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tv   Real Time With Bill Maher  CNN  March 23, 2024 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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estimated chances of winning. tuesday's 1.1 billion dollar drawing one in a little over 302 million the odds of getting your $2 back though omar. what in 24. so maybe a little better >> thanks, polo >> now, she was a covert cia officer >> until her cover was blown and former spy valerie plane told jake tapper about the potential danger that could have caused on united states of scandal. you can catch a new episode of united states of scandal tomorrow night at nine eastern pacific only on cnn. thank you for joining me today. if you've been with me this whole time, it's been quite a ride. it's been a fun four hours informative at times. i'm i hope i'm omar jimenez. i'll see you again tomorrow night, starting at five eastern, an encore presentation of hbo's real time bill maher is up next >> no, >> hbo original series
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>> hi hi, good man thank you
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very much i appreciate that. i hope i know why you're happy >> it springs bring his brung that always makes people feel good but i tell you who's got a tough couple of days ahead is donald trump. i know you're worried about that >> well, you know, he has a few >> trials going ahead. one of them is in new york because he exaggerated his, his net worth and how much property was worth isn't that amazing that he did that there's a bond he has to pay the fine a 454 million dollars. any trump has the weekend to come up with it >> really, this is >> he's like garfield now he's at fat orange pushing your dredge monday
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>> good hearted man >> but it's so funny because all week long, trump's lawyers have saying he cannot possibly come up with this money. so of course, on truth, social media platform he bragged today. he had $500 million in cash he wants you to know he has the money. he just doesn't think he should use it because it's not there trump family motto is latin for my wallet is in my other pants but i mean this is pretty interesting stuff that donald trump, the great billionaire, the great businessman he could lose as next, starting next week his businesses, his properties, his money today. millennia was seen wearing a coat that said, okay, now i do care new. york state
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can start seizing his assets. this is pretty amazing, including trump tower trump today said, look, take anything, just leave me my boxes of confidential documents. that's all i really care about >> but he keeps trump keeps floating new people for the vice presidential slot. it's so sad when number primary season, right? but this is a look. let's not get into that. this is the race we have. so we're now down to picking the vice president. he mentioned marco rubio anymore? mentioned tulsi gabbard, and he mentioned tim scott than nancy mace. it's like he's making his own march madness bracket and what a great job will be vying for. you it's a kiss and defend the indefensible from four years and at the end of it, a mob tries to hang you a great job >> yeah. >> i mean, who would really want to be in this government?
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we have admitted to serve ridiculous. the house voted >> again, we >> keep doing this week the budget to run the government, so it doesn't collapse okay, so they've did it today, another six months. we get to go to september and half the republicans mutinied about it, where the biggest superpower in the world, and we run this country like when i was broken, i just bought enough gas to go home yeah >> there were hard right. republicans are apoplectic about this. marjorie taylor greene, ask for a motion to dismiss house speaker mike johnson. he's only been in the job for months even taylor swift gives a guy a little more time than that didn't they just do this with kevin mccarthy?
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did i dream? no, they did marjorie taylor greene, the last time she was satisfied by a speaker, she was sitting on it. it was playing leonard skinner hey >> what a great week tab keras wish her on the show should be out here in a minute because so much tech news, big antitrust suit against apple and you've been following this. oh, this is very important. yeah, see, i told you important to that guy no, it's all about apple, you know, if you're abusing their power to have a monopoly, the android people can send a message to easily to the apple people. i mean, i'm not from the generation that built its personality about what phone you own you know, people, kids come up to me like we're still using iphone 11 >> yeah. and my vacuum cleaners from 2019 should i drown myself
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>> of course >> we're getting very close to the decision that's going to have to be made about tiktok we are looking, you know, china owns tiktok and we are threatening to ban it. so the kids who like tiktok, they're sending threatening messages to congress people saying they're going to shoot them and cut them into pieces on the bright side is good to see the young people interested in government again i think that could come down this week. china either sells it to an american or we ban it. i got a better idea. how about we traded for boeing we've got a great show. we have >> and sell the first time she is the host of the podcast on the kara swisher pivot, whose new memoir is called burn book, a tech love story. kara swisher is i and aspirin
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>> are you? i'm doing good with an >> iphone 11 of the only speak to you back >> what you're the one person in this country who can say that? >> yes, the true that's fair. >> because you were out ahead. i mean, this book, you earn this book. thank you. you really did because nobody was more out ahead on tech where it's going, how important it's going to be in the 21st century? so you deserve this victory lap. well, thank >> you. >> it is a fascinating book because it's a weaves sort of your personal story. and with what so many other things were all interested in about that, just the title got me. yeah. because tell him tell him what a burn >> well, it's a movie from the movie mean girls, but people are in high school, you write the book of what you really think people are looking i can read letter, right? know it's a bernbach, it's like a diary, but four is for you instead of writing about you, you right. anybody else like this is what i really think about bell. >> you never show it to them. >> you never swell. >> it gets out in that yeah.
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wow i'm pretty are showing it. i'm showing it right now. right? yeah >> so all all the big names. you can check in this century, the steve jobs and dorsey, and all of the musk, they're all in there vaso who's going to not like this? >> all of them they liked know, they respect you >> know some some of them. i think they're scared a little bit. i guess, >> that's good. that's what they did irritated for the job >> in the back of >> the book instead of you do blurbs on the back of a book. i put all the insults they have i'd like ilan urine >> my >> my my voice is so shrill. you only dogs can hear me and that my hardest seething with hate. >> what ilan thinks of me which
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i'm like, look in a mirror, sir, but he's a complicated guy. >> oh, okay. sure. why not? well, i mean, he's just not a complicated guys, just a jerk. but go ahead. okay >> well, you know what so what so we're mine. >> okay. well, now you just debated with yourself >> yes. >> thank and easily prove he's a complicated guy because yesterday, so on the newest, somebody who was paralyzed, who is giddy with happiness because he was being able to play video games with his mind. yeah, that came from neuralink. that's that's elance company noted my car and i know i get those elam i like i like tesla elon, neuralink, elon. even like hyperloop elon, it's, it's twitter slash x ei diagram. >> but in the big scheme of
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things, where do you think his legacy will be in history? because i've never seen anybody who has more articles written about him every day in the paper because he's got his finger and so many pies and then he does crazy stuff. he is come on, spectrum me. so like he just i don't know why he needs to high five these crazy people. i understand why he wanted to like have a platform where you have free speech. twitter was wait to one camp. i get it. but like why then embrace the worst people on it? instead of disk, disk say, okay, i'm going to let you talk, but i'm not going to go, hey, that was a good one, bro. >> right that's where i don't get a lot of these guys are a lot of these guys are hugely narcissistic when you become the >> richest man in the world, everyone looks you up and down all day. >> and they're >> violently in agreement with what you say. and so you start to really think of yourself as a god in a lot of ways. and he already was tending that way in that direction. >> i
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>> think one person telling bed mesobook who wrote the anti-social network, a bunch of other tech books. he said he thinks he's ready player one in a video game. now, elon loves video games and if you're ready, player one nobody matters, but you, that really, that's what happens with these guys. all of them, not just elon. as to the genius thing sure but there's lots of geniuses and you can kind of think more like henry ford, right? you're like what an amazing contribution at the same time, the antisemitism. >> he was way >> down that highway and racist and everything else. so how do you balance those things? just because you can land yeah if you can learn a rocket going to serve for, you can be anti-trans. i don't think so. like i say, things that are so despicable i just don't think you have to choose or give someone an out when you started on this path, there was a lot of hope i >> remember reading about this at the beginning of the century
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around that time. that this industry would be different and they would be better. they were socially conscious. i cared about climate and they cared about change the world, poor people. and it turns out they, it's almost a worst boys club, right? i mean but justice sexist. yep. just as greedy, more, more yeah. then call barrett first because they speak, they >> cosplay this idea that they're changing the world and you don't have investment banker that goes, you know what we really wanna do, bring everyone together. they're like, i want to make that money and take it home to my giant house in connecticut, which is fine. you kind of understand those people? the first line of this book i would say it, which is so it was capitalism after all. that's what it is. and they pretended they weren't any war soft vests and they walked around why did they need >> to >> be like that? why did they have to say they were changing the world when in fact they just wanted to make money. and if we understand that not put them in these positions like they're magicians. that's great. i just would prefer they would start telling me there. so phantom.
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>> i have this phrase that i wish i didn't have to use so much, but i do, which is liberals and theory. >> they're not liberals. they never were well, they say they are we don't they were libertarian light. they weren't. that's, that's a mistake about silicon valley. they're tolerant of people, but in general they're not, they're very, i would say narcissistic. is their, is their religion and their, and their politics, but didn't something like 98% of the contributions to a political party from silicon valley go to the democrats not among the top people. some of them, but not among the group. it san francisco. a lot of it is in california area. it's a democratic state, right? it's going to be like that. that's where people live. but in general, if you actually like everyone's like how did they suddenly became so right? winning so many of these people, there's a lot of the moving that direction they were always liked this because they felt like i remember when i met bill gates, he was like, why do i need any lobbyists in washington? washington stupid. the same thing. they know better, right? and i think when you get to a point where venture capitalists or o pining about what to do in ukraine, i
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want, i'd like them to sit down because they don't know what they're talking about. and just because you're good making money or building rockets or cars doesn't mean that you know, other things and a lot of them aren't they're not educated and in a wider way, they don't read widely. >> reason i >> like steve jobs because he read widely and he had other things besides what he was doing what >> about ai though? >> what about it? well, i mean, cert >> they killed just you bill four or it could save my life. he could >> that's why >> i'm intrigued. it >> is, it is intriguing. it's the greatest change right now. there's been technology has moments like the graphical user interface, the moment we'll found, we were at a big one right now with ai, it's essentially called strong ai. there's all kinds of ways they referred to it. but it's going to change everything, right? >> and it seems like we went through this with the iphone.
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>> i >> mean, i don't think people even thought the iphone would have the deleterious effective has had on people. >> well, >> when it came out, i right? think there were blinded by that. and i think we all see it now. yes >> ai is different. we know the potential. i mean, we i read the quotes last week from people in our homeland security department. this could be an existential event? yes, could wipe out humanity. i mean, that's just the high end of her what's right, easley, things not quite as bad as that could happen. and it just seems like we don't care that it's just a race to who can, who can get to like what google got. there was more, there's always more than one when we start right about technology and then google became the search engine, right? facebook beat my space. it looks to me like these tech companies are controlling everything well, they want to be the google of ai, the one everybody uses. and so they don't care about putting it out before it's ready, right? >> they do that. well, it's called beta to what koch and beta testing can you imagine beta testing a car? you can't
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beta. oh, sorry, it crashed too much or whatever they beta test everything and we are willing we are the willing subjects. >> and they >> make things that are both addictive and necessary. you can't operate in this world without technology. you can't anymore and with ai, there's all these astonishing things. jeanne folding health care, cancer research, drug discovery, it's an astonishing thing at the same time, killer drones that will operate by themselves, or if someone says solve, solve hunger, do you know what ai could do without the right guardrails? >> kill 1 billion people. that'll solve it. >> and so you >> have to be able to anticipate and the problem with the first part of the internet, which is this book is about, was, look what we did when we had no guardrails. it's the only industry in big industry that has no guardrails and they're the richest people on earth that the richest trillion dollar companies. and our government has abrogated its power and they're doing doing it here with ai. and that's you know, i sound like crazy cassandra, because like i really have hope for this. this could really change things in an astonishing way. and it
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could also go completely south if we're going to do it the way we've done it, and we can bit better bay a test, a car they just use crash tests. that's right. crash test and what were the crash test dummies of the digital age really want to ask you about this? before the supreme court mercury verses missouri used to be biden versus missouri. it's a free speech issue. very interested to me, interesting to me because i was always on the page during the pandemic that they should not be shutting down debate about medical matters, yes, correct? i was dissenter on many of these issues. and as the years roll by now, we see that the dissenting opinions on a lot of these things were quite the right ones. >> okay. although we still don't, we're not going to know perfectly, but go ahead. okay. but we should have been able to argue about whether it came from a lab which we were things like that, natural immunity, whether it was better to go to the beach, it gets son and fresh air chair as i would have said. okay. as opposed to sitting home and day drinking,
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right >> putting on i'm >> going to try and never mentioned that obesity biggest factor i can have a lot to answer for anyway >> but you're in the middle of a plague and a debate that people don't know. >> yes, it's going to have so you should be able to debate it this medicine, they don't know. >> the moment was not but people make mistakes and science because it makes mr. well, this is what, this is what the lawsuit is about. >> okay. because there were two doctors, j. belta, gera and martin, cold dark there from stanford in harvard. right? >> and they said, we were shut down. not always fully, but there are ways to do that. and they weren't sick, they're not radicals. >> there were, there >> were saying like like we're going to form a school closures. again, i think has been proved right? my question is always why why are your doctor's more important than my doctors, the ones i want to listen to and social media companies were in the tank with the government as opposed to what you were just saying before about urine a your, the, the watchdog and you have been right. they just did the
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bidding of the government. that's what the lawsuits about. >> it is about that, but it's whether they can talk to each other reasonably and whether they can be coerced. and i think the supreme court is going to grow against it because social media companies also have first amendment rights it's by the way. and so i think the issue is what is the government talking to these companies about? is it coercing them or is it just having reasonable discussions if the government knows, say about a major threat and it doesn't talk to these companies. we get into all kinds of trouble. so i think what's happened is like everyone's got to be you were wrong. i was right. and it's definitely like that and what's happened in this culture, and i think it's because of three things, social media gerrymandering and rupert murdoch, i think pretty much if i had to pick three things i >> like i know. it's amazing that class, right i call him uncle satan in the book because he's avuncular and yet bad but one of the things that's happened is that social media has caused us to, we talk about our grievances with each other all the time and we don't tell
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stories about each other anymore. and that's what's happened. it's reductive anise you don't get a debate and someone has to top each other and dunk each other. and this is why i have a problem with elon musk on x because all he wants to do is done, right? right. instead of like mark cuban, who you both you and i did an amazing series on dei, right when he did it, i wrote him, i go godspeed, you're going over there. okay. good luck >> he >> did it and was really smart. and the response from ilan was you're a moron. >> oh, that's too. well done. were highest level of oxford. >> i'm not defending that. it shouldn't be >> but i'm saying all thank you your could have been rich >> i appreciate it. i'll see you >> there is >> next next stop. >> he got it >> know going and get >> next. >> if you neck pick one, you
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texas and connor of the powered by people organization better or rock, is over here that are listening we are back and she's the senior editor, grabs a dispatch and host of the dispatch's legal podcasts, advisory opinion. sarah is girls over here. how are you see you back? >> all right. so i want to start with what's going on in texas because you're from texas to write absolutely. we are representing one of texas most famous citizens. and i was just in houston. i love texas by the way. i really hope they don't secede for the battery i was just in users that el paso i was doing. i'll pass i mean, you can just see this show their in you on your last year there, an early march yards just there. you love texas. wanted to stay. they always say it's gonna turn blue, it's out. i'm gonna i'm gonna turn blue this year. i mean, you you've tried a couple of times pretty hard. >> okay. just let me answer that because i messed it as a
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genuine question. i don't really know the answer to this question, but if you good one, if there were like x more latino voters in the state, you them. i don't know what by the percentage point, but you want a majority, you would have won that election the republicans are always saying, well, the democrats just want open borders because they want more voters is that completely wrong >> it's completely wrong. i mean >> people that they're >> talking about, the immigrants are coming in by law, cannot vote. there in asylum application purgatory for six years >> there, but they're kids can their kids can 18 years down the road. i mean, you think the democratic party's able to plan 18 years down down the road >> i don't i don't there's a real serious dynamic to this and really dangerous one. this replacement theory that is traffic by those were talking about democrats bringing immigrants in, right? to take the state or the country over politically. are governor traffics in that are lieutenant
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governor. there was a guy 2019 who came to el paso when he posted before he walked into a walmart? i've come to repel the hispanic invasion of texas, goes into that walmart and slaughters 23 people because he believed what donald trump and greg abbott, all these people were telling them he was afraid that he was going to lose his power and this invasion was really going to take over the state. so i would love to see my party standing up and reminding this country who we are in the first place, we're a country of immigrants and asylum seekers and refugees. and that has made us the leading superpower in the world. and we won't be able to maintain that status without welcoming more people to this country. now, we've got to do it the right way. it's gotta be orderly. just got there say no one little look at what's going on now, really write and say, this is the way an immigration system should work. i don't think we need to work on it at all. that that's no one has that opinion >> basically funding these cartels that used to run drugs. they don't need to run drugs anymore. they run humans $10,000 a pop and you get three tries at the border. they're running small children than leaving them in the desert when
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i get inconvenient. and then some of those children, they're ending up in places for sex trafficking in child labor, in agriculture >> we are >> funding these cartels that are then corrupting the countries from where these people are trying to flee from. we've set up the worst system that we could possibly have for immigration. it is a crisis it's to not actually have a border. >> what why is it so hard just to close the border? i've seen other countries do it. i mean, you know, hungry does it, you may disagree or agree with whether they should saudi arabia candidate? pretty good at doing it. i mean, they don't have the situation we have, but i did see that 60 minutes episode. where they're just walking through this hole in the fence and there is a border guard there just waving. there's 08:00 a.m. i. wrong to say that isn't how we should do it. >> congress. >> congress is the reason we that the president's can solve this problem on their own, that they have some sort of magic executive order won. they don't. and congress has benefited from not solving this
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problem and election after election from both parties. so get to blame the other one. >> everyone gets to run on it right? everyone just start with sometimes do you think there's a conspiracy between both parties not to say yes, when they liked the open wound when a given party has the white house, the house and the senate, they failed to act on this. >> obama did, trump did >> reagan was the last president to preside over anything approaching comprehensive? immigration reform. but to your question, i don't think it's tough and i agree with sarah, the current the status quo is only enriching the cartels in giving them more power. it's miserable for everyone else, including the migrants who are dying at a record number right now, six years ago, only six migrants died and they'll paso border patrol sector last year, 149 those are. women these are kids. they're drowning, they're dying of dehydration. so what's the fix? >> we need >> more legal pathways to come to this country. and sarah's 100% correct, only congress can do that. the president has done about almost everything that he can. this dhs appropriations bill that passed house today, it now, over the course of
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biden's presidency, has doubled border patrol spending, which is five times greater than what it was 20 years ago. he's added sections of wall. he's deported more people than president trump ever did that alone is not going to get it done. you need ways for people to come here and work million jobs and they having to build, to join family, to flee persecution and to do it legally. >> the democrats didn't democrats did call the bluff of the republicans. they did give them a bill that actually does seal up the border much better than it is now. and they would not vote for it because trump wants to record problem. he doesn't want the solution. >> now, your governor on there. this is the big match going on. now, he's saying if the federal government won't do it, i will. this is, texas is senate bill sb forest and bill for state and local police officers are allowed to arrest people suspected of being in the country illegally judges to order the deportation of
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migrants. that's allowed. and of course, the federal government is saying this isn't job for the federal government always has been. and texas is saying, well, but you're not doing it. if you're not doing it shouldn't it devolved to the states? >> so there was that video that you might have seen this week where a bunch of migrants basically blood the national guard that was there an overtake them, pushing past them people were knocked down, et cetera. and when the white house press secretary was asked about that, she said, go ask the governor of texas, which is a really weird thing for the executive branch of the federal government to say when there aren't coming at the supreme court, the texas isn't supposed to have anything to do with it part of the problem here is the asylum system. we have this giant magnet after world war ii. we were very understandably and correctly embarrassed by what we did about jews seeking asylum from germany and europe. and so we have this asylum law where if you get to the united states, we are going to hear your asylum claim. well, unfortunately that means there's just a huge incentive.
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anyway, you can to get across that rio grande river because then we have to hear your asylum claim. that's the other thing that only congress can fix the president cannot fix that. and as long as that's the rule that get here and you can stay as long as you say the max words, i have a credible fear of returning to my country, right? we're not going to fix the border because it's the only it's the only way are your people applying for foreign one should not, but it's because we'd kept quotas from countries. we don't really have a guest worker program to speak of there are people who want to come here to do jobs that nobody born in this country is willing to do. 9 million of them unfilled if we paid them more, they'd be willing to its possible and we could try that, but i've taught okay. to cotton gin owners and texas and they say it doesn't matter what i pay someone, no one born in roscoe cotton gin owner is willing to do cotton still using the cotton gin. >> we're still using were slows and cotton gin were still jenin cotton wow, >> but but the point you got it
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pathway is to push back just on one thing he said about abbott, this guy is an agent of chaos and confusion. the busing, the drowning devices that he put in the rio grande river in voluntarily activating 10,000 members of the guard who have prevented border patrol agents who are trained to enforce the law to apprehend and detain migrants, and to save the lives of those who are drowning in the river. so he can't have it both ways. he can't supplant the federal government takeover their job and then blame joe biden for not doing it now, where i think we may agree is i think the president now has two step up and he has to resolve this chaos and confusion and go in there and make sure that border patrol agents have access to the river, make sure that the governor's not complicating what he's doing follow that supreme court decision where those agents can cut through the wires they can get to the river and he's got to take charge there because if he doesn't, this is really going to hurt him. >> number i hate political landscape. i really sure. makes
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a big difference when all of a sudden chicago and boston and new york suddenly noticed that we have a migrant problem, right? >> no so when >> you ran against ted cruz, you beat him among 18 to 2097, you got 71%. now, this is pretty obvious. ted cruz, come on. what kid is going to want to vote for tech their life? >> it looks like the cool professor who has, we'd and bruise. but now, i mean trump what is with this guy always gaining with the people he's supposed to be losing two now he is up five points among 18 to 29 he's been 65% of gen z-ers say they believe trump would shake up the country for the better. see, this is the problem, is that there's two kinds of voters. voters are no
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things and voters who just go buy a feeling fives. >> but exactly, but >> so i mean, yes, trump. i get it. he appears robust more than, you know, and, you know, you could just characterize them what i've seen, just like the yellow hair and the red, it's like he's like mcdonald's, read kids love a brand. >> they two brand. i get i don't know but why and what how do you explain this trump up among the 18 to 29 that you did so well, i mean, part of it is what you're describing the shock value. it's entertainment. you're drawn to him. he's a master of distraction and attention and all of us to some degree are susceptible to that. maybe young people more than others. however, let me say this the biden administration more than any that i can remember is following the lead of young
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people. you don't get the most ambitious climate program in american history without young people driving that you don't get the first success on gun violence, something that both of us really care about. >> in >> three decades without young people calling attention to that, the forgiveness of billions of dollars in student loans. this is the agenda that young people pushed, that joe biden is following. i think it's incumbent upon him to remind young people of their successes that there's more to do immigrations. a great one haven't heard anyone talk about dreamers, making sure there's a pathway for those who are living here, undocumented, contributing so much to our country. and then just reminding america immigration is a great thing for us. that's going to resonate with young people who want to see us reclaim our values and do something that might be a little bit politically difficult and counter to the conventional wisdom but the president has a chance to do that right now, okay >> going to be so pleading, working with congress, he's president pat themselves on the
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back for all the things they get done in six months into the next guy they'd been done it all mean climate change is a great example. obama had a clean power plan, trump and did the clean power plan. biden has a different pick clean power plan. you can't solve climate change four years at a time. it's not going to work. >> and young people like incredibly frustrated with establishment if it were just that he was entertaining, they would have voted for him in 2016 or 2020. they didn't. it's this time because all of the attacks on trump, the blood bath stuff, they hear that and they see an establishment attacking the guy who's fighting them and they're attracted to that. it's like rebellion, but for, you know, what everyone our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition are strength and energy ensure with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein >> you know, what's brilliant, boring think about it. boring
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now i bring it up >> i >> it's so funny in the last four or five months, i constantly are seeing old friends line who were suddenly svelte in a way they never were you know, i've known them for years and it's always just amazing coincidence and it just made me think of a bit that we've done for years here called i don't know it for a fact. i just know it's true >> bring it out to for example. i don't know it for a fact that people have wound shut up about pickleball now are the same people who ten years ago wouldn't jennifer about crossfit? i just know it's true i don't know for a fact that you can get passengers to pay attention during the safety demonstration. now by telling them the plane was made by boeing i don't know for a fact that katie britt's kids pretend
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they're asleep when mommy comes in to say good night i don't know for a fact that every time travis kelce flux upper and taylor swift, he thinks, oh man, i'm gonna pay for that i don't know for a fact that lindsey graham is a big fan of major league baseball's new see-through pants. i i don't know for a fact that in 2048, when they make the nostalgic sitcom that takes place in 2024, that the character will ride one of those birds, scooters i don't know for a fact when your doctor's steps out of the exam room, it's so he can google your symptoms just like you did
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i just know >> i don't know for a fact that when they announced that your subway is delayed due to a sick passenger by sick, they mean stabbed i don't know. for a >> fact that when the guy at the repair shop shows me a broken part, it didn't even come from my car. i i don't know for a fact that trump's stopped doing this at his rallies because i said it looked like he was jerking off >> but it was bad dad holding you back
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to three-to-one, three-to-one today vegas, the story of sin city tomorrow at ten on cnn >> i ever knew >> all, right >> guys were all sex experts need to stop up inventing fancy new theories to explain the basics of sex. the latest buzzwords are stimulation, communication, and mindfulness what we layman call little higher right there and stop neural thanks politician who gets weepy about how much he loves farmers, has to try farming which has a suicide
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rate, three-and-a-half times higher than everyone else. no one loves farmer's more than willie nelson and he'd rather live on a bus your role the woman in the news lately who's on onlyfans and has the genetic abnormality of having to vigil jaundice. and who also has two boyfriends each of whom has only allowed to be intimate with one of her join us let's tell me how she does it the. >> last time i had to keep track of that many pigs in holes i was building a bed frame for my care hi >> i am so many questions like do you ever shave one and leave the other one, harry, so they
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looked they look like all announced neural. someone must tell me who's using dwayne johnson's new shampoo what are the directions really? i'm slather pretend i don't know whose idea was to greenlight this product, but they should no, but if i'm going to take hygiene tips from a bowl de i'm staying loyal to mr. clean neural trip advisor has to admit their entry, the 15 best things to do in haiti in 2024 was probably written by a but even sean penn decided to vacation in gaza this year seriously, when you click on this link, it should read in haiti, i think you mean to haiti, dumb and finally, new
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rule. >> now that we're all recovered from st. patrick's day, let's make it the last one i never understood irish pride or any pride in any other than what you've actually accomplished. and as holidays go, st. patty's is kind of malarkey you don't, get presence like christmas or candy like easter or joyless appointments, sex like valentine's day you don't even get a peanut special there's just a parade and what rights are we marching for the right to drink in the de >> we still need to very still need to take to the streets and a public expression of support for irish migrants.
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>> i >> think now more than ever, we need to stop talking about the things that make americans different from each other and start honoring the things that make us the same. so let my people, the irish, lead the way because again, the irish thing, i don't give us yet >> but >> i do give a who wins the next election and outdated racial pandering is one reason democrats lose elections. when chuck schumer and nancy pelosi put on kente cloth? i don't think it earned them one vote for their powerful emotional ties to ghana here in california, we're now segregating kidnapping really >> california doesn't just have amber alerts for missing children. we have ebony alerts for black children, and feather alerts for native american kids. what is that we look for them by listening on the ground
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look, even if you like, identity politics, this kind of thing is antiquated from 2010 to 2020 the number of people identifying as multiracial and america went up 276% one in five newlyweds now, or in an interracial marriage. and that number goes up to 100% in ads for subaru you couldn't do a remake of guest who's coming to dinner today because almost 100% of americans approve of interracial marriage all right especially with rich in-law and 95% of white women would leave their husbands and marry idris elba idris elba, who says, as humans, we are obsessed with race. and that obsession can really hinder people's
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aspirations actress raven simone agrees. she told oprah, i'm tired of being labeled i'm not an african american. i'm in american she says i don't. know what country in africa i'm from. my roots are in louisiana and you don't have to agree with that but it's a point of view. a lot of people have, it should be respected morgan freeman says the way to finish off racism is stopped talking about it. i'm going to stop calling you a white man. and i'm going to ask you to stop calling me a black man. there's even a movement now to ban racial questions on the census. and many of its leaders are people of color, like professor sheena mason who says to undo racism, we have to undo our belief and race the liberal group move on.org formed in 1998 to urge republicans to move on from the clinton impeachment. >> today's >> democrats should move on
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from identity politics. it's not working it's not working for them or for us democrats are hemorrhaging the very voters they think they're pandering to. the financial times writes, democrats are going backwards faster with voters of color than any other demographic and suggests the reason is that a less racially divided america is an america where people vote more based on their beliefs than their identity exactly >> far-left liberals are living >> in an old paradigm. americans don't fit into neat little boxes anymore. who has the number one country song right now beyond say no nasdaq when a country music award and he's black and gay and a brand ambassador for the wasp. b is
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person america coach the biggest new star in country is jelly roll, who was a drug dealer than a prisoner, than a wrapper. and then a face headed country music store not to mention a giant middle finger to the idea of staying in your own lane know, in america now, you're allowed to be many things all at once. and that's a good thing even when it's really stupid. >> look >> we're all jelly roll now we're sloppy, complicated and contradictory two-thirds of republican voters support. we'd legalization and 40 >> yeah and 41% of democrats own or live with someone who owns a gun ms marvel is pakistani and the winner of the last two nba dunk contest as
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white the new captain america is black and spider-man is black and puerto rican, just like ai, george washington let's see, nose make up half of the border patrol and the name of the coolest black dude on the planet is lenny kravitz ru paul, has a ranch in wyoming that does fracking and as a fortified compound with a bunker to die for somehow the leader of the village people were straight he just went to
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the ymca to work out the leader of the proud boys, isn't an old white guy. he's enrique tahrir, you, an african, afro-cuban. he burns crosses on his own long caitlin jenner, is a pro-trump trans woman who supports a ban on trans athletes competing in women's sports? and there's even an lgbtq organization called gaze for trump. and why wouldn't there be gaze loved drag queen our black president was half white and are black vice president is half asian and tiger woods is. we don't even have the time
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>> my point is you're still building your politics around slicing and dicing people into these fixed categories democrats need to get the memo that you can't win elections anymore by automatically assuming you're going to get every voter who's not these guys >> the more >> you obsess over identity, the more you ignore the bread and butter issues that win and lose elections. the real issue with class, not race, and the real gap is the diploma divide the real future of the party and maybe democracy depends on democrats figuring that out. okay, thank you, everybody >> florida sunday, march 24, the equities and salt lake city, the april and more gotta study may 18. i want to thank better now all time, i knew
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