've heard references to it.
[44:52] It's like a czarist forgery or something.
[44:55] I guess I'm just wondering what the line is for you.
[44:57] The line for me is the truth.
[44:59] What is actually happening?
[45:00] Between criticism—I mean, this is, by the way, a very difficult line.
[45:03] I am in no means purporting to understand necessarily where it is.
[45:09] I'm curious for you where the line is between criticism of the state of Israel and how that
[45:20] could be perceived as feeding into anti-Semitism.
[45:24] Well, it breaks my heart that it is perceived that way.
[45:27] And that perception is the product of a decades-long effort to conflate anti-Semitism with any
[45:33] criticism of the secular government of Israel.
[45:36] Okay?
[45:36] So the IHRA definition of anti-Semitism lists 11 examples of anti-Semitism.
[45:41] And that's been adopted globally.
[45:43] 40 different governments have adopted it as their standard of what anti-Semitism is.
[45:46] And two-thirds of the examples are criticism of Israel.
[45:50] So, you know, I don't get to write these standards.
[45:53] I also don't have to abide by them.
[45:54] And I reject, as ludicrous, out of hand, the idea that the criticism of a secular government
[46:00] is the same as criticism of an entire ethnic group, many of whom do not support that secular
[46:07] government, many of whom reject that secular government.
[46:09] And a lot of those I know personally.
[46:11] So you're just not going to get me on board with the lie that criticism of Netanyahu is
[46:17] hatred of all Jews because it's not.
[46:18] And I don't care how many times someone repeats that to me.
[46:21] I don't care.
[46:22] And by the way, I've lost friends over this, and I do grieve that.
[46:26] People who are totally convinced that criticism-
[46:27] Is it just Bibi that you're against?
[46:29] Or if there was a different government in Israel, it would be okay?
[46:31] I'm against anything that hurts my country.
[46:35] Why wouldn't I be?
[46:36] I live here.
[46:36] No, but I'm just curious.
[46:37] Like, if there's elections coming up and if Bibi gets kicked out, are you still-
[46:42] I took my family on vacation there.
[46:44] I'm just trying to understand.
[46:45] Obviously, I'm not against Israel.
[46:47] I never have been against-
[46:48] By the way, you can check the record.
[46:50] Before, maybe two and a half years ago, I don't think I ever-
[46:54] Well, I certainly never criticized Israel, but I never-
[46:56] Rarely even mentioned Israel.
[46:57] I could give you a long list of the things that I love about Israel, particularly about
[47:00] Jerusalem, which is one of my favorite cities.
[47:03] Jerusalem and Beirut, greatest cities in the world.
[47:05] It kills me to see them at the center of all of this.
[47:08] I think the second that we ban criticism of a foreign country-
[47:13] Well, of course, we're not free at that point.
[47:16] We're slaves of that other country.
[47:18] You know, whatever you can't criticize is the force in charge.
[47:21] I don't think it's, by the way, good for global Jewry to have any of this at all.
[47:27] If you tell 350 million Americans that it's against the law, and it's very close to against
[47:31] the law at this point, it's against the law to criticize Israel.
[47:34] How does that help the perception?
[47:38] Does that feed anti-Semitism?
[47:39] I think it does.
[47:40] Not that it's my job to monitor or regulate this stuff, but I mean, just common sense would
[47:44] tell you that's not good.
[47:45] If you want to make the case on behalf of anything, any idea, including ones I disagree
[47:51] with, make your case.
[47:52] Tell me why it's a good idea.
[47:54] And we're falling out of that habit and instead trying to hurt people who disagree with us.
[48:00] And I just will always reject that.
[48:03] I guess I'm the liberal.
[48:05] I would say it's not exactly against the law, but I understand you're referring to some-
[48:09] Someone was just arrested because look-
[48:11] Specific things that-
[48:13] Well, the second you say that criticism is the same
[48:17] as a threat or words or violence, then of course, it's very easy to arrest people as
[48:24] they are arrested in Great Britain.
[48:26] They've had hundreds of people arrested in Great Britain for criticizing Israel.
[48:29] I don't know why any liberal-minded, and I'm in that group, liberal-minded, you have a
[48:34] right to your views, I have a right to mine.
[48:36] I don't know why any liberal-minded person will go along with this and not say, whoa, whoa,
[48:40] whoa, whoa, this is totally bonkers.
[48:42] And this is the road to totalitarianism.
[48:45] And I would say that about any topic.
[48:47] Hmm.
[48:48] I'm going to move on because we've talked about some fissures that have emerged among
[48:56] conservatives over Israel and the war, right?
[48:59] You've talked about-
[48:59] Fissures, yeah.
[49:00] It's sort of blown up.
[49:01] Yeah.
[49:01] And I want to dig into that because earlier this year, you told Megyn Kelly that there is,
[49:06] quote, a huge scramble.
[49:07] And you said, I'm in the middle of it to define what the Republican Party is after Trump.
[49:11] Yep.
[49:12] So boil down the scramble for me.
[49:15] Are there two sides?
[49:16] Well, I lost that scramble.
[49:18] Yeah, I mean, is it driven by ideas, personalities?
[49:21] I mean, something else?
[49:22] Like, what do you see happening?
[49:26] Look, I mean, there have been disagreements over foreign policy within the Republican Party
[49:31] for, well, really since 2015, when Trump announced for president.
[49:36] There was no disagreement at all.
[49:38] It was a neoconservative party completely.
[49:40] I was part of that for sure.
[49:43] And unthinkingly and then unwillingly, but whatever.
[49:46] Um, but since 2015, there's been this kind of debate like, well, you know, what is the
[49:52] appropriate use of American power?
[49:54] And what is our relationship with Israel?
[49:56] And those have been sort of sort of voce debates.
[49:59] But it's only with this full regime change effort against Iran that they've become untenable.
[50:07] Like, you can't.
[50:07] I mean, my own view is I'm always happy to eat with and talk with people I disagree with.
[50:14] Again, I guess I'm the liberal here.
[50:16] But there is a strong sense among the neocons who've completely taken over the Republican
[50:20] Party that anyone who disagrees cannot be allowed, like literally in the White House.
[50:26] Um, okay.
[50:27] I don't make these rules.
[50:28] I feel sad about it.
[50:29] For a bunch of reasons, I would say as a political matter, the constituency for that is very small.
[50:38] There aren't, you know, 150 million people in America who are really excited about the
[50:42] Iran war or who are ever going to be excited about that.
[50:45] So you're dooming your party to irrelevance when you do that.
[50:49] I don't know why they would want to.
[50:51] Um, they hate Trump.
[50:53] The neocons hate Trump.
[50:54] I've always hated Trump.
[50:55] I had a first row seat to this.
[50:58] And, and now they've destroyed him.
[51:00] And I told him that.
[51:00] I said, these are people who hated you from day one.
[51:03] They couldn't control you.
[51:04] They hated you for that reason.
[51:05] What you said about the Iraq war inflamed them.
[51:08] It humiliated them and they want to destroy you.
[51:10] And this war will destroy you.
[51:12] I said that point blank right to him.
[51:14] And it's true.
[51:15] And it's, I think, proven true now.
[51:17] And what do you mean about you being in the middle of it and losing the scramble?
[51:21] Well, because Charlie Kirk and I, I think, were the only people, I'm confident in saying
[51:27] we're the, we're the only people in June of 2025 to say to the president, this is a very
[51:33] bad idea.
[51:34] The people pushing this are trying to get you involved in a regime change war.
[51:37] You've campaigned against that.
[51:40] Don't do this.
[51:42] And then in, on September 10th, um, Charlie was murdered by a lone gunman.
[51:48] Um, so, uh, by the time this latest round happened in January and February, I, I think I was the
[51:55] only person who said that to Trump for a bunch of reasons.
[51:59] So now it's, you know, I mean, we, we know who won by the effects.
[52:06] So this was, from my perspective, was a debate between people who thought it was wise to use
[52:10] American power in the way we're now using it and those who thought it was dangerous and
[52:16] Trump did it.
[52:17] So obviously he rejected my view.
[52:19] I want to stay though with how some of this is playing out because as you mentioned, you
[52:25] were very close to Charlie Kirk before he was killed.
[52:28] Um, and he started Turning Point USA, which is this very influential group among young people
[52:32] on the right.
[52:34] And you're now seeing some on the right who are questioning whether Israel had a hand
[52:40] in Charlie Kirk's murder.
[52:41] Um, and I should say the theories that Israel was linked to Charlie's death were denied by
[52:46] Israel.
[52:46] There's been no proof of that at all.
[52:48] And crucially, this theory has been condemned by Erica Kirk, Charlie's widow.
[52:53] Do you still have a relationship with Turning Point USA?
[52:56] Um, well, I, I have always loved Erica Kirk and I met her when she was dating Charlie and
[53:02] thought so much of her.
[53:03] Um, I know a lot of people at Turning Point.
[53:05] I was the headliner for a bunch of different Turning Point events.
[53:07] Um, I haven't been asked to do it this year.
[53:11] Don't know if I will be.
[53:12] Never said a word against Turning Point.
[53:13] I, I think it's been a really, well, I was their headliner for a bunch of years.
[53:18] So obviously I supported it.
[53:19] Um, I would hate to see it hijacked by its donors to become an oracle of, you know,
[53:25] conservatism.
[53:25] Um, I think it'd be pretty hard to do because its members are not for that.
[53:32] Young people are not for that.
[53:33] People of draft age are especially not for that.
[53:35] I mean, when was the last time you spoke to Erica Kirk?
[53:37] A couple of weeks ago.
[53:40] Okay.
[53:41] By text.
[53:41] So my concern, and this is not about Erica Kirk or Andrew Colvett or any of those people
[53:47] with whom I've never had a crossword and hope never to have a crossword.
[53:51] Um, but my concern more broadly is about the investigation into Charlie's murder, which
[53:57] was short circuited by the FBI.
[53:59] And I'd like to know why.
[54:00] And I, I don't care to be screamed at for asking that question.
[54:04] It's a legitimate question.
[54:05] And we know that, uh, I know that for a bunch of reasons, but, uh, the public knows
[54:10] it because Joe Kent said it out loud and explained it.
[54:14] He was the head of the national counter-terrorism center.
[54:16] He's an ODNI and he was told by the FBI that he could not investigate it.
[54:22] And as a friend of Charlie's, I'm not going to be intimidated into saying the following,
[54:27] which is on what grounds would you do that?
[54:29] I'm not saying the guy who's been arrested didn't pull the trigger.
[54:33] I'm not, there's been no trial.
[54:34] He was obviously handed over by his father.
[54:38] Do we know that?
[54:38] I don't know what I know because there hasn't been a trial yet.
[54:41] And again, it's like so many things and it's not just Israel.
[54:43] It's not just Charlie Kirk.
[54:44] It's the existence of NATO or the way the economy is structured.
[54:47] Why is capital taxed at half the rate of labor?
[54:50] Like that's the question that bothers me in every case, shut up, socialist, racist, conspiracy.
[54:59] It's like, I'm just too old for that.
[55:01] Why don't you answer the question?
[55:03] That's my job.
[55:04] Do you think Turning Point's influence, um, has waned since Charlie's death?
[55:10] I haven't the faintest idea.
[55:12] Um, I do think that, you know, I agree with most Americans when I say, I think this war is a disaster.
[55:21] It's impossible to see how it helps the United States.
[55:23] And, uh, you know, I would like to see all self-described conservative groups pressure the president, as Charlie did, to minimize the damage.
[55:36] And then I hope Turning Point is working on that.
[55:37] I don't know the answer, but I certainly hope they are.
[55:39] I can't, yeah, so they should.
[55:42] I, I, I can't say confidently Charlie would be working to do that.
[55:46] Obviously, Turning Point is just one organization trying to reach youth on the right.
[55:50] But you also have Nick Fuentes, the far-right white nationalist influencer, who's called Hitler effing cool, um, who also has a huge following among young right-leaning, um, men.
[56:01] How do you see Fuentes in terms of the future of the right?
[56:05] You know, it's so hard to know.
[56:07] I'll tell you my instinct on it.
[56:11] Most of the debates about race, ethnicity, religion, to some extent immigration, are less resonant long-term than debates about economics.
[56:24] I think the main frustration among young people is not just that the composition of the country is changing too fast, which it definitely is.
[56:33] But the main concerns are about the lack of economic opportunity for American young people who are totally screwed at, like, a more profound level than people acknowledge.
[56:46] Older people do not acknowledge that.
[56:48] I had dinner the other night with a bunch of kids from Stanford, really smart, there at Stanford.
[56:52] And one of them said, oh, yeah, his best friend just graduated with a degree in computer science last year, has not been able to find a job.
[56:59] Stanford computer science can't find a job.
[57:00] So that's like a window into the total destruction of the economic opportunity for young people.
[57:07] And the, what looks to me as a non-economist, like the true hoarding of capital by a tiny group of people, it looks like a very lopsided and unfair economic system that is guaranteed to radicalize young people.
[57:22] And not just young people, but especially young people.
[57:24] And so I think most future conversations politically will be about economics.
[57:32] I do think that.
[57:33] I think we're sort of the last stage.
[57:34] This is the last time the U.S. has ever been.
[57:36] So you see, what I'm trying to understand is you see that as Fuentes' power waning?
[57:41] For sure.
[57:41] Well, I don't know Fuentes in particular.
[57:44] I mean, you know, never even, wasn't even aware of Fuentes.
[57:47] I mean, again, I'm just in a different world, right?
[57:49] Okay.
[57:49] I read the New York Times or whatever.
[57:52] Like, I'm just older, okay?
[57:53] So I'm not an expert on Fuentes' reach or even what he's saying day to day.
[57:58] I really don't know.
[57:59] But he has been caricatured as a race guy, which he may be, by the way.
[58:04] It was like mad about the Jews or black people or whatever.
[58:07] But I'm just telling you, I think the future, the energy, not just on the right, but I think right and left agree on this under 30,
[58:16] is that young people have been shafted by older people, particularly by the baby boomers, people born between 46 and 64.
[58:24] And I think they're right about that.
[58:25] I do think that's like the most selfish generation, most loathsome, mediocre generation in this country ever produced.
[58:32] Not all of them.
[58:33] But in general, I would say their behavior has been shameful and selfish.
[58:38] And I hear young people talk not about, you know, I'm mad at the Jews.
[58:42] I hear young people say things like, only baby boomers would, like, have a second home in Isla Palm, South Carolina, but, like, not help their kids buy homes.
[58:52] That's what I hear.
[58:52] I hear people who understand that their lives will bear no resemblance to the lives of their parents and grandparents, and they're really upset about it.
[59:01] Meanwhile, there are all these people making billions on clearly fraudulent enterprises, crypto-related enterprises and other enterprises that are, like, not adding to the sum total of prosperity in this country and not making the country better.
[59:13] So that's where I think the radicalism is going to start.
[59:16] The murder of that health care executive in New York, the health insurer guy, I'm against all murder, just to be totally clear.
[59:24] But I was surprised but not really shocked by the reaction, the positive reaction.
[59:30] He's kind of normal-looking people on the internet are like, I'm glad that killed him.
[59:33] They don't even know his name.
[59:34] However, that reflects this revolutionary frustration.
[59:40] And I do think it's revolutionary.
[59:41] I think one of the reasons that Trump is apparently going to make weed legal is just so we can lower testosterone levels even more, just make people more passive, have some more benzos, like, it's fine, it's totally fine, because it's not fine, is the truth.
[59:56] So, again, long-winded answer to a short question, but the future that I imagine is not a future in which we're yelling at each other about race.
[1:00:03] It's a future in which people are legitimately revolutionary, maybe even violent on the basis of thwarted economic opportunity.
[1:00:13] I mean, Fuentes wants America to be a white Christian nation, among other things.
[1:00:16] Okay, well, he's very good at defending the New York Times, but I think the real issues are not about Fuentes or even about race.
[1:00:23] Immigration has a direct effect on economics, and so the overwhelming majority of newly created jobs in the past five years have gone to foreign-born.
[1:00:33] So, like, that's, it's not an attack on the foreign-born to say that's not really the job of the U.S. government to provide economic opportunity to the world.
[1:00:40] The job is to protect its own people.
[1:00:42] I can tell you don't want to talk about Fuentes.
[1:00:45] Well, I don't, I don't have what to say.
[1:00:47] I just think, like, okay, he said naughty things about this, that, or the other thing.
[1:00:51] Okay.
[1:00:51] No, well, you caused a big, I'm focusing on you.
[1:00:55] This is an interview of you.
[1:00:56] Well, I didn't cause anything.
[1:00:56] People got hysterical.
[1:00:58] How can you talk to this man?
[1:01:00] I talked to people.
[1:01:01] You brought Fuentes onto your show.
[1:01:02] I've interviewed Ted Cruz, who's calling for the murder of innocents.
[1:01:05] I don't think Fuentes is doing that.
[1:01:06] But that conversation was pretty friendly.
[1:01:08] People say that.
[1:01:11] I mean, whatever.
[1:01:11] Okay.
[1:01:12] I'm naughty for talking to Fuentes, but.
[1:01:13] But you've been doing this for decades.
[1:01:16] I mean, I have watched you and your shows for a very long time.
[1:01:21] And you obviously have a very savvy understanding of how to approach your interviews and how they're going to land.
[1:01:28] You know, why.
[1:01:29] I don't know about that, but yeah.
[1:01:31] Well.
[1:01:32] I don't think I'm that savvy.
[1:01:34] Maybe I'm underselling myself.
[1:01:35] I mean, why did you want to handle it the way that you did?
[1:01:40] You know, you started with.
[1:01:42] Well, I've explained this a million times, but I'll explain it very crisply.
[1:01:45] No, you started, you know.
[1:01:46] No, no.
[1:01:47] I noticed it.
[1:01:47] Talking about his background and where he grew up.
[1:01:51] It's a different kind of interview than the one when I look at Ambassador Huckabee.
[1:01:55] I've known Huckabee for over 30 years.
[1:01:58] Yeah.
[1:01:58] Huckabee's been a public figure for over 30 years.
[1:02:00] But one was prosecutorial.
[1:02:00] He was the governor twice, three times.
[1:02:01] You were building a case.
[1:02:03] The other one was friendly.
[1:02:04] I mean, you were wrestling quite vigorously with.
[1:02:07] If I agreed with everything Fuentes said, I would just say so.
[1:02:10] I would just say so.
[1:02:11] Like, there's no, the effort to kind of like divine my motives when I state my motives clearly.
[1:02:18] I think I'm telling the truth.
[1:02:19] I know, but as you have acknowledged in this interview.
[1:02:21] Let me just state my motives.
[1:02:22] You use questions sometimes as a form of.
[1:02:25] If I could just state my motives.
[1:02:26] Attack.
[1:02:26] And you can either believe me or not.
[1:02:28] And I've done this many times, but I'll do it once more.
[1:02:30] And say, I'd never heard of Fuentes.
[1:02:34] I first heard him because he was attacking me and my family, which enraged me.
[1:02:39] I did fall for the bait.
[1:02:41] And so then I thought, well, this guy seems like, I keep hearing he's very influential.
[1:02:47] Let's have him on, hear what he has to say.
[1:02:50] So I did that.
[1:02:51] And on the question of hating Jews because they're Jews, I'm opposed.
[1:02:55] Told him that to his face.
[1:02:57] Lots of people decided that I should have taken a different tone.
[1:03:00] Okay.
[1:03:01] Do your own interview with Fuentes if you want.
[1:03:03] That's okay with me.
[1:03:04] But I guess what I've come to believe, I didn't feel it was a significant interview,
[1:03:09] especially on any level, except the extent it was used to try and make me into a Nazi,
[1:03:14] which again, I'm not, I would admit it.
[1:03:17] But what I think is interesting is the kind of moral scheme that that interview revealed,
[1:03:26] which not surprisingly is childish and kind of repulsive.
[1:03:30] And by moral scheme, I mean like what the people in charge, including in journalism,
[1:03:35] think is right and wrong.
[1:03:37] So I think anyone who calls for the murder of innocence or justifies them is the lowest
[1:03:42] possible person.
[1:03:44] There's nothing worse than that, than killing kids.
[1:03:48] And you take someone like Randy Fine or Ted Cruz.
[1:03:52] Representative from Florida.
[1:03:53] Yeah.
[1:03:54] Mike Huckabee.
[1:03:54] Senator in Texas.
[1:03:55] These are all, I don't know, fine.
[1:03:57] But I, um, but I know the other two very well and have for many years.
[1:04:01] And both of them have just been like, you know, we should go kill people and their kids.
[1:04:05] And they make excuses for that.
[1:04:06] Like there's nothing worse than that.
[1:04:09] And yet those are totally, the only controversial part of those interviews from the perspective
[1:04:13] of others in journalism is that I was too mean.
[1:04:15] I was too tough.
[1:04:16] I was too tough on Mike Huckabee, who's a sitting U.S. ambassador or Ted Cruz, who's
[1:04:20] a, I don't think that was the concern.
[1:04:22] Okay.
[1:04:23] But, but the point is, I think it was looking, I think it, I think, you know, you, when you
[1:04:27] just compare them, um, who do you think is more morally repulsive, Ted Cruz or Nick Fuentes?
[1:04:34] Who do you think is more morally repulsive?
[1:04:36] Ted Cruz.
[1:04:37] Ted Cruz is a sitting U.S. senator who has called for the killing of people who did nothing
[1:04:45] wrong, whole populations who advocated for this war.
[1:04:49] Nick Fuentes is like a kid.
[1:04:51] He's like 26 or 70.
[1:04:52] He has no power except his words.
[1:04:55] Here you have public official who we pay, who has actual power, who's voting for things,
[1:05:01] who's making policy decisions.
[1:05:03] And those decisions would include, in fact, they are focused on the murder of people who
[1:05:07] did nothing wrong.
[1:05:08] And yet no one thinks it's a big deal.
[1:05:10] What the, well, this is totally fine.
[1:05:12] I mean, if there's tape of Nick Fuentes saying we should kill people because we hate their
[1:05:16] parents or it's okay to kill children, I would love to see the tape because that's
[1:05:21] disgusting.
[1:05:22] And that's basically what the entire U.S.
[1:05:24] Senate does every single day.
[1:05:25] And no one notices.
[1:05:26] Nick Fuentes said something naughty that I disagreed with.
[1:05:29] He made fun of things that I don't think I would never make fun of them.
[1:05:32] He's a white nationalist who has denied the Holocaust.
[1:05:34] And what I will say, from my own understanding.
[1:05:36] But is that worse than killing kids?
[1:05:37] From my understanding of my own, you know, I was just in Germany recently.
[1:05:43] Um, and, you know, it was such a good reminder that the Holocaust didn't start with the gassing
[1:05:51] of Jews.
[1:05:51] It started with the dehumanization of Jews.
[1:05:54] It was language that was used.
[1:05:55] And again, that is what it concerns people.
[1:05:59] I couldn't agree more.
[1:06:00] And that's why when you have a U.S.
[1:06:02] Senator, a member of Congress, a U.S.
[1:06:05] ambassador waving away civilian deaths as if they don't matter.
[1:06:09] That's the language of genocide, which results, and this is the lesson of the Holocaust,
[1:06:12] in genocide itself.
[1:06:13] And it has.
[1:06:15] So the lesson for me, really, watching all of this, is that this can happen in civilized
[1:06:22] countries.
[1:06:22] In all human beings, there is the capacity to ignore the evil right in front of you.
[1:06:28] And I'm, my point is, it's happening right now.
[1:06:31] And my job, to the extent I have one, I don't really have a job, but I just want to remind
[1:06:34] people that we're all capable of that, including me, and that we're watching it right now.
[1:06:40] And if you think that Nick Fuentes is a greater threat to other human beings than Ted Cruz,
[1:06:46] I would love to know how.
[1:06:48] I can imagine people hearing this and thinking, you are soft-peddling Nick Fuentes.
[1:06:54] You are apologizing for Nick Fuentes.
[1:06:55] I'm hardly soft-peddling Nick Fuentes.
[1:06:56] I'm trying to awaken people to killing of innocents in our midst, which we are not only encouraged
[1:07:03] to ignore, but really told to ignore on pain of being denounced.
[1:07:07] And I'm just saying, no, I'm not doing that.
[1:07:10] And Ted Cruz and Mike Huckabee are two of the main people making this moment possible.
[1:07:17] And President Trump.
[1:07:19] But Nick Fuentes is the problem?
[1:07:21] Okay.
[1:07:21] It's not a defensive Nick Fuentes.
[1:07:23] It's merely like a reality check for the rest of us.
[1:07:26] What are we doing?
[1:07:29] We began this conversation by discussing your rupture with President Trump.
[1:07:35] And I'd like to ask about your relationship with the Vice President, because you were one
[1:07:42] of the people credited with getting him into that role.
[1:07:45] You were close to him.
[1:07:47] You advocated for him.
[1:07:49] Are you still close to Vance considering your rupture with the President?
[1:07:53] I mean, I will always love J.D. Vance as a man.
[1:07:58] And I think, and I'm making this judgment on the basis of his public statements over many
[1:08:04] years, I think he's in a tough spot.
[1:08:06] He's in a tough spot.
[1:08:08] I mean, he's on the record repeatedly saying this is exactly the thing that this administration
[1:08:14] would avoid doing.
[1:08:15] And now they've done it.
[1:08:17] President Trump was also on the record saying similarly.
[1:08:19] As I've said many times, exactly.
[1:08:21] And by the way, I wouldn't characterize it as a rupture with Trump.
[1:08:23] He betrayed his promises to me and everybody else.
[1:08:26] And I acknowledge that in public.
[1:08:27] So it doesn't make me the person who breached the contract.
[1:08:30] He's the one who breached the contract, to be clear.
[1:08:33] But it puts the Vice President in a super difficult spot.
[1:08:37] And I know him well and think so much of him as a person.
[1:08:41] And it is my guess that based on his past behavior, that he's doing everything he can
[1:08:47] to mitigate what he sees as the ill effects of this.
[1:08:51] But it's kind of hard to call the shots when you're Vice President because that's not in
[1:08:56] the Constitution.
[1:08:57] So, no, I would never, I put him in a bad situation just by my public, you know, he was
[1:09:05] attacked endlessly for my Nick Fuentes interview.
[1:09:08] Whoa, so scary.
[1:09:10] And, okay, so I've always felt bad about that.
[1:09:12] He didn't do anything.
[1:09:14] You know what I mean?
[1:09:14] But I was used as a cudgel to beat him over the head because the neocons hated him because
[1:09:19] they thought that if he ever became president, he would be less compliant than the president
[1:09:24] turned out to be.
[1:09:25] So, you know, I don't want to add to that at all.
[1:09:28] I think he's a really good man.
[1:09:29] I know he's a good man because I know him very well.
[1:09:31] But, you know, I don't have anything else to say to anyone in the administration because
[1:09:35] I can't affect any outcome.
[1:09:37] You don't talk to him anymore?
[1:09:38] When was the last time you spoke to the Vice President?
[1:09:41] Oh, I don't know.
[1:09:42] But I wouldn't, I wouldn't, I don't want to add to his problems at all.
[1:09:47] But I would just say what's obvious is that I'm hardly an advisor to this administration.
[1:09:52] And I think it's also clear that Donald Trump makes these decisions.
[1:09:57] You really don't know the last time you spoke to Vice President J.D. Vance?
[1:10:01] Weeks, months, days?
[1:10:02] I don't know.
[1:10:03] I mean, I would never characterize that.
[1:10:05] I don't want to cause him more problems.
[1:10:06] I would just say I'm not advising.
[1:10:08] No one's seeking my counsel.
[1:10:09] I'm not trying to influence anything.
[1:10:10] I gave it my best shot.
[1:10:12] It didn't work.
[1:10:13] Well, let me ask you this.
[1:10:13] Vance was not in favor of the war.
[1:10:16] But he ultimately didn't seem willing to die on the Hill.
[1:10:19] I mean, he could resign.
[1:10:21] He could, um, there's many things he could have done, I suppose.
[1:10:24] Do you wish he'd been more forceful?
[1:10:27] You know, I will just say, I'll just be totally blunt about what I'm doing,
[1:10:31] which is taking a pass on your question.
[1:10:33] And say that I know J.D. very, very well.
[1:10:35] And I think it's like super tough situation.
[1:10:38] He's in my prayers.
[1:10:39] I mean that.
[1:10:40] And I just don't want to add to the, what is clearly a really hard job.
[1:10:44] I know that if you were in my position, you'd press.
[1:10:47] Oh, go crazy.
[1:10:48] But I'm just saying, like, I'm starting.
[1:10:51] I mean, I, my only goal is I just want to be honest.
[1:10:55] And so I'm being, I think, as transparent as I possibly can be.
[1:10:59] Or I'm attempting to.
[1:11:00] And I'm being transparent.
[1:11:00] Of course, yeah, no problem at all.
[1:11:02] And saying that my job is also to press you.
[1:11:04] Yeah, I get it. I get it.
[1:11:05] So, however he has felt privately, publicly, Vance has been a loyal soldier.
[1:11:12] Yes.
[1:11:13] Even going so far as to head the recent negotiations with the Iranians.
[1:11:18] And we've seen, and you've commented, how unpopular this war is among the American people.
[1:11:25] Do you think the role that he is playing right now will hurt his political prospects?
[1:11:31] There are people in the White House who want to hurt J.D. Vance and have wanted that since the very first day.
[1:11:37] They were bitter.
[1:11:38] They wanted Marco Rubio to be the choice as vice president.
[1:11:41] And so J.D. has been subject to, this is well known, but I'll just confirm it, nonstop treachery from people on the neoconservative side.
[1:11:53] Who are these people?
[1:11:54] Around Marco Rubio.
[1:11:55] And by the way, Marco Rubio has got to be one of the most charming people in the whole world.
[1:12:00] And, you know, it's impossible to dislike Marco Rubio.
[1:12:04] And I'm not an intimate friend or anything.
[1:12:06] But, so I can't say to what extent he's involved in it.
[1:12:09] But, certainly, he's the choice of the donor class.
[1:12:12] The donor class is avowedly neoconservative.
[1:12:15] That's why they give money for outcomes like the ones we're watching.
[1:12:19] That's why this whole system is completely rotten and just impervious to reform.
[1:12:22] And they have been totally against J.D. Vance from the very beginning.
[1:12:25] Who do you mean specifically?
[1:12:27] Because, I mean, it was interesting in those conversations with Susie Wiles, for example, where she was very much praising Marco Rubio and had less maybe complimentary things to say about J.D. Vance.
[1:12:40] I mean, is that to whom you're referring?
[1:12:42] You know, I don't know is the real answer.
[1:12:44] I don't know.
[1:12:46] I mean, you're accusing people of treachery, so I'm wondering.
[1:12:48] Well, I know there's been a lot of treachery, for sure.
[1:12:50] And I know they've been, they were so mad about J.D. getting that job.
[1:12:54] I mean.
[1:12:54] They? Who's they?
[1:12:57] Well, Miriam Adelson, for example, Rupert Murdoch, you know, people who were very much vested in using Trump for what we're seeing now.
[1:13:07] But within the White House?
[1:13:10] I don't, you know, I don't know the answer to that.
[1:13:13] I've never worked there.
[1:13:14] So, like, if you don't work there, you can say, you know, you can say what you think you know, but it's hard to really know.
[1:13:19] This is me looking skeptical.
[1:13:21] Yeah, well, no, it's me being honest.
[1:13:22] Like, I don't really know.
[1:13:23] And you read all these things about, you know, Susie, you know, is, of course, a product of Florida.
[1:13:28] And there's a whole Florida group and the consultants and Marco and all the rest.
[1:13:32] And people whisper about that.
[1:13:33] Is that true?
[1:13:33] I really don't know.
[1:13:34] I've never heard her say anything against J.D.
[1:13:36] She seemed to love J.D.
[1:13:37] But who knows, man?
[1:13:38] You know, who knows?
[1:13:39] But I know, I definitely know that, like, outside.
[1:13:43] I mean, it's hard to believe that Mark Levin and Laura Loomer, who are, you know, have no constituency whatsoever and would have influence in the White House.
[1:13:52] But they do.
[1:13:52] And both of them have been out for Vance from day one, big time.
[1:13:56] Do you think it's hurting, though, his political prospects, to repeat the question, that he has been put in the position, according to you, that he is fronting these negotiations in Iran?
[1:14:06] Yeah, I mean, well, it's, I think this whole thing, it's not even J.D. specific.
[1:14:12] This whole thing is, like, dooming anyone connected to it for the foreseeable future, including the entire Republican Party.
[1:14:20] And, you know, if you're psyched for President Gavin Newsom, I guess that's a good thing.
[1:14:26] I'm not.
[1:14:27] So I think it's a disaster.
[1:14:29] It's a true disaster.
[1:14:30] And again, I told Trump this, like, 10 times.
[1:14:32] Like, this is going to blow up your legacy.
[1:14:35] All this gold you put in here, like, they're going to take it down and mock you as they do.
[1:14:40] Like, this is going to blow up your, you're concerned about your legacy.
[1:14:42] You're 80 in June.
[1:14:43] Like, I get it.
[1:14:45] But this is not the way.
[1:14:47] And I, and I think that's proven true.
[1:14:50] So you think this will doom J.D. Vance as well?
[1:14:52] There's no doom.
[1:14:53] I mean, I, I'm obviously not good at calling the future, but I, I couldn't be more, you
[1:14:58] know, I couldn't be a bigger fan of him as a man.
[1:15:00] But I think anybody connected to this is going to have a hard time explaining it, because
[1:15:04] how is this good for the United States?
[1:15:05] It's not.
[1:15:06] One more question on this particular issue.
[1:15:09] It was just published that your son, who worked for the VP, left that job.
[1:15:15] Did your rift with Trump have anything to do with that and make it hard for him?
[1:15:19] Zero.
[1:15:20] He was not forced out of the role at all.
[1:15:22] And my understanding of it is, let me just say, in a normal world, in a decent world,
[1:15:31] my son or my son's job would have no relevance at all to me.
[1:15:37] Why did your son leave then?
[1:15:38] If he wasn't forced out?
[1:15:40] I don't know.
[1:15:40] You can ask him.
[1:15:41] But he was there over a year.
[1:15:43] Like, I don't know.
[1:15:44] White House is an intense place to work.
[1:15:45] I don't want to talk about my son.
[1:15:47] He's got nothing to do with this.
[1:15:47] No, but that's kind of the point.
[1:15:49] Like, we need to defend the core beliefs of our civilization, which, by the way, are attractive
[1:15:58] to the entire world.
[1:16:00] People move here not just for our robust economy, but because they want to be judged on the basis
[1:16:04] of what they did, not on what their parents did.
[1:16:07] That's the whole point.
[1:16:08] That's collective punishment.
[1:16:10] It's blood guilt.
[1:16:10] And we reject it.
[1:16:11] I gave this lecture to Nick Fuentes.
[1:16:13] I gave this lecture to Mike Huckabee.
[1:16:16] The lecture never changes because the idea is the core idea of our civilization.
[1:16:20] Since you mentioned Nick Fuentes, I have one last question.
[1:16:24] Ah, you opened the door.
[1:16:26] I don't care about Nick Fuentes.
[1:16:28] He is not a J.D. Vance fan.
[1:16:30] He's called him a race traitor because of his marriage to OSHA.
[1:16:33] What? I don't care.
[1:16:35] Who is Indian-American?
[1:16:36] Wait, let me finish the question.
[1:16:38] I mean, given how influential Fuentes is right now.
[1:16:42] Is he?
[1:16:44] Is he not?
[1:16:45] I don't know.
[1:16:45] It doesn't seem to be.
[1:16:46] He didn't get us into war with Iran.
[1:16:48] Like, who cares, actually?
[1:16:49] That's kind of what I'm saying.
[1:16:50] Like, all of this is like a sideshow.
[1:16:52] Americans are being killed in a foreign country at the behest of another foreign country, and
[1:16:57] it's going to wreck the U.S. dollar and cause hyperinflation in our country.
[1:17:01] And we're, like, fretting about what some kid on the internet said.
[1:17:04] It's like, who cares, actually?
[1:17:06] This is a way of taking us away from the core issues, which are economic.
[1:17:11] They're economic.
[1:17:12] And that is the one thing that nobody ever wants to talk about.
[1:17:15] How is the money distributed?
[1:17:17] Where does the money come from?
[1:17:19] No one wants to.
[1:17:20] That's why, like, the only left-wing movement I ever had a lot of sympathy for was the one
[1:17:27] that arose after the global financial crisis, Occupy Wall Street.
[1:17:30] I didn't know exactly what they were about, but I was like, yeah, we should be mad at the
[1:17:35] banks because, like, they did this, and no one got punished.
[1:17:37] And within, like, 20 minutes, we're talking about black people and white people.
[1:17:41] It was like-
[1:17:41] I'm happy to talk about economics, but your interview with Fuentes has 25 million views.
[1:17:48] Who cares?
[1:17:49] But to say that it doesn't matter isn't-
[1:17:51] It matters in what sense?
[1:17:53] Like, does it matter more than-
[1:17:54] But let me-
[1:17:55] Can I finish my question?
[1:17:56] Yeah, of course.
[1:17:56] Thank you.
[1:17:58] Given how influential he is, and I just don't think that there's any argument about that.
[1:18:04] I'm wondering how-
[1:18:05] Influential in what way?
[1:18:06] I'm wondering how you think J.D. Vance could become the leader of the party after Trump if
[1:18:10] you have someone like Fuentes speaking so critically of him.
[1:18:15] So, I love- I'm so glad you asked that question because its premise reveals everything.
[1:18:19] All right, tell me.
[1:18:19] So, the premise of your question is that J.D. Vance can't-
[1:18:24] No, I'm not saying that he can't.
[1:18:26] It's going to be difficult for J.D. Vance to advance politically because of-
[1:18:29] Is, I'm asking, do you think-
[1:18:30] Just the premise, that it could be that J.D. Vance's interracial marriage is a bigger
[1:18:36] problem than his foreign policy views.
[1:18:38] No, I didn't say that.
[1:18:40] It doesn't-
[1:18:41] No, I'm saying that there is a person who is incredibly influential in the party.
[1:18:44] Is he incredibly influential?
[1:18:46] Like, on what basis are you saying that?
[1:18:47] Oh, my goodness.
[1:18:48] There's lots of evidence, not only in the reach of what he talks about, but also-
[1:18:53] Can you name a single member of Congress who's acknowledged his existence or said,
[1:18:57] I did this because he told me to?
[1:19:00] That's a griper?
[1:19:01] I don't know that there's a single-
[1:19:02] Oh, there's not a single member of Congress who would ever stand-
[1:19:05] Hold on.
[1:19:05] Who would ever stand up and say, or even show evidence of being influenced by Nick Fuentes,
[1:19:12] where they're, out of 535, there are about 500 who are taking money from AIPAC.
[1:19:17] I have already asked about the war's impact on Vance.
[1:19:20] This is a question about the future of the party, and the future of any party are its young
[1:19:26] people.
[1:19:27] And in the same way the Turning Point USA has influence on young conservatives, so does Nick
[1:19:35] Fuentes.
[1:19:35] I guess, I don't know how we're measuring that, but I don't-
[1:19:38] But what I'm trying, all I'm trying to ask you here is if you, no, but listen, there is
[1:19:44] What I'm trying to-
[1:19:45] A strain, a strain in the Republican Party, especially among young people who are racist,
[1:19:53] who talk about J.D. Vance and his marriage in a particular way, and I'm asking you, and
[1:19:59] you can decide not to answer it, but I'm simply asking you-
[1:20:02] Well, I'm trying to answer it.
[1:20:03] You know, if you think that that is going to be a problem for J.D. Vance leading the
[1:20:09] party, because-
[1:20:10] Let me answer your question.
[1:20:11] Thank you.
[1:20:12] You were unable to tell me how Fuentes was influential in any way, other than the views
[1:20:20] on a video, which are probably lower than those on your average porn video, so that's like
[1:20:24] not a good measurement.
[1:20:26] It's not meaningful.
[1:20:28] Does he have influence on our politics?
[1:20:30] I haven't seen any.
[1:20:32] So let's just start there.
[1:20:33] Second, J.D. Vance's problems with young people and old people and the party itself
[1:20:39] revolve around his views on foreign policy and economics, which are the issues that actually
[1:20:43] matter.
[1:20:45] Third, race is thrown up as a distraction so often, as in this case, to distract from what
[1:20:54] actually matters, because on questions of economics-
[1:20:56] I'm not distracting you.
[1:20:57] Let me just finish.
[1:20:58] On questions of economics-
[1:20:59] I'm quoting Fuentes.
[1:20:59] If I can finish.
[1:21:00] On the-
[1:21:00] Fuentes himself is a distraction from the conversations that matter, because power is displayed through
[1:21:08] the structure of the economic system, globally and per country, and in the use of force.
[1:21:15] So it's the economic program and the foreign policy program are what matters in every government
[1:21:21] from the beginning of time.
[1:21:24] Those are the two questions on which there's a bipartisan consensus in Washington between
[1:21:28] Republicans and Democrats that we should do this thing.
[1:21:31] The public rejects that thing on both categories.
[1:21:35] They reject the economics that are a consensus choice in Washington, and they reject the foreign
[1:21:39] policy that's a consensus choice in Washington.
[1:21:41] And so Washington's response, Wall Street's response as well, is to be like, let's have a race
[1:21:45] war, and you guys can like argue over blacks or whites, or whether JD is married to an
[1:21:49] Indian woman, like what?
[1:21:51] And so Fuentes is incredibly useful for people with actual power to divert the conversation
[1:21:57] to something that is both irrelevant and divisive, because it's a divide and conquer strategy.
[1:22:02] And my strong view gained over 35 years of watching carefully and being involved is that
[1:22:08] that's come to its end.
[1:22:10] Okay.
[1:22:11] And JD's real problems are his foreign policy views, the ones he's articulated,
[1:22:16] for 10 years, are in direct opposition to the foreign policy views of the people who
[1:22:21] fund the Republican Party and the Democratic Party, same people.
[1:22:23] And they have the same views.
[1:22:25] It's the idea of the uniparty.
[1:22:26] It will, on these questions, it's totally true.
[1:22:28] We can argue about the trans, the trans thing.
[1:22:31] Another, you can have legitimate views on race, legitimate views on trans.
[1:22:36] That's all, those are real issues.
[1:22:37] I'm not saying they're not.
[1:22:38] But those are not the issues on which empires rise and fall.
[1:22:42] The real issues are economics and foreign policy.
[1:22:44] And on those issues, there's a bipartisan consensus.
[1:22:47] And so they throw up like, no, we're disagreeing on trans.
[1:22:50] We're disagreeing on affirmative action or whatever.
[1:22:52] But they agree on all that matters.
[1:22:56] And JD disagrees, as Trump did, at least in his public statements.
[1:23:01] This is the wrong foreign policy course.
[1:23:03] This economic system is hurting young people.
[1:23:06] And so Fuentes shows up and everyone wants to talk about Fuentes because it's really safe.
[1:23:10] No one wants to talk about, why are capital gains taxes half those of taxes on regular income?
[1:23:15] I'm like, I think that's like a critical debate.
[1:23:17] You will never have that debate.
[1:23:19] Have you ever asked a question about that?
[1:23:21] No, no one ever asked that.
[1:23:22] And I think that's like, nothing's more important domestically than that, but whatever.
[1:23:28] That's my opinion.
[1:23:29] Okay.
[1:23:30] I wish I hadn't done the Fuentes interview because.
[1:23:34] Really?
[1:23:35] Yeah, it was totally not worth it.
[1:23:36] I mean, it was like kind of interesting, I guess.
[1:23:38] But it was used as, I added to the distraction.
[1:23:44] What I really wanted to talk about was where we were going in this war with Iran.
[1:23:52] And I spent like a month getting calls from people being like, you're a Nazi.
[1:23:58] And I wish I hadn't done that.
[1:24:01] Not that it didn't imperil my soul.
[1:24:04] I've interviewed far worse people than Nick Fuentes, like Mike Huckabee.
[1:24:09] Far worse person than Nick Fuentes.
[1:24:10] Hurt many more people than Nick Fuentes.
[1:24:12] Same with Ted Cruz.
[1:24:13] But so I don't think it affected me.
[1:24:16] I interview people I disagree with all the time.
[1:24:18] And often I'm polite to them, including war criminals.
[1:24:21] The only person I've really been impolite with is Ted Cruz.
[1:24:25] Because I have limited self-control and he's just so repulsive.
[1:24:28] I couldn't control myself.
[1:24:30] And I was a jerk.
[1:24:31] And I tried to apologize.
[1:24:32] But if you had to sit across from Ted Cruz, it's just, there's something about him.
[1:24:36] It's just like repulsive.
[1:24:38] I mean, it's like disgusting.
[1:24:39] Like if you entered a men's room and Ted Cruz was there, you would be like, I can hold it.
[1:24:43] I'm leaving.
[1:24:44] And I broke down under the strain of his repulsiveness.
[1:24:47] But in general, I try to be nice to everybody.
[1:24:49] But man, that Fuentes interview, I just added to the distraction.
[1:24:56] I think we're done for now.
[1:24:57] We're going to speak again.
[1:24:58] We're going to speak again?
[1:24:59] Yeah.
[1:25:00] You didn't know that?
[1:25:00] No.
[1:25:01] Oh, you thought this was one and done?
[1:25:04] Oh, my man.
[1:25:05] No.
[1:25:07] On the interview, we speak to our guest twice.
[1:25:09] So a few days later, I followed up with Tucker Carlson.
[1:25:12] We talked about his views on immigration, his disdain for both parties, and whether he thinks
[1:25:17] his rupture with President Trump is permanent.
[1:25:24] Hi.
[1:25:25] Hey.
[1:25:25] Hey.
[1:25:26] How you doing?
[1:25:27] I'm good.
[1:25:27] All right.
[1:25:28] You're a little loud in my ear.
[1:25:29] Let me turn you down.
[1:25:31] I'm a little loud in many people's ears.
[1:25:34] Thank you for taking time to talk to me again.
[1:25:39] I definitely wanted to circle back on something because we ended up our last conversation talking
[1:25:46] about Vice President Vance.
[1:25:49] But I also wanted to ask you about somebody else that you were close to, and that's Don
[1:25:52] Jr., the president's son.
[1:25:54] He supported your new media venture after you left Fox.
[1:25:58] So I'm wondering what your relationship is now, considering your comments about his father.
[1:26:02] Have you talked about it?
[1:26:03] Are you still in touch?
[1:26:04] I've known Don for a long time.
[1:26:05] We share a common love of the outdoors, and we don't actually talk a lot about politics.
[1:26:12] We talk mostly about hunting and fishing.
[1:26:14] And so I have not spoken to him about the war in Iran, and probably won't.
[1:26:20] But, you know, I think his views on that are pretty well known.
[1:26:25] So you're still in touch, in other words?
[1:26:27] Yeah, absolutely.
[1:26:28] And I expect to be.
[1:26:29] I mean, Don's a friend of mine and a really good guy.
[1:26:31] But our relationship is not political at all, really.
[1:26:35] In fact, I don't remember the last time I talked about politics.
[1:26:38] Yeah.
[1:26:39] I mean, I guess it brings me to this wider issue about how you critique the president.
[1:26:45] You're always quite careful to say how much you like him personally.
[1:26:49] Are you worried about alienating his base, though?
[1:26:52] Because aren't they some of the same people who tune into your show?
[1:26:55] Well, I don't think I'm careful about saying it.
[1:26:56] I want to be honest about saying it.
[1:26:58] I mean, you know, in part because I was out promoting Trump, you know, pretty aggressively
[1:27:03] for a long time.
[1:27:04] As for his base, I mean, I don't have a base.
[1:27:07] I'm not a candidate for office and don't plan to be.
[1:27:10] You have an audience, though.
[1:27:12] We do have an audience, yeah, and it's grown.
[1:27:14] And, you know, it's not exactly clear who that is.
[1:27:17] I mean, I get these readouts from our tech guys while we have, you know, new people watch.
[1:27:22] Well, who are they?
[1:27:23] You know, it's like you don't really know.
[1:27:26] But, you know, this war is unpopular.
[1:27:30] The idea of sending Americans over to risk their lives to regime change in another part
[1:27:35] of the world is itself unpopular, whether it's in Iran or any other country.
[1:27:39] So, I mean, I think I'm on the side of the majority in this country.
[1:27:44] And maybe the numbers reflect that.
[1:27:45] But, you know, I don't really think about that when I'm thinking through what we talk
[1:27:52] about, who I interview.
[1:27:53] Because, I mean, when you do look at your page on YouTube, you do definitely see that
[1:27:59] the numbers are much bigger when you talk about the war in Iran.
[1:28:02] And so.
[1:28:03] Well, we're in a war with Iran, and it's the biggest thing that's happened in my lifetime.
[1:28:08] And the potential consequences include nuclear war.
[1:28:12] And so it's an inherently big deal, and it's being ignored or downplayed by most of the
[1:28:16] rest of the media.
[1:28:17] So I think we benefit from taking it seriously, but it's inherently serious.
[1:28:21] That's my view of it.
[1:28:23] And so I would talk about it, you know, almost no matter who watched or didn't.
[1:28:28] Because I think it's that important.
[1:28:30] One more question about the president.
[1:28:32] Your comments have clearly gotten under his skin.
[1:28:36] I mean, he's posted long screeds on Truth Social about you.
[1:28:40] And, you know, to refer again to those texts that came out in the Fox News Dominion legal
[1:28:45] fight, there was one from you saying that Trump is good at destroying things.
[1:28:49] And you wrote, he's the undisputed world champion of that.
[1:28:53] He could easily destroy us if we play it wrong.
[1:28:56] I mean, do you worry about him destroying you now?
[1:28:58] He's got a lot of power.
[1:28:59] I don't worry about him destroying me.
[1:29:02] I mean, I'm turning 57 next month.
[1:29:05] My kids are grown.
[1:29:06] I mean, there's not really, what can you do to me?
[1:29:08] I don't work for anybody, and I'm not that worried about my own life anyway.
[1:29:12] But he does have the capacity to destroy.
[1:29:14] And I do think that it's a binary or either creating or destroying in this life.
[1:29:19] And I think he has proved through the course of his life better at destroying than at creating.
[1:29:25] I mean, he's created some, but I, you know, I have a strong preference for creation over
[1:29:30] destruction.
[1:29:30] And, you know, he's, look, one of the reasons that I appreciated Trump from day one, in addition
[1:29:37] to always enjoying his company and finding him hilarious, is because he was very good
[1:29:42] at assailing the foundations of rotten structures.
[1:29:46] And I knew that they were rotten because I am from Washington, and I knew those institutions
[1:29:50] well.
[1:29:51] And I knew that despite, you know, how they described themselves, they were basically
[1:29:56] just fatuous and long outdated and probably deserved to be taken down, like a house with
[1:30:01] rotten sills.
[1:30:02] And Trump was great at exposing that and taking them down.
[1:30:06] You know, USAID, I, as someone from DC, I knew a lot about USAID.
[1:30:10] And I thought, so why are we doing this?
[1:30:12] You know, this is counterproductive to American interests.
[1:30:14] And Trump just went in there and took it out.
[1:30:15] And, and I like that, but that is the first step.
[1:30:20] Of course, that can't be the end stage.
[1:30:23] The first step is you, you scrape the old property, then you build something new and
[1:30:26] better and beautiful.
[1:30:27] And we haven't gotten to that part of the program.
[1:30:29] And it's not even really being promised at this point, which is troubling.
[1:30:36] Do you see a path towards supporting him again?
[1:30:38] I mean, if he suddenly took actions that you agreed with, do you see yourself coming back
[1:30:47] into the fold?
[1:30:49] I'd support anybody who made life in the United States better.
[1:30:54] Of course, it's not, it's absolutely not personal.
[1:30:56] And that's part of what I hope to convey by always adding the caveat, but I like Trump
[1:31:00] because it's not personal.
[1:31:01] Um, so I would always support any, and I mean, literally anybody, no matter how unlikely
[1:31:07] the person, no matter how much I disagreed with his previous policies or reviled him as
[1:31:13] a man or whatever, it almost doesn't matter if someone's doing a good thing.
[1:31:17] I want to be honest enough to say, God bless you for doing that.
[1:31:21] And I support that thing.
[1:31:22] So it's, it's really about what a person is doing.
[1:31:25] It's, it's about the fruit rather than the perception.
[1:31:29] You make this country better.
[1:31:30] I don't care who you are.
[1:31:32] I will cheer you on because I live here and I want the country to get better.
[1:31:36] It's not getting better.
[1:31:37] Now it's very hard for me to imagine any scenario in which we look back on the last two months,
[1:31:44] this war with Iran and say, that really made us more prosperous, safer, happier, united
[1:31:50] in our country.
[1:31:51] It's just, I just can't imagine that.
[1:31:53] But then, you know, a lot of things I haven't been able to imagine.
[1:31:56] So if that happens, I will be the very first person to say, well, I was completely wrong
[1:32:00] about that and I'm sorry, and I'm grateful that I was wrong and I, and I will really mean
[1:32:05] it because I'm not, again, I don't have any partisan agenda at all.
[1:32:10] The Republican party could not be more repulsive to me.
[1:32:13] The democratic party, same thing.
[1:32:15] So I just am in this weird non-aligned place and it's, it's totally sincere.
[1:32:21] Like I think the parties, and I'm saying this on the basis of a lot of knowledge, are rotten
[1:32:25] beyond repair or at least simple repairs.
[1:32:29] Can you imagine creating a new party?
[1:32:31] I mean, can you imagine there being a different party that would more closely align to your
[1:32:40] views and perhaps others?
[1:32:41] I mean, if you're saying that these parties are rotten beyond repair, what are you proposing,
[1:32:46] if anything?
[1:32:47] Let me just say, just to be more precise, nothing is rotten beyond repair.
[1:32:52] Repairs are always possible.
[1:32:54] Okay, because you said rotten beyond repair.
[1:32:55] I meant, it's a, it's a cliche, which I, and I shouldn't have used it on those grounds.
[1:33:00] Rotten beyond remodeling, I would say.
[1:33:03] This can't, you know, you can't just put a new coat of paint or fresh drywall on these
[1:33:07] structures because they are ridden with rot.
[1:33:11] Okay, so I would like to see them repaired.
[1:33:13] That would be the simplest solution.
[1:33:15] I don't think that's likely to happen.
[1:33:17] So of course I would be thrilled to see the rise of a party that represented the majority
[1:33:23] of Americans, at least by intent.
[1:33:26] Look, it's not even a question of, you know, are you for this tax rate?
[1:33:29] Are you for that tax rate?
[1:33:30] It's a question of orientation.
[1:33:31] Are you going to have a political party whose number one aim is helping the people who put
[1:33:38] it in power, helping the citizens of the United States?
[1:33:41] And neither party can say that, honestly, because neither party is very interested in
[1:33:46] its own citizens.
[1:33:47] Democratic Party is much more interested in importing new non-citizens, making them citizens
[1:33:50] and making reliable voters out of them.
[1:33:52] And the Republican Party is much more interested in, I don't know, fighting wars for a foreign
[1:33:56] country.
[1:33:57] So whatever you think of those aims, neither one is focused on the needs of Americans.
[1:34:02] And I think somebody should be in a representative democracy, like there should be a party that
[1:34:07] is speaking for most people.
[1:34:09] Am I going to build it?
[1:34:10] Absolutely not.
[1:34:11] I'm not a politician, but I would support it as with whatever I had, I would support it.
[1:34:16] And who do you imagine being the head of that party?
[1:34:19] I have literally no idea.
[1:34:20] So could it be someone on the left?
[1:34:22] Well, it could be anybody.
[1:34:24] I'm not even sure what the left means at this point.
[1:34:26] I mean, I have some very good friends on the left.
[1:34:29] Now, they're not conventional West Side liberals.
[1:34:32] You know, they're not, they don't have signs in this house.
[1:34:36] We believe in science.
[1:34:37] Like that sort of dopey lifestyle liberalism of my childhood.
[1:34:41] Like, I think that's kind of played out.
[1:34:43] Like angry ladies telling you to put your mask on.
[1:34:45] Like, you know, no one wants that.
[1:34:47] But I have some sincere left-wing friends who have a critique of economics and foreign
[1:34:51] policy that I agree with completely, or substantially agree with, for sure.
[1:34:56] One last question on this.
[1:34:58] Obviously, you're in Maine.
[1:35:00] Graham Plattner is a Democrat who is vying to be the Senate candidate.
[1:35:05] Is that someone that you, whose ideas you are interested in at all?
[1:35:12] I mean, I certainly appreciate his foreign policy views, you know, a lot.
[1:35:18] And I appreciate how different they are from everybody else's in this party.
[1:35:23] I haven't met him.
[1:35:24] And I plan to meet him.
[1:35:26] I don't know a lot about his other views.
[1:35:28] You know, I think at this point with AI posed to destroy some high percentage of American
[1:35:35] jobs, there's really no justification for immigration of any kind into the United States.
[1:35:41] You can't say, well, we're going to, you know, 30% of lawyers are going to be out of
[1:35:45] work and this percentage of software coders or accountants or, you know, any other sort
[1:35:50] of supportive family type job.
[1:35:53] They're all going to evaporate because of this new technology.
[1:35:56] But we have a bunch of new H-1B people we'd like you to meet.
[1:35:58] And that's just cruelty, both to, and most important to American citizens, but also to
[1:36:05] the immigrant, like, what are we doing?
[1:36:06] So anybody who's for diluting our labor pool with foreign labor is, you know, clearly not
[1:36:14] acting in the interest of the country.
[1:36:16] And I couldn't support anyone like that.
[1:36:19] But, you know, we, the prerequisite to having a rational conversation about immigration is
[1:36:24] de-racializing it.
[1:36:25] Okay.
[1:36:25] It's not, not everything is about race.
[1:36:27] I am so-
[1:36:28] The truth is, sorry?
[1:36:30] No, no, I was, finish your thought and then I was going to jump in.
[1:36:33] Well, just, we are looking at the elimination of some very large unspecified number of American
[1:36:40] jobs due to technology.
[1:36:42] Hmm.
[1:36:42] And there are going to be a lot of unemployed people, including a lot of unemployed immigrants
[1:36:47] in this country.
[1:36:47] And you have the potential for disunity and actual disruption, you know, rupture of the
[1:36:52] social fabric to the extent it still exists.
[1:36:54] And so you have to shut down immigration right now.
[1:36:58] I'm glad you brought up immigration because I was thinking about what you said in our last
[1:37:03] conversation about race.
[1:37:05] And I'm going to quote you here.
[1:37:06] You said most of the debates about race, ethnicity, religion, to some extent, immigration are less
[1:37:11] resonant long term than debates about economics.
[1:37:15] And you said race is thrown up as a distraction.
[1:37:18] And you are someone who has spent a lot of time, though, talking about those issues.
[1:37:23] You know, you've denigrated immigrants saying that they make our country poorer and dirtier
[1:37:27] and more divided.
[1:37:28] And you've long warned that immigrants are going to replace what you call legacy Americans.
[1:37:33] Well, they have.
[1:37:34] The overwhelming majority of new jobs in the last five years have gone to immigrants,
[1:37:39] not Americans.
[1:37:40] So it's not really a debate, actually.
[1:37:43] Well, yeah, but you called Iraqis semi-literate primitive monkeys.
[1:37:47] I mean, you've used language that many find.
[1:37:48] What year did I say that to you?
[1:37:50] I think it was in 2018.
[1:37:53] Oh, I did not say that in 2018.
[1:37:55] Oh, no, 2008.
[1:37:56] I'm so sorry.
[1:37:57] Yeah, 2008.
[1:37:58] So 2008.
[1:37:59] Right, yeah.
[1:38:00] So the point is I'm a racist?
[1:38:02] Is that what you're saying?
[1:38:02] No, no.
[1:38:03] The point is were you part of the distraction?
[1:38:05] The question is were you part of the distraction?
[1:38:07] Because you were using those, you know, talking about those issues quite a lot.
[1:38:11] I wasn't actually talking about those issues quite a lot, but I would say I have been involved
[1:38:17] in many distractions, including that.
[1:38:20] I'm not saying race is immaterial.
[1:38:23] Race is important.
[1:38:23] Race is real.
[1:38:24] It's not a social construct.
[1:38:26] It's a biological reality.
[1:38:27] There are racial differences, real racial differences.
[1:38:30] They're much smaller than gender differences, but they're still real.
[1:38:33] But my point was the one that I made initially, which is for most Americans, people who are
[1:38:41] born here, black, white, Hispanic, Asian, doesn't matter of any race, the real concerns
[1:38:46] are economic.
[1:38:46] And I do think that certain forces, the banks, people loaning the money, have a real incentive
[1:38:55] to foment dissent within the population against each other.
[1:39:00] Fight amongst yourselves while we continue to charge you 25% interest on your credit card.
[1:39:04] And as I said, when we first discussed this, I noticed this after Occupy Wall Street, which
[1:39:10] was like the very first left-wing movement that I thought, hmm, I kind of like the theme
[1:39:16] here.
[1:39:17] I mean, I wasn't, you know, whatever.
[1:39:18] I'm not camping out on the sidewalk in front of JP Morgan.
[1:39:21] But the idea that you could have a global financial crisis and no one responsible for
[1:39:26] it goes to jail.
[1:39:27] And the only people who suffer are the people who took the loans, not the ones who issued
[1:39:31] the loans.
[1:39:31] I felt like that's just not fair.
[1:39:33] And so I supported the idea of holding the creditors accountable for their crimes.
[1:39:40] And none ever were held accountable by Bush or Obama, as you know.
[1:39:44] And then I noticed, and this is measurable actually by Alexa's search of New York Times
[1:39:48] stories, that the term racist, racism, white supremacy, those exploded in New York Times
[1:39:54] stories and not just the New York Times, but the rest of the legacy media.
[1:39:57] And my interpretation of this fact is that the media was used to distract the population
[1:40:05] with racial conflict.
[1:40:07] But you were part of the media, Tucker.
[1:40:09] Well, I've already said I have been part of many distractions.
[1:40:12] Took me a long time to recognize this.
[1:40:15] And I'm trying to be honest about it now.
[1:40:17] Now, again, there's been an enormous amount, particularly in the New York Times, but not
[1:40:22] just of anti-white hate, which is like totally normalized across the American media.
[1:40:29] Whiteness is bad.
[1:40:30] White supremacy is evil.
[1:40:32] Every other kind of ethnic awareness is great and celebrated, but white ethnic awareness is
[1:40:37] Nazism, et cetera, et cetera.
[1:40:39] This absurd and pretty malicious double standard.
[1:40:42] And that's annoying.
[1:40:43] And I've noted it many, many times.
[1:40:45] But ultimately what I'm saying is that people care about their economic fortunes and their
[1:40:52] ability to pay their bills and secure a better life for their kids.
[1:40:56] And those things are way more important to most Americans I have met than anything related
[1:41:03] to race.
[1:41:03] And that's why all this stuff about whiteness being bad, which is like an outrageous slur
[1:41:09] if you think about it.
[1:41:10] All of that, in my opinion, was designed as a distraction from the fact that the American
[1:41:18] economy was becoming ever more pyramid shaped, ever more lopsided, ever more, basically ever
[1:41:24] less middle class.
[1:41:25] The middle class was no longer the majority after 2015.
[1:41:29] That was not even noted in most publications.
[1:41:32] And like, that's a tragedy and no one even said anything about it.
[1:41:34] Instead, it was just like white people hate black people.
[1:41:36] Black people hate white people.
[1:41:38] You know, we got played.
[1:41:40] That's my view.
[1:41:40] You brought up Occupy Wall Street and your affinity with that.
[1:41:44] And you said in our previous interview, the future that I imagine is not a future in which
[1:41:48] we're yelling at each other about race.
[1:41:50] It's a future in which people are legitimately revolutionary, maybe even violent on the basis
[1:41:56] of thwarted economic opportunity.
[1:41:58] And it made me wonder, do you believe capitalism is an evil system, a necessary evil, something
[1:42:04] else?
[1:42:05] And also, what do you mean about legitimately revolutionary?
[1:42:08] Well, I certainly didn't mean to endorse violence.
[1:42:13] I can't imagine I would ever, I would never say that intentionally.
[1:42:16] I'm amazed that you have a tape of me saying that.
[1:42:19] And I just want to disavow it.
[1:42:20] I'm not for violence, period.
[1:42:22] Okay.
[1:42:22] It's against my religion.
[1:42:24] And so I just want to be very, very clear that I'm totally opposed to violence.
[1:42:29] What I mean is the current system, and I don't know what you would call our economic system.
[1:42:36] I mean, I'm often told it's free market capitalism.
[1:42:38] It doesn't bear any resemblance to what I thought free market capitalism was.
[1:42:42] I'm not sure the name is important, except as a way to mislead and bully people into being
[1:42:49] quiet about it.
[1:42:50] But any economic system in which, you know, the overwhelming majority of the rewards go
[1:42:57] to an ever shrinking number of people or proportion of people is a doomed system because it makes
[1:43:05] people revolution.
[1:43:06] I saw this in Venezuela, which I visited as a child.
[1:43:08] It was a prosperous kind of first world country, beautiful country, actually.
[1:43:13] And then it, of course, it proceeded along the path we're on and the resentment built
[1:43:20] and you had this very volatile combination of electoral politics, a democracy, and, you
[1:43:27] know, an economic oligarchy.
[1:43:29] And those two don't work well together.
[1:43:31] And you had a left-wing populist takeover, Hugo Chavez, and the results are now well known.
[1:43:39] So I don't know what you call this, but it's not working and it's making for a very volatile
[1:43:45] country.
[1:43:47] You know, people have to own things.
[1:43:49] They have to be vested in the country in order to de-radicalize them.
[1:43:53] But when people own nothing, they've got nothing to lose.
[1:43:56] I mean, these are very obvious observations.
[1:43:59] Two last questions.
[1:44:02] You can dispute the premise, which I'm sure you will.
[1:44:07] I don't know that I will.
[1:44:09] But I want to preempt it anyway, just because I think in our brief time together.
[1:44:14] Thank you for preparing me.
[1:44:17] In our brief time together, I feel like I've come to understand a bit about you.
[1:44:24] All right.
[1:44:25] I'd say two of the most seminal events in your professional life were, one, the Iraq War,
[1:44:31] and two, the election of Donald Trump.
[1:44:32] That's the premise.
[1:44:35] You were for both of them.
[1:44:38] Now you say that they were both mistakes.
[1:44:40] So I guess, why should anyone after that track record listen to you?
[1:44:46] People probably won't, you know.
[1:44:48] But has it caused some self-reflection about...
[1:44:51] Well, I admitted it.
[1:44:53] So of course, it has caused a lot of self-reflection.
[1:44:56] And I wouldn't say, by the way, that the 2016 election of Donald Trump was a mistake.
[1:45:00] I didn't mean to suggest that.
[1:45:02] I was addressing this last year.
[1:45:06] And what happened to the campaign promises that a lot of us repeated enthusiastically and thought were real.
[1:45:13] But if you're saying that Donald Trump could lead this country to a nuclear war, which is essentially what you said could happen,
[1:45:21] then how could the 2016 election of Donald Trump not have been something that you regret?
[1:45:26] I mean, those two things.
[1:45:28] I mean, if I was going to vote for someone who might lead us to a nuclear holocaust, I would perhaps reconsider my vote.
[1:45:38] Well, I don't know if you remember well, but that year was a choice between the lady who killed Gaddafi for no reason
[1:45:47] and turned Libya into a gaping wound, which it remains, for no reason, and then laughed about it,
[1:45:55] and a guy who said the Iraq war was a mistake.
[1:45:58] So, for me, that was not even a close call.
[1:46:02] I mean, Hillary Clinton, particularly in foreign policy questions, was a grotesque neocon from my perspective.
[1:46:10] So, I don't regret that.
[1:46:12] I'm grateful that he won in 2016.
[1:46:16] My only point, once again, was he campaigned against the things he's now doing a year and a half ago.
[1:46:23] So, I just apologized for repeating those campaign slogans as if they were true.
[1:46:30] I thought they were true.
[1:46:31] They turned out not to be true, and I feel bad about that.
[1:46:33] You know, I'm often wrong.
[1:46:35] I say that, and I mean it.
[1:46:36] It's not a pose.
[1:46:38] And I do think, last thing I'll say is, I think if you force yourself to admit you're wrong,
[1:46:44] and I always force my four children to admit they were wrong, I didn't do a lot of spanking,
[1:46:49] the punishment I meted out was forcing them to admit that they had done something wrong.
[1:46:53] That's enough, usually.
[1:46:55] I think if you do that, it makes you wiser over time, and you're less likely.
[1:47:01] It doesn't mean you're not going to make mistakes.
[1:47:03] I will make many mistakes going forward, I assume, but you're less likely to fall for things
[1:47:08] once you've apologized the first time.
[1:47:11] And the thing that I noticed and that drove me so crazy about Washington that I finally left
[1:47:15] was the cyclical nature of bad decision making.
[1:47:21] They wouldn't just make bad decisions again and again.
[1:47:24] They'd make the same bad decisions again and again and again, based on the same faulty
[1:47:30] assumptions.
[1:47:31] And they could do that because no one was ever held to account for any failure or disaster
[1:47:35] ever.
[1:47:36] The only people who were ever punished were the people who complained about it.
[1:47:39] And I watched that, and again, it drove me nuts.
[1:47:42] And I just don't want to add to that.
[1:47:44] I don't want to be part of that at all.
[1:47:46] For all my faults, I don't want to be part of that.
[1:47:48] So that's it.
[1:47:49] I'm not running for anything.
[1:47:50] And if people think I'm not credible because I changed my mind about the Iraq war or because
[1:47:55] I was shocked that Trump launched a war he said he wouldn't launch, I get it.
[1:48:01] I understand why people feel that way.
[1:48:03] I'm not mad about it.
[1:48:04] This is my last question.
[1:48:07] It's a personal one.
[1:48:08] I talk to a lot of people left and right about you.
[1:48:12] A lot of them used to be your friends.
[1:48:15] I mean, or they said they were close to you or spent time with you.
[1:48:20] They're all mad at me now.
[1:48:21] Well, they all say that you've changed.
[1:48:24] Some say you've sort of become untethered from reality.
[1:48:30] And the question all of them had was, what happened to Tucker Carlson?
[1:48:35] And it's something that I've heard echoed a lot.
[1:48:38] You're an object of a lot of fascination, continuing interest.
[1:48:42] You are at the center of a lot of our cultural conversations.
[1:48:46] And I wonder how you would answer that question.
[1:48:52] Well, I marvel at it.
[1:48:54] And I mean this sincerely.
[1:48:55] I don't find myself very interesting.
[1:48:57] At all.
[1:48:58] I feel like I'm as transparent as I can be.
[1:49:02] So the idea that I've changed, well, yeah, I hope so.
[1:49:05] America's changed a lot.
[1:49:06] And if you still think that making the world better is as simple as sending aircraft carriers
[1:49:12] to a foreign country, if you think the way to improve discourse is by banning words,
[1:49:18] if you think the VAX is safe and effective, I don't know what to tell you.
[1:49:23] Like, have you not been paying attention?
[1:49:25] Apparently not.
[1:49:26] Or maybe you're just resistant to the conclusions.
[1:49:30] But it's really important if you advocate for something to watch, to stay patient, and
[1:49:37] see how it winds up.
[1:49:39] And if you spend a lot of time telling people this is true and then you find out it's not
[1:49:43] true, you have an obligation to say, I'm sorry, I told you that was true, but it turns out
[1:49:48] it's not safe and effective.
[1:49:50] And regime change isn't that simple.
[1:49:52] And no, speech codes don't work or whatever you were advocating for.
[1:49:58] So, yeah, of course I've changed.
[1:50:00] I mean, the changes that have taken place in this country since August of 1991 when I entered
[1:50:05] the workforce are bewildering to me.
[1:50:09] I mean, so much has changed.
[1:50:11] So many of my assumptions have been blown up, just evaporated under the pressure of reality
[1:50:19] that if I still clung to those, that would be shameful.
[1:50:24] That would be dishonest.
[1:50:25] And I don't want to be that.
[1:50:27] Tucker Carlson, this has been so interesting.
[1:50:31] Thank you so much for your time.
[1:50:33] Thank you.
[1:50:34] Thank you for having me.
[1:50:36] I appreciate it.
[1:50:37] After these interviews, we reached out to Carlson's representative to get clarity on
[1:50:41] his claims that Senator Ted Cruz and Ambassador Mike Huckabee have advocated for the murder
[1:50:46] of children and other innocent civilians.
[1:50:49] She responded in an email, quote, Gaza.
[1:50:52] When asked for comment, Huckabee replied that, quote, no sane person advocates for the murder
[1:50:56] of children or civilians and called the allegation, quote, sick and evil, Cruz replied that we
[1:51:02] should spend our time, quote, actually covering people who still matter.
[1:51:06] We also reached out to Sean Hannity, who denied that he pressured President Trump to
[1:51:10] go to war with Iran.
[1:51:11] Mark Levin denied this as well.
[1:51:13] And both Levin and Laura Loomer denied that they had ever been out to get Vice President
[1:51:18] J.D. Vance.
[1:51:19] We also reached out to Rupert Murdoch and Miriam Adelson, but they did not respond to our
[1:51:23] request for comment.
[1:51:24] I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro.
[1:51:30] And I'm David Marchese.
[1:51:31] And we're the hosts of The Interview, an audio and video podcast from The New York Times.
[1:51:37] Every week we interview fascinating and influential people from all walks of life.
[1:51:41] Subscribe to our YouTube channel so you'll never miss an episode.
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