1 00:00:01,400 --> 00:00:03,760 Speaker 1: Early Friday morning, news broke that there had been an 2 00:00:03,840 --> 00:00:07,240 Speaker 1: attack at the Pelosi San Francisco home on the speaker, 3 00:00:07,320 --> 00:00:11,240 Speaker 1: Nancy Pelosi's husband, Paul Pelosi. As the news has progressed 4 00:00:11,240 --> 00:00:14,000 Speaker 1: throughout the day, we've learned more, of course, as is 5 00:00:14,000 --> 00:00:16,000 Speaker 1: to be expected. But Ryan actually just tuned into the 6 00:00:16,120 --> 00:00:19,120 Speaker 1: entire press conference that happened midday here on the East coast. 7 00:00:19,760 --> 00:00:22,560 Speaker 1: What did we learn, Ryan about the attack on Paul 8 00:00:22,560 --> 00:00:26,319 Speaker 1: Pelosi from that press conference? So we learned that the 9 00:00:26,400 --> 00:00:29,720 Speaker 1: weapon was a hammer, and I'll get into this in 10 00:00:29,760 --> 00:00:33,880 Speaker 1: a moment. So the San Francisco Police Chief, William Scott, 11 00:00:33,920 --> 00:00:38,440 Speaker 1: said that at two twenty seven am, officers responded to 12 00:00:38,479 --> 00:00:42,280 Speaker 1: a wellness check, which we're getting more details. We don't 13 00:00:42,320 --> 00:00:45,279 Speaker 1: know if that came from some of the Maybe there 14 00:00:45,320 --> 00:00:48,320 Speaker 1: was in home surveillance technology that a loaded the police. 15 00:00:48,360 --> 00:00:51,640 Speaker 1: Maybe Paul was able to call from his phone, or 16 00:00:51,640 --> 00:00:53,920 Speaker 1: maybe there was enough noise that a neighbor called something in. 17 00:00:54,000 --> 00:00:56,560 Speaker 1: We didn't get those details from the press conference, but 18 00:00:56,600 --> 00:00:59,320 Speaker 1: we do know that police got out there. When police 19 00:00:59,440 --> 00:01:02,920 Speaker 1: arrived on this scene, they saw Paul Pelosi with a 20 00:01:02,960 --> 00:01:07,200 Speaker 1: hammer in his hand, and the suspect, David de Pape, 21 00:01:07,280 --> 00:01:10,240 Speaker 1: or Depappy, It's been said different ways. The forty two 22 00:01:10,280 --> 00:01:13,240 Speaker 1: year old man also with the hammer in his hand, 23 00:01:13,520 --> 00:01:18,120 Speaker 1: when as soon as the police arrived, the depappy then 24 00:01:18,200 --> 00:01:22,400 Speaker 1: attacked Pelosi with the hammer. Paul Pelosi with the hammer, 25 00:01:23,440 --> 00:01:28,120 Speaker 1: and police, you know, immediately intervened, but injuries were severe 26 00:01:28,240 --> 00:01:31,600 Speaker 1: enough that he was taken to the hospital, Paul Pelosi, 27 00:01:31,760 --> 00:01:34,400 Speaker 1: both were taken to the hospital, in fact, but Paul 28 00:01:34,400 --> 00:01:36,120 Speaker 1: Polos who was taken to the hospital, and they said 29 00:01:36,160 --> 00:01:40,360 Speaker 1: he's expected to make a full recovery. When you when 30 00:01:40,440 --> 00:01:43,240 Speaker 1: you see language like that, expected to make a full recovery, 31 00:01:43,240 --> 00:01:45,400 Speaker 1: that that implies that there was at one point a 32 00:01:45,480 --> 00:01:49,040 Speaker 1: chance that looked like there might not be a full recovery. 33 00:01:49,320 --> 00:01:51,800 Speaker 1: A hammer, you know, to the head, if that's where 34 00:01:51,800 --> 00:01:55,880 Speaker 1: it landed, can be you know, can be fatal. And 35 00:01:56,640 --> 00:01:59,680 Speaker 1: the San Francisco police chiefs said that in fact, to 36 00:01:59,720 --> 00:02:03,480 Speaker 1: pay to Pappy is going to be charged with attempted homicide, 37 00:02:03,840 --> 00:02:07,680 Speaker 1: along with a slew of other other charges. So, you know, 38 00:02:07,720 --> 00:02:10,920 Speaker 1: since then, there's been a kind of outpouring of support, 39 00:02:10,960 --> 00:02:14,240 Speaker 1: including from you know, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who 40 00:02:14,280 --> 00:02:17,560 Speaker 1: said he was horrified and disgusted, and I think, I 41 00:02:18,160 --> 00:02:19,720 Speaker 1: don't know if you do you have do you have 42 00:02:19,840 --> 00:02:21,880 Speaker 1: his uh? Oh? Here, I have his comment right here. 43 00:02:21,880 --> 00:02:24,000 Speaker 1: He said, I'm horrified and disgusted by the reports that 44 00:02:24,080 --> 00:02:27,520 Speaker 1: All Pelosi was assaulted in his and Speaker Pelosi's home 45 00:02:27,600 --> 00:02:30,320 Speaker 1: last night. Grateful to hear that All is on track 46 00:02:30,360 --> 00:02:33,200 Speaker 1: to make a full recovery and that law enforcement, including 47 00:02:33,200 --> 00:02:36,240 Speaker 1: our stellar Capitol police, are on the case. Nancy Pelosi 48 00:02:36,440 --> 00:02:40,080 Speaker 1: was back in Washington, d C. With with her cat, 49 00:02:40,160 --> 00:02:43,240 Speaker 1: with her security. You know she has she the speaker 50 00:02:43,280 --> 00:02:48,040 Speaker 1: has public security. Back in San Francisco. The attacker, you know, 51 00:02:48,120 --> 00:02:51,560 Speaker 1: according to according to reports ahead of the press conference, 52 00:02:51,600 --> 00:02:54,720 Speaker 1: said you know where is Nancy? Uh? And when said 53 00:02:54,880 --> 00:02:58,079 Speaker 1: and told police that he was waiting for Nancy Pelosi 54 00:02:58,160 --> 00:03:00,640 Speaker 1: to come home. So that's that's that's what we know 55 00:03:00,720 --> 00:03:04,560 Speaker 1: as of now. What do we know about potential political 56 00:03:04,600 --> 00:03:07,160 Speaker 1: motivations other than the fact that he seemed to have 57 00:03:07,200 --> 00:03:09,840 Speaker 1: been looking for Nancy Pelosi? The attackers seemed to be 58 00:03:09,880 --> 00:03:13,240 Speaker 1: looking for Nancy Pelosi. What do we know about this person? 59 00:03:13,320 --> 00:03:17,160 Speaker 1: I know that there are pretty new reports about who 60 00:03:17,200 --> 00:03:19,000 Speaker 1: he might be. I mean, we have his name obviously, 61 00:03:19,000 --> 00:03:20,720 Speaker 1: but who he might be on a personal level, What 62 00:03:20,760 --> 00:03:26,000 Speaker 1: his you know, sort of what his interests, motivations could 63 00:03:26,040 --> 00:03:28,760 Speaker 1: be in this crime. Right, people are immediately going to 64 00:03:28,800 --> 00:03:31,520 Speaker 1: be searching through all of his social media, as has 65 00:03:31,560 --> 00:03:35,640 Speaker 1: become the habit after any of these attacks or mass shootings, 66 00:03:36,160 --> 00:03:40,960 Speaker 1: trying to define divine what his politics might be. According 67 00:03:41,000 --> 00:03:43,520 Speaker 1: to the Wall Street Journal that they wrote, the suspected 68 00:03:43,520 --> 00:03:46,960 Speaker 1: attacker has espoused extreme right wing views on social media, 69 00:03:47,000 --> 00:03:51,480 Speaker 1: including conspiracy theories about COVID nineteen. According to one of 70 00:03:51,520 --> 00:03:55,240 Speaker 1: the law enforcement officials making sure that was the Wall 71 00:03:55,240 --> 00:04:03,320 Speaker 1: Street Journal, yes, yes, it was so at this point, 72 00:04:03,440 --> 00:04:06,960 Speaker 1: it seems like extreme writing views on social media. There's 73 00:04:07,000 --> 00:04:08,839 Speaker 1: also there was this did you see the hot mic 74 00:04:08,960 --> 00:04:11,680 Speaker 1: moment at the at the end of the press conference. 75 00:04:12,080 --> 00:04:15,360 Speaker 1: I didn't see that this is circulating on social media 76 00:04:15,400 --> 00:04:20,440 Speaker 1: and is obviously just completely unverified from a reporter. But 77 00:04:20,480 --> 00:04:23,719 Speaker 1: a reporter is talking to his editor on a phone 78 00:04:23,920 --> 00:04:26,919 Speaker 1: while the press conference is still running, saying, is this 79 00:04:27,000 --> 00:04:30,360 Speaker 1: the newdest guy? Like it sounded it sounded like this 80 00:04:30,440 --> 00:04:34,640 Speaker 1: was someone who was familiar to local reporters, and then says, 81 00:04:34,680 --> 00:04:37,320 Speaker 1: so should we look into that? And then there's and 82 00:04:37,360 --> 00:04:40,120 Speaker 1: then he answers a question from the from the editor. 83 00:04:40,640 --> 00:04:43,440 Speaker 1: He said in Porter says nopes. But it's unclear what 84 00:04:43,480 --> 00:04:46,600 Speaker 1: the unclear what the question was. Question could have been 85 00:04:46,640 --> 00:04:48,400 Speaker 1: do you know anything more about this guy? Or so, 86 00:04:48,720 --> 00:04:51,240 Speaker 1: or it could have been anyway. So there's this that 87 00:04:52,080 --> 00:04:54,720 Speaker 1: it seems like we're going to learn more about him 88 00:04:54,760 --> 00:04:59,120 Speaker 1: soon because because it seems like the local press does 89 00:04:59,160 --> 00:05:02,440 Speaker 1: have a bead on who this person is. This isn't 90 00:05:02,480 --> 00:05:06,960 Speaker 1: the first. Now, this is the first violent attack on Pelosis. 91 00:05:07,040 --> 00:05:08,839 Speaker 1: If you remember back in I think what was it 92 00:05:09,000 --> 00:05:13,800 Speaker 1: around January twenty twenty one, her mansion or row House 93 00:05:13,839 --> 00:05:18,000 Speaker 1: mansion in San Francisco was vandalized with I think there 94 00:05:18,080 --> 00:05:20,560 Speaker 1: was like a pig's head left out in front of it, 95 00:05:21,000 --> 00:05:27,040 Speaker 1: something like that. Obviously, In what twenty seventeen, Steve Scalise 96 00:05:28,120 --> 00:05:33,560 Speaker 1: was shot by a former volunteer for Bernie Sanders. He 97 00:05:33,640 --> 00:05:36,520 Speaker 1: survived that attack, though it appeared for a long time 98 00:05:36,520 --> 00:05:41,640 Speaker 1: that he might not. In what twenty eleven, Gabby Giffers 99 00:05:41,320 --> 00:05:45,000 Speaker 1: was shot by a kind of somebody with kind of 100 00:05:45,000 --> 00:05:47,920 Speaker 1: deep mental health problems. Didn't seem like that you could 101 00:05:47,960 --> 00:05:50,479 Speaker 1: even divine much of a political motive to that. It 102 00:05:50,560 --> 00:05:53,520 Speaker 1: was a shot something like nineteen people at an event 103 00:05:53,920 --> 00:05:57,400 Speaker 1: where Gabby Giffers was meeting constituents, killing I think six 104 00:05:57,480 --> 00:06:01,880 Speaker 1: of them, and badly, badly owning Giffords to the point 105 00:06:01,880 --> 00:06:05,360 Speaker 1: that she stepped down from from Congress and is and 106 00:06:05,440 --> 00:06:09,800 Speaker 1: is operating with significantly reduced capacity as a result of it. 107 00:06:10,560 --> 00:06:14,799 Speaker 1: But this is this is a and this is another 108 00:06:15,400 --> 00:06:19,680 Speaker 1: and bratcheting up of political violence in the country. What 109 00:06:19,760 --> 00:06:22,279 Speaker 1: was your what was your reaction when you started seeing 110 00:06:22,279 --> 00:06:25,840 Speaker 1: this news circulating? Well, and one more quick thing to 111 00:06:25,839 --> 00:06:29,640 Speaker 1: add this is NBC's Bay Area affiliate confirmed with hospital 112 00:06:29,640 --> 00:06:33,720 Speaker 1: sources that Paul Pelosi is actually undergoing brain surgery, so 113 00:06:33,760 --> 00:06:35,920 Speaker 1: that that, I think gives us more indication to the 114 00:06:36,000 --> 00:06:38,880 Speaker 1: level of severity. It is interesting for that press conference 115 00:06:38,920 --> 00:06:41,839 Speaker 1: that the attack didn't start until police arrived, that Paul 116 00:06:41,880 --> 00:06:44,280 Speaker 1: Pelosi had the hammer in his hand, please show up, 117 00:06:44,440 --> 00:06:47,080 Speaker 1: and that's how all of this goes down. That's that's 118 00:06:47,080 --> 00:06:50,560 Speaker 1: a very well, yeah, they both had both had hammers, right, 119 00:06:51,680 --> 00:06:54,320 Speaker 1: both of them have handed both of them had and 120 00:06:54,400 --> 00:06:59,080 Speaker 1: then right there and there was reporting that that he 121 00:06:59,240 --> 00:07:03,720 Speaker 1: that he had attempted to tie up Paul Pelosi so 122 00:07:03,760 --> 00:07:06,360 Speaker 1: that he could wait, you know, a hostage situation, then 123 00:07:06,400 --> 00:07:09,760 Speaker 1: wait for Pelosi to come home. So you know, just 124 00:07:09,800 --> 00:07:12,679 Speaker 1: from reading between the lines of what happened, it sounds 125 00:07:12,680 --> 00:07:14,960 Speaker 1: like that was his that was his plan. His target 126 00:07:15,000 --> 00:07:19,120 Speaker 1: was Nancy Pelosi. He wanted to just you know, hold 127 00:07:19,400 --> 00:07:22,200 Speaker 1: Paul Pelosi until then. But then when the police come in, 128 00:07:22,360 --> 00:07:25,360 Speaker 1: he realizes he's done for like that, this is over. 129 00:07:25,440 --> 00:07:27,720 Speaker 1: He's not going to get Nancy Pelosi. And at that 130 00:07:27,760 --> 00:07:30,600 Speaker 1: point he can either surrender or he can do the 131 00:07:30,960 --> 00:07:36,320 Speaker 1: sociopathic thing, which is just try to kill the husband 132 00:07:36,640 --> 00:07:39,840 Speaker 1: of the person that he's trying trying to kill. Uh, 133 00:07:40,000 --> 00:07:44,560 Speaker 1: you know, brain surgery hopefully, hopefully it's just to relieve 134 00:07:44,600 --> 00:07:47,360 Speaker 1: swelling from you know, you know, if you get hit, 135 00:07:47,680 --> 00:07:48,960 Speaker 1: if you get hit in the head and your and 136 00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:52,640 Speaker 1: you and your brain swells, that can cause you know that, 137 00:07:53,040 --> 00:07:57,280 Speaker 1: you know, that can cause death itself. And so sometimes 138 00:07:57,280 --> 00:08:00,520 Speaker 1: they go in there to relieve that, to relieve that swelling. Obviously, 139 00:08:00,560 --> 00:08:03,240 Speaker 1: there isn't any room for your brain to go if 140 00:08:03,680 --> 00:08:06,080 Speaker 1: it needs to swell, because your skull is right there. 141 00:08:06,080 --> 00:08:08,320 Speaker 1: So what they can do is relieve some of that pressure. 142 00:08:08,400 --> 00:08:13,680 Speaker 1: So that sounds sounds sounds quite bad. You know that 143 00:08:14,080 --> 00:08:17,480 Speaker 1: he needs this level of treatment. And another one we 144 00:08:17,520 --> 00:08:19,520 Speaker 1: actually forgot to mention in that string of sort of 145 00:08:19,520 --> 00:08:23,680 Speaker 1: political politically violent attacks. Is brand Paul's neighbor. I've seen 146 00:08:23,680 --> 00:08:27,120 Speaker 1: that kind of circum on Twitter a bit, people reminding 147 00:08:27,400 --> 00:08:30,240 Speaker 1: when that happened, that that Rand Paul was attacked by 148 00:08:30,280 --> 00:08:32,760 Speaker 1: his neighbor, and that did happen. He was he also, 149 00:08:32,800 --> 00:08:37,840 Speaker 1: i believe hospitalized. But often in these situations situations it's 150 00:08:37,880 --> 00:08:42,720 Speaker 1: difficult to divine or even to fit the political motivations 151 00:08:42,720 --> 00:08:45,000 Speaker 1: into this sort of like neat binary box that we 152 00:08:45,120 --> 00:08:47,600 Speaker 1: try to do. Sometimes that may or may not turn 153 00:08:47,640 --> 00:08:49,280 Speaker 1: out to be the case. Here. I'm in the camp 154 00:08:49,320 --> 00:08:51,840 Speaker 1: that you know, you don't blame Bernie Sanders for what 155 00:08:52,040 --> 00:08:56,040 Speaker 1: happened to Steve Scalice, and you know it's this is 156 00:08:56,080 --> 00:08:59,199 Speaker 1: on the person who did it. I think we will 157 00:08:59,240 --> 00:09:03,000 Speaker 1: all agree thattical rhetoric right now is wildly overheated, but 158 00:09:03,160 --> 00:09:06,920 Speaker 1: that's on both sides, and individual political actors are not 159 00:09:07,000 --> 00:09:12,319 Speaker 1: responsible for the actions of often mentally ill people and 160 00:09:12,679 --> 00:09:15,720 Speaker 1: just deranged violent people who take matters into their own 161 00:09:15,760 --> 00:09:18,840 Speaker 1: hands without any specific instruction to do anything of the 162 00:09:19,040 --> 00:09:22,280 Speaker 1: Like that said, Ran, I want to ask a question 163 00:09:22,280 --> 00:09:25,240 Speaker 1: to you, which is sometimes I'm thinking specifically of the 164 00:09:25,280 --> 00:09:28,920 Speaker 1: Gabby Gifference incident and the Skillies incident to some effect, 165 00:09:29,000 --> 00:09:30,760 Speaker 1: but to some extent but not I don't think it 166 00:09:30,800 --> 00:09:33,360 Speaker 1: was as much as with Gabby Giffert's members return to 167 00:09:33,400 --> 00:09:36,680 Speaker 1: Congress after something like this, and there's a at least 168 00:09:36,720 --> 00:09:40,199 Speaker 1: a fleeting moment of a heightened camaraderie and a fleeting 169 00:09:40,240 --> 00:09:42,600 Speaker 1: moment of sort of, we're going to put our heads 170 00:09:42,600 --> 00:09:46,200 Speaker 1: together and do something, and we have to, you know, 171 00:09:46,840 --> 00:09:49,480 Speaker 1: we have to do this for the good of the country. 172 00:09:50,200 --> 00:09:53,280 Speaker 1: Whether that actually, you know, leads to catalyzes any serious 173 00:09:53,360 --> 00:09:55,240 Speaker 1: change is another question, but there's at least sort of 174 00:09:55,240 --> 00:09:57,480 Speaker 1: an impulse to do it at any given moment. Do 175 00:09:57,520 --> 00:10:00,319 Speaker 1: you expect to see that this time around? Don't think 176 00:10:00,320 --> 00:10:02,679 Speaker 1: there they have anything where they certainly don't have anything 177 00:10:02,760 --> 00:10:05,600 Speaker 1: legislative that that they're going to do about this. They're 178 00:10:05,600 --> 00:10:08,400 Speaker 1: not going to be back in Congress until after the elections, 179 00:10:08,400 --> 00:10:11,079 Speaker 1: and after that they'll be fighting over over the elections. 180 00:10:11,559 --> 00:10:14,080 Speaker 1: I think that, you know that the fact that both 181 00:10:14,160 --> 00:10:18,760 Speaker 1: Kevin McCarthy and and Mitch McConnell have put up put 182 00:10:18,760 --> 00:10:24,760 Speaker 1: out thoughtful statements. McCarthy reached out to Pelosi to express 183 00:10:24,800 --> 00:10:28,520 Speaker 1: his sympathy and his prayers for her, you know, suggest 184 00:10:28,559 --> 00:10:32,079 Speaker 1: that there are still bonds of humanity between the two parties. 185 00:10:32,920 --> 00:10:35,960 Speaker 1: That's that's people may think that's a bare minimum, but 186 00:10:36,480 --> 00:10:39,880 Speaker 1: you can cern there are certainly political systems around the 187 00:10:39,920 --> 00:10:43,360 Speaker 1: world in which that in which that doesn't exist, in 188 00:10:43,400 --> 00:10:46,679 Speaker 1: which you know, opponents are attacked or killed by supporters 189 00:10:47,080 --> 00:10:50,679 Speaker 1: of the other side, and and there isn't a denunciation 190 00:10:50,760 --> 00:10:53,520 Speaker 1: and sometimes even even a cheering on If you look 191 00:10:53,559 --> 00:10:55,600 Speaker 1: at if you look at what's going on, say in 192 00:10:55,600 --> 00:10:59,520 Speaker 1: India in their politics right now, you're seeing it. You know, 193 00:10:59,559 --> 00:11:02,440 Speaker 1: you're seeing at crest to a place that's so far 194 00:11:02,480 --> 00:11:05,520 Speaker 1: beyond where we are now, so you know there there 195 00:11:05,600 --> 00:11:08,720 Speaker 1: is still a lot of room to go. And so 196 00:11:09,280 --> 00:11:11,400 Speaker 1: perhaps this could be a wake up call, you know, 197 00:11:11,480 --> 00:11:15,160 Speaker 1: for some political leaders to stop talking about the other 198 00:11:15,200 --> 00:11:21,080 Speaker 1: party in such dehumanized and existential terms. You know, I 199 00:11:21,120 --> 00:11:24,320 Speaker 1: think you can find no doubt you can find examples 200 00:11:24,360 --> 00:11:27,280 Speaker 1: of Democrats doing it, like you know, Joe Biden talking 201 00:11:27,320 --> 00:11:33,280 Speaker 1: about semi fascists, Hillary Clinton talking about deplorables. And maybe 202 00:11:33,280 --> 00:11:36,319 Speaker 1: it's maybe you you feel it more from one side 203 00:11:36,400 --> 00:11:40,560 Speaker 1: or another, but it does feel like the rhetoric out 204 00:11:40,559 --> 00:11:43,160 Speaker 1: of places like Fox News and o An and places 205 00:11:43,160 --> 00:11:46,520 Speaker 1: like that are our beginning are suggesting that like that 206 00:11:47,000 --> 00:11:51,840 Speaker 1: that Democrats are just you know, less than human, you know, 207 00:11:51,880 --> 00:11:55,560 Speaker 1: serpent type people, you know that are just a plague 208 00:11:55,640 --> 00:12:00,880 Speaker 1: upon humanity. Uh, Whereas the democratic kind of of rhetoric 209 00:12:00,920 --> 00:12:11,520 Speaker 1: toward Republicans is is is uh condescending, belittling, rude, but 210 00:12:11,520 --> 00:12:15,760 Speaker 1: but not like but but feels feels different in a way. 211 00:12:16,320 --> 00:12:19,160 Speaker 1: On the other hand, the talk about we're going to 212 00:12:19,240 --> 00:12:22,240 Speaker 1: lose our country, our democracy is going to be gone, 213 00:12:22,360 --> 00:12:24,760 Speaker 1: like if you know, these if these fascists take over, 214 00:12:25,040 --> 00:12:29,720 Speaker 1: that does veer into the more existential rhetoric. What's your 215 00:12:30,040 --> 00:12:32,719 Speaker 1: what's your sense on it? Yeah, I think I don't 216 00:12:32,760 --> 00:12:36,120 Speaker 1: think putting semi in front of fascist is really the 217 00:12:36,720 --> 00:12:38,679 Speaker 1: is doing as much work as maybe they hope it 218 00:12:38,720 --> 00:12:42,040 Speaker 1: is to separate this wide swath of the country that 219 00:12:42,160 --> 00:12:45,679 Speaker 1: Democrats want to classify in those severe terms. I mean, 220 00:12:45,840 --> 00:12:50,280 Speaker 1: that's that's war language. That's language that can catalyze people 221 00:12:50,760 --> 00:12:52,560 Speaker 1: to do a lot of really terrible things. And I 222 00:12:52,559 --> 00:12:55,679 Speaker 1: thought the same about the President's the former president Trump's 223 00:12:55,880 --> 00:13:00,120 Speaker 1: talk about the election. It's just, you know, these this 224 00:13:00,200 --> 00:13:04,640 Speaker 1: hyperbole for the sake of political expedience is really really dangerous. 225 00:13:05,040 --> 00:13:08,319 Speaker 1: And you say, something is super interesting about how it's 226 00:13:08,360 --> 00:13:10,040 Speaker 1: not the case in other countries that you have with 227 00:13:10,120 --> 00:13:14,160 Speaker 1: Kevin McCarthy equivalent reaching out to the Nancy Pelosi equivalent. 228 00:13:14,240 --> 00:13:16,480 Speaker 1: And it does feel more and more like we veer 229 00:13:16,520 --> 00:13:19,200 Speaker 1: into that territory as a country ourselves, which is we 230 00:13:19,280 --> 00:13:22,560 Speaker 1: have had horrible moments in American history Brooks Sumner go 231 00:13:22,679 --> 00:13:24,560 Speaker 1: back all the way to the founding of the country. 232 00:13:25,120 --> 00:13:26,800 Speaker 1: It's not as though people have always been sort of 233 00:13:26,800 --> 00:13:30,120 Speaker 1: holding hands in singing Kumbaya, but it does feel like 234 00:13:30,360 --> 00:13:35,560 Speaker 1: in recent American history we're getting into some dangerous territory 235 00:13:35,600 --> 00:13:38,079 Speaker 1: in Washington, d C. Just in terms of the way 236 00:13:38,120 --> 00:13:40,439 Speaker 1: people have these conversations and think of one another and 237 00:13:40,520 --> 00:13:43,280 Speaker 1: whether they're able. I'm not like yearning for the days 238 00:13:43,320 --> 00:13:45,440 Speaker 1: of the smoke filled back rooms, far from it, but 239 00:13:45,559 --> 00:13:47,600 Speaker 1: at least being able to shake the hand of the 240 00:13:47,640 --> 00:13:51,720 Speaker 1: person you're arguing with it's generally important. Yeah, that's a 241 00:13:51,760 --> 00:13:56,280 Speaker 1: good point. So when Press and Brooks caned Charles Sumner 242 00:13:56,720 --> 00:13:58,839 Speaker 1: in the Senate back in what eighteen fifty six or 243 00:13:58,880 --> 00:14:04,720 Speaker 1: whatever that was, uh, you certainly did not have you know, 244 00:14:04,760 --> 00:14:08,120 Speaker 1: the leaders of the of the Planter class of reaching 245 00:14:08,120 --> 00:14:12,319 Speaker 1: out to the leaders of the kind of the Republican 246 00:14:12,360 --> 00:14:16,680 Speaker 1: Party pushing for abolition, saying, you know, we wish some 247 00:14:16,800 --> 00:14:21,600 Speaker 1: are well, you know, there were certainly some who you know, 248 00:14:22,040 --> 00:14:26,000 Speaker 1: extended you know, some basic decency, but in general, like, uh, 249 00:14:26,040 --> 00:14:28,840 Speaker 1: there was cheering on of the attack, you know, famously 250 00:14:29,320 --> 00:14:31,800 Speaker 1: memously press and Brooks was mailed you a bunch of 251 00:14:31,880 --> 00:14:35,600 Speaker 1: canes by by constituents to thank him because he had 252 00:14:35,600 --> 00:14:39,120 Speaker 1: broke his cane beating beating him and in fact he 253 00:14:39,280 --> 00:14:44,160 Speaker 1: was censored. He resigned before they could have a vote. 254 00:14:44,200 --> 00:14:48,040 Speaker 1: He then there was then a special election in his 255 00:14:48,120 --> 00:14:50,000 Speaker 1: district to see who would replace him, because since he 256 00:14:50,000 --> 00:14:55,280 Speaker 1: had just resigned, he ran ran unopposed and won. So, uh, 257 00:14:56,360 --> 00:14:59,120 Speaker 1: you're you're right, like there we still have a ways 258 00:14:59,160 --> 00:15:03,120 Speaker 1: to fall, believe or not if uh, you know, if 259 00:15:03,360 --> 00:15:06,720 Speaker 1: we don't, if we continue on this trajectory. Right, And 260 00:15:06,760 --> 00:15:08,680 Speaker 1: when you this is this gets to the point that 261 00:15:08,720 --> 00:15:11,320 Speaker 1: you were making when you treat the other side as 262 00:15:11,360 --> 00:15:16,560 Speaker 1: though they are literally a thresh democracy which you can 263 00:15:16,600 --> 00:15:18,920 Speaker 1: make on that's that's a spectrum, of course, right, like 264 00:15:18,960 --> 00:15:21,480 Speaker 1: thrust to democracy exists on the spectrum. And when you're 265 00:15:21,520 --> 00:15:23,600 Speaker 1: talking about it, like I don't want people to shake 266 00:15:23,640 --> 00:15:27,400 Speaker 1: the hands of people who are like slaveholders. You know, 267 00:15:27,440 --> 00:15:31,640 Speaker 1: that's that's a that's a pretty obvious another thing where 268 00:15:31,640 --> 00:15:33,160 Speaker 1: it's like this is a great you know, we should 269 00:15:33,160 --> 00:15:34,840 Speaker 1: be able to shake hands with the people who disagree 270 00:15:34,880 --> 00:15:37,320 Speaker 1: with us and and work to do the business of 271 00:15:37,320 --> 00:15:39,920 Speaker 1: the people. That isn't to say that you should be 272 00:15:39,960 --> 00:15:43,880 Speaker 1: wonderful and kind and uh, you know, bend over backwards 273 00:15:43,920 --> 00:15:48,800 Speaker 1: to appease and accommodate evil. But that's yeah, and that 274 00:15:49,640 --> 00:15:52,600 Speaker 1: we see the other side. Well, yeah, that's what I 275 00:15:52,640 --> 00:15:54,320 Speaker 1: was going to say, is that I think we are 276 00:15:54,360 --> 00:15:56,760 Speaker 1: getting to a point where you mentioned the sort of 277 00:15:56,840 --> 00:16:01,200 Speaker 1: like less than human lizard people type that creeps into 278 00:16:01,720 --> 00:16:05,080 Speaker 1: like all right circles, and I mean I haven't seen 279 00:16:05,120 --> 00:16:07,560 Speaker 1: it on Fox. I think you know, sometimes stuff like 280 00:16:07,560 --> 00:16:10,680 Speaker 1: that creeps into the mainstream just red or blue wherever 281 00:16:10,680 --> 00:16:16,880 Speaker 1: you are. But it's you're right, dehumanizing or warlike language, fascism, 282 00:16:17,560 --> 00:16:20,960 Speaker 1: democracy is under siege, that kind of thing. It makes 283 00:16:21,320 --> 00:16:23,720 Speaker 1: ordinary people feel like they have to take dramatic action. 284 00:16:24,520 --> 00:16:27,600 Speaker 1: And when you sort of get to that level, then 285 00:16:27,680 --> 00:16:30,080 Speaker 1: of course you're going to see more of this. Yeah, 286 00:16:30,120 --> 00:16:34,520 Speaker 1: And I can understand the tension of the eighteen fifties 287 00:16:34,520 --> 00:16:36,960 Speaker 1: because like you said, you don't want to compromise with evil. 288 00:16:37,400 --> 00:16:43,240 Speaker 1: There were absolutely fundamental differences about the structure of the 289 00:16:43,240 --> 00:16:45,440 Speaker 1: world that they lived in. You know. One side said, 290 00:16:45,840 --> 00:16:48,760 Speaker 1: this thing that you all are basing your entire economy 291 00:16:48,760 --> 00:16:52,520 Speaker 1: around where you own other people is evil. And you 292 00:16:52,560 --> 00:16:54,160 Speaker 1: look back and you see what John Brown did and 293 00:16:54,200 --> 00:16:56,240 Speaker 1: you're like, I don't think I could have done that, 294 00:16:56,280 --> 00:16:59,200 Speaker 1: but I'm not going to judge him for he for 295 00:16:59,280 --> 00:17:04,280 Speaker 1: what he tried to do, and that that makes sense 296 00:17:04,359 --> 00:17:08,320 Speaker 1: looking back on it. But today Democrats and Republicans like 297 00:17:09,119 --> 00:17:11,639 Speaker 1: agree on like ninety five percent of the major things, 298 00:17:11,800 --> 00:17:14,520 Speaker 1: major questions facing the country. Like they disagree on like 299 00:17:14,600 --> 00:17:17,879 Speaker 1: tax rates, like you know, they if they want to 300 00:17:17,880 --> 00:17:20,479 Speaker 1: fight over what books are in the in the public 301 00:17:20,520 --> 00:17:23,200 Speaker 1: library or in the school library. Like there are things 302 00:17:23,240 --> 00:17:26,440 Speaker 1: that they disagree over, but they are not things that 303 00:17:26,560 --> 00:17:29,240 Speaker 1: just that can't just be worked out, like they're like 304 00:17:30,080 --> 00:17:34,360 Speaker 1: structurally fundamentally they agree on pretty much everything. Like sure, 305 00:17:34,400 --> 00:17:38,720 Speaker 1: outside of the country, uh, watching it, people are like, 306 00:17:38,760 --> 00:17:40,720 Speaker 1: what do you what do you guys mean that you're 307 00:17:40,760 --> 00:17:44,320 Speaker 1: so different Democrats and Republicans, We see you as mostly 308 00:17:44,359 --> 00:17:48,200 Speaker 1: the same. And to go around like killing people over that, 309 00:17:48,600 --> 00:17:53,400 Speaker 1: I think is absurd and politicians, you know, I think, 310 00:17:53,440 --> 00:17:56,560 Speaker 1: have have a role to play. And in dialing that down, 311 00:17:56,600 --> 00:17:59,919 Speaker 1: I mean like, look, this is like this, this is 312 00:18:00,080 --> 00:18:04,359 Speaker 1: not an existent these are not existential differences here. Yeah, 313 00:18:04,440 --> 00:18:07,880 Speaker 1: you know, it's again like we have the amount of blood, 314 00:18:07,920 --> 00:18:09,639 Speaker 1: sweat and tears that has gotten to a place in 315 00:18:09,640 --> 00:18:13,520 Speaker 1: this country where just about every person and the stigma 316 00:18:13,600 --> 00:18:16,159 Speaker 1: to disagree with this is rightfully, very high, agrees in 317 00:18:16,240 --> 00:18:19,040 Speaker 1: equal it agrees in equal dignity, right like you're not 318 00:18:19,119 --> 00:18:21,400 Speaker 1: going to have the principles of say, the Civil Rights 319 00:18:21,440 --> 00:18:24,359 Speaker 1: Act of nineteen sixty four, the principles of it in 320 00:18:24,440 --> 00:18:27,560 Speaker 1: terms of equality. There's a very high stigma in this 321 00:18:27,600 --> 00:18:30,159 Speaker 1: country to disagree with that, because we've rightfully come so 322 00:18:30,200 --> 00:18:32,360 Speaker 1: far that we believe in the equality and the dignity 323 00:18:32,400 --> 00:18:38,080 Speaker 1: of people based on regardless of where they are sexually, racially, 324 00:18:38,280 --> 00:18:40,960 Speaker 1: anything like that. That in the scope of human history 325 00:18:41,040 --> 00:18:44,000 Speaker 1: is a massive achievement, and in this country it was 326 00:18:44,000 --> 00:18:45,960 Speaker 1: achieved in a short period of time. That's not to 327 00:18:46,000 --> 00:18:48,080 Speaker 1: say we don't have a waste to go. It is 328 00:18:48,119 --> 00:18:51,000 Speaker 1: to say, though, Ryan, that on some of these existential questions, 329 00:18:51,840 --> 00:18:54,800 Speaker 1: you know, there should be more common ground. But that's 330 00:18:56,400 --> 00:18:59,240 Speaker 1: people are who engage with this type of violence are 331 00:18:59,280 --> 00:19:03,800 Speaker 1: often like deeply, deeply mentally ill, not representative of anything broader, 332 00:19:03,880 --> 00:19:06,240 Speaker 1: And so that is yet to be determined in this case, 333 00:19:06,240 --> 00:19:09,600 Speaker 1: and we'll see. But I am really curious if it 334 00:19:09,680 --> 00:19:15,760 Speaker 1: will galvanize any sort of uh differences or a softening 335 00:19:15,880 --> 00:19:19,440 Speaker 1: of some hearts in Congress. Right right, all in all 336 00:19:19,480 --> 00:19:22,800 Speaker 1: societies have unwell people, and the way that they act 337 00:19:22,840 --> 00:19:25,480 Speaker 1: out and the way they express that and project it, 338 00:19:26,200 --> 00:19:29,400 Speaker 1: I think is somewhat related to how unwell the overall 339 00:19:29,440 --> 00:19:34,000 Speaker 1: society is. And so in that sense, in some ways, 340 00:19:34,000 --> 00:19:39,480 Speaker 1: we're all responsible for for everything here. Uh So, which 341 00:19:39,520 --> 00:19:42,720 Speaker 1: isn't to take responsibility off of David thepape who sounds 342 00:19:42,760 --> 00:19:48,000 Speaker 1: like a deranged sociopath for attacking attacking an old man 343 00:19:48,040 --> 00:19:51,720 Speaker 1: in his home, Like what more like what more cowardly 344 00:19:51,760 --> 00:19:56,480 Speaker 1: thing can can you do? Uh? You know, wishing wishing, 345 00:19:56,480 --> 00:20:02,840 Speaker 1: Paul Pelosi, you know, a complete and full and swim recovery. Absolutely, 346 00:20:03,240 --> 00:20:06,080 Speaker 1: And we'll keep following the story