It's positively astounding that you could spend 55 minutes talking about the "New Republican Party" without once talking about foreign policy. Afghanistan alone cost over a trillion dollars, how does that not bear mentioning?
Just because you drop a foreign policy deuce in the middle of the living room floor 18 years ago, doesn't mean it matters now that it's turned to a white powdered dust that we can all brush under the rug!!!
I like the conversation specially with regards to the failure of the party to present a new way forward and allowing the rise of a demagogue. I'm pretty left specially in issues of taxation and take major issues with conservative stances on labor. Listening closely I can agree with a lot of the stuff they say but I just don't see the GOP or Trump delivering on any change for the middle class.
@ betting on an administration not living up to their promises is always a good bet. Per Ezra Klein, Obama stimulus from 2009 that went to high speed rails has still not come to fruition 15 years later. And we all know how inept the Biden infrastructure bill has been at building EV charging stations.
Conventional Republican tax cut means the rich, who don't arguably need any help, will get the lion share of the breaks, and the middle class and working class will end up paying for it.
I love that you guys immediately talk about cutting social programs and spending on humans, but never talk about government overspend on military contracts, infrastructure robberies by contractors and the corruption through backdoor deals. Nah, the people should suffer but the piggies can keep getting their slop.
The naked hypocrisy of the right was revealed during the 2008 financial crisis. Deregulation in the name of business, anti-social welfare, but once deregulation backfires and blows up in our collective faces (directly due to Republican ideology), then hands out for government welfare lest the wealthy lose their fortunes. It's all so nauseating.
Right, we want both for the most part. Are you ready for real borders, less federal government, much less support for secondary education outside very select areas and tariffs/drilling.
You’re not familiar with republican talking points. GOP voters are openly against the govt waste you speak of. However, all of Congress is beholden to those institutions.
Social programs for what? Our founding fathers never envisioned our government to be a provisioner of social programs. High taxes and social programs are disaster for any self sustaining society. We need to go back to what the founders intended. Small government and low taxes. That's what unleashed American dynamism and turned the USA into the pre eminent power in the World.
You think the government is supposed to help you into prosperity? The only purpose of government is to maintain the economic development ,and to maintain order.
@@spaniardsrk5108 I think you need to brush up on Civics 101: We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
How do you have this conversation and not acknowledge the deep flaws of the president elect? How do you have this conversation and not bring up Peter Theil? How does this conversation not acknowledge that this coalition will likely be betrayed by the very person who created it.
If you want to have your minority, elite, urban bubble re-enforced - then go seek MSNBC. The some of us who are liberal, educated but find progressive politics disgusting - there is a genuine desire to see the NYT move back to the and ditch the progressives as an unfortunate political fad.
Musk wealth is very connected to government subsidies, grants, contracts. Allowing private sector to build satellites that are needed for defense and as a type of public utility creates a hostage situation.
FDR literally nationalizes Ford for the war effort. The government can literally force any factory that has the means to build whatever it wants, in times of war.
@@Dana-pq7ke musk and his “family” are such a great example 😂😂. He is just as money hungry and narcissistic as his new puppet Trump. Do yourself a favor and read a little more about his history and what he’s like based on lots of experience from people who have worked for him.
Even if Musk doesn't get a single dollar or contract from the government going forward. SpaceX will still be the leader in space launches and Tesla will still be the leader of EV in the West. Musk doesn't need the govt for anything.
For months, economists have debated the American Rescue Plan’s impact on inflation. While many economists agree that the stimulus law did worsen inflation by giving people more money to spend, they continue to disagree about the extent. The debate is, in part, about what else might be to blame in the United States and globally. Inflation started shooting up in early 2021 after the package passed and has remained stubbornly high since. But even without the stimulus, inflation would have increased. The coronavirus led to factory shutdowns around the world, shipping backlogs, and labor shortages, all of which have strained supply chains and pushed prices higher. The disagreement essentially boils down to economists’ views on how pandemic-related factors independent of the stimulus, such as a shift to working from home, have contributed to inflation and how unique inflation has been in the United States compared to other countries.
A savvy political operative (like Trump) would never try long term solutions to a short term problem in the middle of a crisis. Biden did the US a service but gave Democrats a reason to vote against him, and what caused it doesn't matter.
“Inflation” has NOT remained stubbornly high. PRICES have not gone back down, but that’s not the goal-price stability (that is, keeping the rate of increase down, ideally around 2%) is. Inflation for the 12 months ending in October 2024 was 2.6%. That’s actually amazingly good, and the Fed achieved it without triggering a recession. For comparison, my last year of high school, inflation was at 14.6%. To tame it, the Fed had to impose a draconian regime of interest rate hikes, maxing out at 18% in 1982. That, in turn, triggered what was then the worst recession of the Post-WWII period, with unemployment peaking at 10.8%. Given that most of the public lacks historical perspective, I suppose Biden would have been more politically astute to go for a smaller aid package, drag out the recovery in a way similar to the post-2008 period, and avoid inflation. Evidently, when people can’t find work, they blame themselves, and they’re grateful to the government for any aid they receive, whereas when there’s inflation, they just get pissy at the incumbent, and if their wages go up, they figure it’s because they did something to deserve it 🙄.
@@LaoZi2023 Covid did NOT shut down the economy. Alarmist & misguided policies & mandates shut down the economy. The science is & was clear on that early on.
A conversation between policy dorks who know enough to confirm their own biases and pat themselves on the back because they happened to be right once or twice while also being incredibly naive of how dumb and limiting their ideology really is. Its nice to see cool guys in suits that don't respect their own audience as a perfect mirror of Trump's own disinterest in actual middle and working class voters. Posturing is all that matters! I mean, thats what feeds your kids, doesn't it boys?
😂 Why are you so upset & projecting harsh personal judgment on these podcast hosts? Do you know them personally, so you can say they’re “naive & dumb” & “disinterested in the middle class”? They’re simply sharing opinions in their area of expertise. Also, it’s a fact that Trump’s policies benefited the lowest working class voters. He had biggest real wage growth in that segment in modern history. It was primarily due to reducing illegal immigration, which caused upwards pressure on wages in areas like unskilled labor. That enraged the big corporations (eg hotels) that rely on cheap undocumented labor. You may not view Trump as anti-corporate, pro-working class, & you may dislike his rhetoric (as we all do) but his policies certainly worked out that way & Dems’ reversal of those policies during Biden/ Harris pushed those voters to Trump
Governor Reagan slashed spending not just on higher education. Throughout his tenure as governor he consistently and effectively opposed additional funding for basic education. The result was painful increases in local taxes and the deterioration of California’s public schools. Los Angeles voters got so fed up picking up the slack that on five separate occasions they rejected any further increases in local school taxes. The consequent underfunding resulted in overcrowded classrooms, ancient, worn-out textbooks, crumbling buildings, and badly demoralized teachers. Ultimately half the Los Angeles Unified School District’s teachers walked off the job to protest conditions in their schools.5 Mr. Reagan was unmoved. Ronald Reagan left California public education worse than he found it. A system that had been the envy of the nation when he was elected was in decline when he left. Nevertheless,Mr. Reagan’s actions had political appeal, particularly to his core conservative constituency, many of whom had no time for public education. In campaigning for the presidency, Mr. Reagan called for the total elimination of the U.S. Department of Education, severe curtailment of bilingual education, and massive cutbacks in the federal role in education. Upon his election he tried to do that and more. Significantly, President Reagan also took steps to increase state power over education at the expense of local school districts. Federal funds that had flowed directly to local districts were redirected to state government. Moreover, federal monies were provided to beef up education staffing at the state level. The result was to seriously erode the power of local school districts. As in California,Mr. Reagan also made drastic cuts in the federal education budget. Over his eight years in office he diminished it by half. When he was elected the federal share of total education spending was 12 percent. When he left office it stood at just 6 percent. He also advocated amending the Constitution to permit public school prayer, demanded a stronger emphasis on values education, and proposed federal tuition tax credits for parents who opted for private schooling. The latter two initiatives stalled in Congress. There were desultory efforts to promote greater values education, but they eventually misfired because of an obvious lack of consensus on whose values were to be taught. Mr. Reagan was far more successful in giving corporate managers unprecedented influence over the future of public education. Reagan’s avowed purpose was to make America more competitive in the world economy. Corporate executives dabbling in public education had no discernible influence on America’s competitiveness, but the influence of big business did undermine the power of parents and locally elected school board members. It also suggested that it was far more important for schools to turn out good employees than to produce good citizens or decent human beings.- excerpt from: THE CUTTING EDGE The Educational Legacy of Ronald Reagan by Gary K. Clabaugh
@@wesleybaker9724 Then why are the best funded educational programs on earth crushing us in educational outcomes? There's less money per capita going into schools in the US, so why aren't we getting better schools, as we would by your logic?
@@roberth9814 I'm sure they are spending the money wisely to help their children and not a Union. When you show us money well spent here, we will send them MORE. Teacher's Union protects teachers not children, Maybe we need a Students Union
Almost laughed out loud at the optimism about scientific breakthroughs. The previous Trump administration had its hand in exactly one scientific breakthrough, and his base rejected it so thoroughly that we're about to have the world's most prominent antivaxer as head of the part of government that funds basic medical and scientific research
On top of that there's every indication they're going to slash spending on research grants because "the private sector can do that". I'm not sure how committed or how deep those cuts will be, but I AM SURE another country won't be making any R&D cuts whatsoever: China.
Good news: RFK supports doing more science to figure out if past scientific consensus still stands to scrutiny. Don’t you want to see where the evidence takes us?
Salam seems pretty shallow to me. He makes simple and dumb points in a long winded pretentious way. It doesn't seem like he knows what he's talking about.
Nah, he's talking in code. If you read the kind of writers Vance follows (e.g. Yarvin, some "postliberal" Catholics) you can see that what Salam is talking about is a poorly defined neo-aristocracy. The people talking about it can't agree on any of the details yet, but they know the end goal. When he talks about focusing on families over individuals, and "networks of families", he means creating a set of economic laws that makes young adults much more dependent on grandpa as "head of house". This legitimizes the government not caring about couples that can't afford a home, or single mothers that can't make ends meet, because that's the responsibility of your head of house.
There's also a heavy dose of wish-casting on Trump and people he's surrounding himself with. He seems VERY serious about aggressive tariffs, and just as serious with tax cuts for the rich and deeper cuts for corporations. Mike Johnson will swat down some throwaway lines on no tax on overtime/tips and preserve rural/redstate subsidies and that'll be that: wealthy tax cuts partly paid for by middle class tariff tax hikes, while food and construction get more expensive because the gov't is hunting down a large segment of workers that instead should be offered legal status like reagan did in the80s... ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Post-1989, there was always a vast internal contradiction between the Nativist middle class and proletarian wing of the GOP and the Atlanticist Free-market plutocratic wing of the GOP that were no longer tied together by a common anti-communism, that would some day fall apart when a catalyst presented itself. That catalyst was the Global Financial Crisis of 2007 to 2012 and the second Iraq war. Anti-communism was the glue - once it was gone at the 'end of history' - the sharply different interests of these wings of the GOP would blow it apart. I think you could start to see this even in 2003 when a friend and I wondered how long the then current GOP could last.
That would make sense if trump hadn’t won 2 out of 3 elections, or GWB winning two elections, by reuniting the nativist middle class with the free market extremists. Politics has become purely aesthetic after the end of the Second World War in America and the gop has generally been better at representing the aesthetics of Americana. Meanwhile, the Dems stay addicted to peripheral cultural issues that box them into eventually becoming the party they are today, who represents 10% of the country, but gets 38% more of the vote as a rejection or gop aesthetics.
More like this please NYT. It’s been difficult to take you seriously when you banter about like MSNBC - and it’s a good time to find the Center left and ditch the progressive madness.
I must admit, it impresses me to see two educated, putatively reasonable men discussing the future of the so-called "Republican party" in the face of another Presidential term of a senile reality-TV celebrity. Way to go, gentlemen--you talked about a LOT of things without having to studiously ignore the elephant in the room, which is that the MAGA party has no solutions to ANYTHING.
That’s an incredibly stupid remark. To say that any president will accomplish nothing is wanting the worst for our country. If you don’t want to acknowledge Trump as a businessman, then by all means but every President’s goal is to help all citizens
@@shannonswift2233 Every business he ever launched has failed. He's a lousy businessman. You're just snowed by a bunch of lies about the guy. Remember his first term? He accomplished absolutely nothing other than a tax cut, and it's got a lot to do with the fact that he cares about nothing other than himself.
@The First Step Act, Abraham Accords, Appointed three Supreme Court Justices, Operation Warp Speed, Migrant Protection Protocols, Increased NATO contributions, USMCA Trade Agreement, Moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem 40 Wall Street, Mar-a-Lago, Trump International Hotel (NY and Chicago), Bedminster, Aberdeen
@ Yeah, they did. Despite tensions in certain regions, there’s still diplomatic and economic relations between certain nations. You said he didn’t accomplish anything as President and was a lousy businessman; I’m pointing out how that’s demonstrably untrue. I’d be happy to share the same about Biden or Obama because I’m smart enough to know people have administrations that handle majority of the work.
I appreciate the nuance of this conversation. The problem that liberals have is that they are quick to dismiss Trump and the increasing number of minority voters who are moving rightward. Liberals were quick to blame Harris’s loss on racism and sexism- wrong lesson! Trump has been making gains with working class minorities (Blacks, Latino, and Asians) since ‘16 but Liberals were too arrogant to take notice and alter their messaging. If you look at his numbers with non-white voters from ‘16-‘24 it’s impressive. While I don’t like Trump’s rhetoric, he speaks in a way that blue collar folks can understand. Harris & Democrats, in their lofty language centered on Democracy, Abortion were simply not speaking to the economic anxiety working class voters were feeling. When Trump said illegal immigrants were stealing Black & Hispanic jobs- Liberals took offense, mocked & dismissed it. What they failed to realize, in their arrogance, is that Trump is right despite his bellicose rhetoric. Illegal immigration affects those at the bottom of the economic spectrum more. Illegal immigrants do pose a challenge for those who are legal immigrants already established here and/or low skilled US born workers. I believe that’s why Trump was able to make in roads in ‘24 with these voters- because he spoke to their economic issues directly. Further, contrary to Liberal ideology- the majority of immigrants who came here legally are not FOR open borders nor do they support illegal immigration- it cuts to a deep sense of fairness. This is one reason why Trump won and expanded his coalition. Whether it will last remains to be seen.
I’m Latina & a dem, in a community in NYC that had moved +20% to the right since Obama. You’re right in the points you made, but you’re also missing just how outright awful Dems have treated Latinos. Firstly, Obama was called deporter-in-chief & deported the most people of anyone (over 3 million). He was unspeakably cruel because there’d been an open border yet rather than secure it or give prior notice, Obama had federal agents separate us. He supported the separation policies & actually built the “cages” for the “kids in cages” that AOC blamed Trump for & pretended to cry over. Trump, for all his faults, achieved record low illegal immigration through border security & deterrence messaging. He said “don’t come” & people listened. Setting aside his inflammatory rhetoric, he actually treated Latin Americans as humans in a way that Obama never did. Secondly, Latinos don’t share Dems’ hyper progressive values or buy into Dems’ view of the US as a “no good, very bad place.” We also don’t see authoritarianism as a rightwing problem only, because many of us have lived through the nightmare of leftwing authoritarianism. Lastly, we are voting less for Dems because they’ve made clear we’re not welcome in the party. The disdain that working class in general feels from the Dems is felt even more strongly by Latinos. We don’t fit into Dems’ black/white view of the world. We’re actually inconvenient to because our existence disproves the Dem narrative that “US society systemically oppresses brown folks & therefore affirmative action is necessary to achieve equity.” Latinos actually enter the country quite poor, on average, but greatly improve our socioeconomic & education level within 1-2 generations. So then, Dems try to “other” us by calling us terms like Latinx” which is not a Spanish word & which we have repeatedly rejected. They have considerable disdain for us, and would like to replace us legal Latino immigrants with illegals & especially with blacks, eg, from Haiti, in hopes of getting a permanent underclass to provide service industry labor & a more reliable Dem voter base. Just listen to the vitriol the NYT podcast yesterday discussed us- one of the focus group members (who was black) accused Latinos of “thinking [we’re] white.” NYT would never post audio of a Latino or Asian making that statement about the black demographic, yet editors don’t even bother to remove it when it’s directed against us
When I was a kid, the left championed Julio Cesar Chavez, pro worker, pro union, anti immigration.he spokelow skilled immigration depreciating wages. They literally wormholed him like he never existed. He's never spoken about anymore
@ I agree with you that the child separation policies were started by Obama- but the Trump admin made the situation way worse. In terms of treating Latinos bad, I get your perspective. Trump achieve lower migrants because of Title 42 and the pandemic. Immigration rose under him too- if you look at the numbers- but when COVID strict he used that as a pretext to shut down the border. As a black American, I think that the US has its flaws & hasn’t lived up to its ideals- but I don’t share the Liberal view that America is a very bad place. I wouldn’t say that the Democratic Party doesn’t welcome Latinos but their approach is way off- by not trying to offend they end up offending (LatinX- wtf?) On average, most immigrants come into the country poor and improve their lot economically within a few generations- my family’s story is the same. Dems messed up by not speaking the truth on the border & speaking to people’s economic anxiety. Most immigrants I know that came here legally, don’t support open borders or illegal immigration- contrary to liberal orthodoxy. What I’ll say on immigration, is that Congress is the one responsible for this mess- which is partly aided and abetted by BIG business that don’t want to pay fair wages to the Americans and legal immigrants. I think the focus should be on Big Businesses & Businesses as a whole who prefer to use illegal immigrants to fill their jobs so that they can save money. Big Business, which supports both parties, are to blame for the pull factor of immigration.
@@scarletsletter4466I agree with most of what you said. When I was a kid, I lived in an apartment complex that was surrounded by affluent areas, so I went to really good schools. That's where my disdain for liberals started. This was the 90s, but preached diversity, and how it makes us stronger, not quite as heavy as it is today, but a more primitive form. Then I noticed these affluent parents, never once invited me to birthday parties, nor my Latino friends. It wasn't raced based, they would invite the minority kids of affluent parents. I hated some of these kids. They'd pick fights, then would say if you touch me,y sad will sue you for everything you have, and you'll be on the streets. Most of the boys got along fine, but the girls were ridiculously entitled. Something didn't go their way, and they would throw a tantrum. As far as that podcast , it's something I predicted. We Latinos come from corrupt countries , where the police can be bribed, so we feel policing here for the most part works. We don't have that same tension with the police. So if crime surges, we will go to the right. With that said, all those shots taken in that podcast, those same people would have a meltdown if we shared our grievances with that group . They could've shared their disappointment respectfully, instead they threw shots. This tension will grow, and push Latinos further right.
When will Americans understand "We, the People" are in a class war, it's a club, and unless you make over one billion dollars a year? You're not in their club, and a dystopian future is what you should expect. Characteristics of a dystopian society: Control: The use of propaganda and police state tactics to control the people Censorship: The heavy censoring of information or denial of free thought Conformity: The heavy enforcement of conformity and loss of individuality Fear: Citizens live in fear or distress Dehumanization: Citizens live in a dehumanized state Distrust: The natural world is banished and distrusted Surveillance: Citizens are perceived to be under constant surveillance.
@swcordovaf at least we don't appoint candidates for the attorney general's office that have raped children. Nor do we appoint candidates for the department of defense who have pending rape charges. Again, the Republican party like the Roman Catholic Church has no moral core.
Did the “bitter ender, Never Trumpers” as Reihan calls them, have to leave the coalition as it became more populist in general or that Trump uniquely drove them away by his toxic personality. He implies that “normie “ center-right people will furrow their brows about Trump but ultimately see the value in his presidency.
"Let's gut the government and terraform Nevada," is the most idiotic take you could have. You will never get such grand programs without large government. Ever. Please point to a transformative government in world history that wasn't broad and expansive? The Romans? The Egyptians? Multiple Chinese dynasties? All the cultures with such grand ambitions and transformative legacies were run by massive bureaucracies. Sorry.
Don't you think there is a conflict of interest with Musk's business and being head of a government office? Or will he try to do this gutting from outside the government, which Is still a conflict of interest, a rent seeking position.
the arrogance and smugness of these guys. the concentrating on winning at all costs no matter what it does to our democracy or the people which they openly manipulated. Well congrats. You have helped engineer the most perverse media propaganda machine since the 30s and have engineered the spectacle of the poor and uneducated cheer for their own upcoming demise. And we all get to share in their suffering aside from a few megalomaniacal billionaires. something to really be proud of.
You are incredibly disconnected from reality if you believe that any institutions in America are focused on winning at all costs, no matter their political affiliation or interest. The media was saturated with negative trump content and he won, so is the issue the propaganda, or the voters who rejected it? You’re literally some nobody in a comments section, so I highly doubt you have future forecasting abilities worth anything. So maybe pause the intellectually bankrupt and unfounded arrogance, and wait and see how things go.
Corporate greed is what needs to be looked at from a legalistic standpoint. Universal health care is very libertarian. Theses would help the middle class workers.
Everyone who screams of corporate greed, love corporation and their products...that's why you are so offended. The rest of us just don't buy/pay for it. You have a choice what to spend money on!
@@direwolf6234 I thought that, too, until on a podcast a libertarian said that it should be a universal right so people then have the freedom to do what they want with their life. It takes away an encumbrance.
@ except when the corporation is selling something that is so needed to survive or stay viable in society/business, the decision to not buy it becomes impossible.
I can't believe how negative the comments are! Very few even addressing the actual political history laid out in the conversation. I thought this did a great job contextualizing the Trump Era
I saw Reihan and I had to click. I remember he used to be a regular guest on Bill Maher's show. Haven't seen him in a while. Good conversation. I think their takes on the Trump presidency was largely correct. Their description of "chaos" is Trump is a nutshell.
It’s such orthodoxy among Democrats that it merits questioning. It’s important to understand that every policy has tradeoffs, and important that Democrats understand it or they’ll keep losing.
Interestingly, toward the end they talk about this era of American politics being a golden age for workers, the great compression, etc, but then say we should stop that, because the work is done??
Thanks, guys. You're going to erode away women's rights...nice job. Some of your thoughts sound good, but I have reservations about your draconian religious views.
Regardless of religion, I do not think we should live in a society where we utilize abortion as a last ditch birth control, throwing away fetuses like spoiled leftovers. It is cruel.
🤪 it can’t be more “normalized” when it’s a POTUS who’s already been POTUS before. In surveys, the majority of voters said they were better off during Trump’s term, & that’s why he won the election. No offense but you’re clearly not American based on your spelling & the fact that you’re unaware Trump is returning because voters preferred his policies
It's already normalized by 76 million votes. You don't have to like the man or his government, but acting like it's still a fringe illegitimate movement is itself a disservice to democracy.
What do housing costs tell us about how the stimulus affected inflation? Some economists say that recent research and new data have reaffirmed their belief that the stimulus package did not significantly fuel inflation. Increased housing costs have been a big driver of inflation - shelter is the largest component of the Consumer Price Index and makes up about 30 percent of overall inflation as measured by the index. Dean Baker, a senior economist and co-founder of the liberal-leaning Center for Economic and Policy Research, argued that new research on housing inflation helped support the idea that price gains were mostly driven by a mass shift to remote work and not the stimulus package. As people shifted to remote work, housing prices went up, and those prices in turn pushed overall inflation higher.
An analysis published by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco on September 26 examined the rapid rise in housing prices and whether remote work, or other factors like fiscal stimulus, led to the increase. The authors - Augustus Kmetz, John Mondragon, and Johannes Wieland - wrote that as more people started working remotely, they sought out additional space at home. That resulted in a spike in housing demand and helped lead to a surge in prices. The researchers estimated that remote work resulted in house prices rising by about 15 percent from November 2019 to November 2021, which accounts for more than 60 percent of the overall increase in house prices. “It means we can’t blame the stimulus. Clearly that added to it,” Baker said. “But the main story there is this big switch to working from home.”
you cant trust any studies that relate to anything political. outcomes can be cooked, whether it be intentionally skewing statistics or whatever the case may be. At the end of the day, we live in an extremely polarized society with democrats/coastal elites being in control of many of these scientific institutions scientists are people with biases too, and have all been through the university system which leans very left, and they are very obviously not checking their biases at the door.
OK, I made it to about 19 minutes here without hearing about current events at all. I'm all for history, and I got some of that, wedged into what appeared mostly to be a personal remembrance session.
You guys remind me of the Woody Allen joke where he sing a psychiatrist for all of his life and he finally had his long socks for orgasm only to have his psychiatrist tell them that it was the wrong kind..
@ for sure. Their giddiness as they insert themselves and their books and their opinions into actual legislation. I listen to opinion to gain perspective of a voting constituency, not to see the opinion writers smugness on display. Same for news, I care about the American people and not what these two think as they review “ political chess”. Strategies.I’ll have to screen my headlines and podcasters better before opening and listening next time. Listen for folks that put the American people front and center in their work product.Lesson learned.
I get what you mean by caring more for the opinions of the electorate, but policy makers one hundred percent push political campaigns and change public perceptions over time. The two are connected in the big picture.
@evangelosvasiliades1204 That's sad to me. This conversation reflecting their personal musings and beliefs influencing legislators, parties, and campaigns. It's all fun and games, and such a disappointment to me. Just one Americsn, wanting these talking heads to care about actual AmerIcans, and not the "big picture" aka political posturing. The fact that the parties let this stuff stand in for regular Americans...sigh.
At around 7:20, Ross makes a now common error, even among people who should know better (pundits, journalists, even professors, etc.). He followed a time word with “where” (which is used to introduce a place reference) instead of “when” (which is used to introduce a time reference.) He said, “ …it was coming at this moment WHERE …”. The error is that “moment” is a time word, so it should be followed by WHEN, not WHERE. He should have said “…it was coming at this moment WHEN…” For example, “I remember the moment WHEN I met my future wife.” Not “I remember the moment WHERE I met my future wife.” Similarly, WHERE should be followed by a place reference. For example, “I remember the beach WHERE I learned to surf.” Not “I remember the beach WHEN I learned to surf.” (Actually, misusing WHEN this way almost never happens; but misusing WHERE following a time word (era, period, time, moment, year, etc.) happens quite often.) It’s a misusage that is becoming more and more frequent, partly, I believe, because its misuse goes unnoticed and has become accepted without thought of the important distinction between a time reference and a place reference. Does it mark the end of civilization? Hardly. It’s just carelessness, the kind of habit that spreads because it doesn’t require thought, the same way that so many people now misuse THERE’S with plural nouns. For example, “THERE’S many reasons why people voted for Trump.” Instead of “THERE ARE many reasons why people voted for Trump.” People no longer make that distinction. Of course, in language, usage that requires thought, that is more difficult, that requires making distinctions, disappears to be replaced by simpler language. It’s a race to the bottom. Compare the diction used by the educated people in the 19th century and earlier to that of contemporary educated people and you’ll see what I mean. It’s the devolution of English, facilitated by our media, which over time makes the incorrect the correct.
I'm definitely a deplorable piece of MAGA garbage, so maybe you're right. Not too proud to admit that. I bailed on this conversation. Too Ivory Tower for my tastes. But I appreciate that there's an audience for this level & style of discourse. On the other hand, I'm not surprised that the MAGA-style discourse that expanded the Trump electorate again & increased his popular vote--again--to near 77 million did NOT sound anything like this political discussion.
The ownership society has also to take into account the historical injustices that have been done robbing certain groups of people of their rights: women, blacks, indigenous people, etc. Our Constitution defends life, liberty and property as human and natural rights. I am a Catholic priest and I am concerned about cruelty and lies...and anger. I just read about how one of the head honchos of UFC who had participated in Trump´s campaign said that he never wanted to experience such ugliness again. (While continuing to believe in Trump "the badass"). Then I got curious about what UFC is, and you see it comes down to throwing people to the ground and beating them into a pulp. Badass indeed. Than I listened to another one of my savants who told me how our internet algorithms foster anger and division in order to keep us pegged to our screens, and I am reflecting how I have such anger in me. My diabetic conditions also lends itself to anger and I consider now how my algorithm has affected me. We have become an angry country. Will we become a dark and cruel and violent country? These two gentleman are engaging in moral self-justification before the monster that we have created. It is not edifying.
I was 80 percent through this video when I realized the two of you are completely divorced from the day to day havoc poorly run govt causes in people’s lives. And Trump is the definition of poorly run govt.
Y'all seem semi reasonable and ignoring a few points would almost be like practical voices in a Bernie Sanders administration. There seems to be a lot of wishful thinking and ignoring who Trump actually is and that his most loyal voters really only care about owning the libs.
If you drop the suits, be loose, don't be too judgey be willing to engage with the other and listen and Crack jokes you can improve your podcast. This is what women complain about dudes be squares on a date.
When you start with 'pro-life politics ' you have lost me from the start! Y'all can shove that idea; this has created unimaginable danger for women across the country. You need to get off this train.
By all means don't pat yourself on the back too much your ideas patently and greatly failed. It's easy to look back and say oh if you would have done it my way it would have been better.
What does a civilized economy look like? Unlimited wealth for the American People for Sports and Entertainment and the stars they root for. The checks and balances of this system are found in the amount of exposure the STAR receives. Without viewers, the star becomes relative to the fan base and his/her opinion of what's fair. This market is addressed by electronic mediums ie, credit cards, or cryptocurrencies. A cash incentive is for the people who work in the infrastructure. All a civilized society needs is a tax structure to support an infrastructure and an infrastructure to support a tax structure. Cash has no enemies as the saying goes, and it provides everyday Americans a quality of life that should keep them happy. Finally, gift certificates, from a merchant who will pay a busker to perform at his/her establishment. This way everybody has a resource and a chance to improve their life. The World Bank can make this happen, all it has to do is ensure the medium has integrity and is supported by the people.
Everyone becomes old and wants social security and Medicare. Not everyone have children and cares about religious family legislation that should be legislated at the church door. Let the churches help with family perks. This cutting of Medicare to put money in child care tax cuts is debatable. Republicans talk cuts and then go and increase the defense budget.
Nice the Trump movement finally has a more moderate and formal name to it. I am an ambitious young man and like a Roman leader like Julius Caesar I can foresee my own destiny I am filled with foreboding. I seem to see Eastern Europe rising after 35 years of discontent made glorious by the winds of change blowing through Europe.
@@c.a.savage5689 Sure. I am a 34 year old Swede living in Finland. I have only recently finally put some pretty f-ed up trauma behind me and just yesterday I came back from a work trip from Prague so I am not really in a position where I can go into too much details. Suffice to say, I am a party member of the National Coalition of Finland, same party as Foreign Minister Valtonen, Prime Minister Orpo and President Stubb. I have been working basically on my own but still assisted behind the scene by two mates from school on the Ukraine peace negotiations pro bono for the EU. I have worked hard on this since the Paris Olympics. I see the past 4 months as a great sort of "internship" for future role in politics/business or whatever I decide to do in the future. I have a degree in finance and currently I am content to work as private secretary for Alexander Julius Dahlmeier. He is a German banker who works for/owns the Aktia bank in Finland. I believe he is some how related to the Wallenberg family. I know Raoul Wallenberg disappeared mysteriously in Budapest and some say he died in a KGB prison cell in Russia. I know there has been many rumours about Princess Anastasia managing to escape in 1917. There was even a movie about her starring Ingrid Bergman. Throughout these four months I have used the nom de guerre of FSB agent Heydrich and my cousin Markus Sumiloff has used Prince Romanov. We both had a mental breakdown around spring 2020 due to stress related to the Covid-19 pandemic. I spent time at a mental institution in Töölö for 6 weeks around spring/summer 2020. At the time I was a party member of the Finnish Liberal Monarchist Party (RKP) or Swedish People's Party of Finland as they are known but I believe they are considering a rebranding. I will be start making appointments for meetings of party leaders soon as I want to help the Finnish parties with local elections in April. These elections are very important not just for Finland but also Europe and even the world considering the times we are living in.
@@c.a.savage5689 Europe is tired about being disrespected by the United States. The war in Ukraine is the United States fault. The US doesn't understand European culture, geopolitics or history. Nor do they want to. They are extremely hawkish and arrogant in their approach towards especially Eastern Europe. I am not happy with the treatment of my beloved sister Anastasia and my dear friend Reinhard. I would call Elina Valtonen and ask what I am referring to.
It's positively astounding that you could spend 55 minutes talking about the "New Republican Party" without once talking about foreign policy. Afghanistan alone cost over a trillion dollars, how does that not bear mentioning?
But ..to your point..thats not a foreign policy issue
This is true. But not sure what that has to do with the GOP here in 2024. It’s almost like you don’t remember the 8 years of Obama.
Republicans accused Obama of being a weak dove in Afghanistan. They criticized him for not doing a massive surge like republicans in Iraq.
Just because you drop a foreign policy deuce in the middle of the living room floor 18 years ago, doesn't mean it matters now that it's turned to a white powdered dust that we can all brush under the rug!!!
That's in the rearview mirror.
What the NYT actually having conservatives discussing their politics in a long form honest fashion? Curious how people will react to it.
Tough audience for sure. Comment section is brutal. But ignore the noise. The conversation is good
I like the conversation specially with regards to the failure of the party to present a new way forward and allowing the rise of a demagogue. I'm pretty left specially in issues of taxation and take major issues with conservative stances on labor.
Listening closely I can agree with a lot of the stuff they say but I just don't see the GOP or Trump delivering on any change for the middle class.
@ betting on an administration not living up to their promises is always a good bet. Per Ezra Klein, Obama stimulus from 2009 that went to high speed rails has still not come to fruition 15 years later. And we all know how inept the Biden infrastructure bill has been at building EV charging stations.
Read Ross Douthat's 2016 opinion piece: Clinton's Samantha Bee Problem. That will explain why
@@pg-mr7ucI have nothing wrong with conservatives on the nyt. If you actually read the criticism, it’s to what they are missing. It’s valid criticism
Conventional Republican tax cut means the rich, who don't arguably need any help, will get the lion share of the breaks, and the middle class and working class will end up paying for it.
the top 10% (the top1 + next 9) control 80% of the wealth ... in the south the top 10% owned 80% of the slaves ..
Again, it leads to short term gain for all voters, while the government takes on long term debt.
Any tax cut to be effective will benefit the rich...because the rich overwhelmingly pay the bulk of income taxes.
I love that you guys immediately talk about cutting social programs and spending on humans, but never talk about government overspend on military contracts, infrastructure robberies by contractors and the corruption through backdoor deals. Nah, the people should suffer but the piggies can keep getting their slop.
The naked hypocrisy of the right was revealed during the 2008 financial crisis. Deregulation in the name of business, anti-social welfare, but once deregulation backfires and blows up in our collective faces (directly due to Republican ideology), then hands out for government welfare lest the wealthy lose their fortunes.
It's all so nauseating.
Right, we want both for the most part.
Are you ready for real borders, less federal government, much less support for secondary education outside very select areas and tariffs/drilling.
You can cut the entire military budget and we would still be in deficit, paying largely the welfare state and the interest on borrowing to sustain it.
You’re not familiar with republican talking points. GOP voters are openly against the govt waste you speak of. However, all of Congress is beholden to those institutions.
Social programs for what? Our founding fathers never envisioned our government to be a provisioner of social programs. High taxes and social programs are disaster for any self sustaining society.
We need to go back to what the founders intended. Small government and low taxes. That's what unleashed American dynamism and turned the USA into the pre eminent power in the World.
Heil Trump. Cancelled NYT months ago.
He doesn’t “represent” the working class he just received their ignorant vote.
I thought that was Rich Evans from the thumbnail
Socialism for the rich and capitalism for the working class. The new republicans are the same as the old.
the way Ross was heartbroken at the end when he realized Reihan was endorsing bigger government involvement lol
They won't do a thing for the working class
yes .. so what's the matter with kansas ??
Working Class = Cannon Fodder
You think the government is supposed to help you into prosperity? The only purpose of government is to maintain the economic development ,and to maintain order.
@@spaniardsrk5108 "economic development ,and to maintain order."
Whose economic development and whose idea of order?
@@spaniardsrk5108 I think you need to brush up on Civics 101: We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
The mutual arrogance in this conversation is palpable.
I didnt detect any of that.
With due respect, if any is actually due, these guys are simply a mutual admiration conclave.
How do you have this conversation and not acknowledge the deep flaws of the president elect? How do you have this conversation and not bring up Peter Theil? How does this conversation not acknowledge that this coalition will likely be betrayed by the very person who created it.
Bingo
If you want to have your minority, elite, urban bubble re-enforced - then go seek MSNBC.
The some of us who are liberal, educated but find progressive politics disgusting - there is a genuine desire to see the NYT move back to the and ditch the progressives as an unfortunate political fad.
They don't share the same delusions about the president elect with you
@ so, you have no clue who Peter Thiel is. It’s ok to admit that
@@bionic_woman77 I know who peter thiel is. You're a bitter, pretentious liberal. It's ok to admit that.
Musk wealth is very connected to government subsidies, grants, contracts. Allowing private sector to build satellites that are needed for defense and as a type of public utility creates a hostage situation.
FDR literally nationalizes Ford for the war effort. The government can literally force any factory that has the means to build whatever it wants, in times of war.
We want our kids to dream about space and science and not wars.
@@Dana-pq7ke musk and his “family” are such a great example 😂😂. He is just as money hungry and narcissistic as his new puppet Trump. Do yourself a favor and read a little more about his history and what he’s like based on lots of experience from people who have worked for him.
Then Space X is just miniscule part of it, Lockheed martin, boeing, blackrock are giant part of private being rich from gov. defence contract
Even if Musk doesn't get a single dollar or contract from the government going forward. SpaceX will still be the leader in space launches and Tesla will still be the leader of EV in the West.
Musk doesn't need the govt for anything.
For months, economists have debated the American Rescue Plan’s impact on inflation. While many economists agree that the stimulus law did worsen inflation by giving people more money to spend, they continue to disagree about the extent. The debate is, in part, about what else might be to blame in the United States and globally. Inflation started shooting up in early 2021 after the package passed and has remained stubbornly high since. But even without the stimulus, inflation would have increased. The coronavirus led to factory shutdowns around the world, shipping backlogs, and labor shortages, all of which have strained supply chains and pushed prices higher.
The disagreement essentially boils down to economists’ views on how pandemic-related factors independent of the stimulus, such as a shift to working from home, have contributed to inflation and how unique inflation has been in the United States compared to other countries.
A savvy political operative (like Trump) would never try long term solutions to a short term problem in the middle of a crisis. Biden did the US a service but gave Democrats a reason to vote against him, and what caused it doesn't matter.
“Inflation” has NOT remained stubbornly high. PRICES have not gone back down, but that’s not the goal-price stability (that is, keeping the rate of increase down, ideally around 2%) is. Inflation for the 12 months ending in October 2024 was 2.6%. That’s actually amazingly good, and the Fed achieved it without triggering a recession. For comparison, my last year of high school, inflation was at 14.6%. To tame it, the Fed had to impose a draconian regime of interest rate hikes, maxing out at 18% in 1982. That, in turn, triggered what was then the worst recession of the Post-WWII period, with unemployment peaking at 10.8%. Given that most of the public lacks historical perspective, I suppose Biden would have been more politically astute to go for a smaller aid package, drag out the recovery in a way similar to the post-2008 period, and avoid inflation. Evidently, when people can’t find work, they blame themselves, and they’re grateful to the government for any aid they receive, whereas when there’s inflation, they just get pissy at the incumbent, and if their wages go up, they figure it’s because they did something to deserve it 🙄.
@@LaoZi2023 Covid did NOT shut down the economy. Alarmist & misguided policies & mandates shut down the economy. The science is & was clear on that early on.
A conversation between policy dorks who know enough to confirm their own biases and pat themselves on the back because they happened to be right once or twice while also being incredibly naive of how dumb and limiting their ideology really is. Its nice to see cool guys in suits that don't respect their own audience as a perfect mirror of Trump's own disinterest in actual middle and working class voters. Posturing is all that matters! I mean, thats what feeds your kids, doesn't it boys?
😂 Why are you so upset & projecting harsh personal judgment on these podcast hosts? Do you know them personally, so you can say they’re “naive & dumb” & “disinterested in the middle class”? They’re simply sharing opinions in their area of expertise.
Also, it’s a fact that Trump’s policies benefited the lowest working class voters. He had biggest real wage growth in that segment in modern history. It was primarily due to reducing illegal immigration, which caused upwards pressure on wages in areas like unskilled labor. That enraged the big corporations (eg hotels) that rely on cheap undocumented labor. You may not view Trump as anti-corporate, pro-working class, & you may dislike his rhetoric (as we all do) but his policies certainly worked out that way & Dems’ reversal of those policies during Biden/ Harris pushed those voters to Trump
Oh, look...a condescending leftist...how boring.
Considering the election that just happened, it appears actual middle and working class voters seem to know something you do not.
pointing to thatcher as a hero is laughable given the state of the british economy and especially her role in brexit
Thatcher worked to integrate UK with EEC
Trump recognized that most people in our country sit in the center and are working and middle class
Governor Reagan slashed spending not just on higher education.
Throughout his tenure as governor he consistently and effectively
opposed additional funding for basic education. The result was painful
increases in local taxes and the deterioration of California’s public
schools. Los Angeles voters got so fed up picking up the slack that on
five separate occasions they rejected any further increases in local
school taxes. The consequent underfunding resulted in overcrowded
classrooms, ancient, worn-out textbooks, crumbling buildings, and badly
demoralized teachers. Ultimately half the Los Angeles Unified School
District’s teachers walked off the job to protest conditions in their
schools.5 Mr. Reagan was unmoved.
Ronald Reagan left California public education worse than he found
it. A system that had been the envy of the nation when he was elected
was in decline when he left. Nevertheless,Mr. Reagan’s actions had political appeal, particularly to his core conservative constituency, many of
whom had no time for public education.
In campaigning for the presidency, Mr. Reagan called for the total
elimination of the U.S. Department of Education, severe curtailment of
bilingual education, and massive cutbacks in the federal role in education. Upon his election he tried to do that and more.
Significantly, President Reagan also took steps to increase state
power over education at the expense of local school districts. Federal
funds that had flowed directly to local districts were redirected to state
government. Moreover, federal monies were provided to beef up education staffing at the state level. The result was to seriously erode the
power of local school districts.
As in California,Mr. Reagan also made drastic cuts in the federal education budget. Over his eight years in office he diminished it by half.
When he was elected the federal share of total education spending was
12 percent. When he left office it stood at just 6 percent.
He also advocated amending the Constitution to permit public
school prayer, demanded a stronger emphasis on values education, and
proposed federal tuition tax credits for parents who opted for private
schooling. The latter two initiatives stalled in Congress. There were
desultory efforts to promote greater values education, but they eventually misfired because of an obvious lack of consensus on whose values
were to be taught.
Mr. Reagan was far more successful in giving corporate managers
unprecedented influence over the future of public education. Reagan’s
avowed purpose was to make America more competitive in the world
economy. Corporate executives dabbling in public education had no discernible influence on America’s competitiveness, but the influence of
big business did undermine the power of parents and locally elected
school board members. It also suggested that it was far more important
for schools to turn out good employees than to produce good citizens
or decent human beings.- excerpt from:
THE CUTTING EDGE
The Educational Legacy
of Ronald Reagan
by Gary K. Clabaugh
I you think that a lack of money is the problem, you really need to look closer.
More money just means more corruption and leakage
@ , not with the right regulations. Of course there will always be corruption, that’s why we put regulations in place
@@wesleybaker9724 Then why are the best funded educational programs on earth crushing us in educational outcomes? There's less money per capita going into schools in the US, so why aren't we getting better schools, as we would by your logic?
@@roberth9814 I'm sure they are spending the money wisely to help their children and not a Union. When you show us money well spent here, we will send them MORE.
Teacher's Union protects teachers not children, Maybe we need a Students Union
Anyone else think Ross doesn't look like his voice?
Yeah, he looks like Lawrence Tierney's least popular offspring.
These types are part of the problem.
Almost laughed out loud at the optimism about scientific breakthroughs. The previous Trump administration had its hand in exactly one scientific breakthrough, and his base rejected it so thoroughly that we're about to have the world's most prominent antivaxer as head of the part of government that funds basic medical and scientific research
On top of that there's every indication they're going to slash spending on research grants because "the private sector can do that". I'm not sure how committed or how deep those cuts will be, but I AM SURE another country won't be making any R&D cuts whatsoever: China.
Good news: RFK supports doing more science to figure out if past scientific consensus still stands to scrutiny. Don’t you want to see where the evidence takes us?
Never thought I’d see a NYT podcast start with the sign of the cross
Salam seems pretty shallow to me. He makes simple and dumb points in a long winded pretentious way. It doesn't seem like he knows what he's talking about.
Indeed, ..both of them are dumb…Nothing historically accurate or based in reality..laughable
Nah, he's talking in code. If you read the kind of writers Vance follows (e.g. Yarvin, some "postliberal" Catholics) you can see that what Salam is talking about is a poorly defined neo-aristocracy. The people talking about it can't agree on any of the details yet, but they know the end goal. When he talks about focusing on families over individuals, and "networks of families", he means creating a set of economic laws that makes young adults much more dependent on grandpa as "head of house". This legitimizes the government not caring about couples that can't afford a home, or single mothers that can't make ends meet, because that's the responsibility of your head of house.
There's also a heavy dose of wish-casting on Trump and people he's surrounding himself with. He seems VERY serious about aggressive tariffs, and just as serious with tax cuts for the rich and deeper cuts for corporations.
Mike Johnson will swat down some throwaway lines on no tax on overtime/tips and preserve rural/redstate subsidies and that'll be that: wealthy tax cuts partly paid for by middle class tariff tax hikes, while food and construction get more expensive because the gov't is hunting down a large segment of workers that instead should be offered legal status like reagan did in the80s... ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Post-1989, there was always a vast internal contradiction between the Nativist middle class and proletarian wing of the GOP and the Atlanticist Free-market plutocratic wing of the GOP that were no longer tied together by a common anti-communism, that would some day fall apart when a catalyst presented itself. That catalyst was the Global Financial Crisis of 2007 to 2012 and the second Iraq war. Anti-communism was the glue - once it was gone at the 'end of history' - the sharply different interests of these wings of the GOP would blow it apart. I think you could start to see this even in 2003 when a friend and I wondered how long the then current GOP could last.
That would make sense if trump hadn’t won 2 out of 3 elections, or GWB winning two elections, by reuniting the nativist middle class with the free market extremists. Politics has become purely aesthetic after the end of the Second World War in America and the gop has generally been better at representing the aesthetics of Americana. Meanwhile, the Dems stay addicted to peripheral cultural issues that box them into eventually becoming the party they are today, who represents 10% of the country, but gets 38% more of the vote as a rejection or gop aesthetics.
As a lifelong democrat and first time red ticket voter - from an urban, MN city - thank you. Good talk.
You suck
More like this please NYT.
It’s been difficult to take you seriously when you banter about like MSNBC - and it’s a good time to find the Center left and ditch the progressive madness.
There is no Republican party anymore.
Exactly. I'm new to MAGA and I'm a Democrat. I would never vote with Liz Cheney.
@Dana-pq7ke Buyers' remorse dead ahead.
Correct. I am a former dem who voted for Trump. The Republicans turned out to be the party of the ascension. How ironic is that?
@@stephensuddick1896COPE
It's the same republican party, just more crude and vile.
Good conversation.
Really?
There is very little in this conversation that is credible, historically accurate, or based in reality….and Harvard guy said “legitimates” well done
The coping and seething in this comment section in hilarious
I must admit, it impresses me to see two educated, putatively reasonable men discussing the future of the so-called "Republican party" in the face of another Presidential term of a senile reality-TV celebrity. Way to go, gentlemen--you talked about a LOT of things without having to studiously ignore the elephant in the room, which is that the MAGA party has no solutions to ANYTHING.
That’s an incredibly stupid remark. To say that any president will accomplish nothing is wanting the worst for our country. If you don’t want to acknowledge Trump as a businessman, then by all means but every President’s goal is to help all citizens
@@shannonswift2233 Every business he ever launched has failed. He's a lousy businessman. You're just snowed by a bunch of lies about the guy.
Remember his first term? He accomplished absolutely nothing other than a tax cut, and it's got a lot to do with the fact that he cares about nothing other than himself.
@The First Step Act, Abraham Accords, Appointed three Supreme Court Justices, Operation Warp Speed, Migrant Protection Protocols, Increased NATO contributions, USMCA Trade Agreement, Moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem
40 Wall Street, Mar-a-Lago, Trump International Hotel (NY and Chicago), Bedminster, Aberdeen
@@shannonswift2233 Oh, you're some kind of mindless 'bot.
Yeah, those Abraham Accords sure did help peace in the mid-east, huh?
@ Yeah, they did. Despite tensions in certain regions, there’s still diplomatic and economic relations between certain nations. You said he didn’t accomplish anything as President and was a lousy businessman; I’m pointing out how that’s demonstrably untrue. I’d be happy to share the same about Biden or Obama because I’m smart enough to know people have administrations that handle majority of the work.
I appreciate the nuance of this conversation. The problem that liberals have is that they are quick to dismiss Trump and the increasing number of minority voters who are moving rightward. Liberals were quick to blame Harris’s loss on racism and sexism- wrong lesson! Trump has been making gains with working class minorities (Blacks, Latino, and Asians) since ‘16 but Liberals were too arrogant to take notice and alter their messaging. If you look at his numbers with non-white voters from ‘16-‘24 it’s impressive. While I don’t like Trump’s rhetoric, he speaks in a way that blue collar folks can understand. Harris & Democrats, in their lofty language centered on Democracy, Abortion were simply not speaking to the economic anxiety working class voters were feeling. When Trump said illegal immigrants were stealing Black & Hispanic jobs- Liberals took offense, mocked & dismissed it. What they failed to realize, in their arrogance, is that Trump is right despite his bellicose rhetoric. Illegal immigration affects those at the bottom of the economic spectrum more. Illegal immigrants do pose a challenge for those who are legal immigrants already established here and/or low skilled US born workers. I believe that’s why Trump was able to make in roads in ‘24 with these voters- because he spoke to their economic issues directly. Further, contrary to Liberal ideology- the majority of immigrants who came here legally are not FOR open borders nor do they support illegal immigration- it cuts to a deep sense of fairness. This is one reason why Trump won and expanded his coalition. Whether it will last remains to be seen.
I’m Latina & a dem, in a community in NYC that had moved +20% to the right since Obama. You’re right in the points you made, but you’re also missing just how outright awful Dems have treated Latinos.
Firstly, Obama was called deporter-in-chief & deported the most people of anyone (over 3 million). He was unspeakably cruel because there’d been an open border yet rather than secure it or give prior notice, Obama had federal agents separate us. He supported the separation policies & actually built the “cages” for the “kids in cages” that AOC blamed Trump for & pretended to cry over. Trump, for all his faults, achieved record low illegal immigration through border security & deterrence messaging. He said “don’t come” & people listened. Setting aside his inflammatory rhetoric, he actually treated Latin Americans as humans in a way that Obama never did.
Secondly, Latinos don’t share Dems’ hyper progressive values or buy into Dems’ view of the US as a “no good, very bad place.” We also don’t see authoritarianism as a rightwing problem only, because many of us have lived through the nightmare of leftwing authoritarianism.
Lastly, we are voting less for Dems because they’ve made clear we’re not welcome in the party. The disdain that working class in general feels from the Dems is felt even more strongly by Latinos. We don’t fit into Dems’ black/white view of the world. We’re actually inconvenient to because our existence disproves the Dem narrative that “US society systemically oppresses brown folks & therefore affirmative action is necessary to achieve equity.” Latinos actually enter the country quite poor, on average, but greatly improve our socioeconomic & education level within 1-2 generations.
So then, Dems try to “other” us by calling us terms like Latinx” which is not a Spanish word & which we have repeatedly rejected. They have considerable disdain for us, and would like to replace us legal Latino immigrants with illegals & especially with blacks, eg, from Haiti, in hopes of getting a permanent underclass to provide service industry labor & a more reliable Dem voter base. Just listen to the vitriol the NYT podcast yesterday discussed us- one of the focus group members (who was black) accused Latinos of “thinking [we’re] white.” NYT would never post audio of a Latino or Asian making that statement about the black demographic, yet editors don’t even bother to remove it when it’s directed against us
When I was a kid, the left championed Julio Cesar Chavez, pro worker, pro union, anti immigration.he spokelow skilled immigration depreciating wages.
They literally wormholed him like he never existed. He's never spoken about anymore
@ I agree with you that the child separation policies were started by Obama- but the Trump admin made the situation way worse. In terms of treating Latinos bad, I get your perspective. Trump achieve lower migrants because of Title 42 and the pandemic. Immigration rose under him too- if you look at the numbers- but when COVID strict he used that as a pretext to shut down the border. As a black American, I think that the US has its flaws & hasn’t lived up to its ideals- but I don’t share the Liberal view that America is a very bad place. I wouldn’t say that the Democratic Party doesn’t welcome Latinos but their approach is way off- by not trying to offend they end up offending (LatinX- wtf?) On average, most immigrants come into the country poor and improve their lot economically within a few generations- my family’s story is the same. Dems messed up by not speaking the truth on the border & speaking to people’s economic anxiety. Most immigrants I know that came here legally, don’t support open borders or illegal immigration- contrary to liberal orthodoxy. What I’ll say on immigration, is that Congress is the one responsible for this mess- which is partly aided and abetted by BIG business that don’t want to pay fair wages to the Americans and legal immigrants. I think the focus should be on Big Businesses & Businesses as a whole who prefer to use illegal immigrants to fill their jobs so that they can save money. Big Business, which supports both parties, are to blame for the pull factor of immigration.
@@scarletsletter4466I agree with most of what you said. When I was a kid, I lived in an apartment complex that was surrounded by affluent areas, so I went to really good schools. That's where my disdain for liberals started. This was the 90s, but preached diversity, and how it makes us stronger, not quite as heavy as it is today, but a more primitive form.
Then I noticed these affluent parents, never once invited me to birthday parties, nor my Latino friends. It wasn't raced based, they would invite the minority kids of affluent parents. I hated some of these kids. They'd pick fights, then would say if you touch me,y sad will sue you for everything you have, and you'll be on the streets. Most of the boys got along fine, but the girls were ridiculously entitled. Something didn't go their way, and they would throw a tantrum.
As far as that podcast , it's something I predicted. We Latinos come from corrupt countries , where the police can be bribed, so we feel policing here for the most part works. We don't have that same tension with the police. So if crime surges, we will go to the right.
With that said, all those shots taken in that podcast, those same people would have a meltdown if we shared our grievances with that group . They could've shared their disappointment respectfully, instead they threw shots. This tension will grow, and push Latinos further right.
When will Americans understand "We, the People" are in a class war, it's a club, and unless you make over one billion dollars a year? You're not in their club, and a dystopian future is what you should expect.
Characteristics of a dystopian society:
Control: The use of propaganda and police state tactics to control the people
Censorship: The heavy censoring of information or denial of free thought
Conformity: The heavy enforcement of conformity and loss of individuality
Fear: Citizens live in fear or distress
Dehumanization: Citizens live in a dehumanized state
Distrust: The natural world is banished and distrusted
Surveillance: Citizens are perceived to be under constant surveillance.
These “thoughtful” conservatives sure don’t spend much time thinking about corruption.
Or maybe not the type that you like to invent and distort?
The Republican parties like the Roman Catholic Church. It has no moral core It's beyond shocking.
The Democratic Party having a moral core is even more laughable
@swcordovaf at least we don't appoint candidates for the attorney general's office that have raped children. Nor do we appoint candidates for the department of defense who have pending rape charges.
Again, the Republican party like the Roman Catholic Church has no moral core.
Cope
Did the “bitter ender, Never Trumpers” as Reihan calls them, have to leave the coalition as it became more populist in general or that Trump uniquely drove them away by his toxic personality. He implies that “normie “ center-right people will furrow their brows about Trump but ultimately see the value in his presidency.
Tough audience but good conversation Ross and Reihan!
"Let's gut the government and terraform Nevada," is the most idiotic take you could have. You will never get such grand programs without large government. Ever. Please point to a transformative government in world history that wasn't broad and expansive?
The Romans? The Egyptians? Multiple Chinese dynasties?
All the cultures with such grand ambitions and transformative legacies were run by massive bureaucracies. Sorry.
It’s amazing that you mention jd Vance without mentioning Peter thiel
Nice conversation. Level unseen for youtube
Don't you think there is a conflict of interest with Musk's business and being head of a government office? Or will he try to do this gutting from outside the government, which Is still a conflict of interest, a rent seeking position.
Yeah, these two think they're onto something.... Wait till their leopard comes home with an empty belly.
This whole conversation is so inhuman and gross
How so?
wipe your tears away
What on earth are you talking about. Get outside your echo chamber bc these guys are entirely reasonable folks.
NEEDS MOAR WOKE
the arrogance and smugness of these guys. the concentrating on winning at all costs no matter what it does to our democracy or the people which they openly manipulated.
Well congrats. You have helped engineer the most perverse media propaganda machine since the 30s and have engineered the spectacle of the poor and uneducated cheer for their own upcoming demise. And we all get to share in their suffering aside from a few megalomaniacal billionaires. something to really be proud of.
You are incredibly disconnected from reality if you believe that any institutions in America are focused on winning at all costs, no matter their political affiliation or interest. The media was saturated with negative trump content and he won, so is the issue the propaganda, or the voters who rejected it? You’re literally some nobody in a comments section, so I highly doubt you have future forecasting abilities worth anything. So maybe pause the intellectually bankrupt and unfounded arrogance, and wait and see how things go.
Corporate greed is what needs to be looked at from a legalistic standpoint. Universal health care is very libertarian. Theses would help the middle class workers.
how is health care libertarian ?.. it's group effort not an individuals ...
Everyone who screams of corporate greed, love corporation and their products...that's why you are so offended.
The rest of us just don't buy/pay for it. You have a choice what to spend money on!
@@direwolf6234 I thought that, too, until on a podcast a libertarian said that it should be a universal right so people then have the freedom to do what they want with their life. It takes away an encumbrance.
@ except when the corporation is selling something that is so needed to survive or stay viable in society/business, the decision to not buy it becomes impossible.
@@talkndrideas so would free college ..
Ross slowly transforming into a portly Solzhenitsyn.
I can't believe how negative the comments are! Very few even addressing the actual political history laid out in the conversation. I thought this did a great job contextualizing the Trump Era
I saw Reihan and I had to click. I remember he used to be a regular guest on Bill Maher's show. Haven't seen him in a while.
Good conversation. I think their takes on the Trump presidency was largely correct. Their description of "chaos" is Trump is a nutshell.
Listen to yourself say to limit low skill immigrants when those are the jobs that need to be filled. Wow.
It’s such orthodoxy among Democrats that it merits questioning. It’s important to understand that every policy has tradeoffs, and important that Democrats understand it or they’ll keep losing.
Interestingly, toward the end they talk about this era of American politics being a golden age for workers, the great compression, etc, but then say we should stop that, because the work is done??
Thanks, guys. You're going to erode away women's rights...nice job. Some of your thoughts sound good, but I have reservations about your draconian religious views.
industrialized murder is not a right
Regardless of religion, I do not think we should live in a society where we utilize abortion as a last ditch birth control, throwing away fetuses like spoiled leftovers. It is cruel.
Yes, other than abortion rights in red states, what precisely are you speaking to?
Men with intact genitals leering at women in private spaces?
Fuck your faith and the pretext you hide it behind.
I am curious why you are normalising the incoming administration as if it is normal when ordinary folk will face grim circumstances?
🤪 it can’t be more “normalized” when it’s a POTUS who’s already been POTUS before. In surveys, the majority of voters said they were better off during Trump’s term, & that’s why he won the election.
No offense but you’re clearly not American based on your spelling & the fact that you’re unaware Trump is returning because voters preferred his policies
It's already normalized by 76 million votes. You don't have to like the man or his government, but acting like it's still a fringe illegitimate movement is itself a disservice to democracy.
What do housing costs tell us about how the stimulus affected inflation?
Some economists say that recent research and new data have reaffirmed their belief that the stimulus package did not significantly fuel inflation.
Increased housing costs have been a big driver of inflation - shelter is the largest component of the Consumer Price Index and makes up about 30 percent of overall inflation as measured by the index. Dean Baker, a senior economist and co-founder of the liberal-leaning Center for Economic and Policy Research, argued that new research on housing inflation helped support the idea that price gains were mostly driven by a mass shift to remote work and not the stimulus package. As people shifted to remote work, housing prices went up, and those prices in turn pushed overall inflation higher.
An analysis published by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco on September 26 examined the rapid rise in housing prices and whether remote work, or other factors like fiscal stimulus, led to the increase. The authors - Augustus Kmetz, John Mondragon, and Johannes Wieland - wrote that as more people started working remotely, they sought out additional space at home. That resulted in a spike in housing demand and helped lead to a surge in prices.
The researchers estimated that remote work resulted in house prices rising by about 15 percent from November 2019 to November 2021, which accounts for more than 60 percent of the overall increase in house prices.
“It means we can’t blame the stimulus. Clearly that added to it,” Baker said. “But the main story there is this big switch to working from home.”
It's a supply side problem
you cant trust any studies that relate to anything political. outcomes can be cooked, whether it be intentionally skewing statistics or whatever the case may be. At the end of the day, we live in an extremely polarized society with democrats/coastal elites being in control of many of these scientific institutions scientists are people with biases too, and have all been through the university system which leans very left, and they are very obviously not checking their biases at the door.
The pandemic caused worldwide inflation. People needed help.
OK, I made it to about 19 minutes here without hearing about current events at all. I'm all for history, and I got some of that, wedged into what appeared mostly to be a personal remembrance session.
You guys remind me of the Woody Allen joke where he sing a psychiatrist for all of his life and he finally had his long socks for orgasm only to have his psychiatrist tell them that it was the wrong kind..
We’ve had a lot of Ross, lately-NYT, can you please give him the month of December off to celebrate the holidays with his family?
Can’t get enough Ross
@@TBass050 you can have my portion 😏
Confident ignorance is when people are confident without knowledge, or when they identify things with how society categorizes them:
Dunning-Kruger effect.
Are you talking about smug liberals whose opinions come from media figures telling them what “teh science” is?
Not sure why you felt the need have this conversation in front of an audience. Save it for your wives.
It was for you, silly
@ for sure. Their giddiness as they insert themselves and their books and their opinions into actual legislation. I listen to opinion to gain perspective of a voting constituency, not to see the opinion writers smugness on display. Same for news, I care about the American people and not what these two think as they review “ political chess”. Strategies.I’ll have to screen my headlines and podcasters better before opening and listening next time. Listen for folks that put the American people front and center in their work product.Lesson learned.
I get what you mean by caring more for the opinions of the electorate, but policy makers one hundred percent push political campaigns and change public perceptions over time. The two are connected in the big picture.
@evangelosvasiliades1204 That's sad to me. This conversation reflecting their personal musings and beliefs influencing legislators, parties, and campaigns. It's all fun and games, and such a disappointment to me. Just one Americsn, wanting these talking heads to care about actual AmerIcans, and not the "big picture" aka political posturing. The fact that the parties let this stuff stand in for regular Americans...sigh.
Ross , is such a ridiculous ...
I pictured ross looking like reverend lovejoy ya know
The guile of your ilk is unbelievable ...
At around 7:20, Ross makes a now common error, even among people who should know better (pundits, journalists, even professors, etc.). He followed a time word with “where” (which is used to introduce a place reference) instead of “when” (which is used to introduce a time reference.) He said, “ …it was coming at this moment WHERE …”. The error is that “moment” is a time word, so it should be followed by WHEN, not WHERE. He should have said “…it was coming at this moment WHEN…”
For example, “I remember the moment WHEN I met my future wife.” Not “I remember the moment WHERE I met my future wife.” Similarly, WHERE should be followed by a place reference. For example, “I remember the beach WHERE I learned to surf.” Not “I remember the beach WHEN I learned to surf.” (Actually, misusing WHEN this way almost never happens; but misusing WHERE following a time word (era, period, time, moment, year, etc.) happens quite often.)
It’s a misusage that is becoming more and more frequent, partly, I believe, because its misuse goes unnoticed and has become accepted without thought of the important distinction between a time reference and a place reference. Does it mark the end of civilization? Hardly. It’s just carelessness, the kind of habit that spreads because it doesn’t require thought, the same way that so many people now misuse THERE’S with plural nouns. For example, “THERE’S many reasons why people voted for Trump.” Instead of “THERE ARE many reasons why people voted for Trump.” People no longer make that distinction.
Of course, in language, usage that requires thought, that is more difficult, that requires making distinctions, disappears to be replaced by simpler language. It’s a race to the bottom. Compare the diction used by the educated people in the 19th century and earlier to that of contemporary educated people and you’ll see what I mean. It’s the devolution of English, facilitated by our media, which over time makes the incorrect the correct.
get a life
Smug echo chamber babble
You realize that the whole "echo chamber" accusation could be levied at Democrat legacy media, right?
@@lepjagmanyes but this is one video from the other echo chamber so NYT listeners get angry
holy hell he has a face for radio
Lord have Mercy! You gotta have a graduate degree just to understand these guys! 🤯
Nope. You might just be dull. It’s a distinct possibility you need to consider.
I'm definitely a deplorable piece of MAGA garbage, so maybe you're right. Not too proud to admit that. I bailed on this conversation. Too Ivory Tower for my tastes. But I appreciate that there's an audience for this level & style of discourse. On the other hand, I'm not surprised that the MAGA-style discourse that expanded the Trump electorate again & increased his popular vote--again--to near 77 million did NOT sound anything like this political discussion.
Franco was a conservative Catholic, Hitler, Mousseline were also socialists.
@31:33 trump also wanted those 1400 dollar checks
The ownership society has also to take into account the historical injustices that have been done robbing certain groups of people of their rights: women, blacks, indigenous people, etc. Our Constitution defends life, liberty and property as human and natural rights. I am a Catholic priest and I am concerned about cruelty and lies...and anger. I just read about how one of the head honchos of UFC who had participated in Trump´s campaign said that he never wanted to experience such ugliness again. (While continuing to believe in Trump "the badass"). Then I got curious about what UFC is, and you see it comes down to throwing people to the ground and beating them into a pulp. Badass indeed. Than I listened to another one of my savants who told me how our internet algorithms foster anger and division in order to keep us pegged to our screens, and I am reflecting how I have such anger in me. My diabetic conditions also lends itself to anger and I consider now how my algorithm has affected me. We have become an angry country. Will we become a dark and cruel and violent country?
These two gentleman are engaging in moral self-justification before the monster that we have created. It is not edifying.
Imagine pinning all your hopes for the Republican Party transformation....on Marco Rubio lol.
Painful to lesson to this. Not concise. Statements full of conditionality. Inane banter.
I was 80 percent through this video when I realized the two of you are completely divorced from the day to day havoc poorly run govt causes in people’s lives. And Trump is the definition of poorly run govt.
The comments section for this video sucks.
These guys are lunatics
You guys must be so fcking proud of bringing the country to the point of losing democracy completely and bringing on this total shtfst. Good job.
Y'all seem semi reasonable and ignoring a few points would almost be like practical voices in a Bernie Sanders administration.
There seems to be a lot of wishful thinking and ignoring who Trump actually is and that his most loyal voters really only care about owning the libs.
I don't think the music has to continue for the entire introduction.
Good lord, an 'opinion' video centered on the intellectual history of two guys I don't know or care about. I only made it 20 mins.
Why would you begin to listen to it?
The hate you will get is ☹️.
We would have had influence. Lol
What's up with this Mr. Beast style title lol.
If you drop the suits, be loose, don't be too judgey be willing to engage with the other and listen and Crack jokes you can improve your podcast. This is what women complain about dudes be squares on a date.
When you start with 'pro-life politics ' you have lost me from the start! Y'all can shove that idea; this has created unimaginable danger for women across the country. You need to get off this train.
By all means don't pat yourself on the back too much your ideas patently and greatly failed. It's easy to look back and say oh if you would have done it my way it would have been better.
both are so shallow and psudointelectual
Too much glossing over facts. Too unbalanced for me to spend my time on.
Probably because you're accustomed to "glossing over and too unbalanced" by the Left, which you believe is deep and balanced.
What does a civilized economy look like?
Unlimited wealth for the American People for Sports and Entertainment and the stars they root for. The checks and balances of this system are found in the amount of exposure the STAR receives. Without viewers, the star becomes relative to the fan base and his/her opinion of what's fair. This market is addressed by electronic mediums ie, credit cards, or cryptocurrencies.
A cash incentive is for the people who work in the infrastructure. All a civilized society needs is a tax structure to support an infrastructure and an infrastructure to support a tax structure. Cash has no enemies as the saying goes, and it provides everyday Americans a quality of life that should keep them happy.
Finally, gift certificates, from a merchant who will pay a busker to perform at his/her establishment. This way everybody has a resource and a chance to improve their life.
The World Bank can make this happen, all it has to do is ensure the medium has integrity and is supported by the people.
WASF!
Why so much continued whining
Because studied *Whinology* at University and need to put all that propaganda to some use.
Everyone becomes old and wants social security and Medicare. Not everyone have children and cares about religious family legislation that should be legislated at the church door. Let the churches help with family perks. This cutting of Medicare to put money in child care tax cuts is debatable. Republicans talk cuts and then go and increase the defense budget.
Nice the Trump movement finally has a more moderate and formal name to it. I am an ambitious young man and like a Roman leader like Julius Caesar I can foresee my own destiny I am filled with foreboding. I seem to see Eastern Europe rising after 35 years of discontent made glorious by the winds of change blowing through Europe.
What, if l may politely ask, are you talking about ?
Gaetz Out as More Damning Info Surfaces, Trump Cabinet Rocked by Scandal: Now Ex stipper takes Mattys place..............LOL
@@c.a.savage5689 Sure. I am a 34 year old Swede living in Finland. I have only recently finally put some pretty f-ed up trauma behind me and just yesterday I came back from a work trip from Prague so I am not really in a position where I can go into too much details.
Suffice to say, I am a party member of the National Coalition of Finland, same party as Foreign Minister Valtonen, Prime Minister Orpo and President Stubb. I have been working basically on my own but still assisted behind the scene by two mates from school on the Ukraine peace negotiations pro bono for the EU.
I have worked hard on this since the Paris Olympics. I see the past 4 months as a great sort of "internship" for future role in politics/business or whatever I decide to do in the future.
I have a degree in finance and currently I am content to work as private secretary for Alexander Julius Dahlmeier. He is a German banker who works for/owns the Aktia bank in Finland. I believe he is some how related to the Wallenberg family.
I know Raoul Wallenberg disappeared mysteriously in Budapest and some say he died in a KGB prison cell in Russia. I know there has been many rumours about Princess Anastasia managing to escape in 1917. There was even a movie about her starring Ingrid Bergman.
Throughout these four months I have used the nom de guerre of FSB agent Heydrich and my cousin Markus Sumiloff has used Prince Romanov. We both had a mental breakdown around spring 2020 due to stress related to the Covid-19 pandemic.
I spent time at a mental institution in Töölö for 6 weeks around spring/summer 2020. At the time I was a party member of the Finnish Liberal Monarchist Party (RKP) or Swedish People's Party of Finland as they are known but I believe they are considering a rebranding. I will be start making appointments for meetings of party leaders soon as I want to help the Finnish parties with local elections in April. These elections are very important not just for Finland but also Europe and even the world considering the times we are living in.
@@c.a.savage5689 Europe is tired about being disrespected by the United States. The war in Ukraine is the United States fault. The US doesn't understand European culture, geopolitics or history. Nor do they want to. They are extremely hawkish and arrogant in their approach towards especially Eastern Europe. I am not happy with the treatment of my beloved sister Anastasia and my dear friend Reinhard. I would call Elina Valtonen and ask what I am referring to.
Two RINO LOSERS ,CRYING ABOUT TRUMP😂😂😂😂