Robert F. Kennedy Jr. argues America faces an economic collapse akin to ancient Rome due to unsustainable debt, alleging the left-wing establishment and corporations like BlackRock collude to control both major parties. He critiques the Biden administration for ignoring chronic disease epidemics driven by pharmaceutical interests while running record deficits, and condemns the Ukraine war as a neoconservative plot preventing peace with Russia. RFK Jr. accuses the World Economic Forum of totalitarian overreach, claims the U.S. violated the 1973 Bioweapons Convention by resuming research at the Wuhan Lab, and asserts that SSRIs link to mass shootings since 1997. Ultimately, he frames his independent candidacy as a necessary revolution against an elite-driven system threatening democracy and civil liberties. [Automatically generated summary]
America, the next presidential election is sneaking up on us.
We're at a major crossroads, and whomever we elect will determine if we begin our slow ascent, our rebuilding to become a great nation on the planet once again, or if we descend into destruction and chaos like ancient Rome.
The signs are there.
History does repeat itself.
This podcast is part of our presidential candidate series to help you decide who you want in the Oval Office.
My guest today is a renegade in his own party, but all but forced out by the left-wing establishment here recently.
His State of the Union address leaned into the dark and bleak times that are upon us now, and yet somehow it went viral.
He's rejected both the DNC and RNC, is running as an independent.
His appeals to conservative voters come in his commitment to take on big pharma, seal the border, and his staunch support for Israel.
But he also appeals to those on the left with his views on climate change, which are very strong, reducing the size of the military, and building a universal health care system from the ground up.
When it comes to the First Amendment and climate change, he and I have had our own, let's say, colorful disagreements.
Come November, will he be a formidable opponent?
Who is he going to do more damage to?
Does he have a chance to win it all?
Many both on the left and the right fear his candidacy will ensure either a Trump or Biden victory.
But will it?
Welcome to a podcast.
We welcome a man whose lineage in politics needs no introduction.
He is a candidate for President of the United States.
His name, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Before we get to RFK, I want to talk to you about self-defense.
Most self-defense situations can be handled with a gun, but that doesn't mean they all should be handled with a gun.
I believe wholeheartedly in the Second Amendment, but I also believe in the power of having options.
Less Lethal Than Deadly Force00:15:26
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Welcome to the program.
Thanks for having me.
It's good to see you.
I've been here for many, many years.
So let me just start with a couple of things.
First of all, I mean, I don't get to talk to a Kennedy very often.
Your father was spectacular.
Big fan of your father.
The speech that he gave when he found out that Martin Luther King had died is the probably the best speech and the bravest speech I've ever seen any politician give.
So it must be hard to be his son.
Well, I mean, it's a source of pride and comfort for me.
You know, the first 14 years of my life were spent in his company.
And, you know, I had the advantage that a lot of people don't have, which is that there are so many books about my family that, you know, most 14-year-old kids who lose a dad, if they want to find out information about him or think about, you know, how would he have responded to a certain situation?
They don't have access to that material, but I feel very lucky that I did.
And, you know, because you're always kind of measuring yourself against your dad.
And I'm not saying in a competition, but I'm not saying in terms of, you know, role modeling behavior, you know, what would he do?
My father, you know, I think my father is a very moral man, a very brave man.
And so my question is, what would he do in this situation?
And a lot of times I have that answer pretty much, pretty certainty at my fingertips.
And, you know, that gives me a very good milestone for which to judge my own behavior.
You remember when your father was called when your uncle was killed, right?
I was, yes.
And what did your dad say?
Well, the day that my uncle was killed, the day my uncle was killed, I was picked up early.
I was going to the Sidwell Friends school in Washington, D.C. with two of my siblings, or actually one of my siblings, Joe.
We were picked up early from school that day, and as we were leaving school, there were flags in Washington, D.C. were being lowered to half mass.
And I asked my mom, why are they doing that?
And she said, a bad man killed Uncle Jack.
When I got home, my father was walking in the yard with John McCone.
who was the head of the CIA.
My uncle had fired Alan Dulles after the Bay of Pigs, after Dulles lied to him.
He actually wanted my father to run the CIA because they thought the CIA was so out of control that he only, you know, he believed only my father could straighten it out.
My grandfather had intervened and said, you can't, the optics for the whole world will be terrible if a president's brother is running the secret police agency.
It will be, there's too much temptation to collusion and, you know, but to politicize it.
And so they brought in John McCone, who was a Republican businessman, and he was a very pious Catholic.
And they thought that he would straighten it out.
But of course, and the CIA, nobody ever told him what was going on.
You know, and Dulles was still running it at that time from a distance.
And so anyway, my father, the CIA is only about maybe half a mile from my house.
We lived in Langley.
So we used to, when the CIA was being constructed, the headquarters, we would ride every day, go horseback riding.
My father would wake us up at six every morning and take us horseback riding with nine kids.
And we would go through the CIA property.
So I watched it be built.
And then when McComb was appointed, he would come to our house every day during the springtime and during the autumn to swim in our swimming pool after work.
So he would leave work around four or five and he would come over and do laps.
And our swimming pools were only a couple minutes away.
A lot of times he'd come to lunch at my house.
My father was walking with him in the yard.
And I didn't know what he said at that time, but it's been reported since that my father said, did your people do this?
My father made three calls that day.
He made the first call he made after Jay Edgar Hoover told him my uncle had been shot.
He called the desk officer at the CIA and he said the same question.
Did your people do this?
Then the next call he made was to Harry Ruiz, who was one of the Cuban Bay of Pay.
He was one of the Cuban activists.
He had fought alongside of Castro, then turned against Castro and had been part of the, you know, the Cubans, the militarized Cubans in this country who were part of the Bay of Pigs invasion.
He didn't actually go in the Bay of Pigs, but he was part of it.
And he was very close to my father and remained loyal to him, even when many of the other Bay of Pigs Cubans had turned against him.
And my father called him.
He was at a hotel in Washington.
And my father said to him, again, it wasn't your people who did this.
His first suspicion, it was the Miami Cubans who were affiliated with the CIA and who were very, very hostile to Jack and my dad.
And because they believed that my uncle should have invaded the Bay of Pigs, should have provided air support and then gone in and deposed Castro.
And they felt he was a traitor, some of them felt that he was a traitor for that.
And then in the 62, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, they wanted him to go in.
And he had instead begun a process of détente with Khrushchev and with Castro.
In fact, the day that my uncle was killed, he had an emissary meeting with Castro at Castro's summer house at Verdatero Beach in Cuba, outside of Havana, and talking about what the conditions would be to end the embargo to Cuba, which my uncle wanted to do.
Wow.
And so, but he knew there was tremendous hostility toward him in the Cuban community, among some members of the Cuban community, and that a lot of those people had been working with the CIA on the assassination programs against Castro.
And that, you know, a lot of them were highly, highly militarized.
They'd been in Batista's army.
They were sharpshooters.
There was all kinds of, you know, sort of highly militarized people who were capable of doing this.
So I'm watching a show.
It's just out on Netflix called The Octopus Murders.
I don't know if you've heard of this, but it's another really bad period of the CIA starting in the 1980s under Reagan and killing.
You know, it's horrible what they were doing.
Mainly like Operation Condor in Latin America and Sandinistas.
Yes, but it's much deeper than that, it now seems.
You know, after the 60s, we had the church commission.
Then the 80s, we're seeing it again with Iran-Contra.
We're seeing it now.
Is there a way to bring the CIA, NSA, NSC, all of it under control?
Yeah, I mean, you know, my uncle actually, you know, one of the documents that the CIA has been kept secret, you know, and there's a few thousand documents left, but in the most recent release last year, one of the documents that was released was a memo from Arthur Schlesinger to my uncle that summarized my uncle's plans for reorganizing the CIA, for how to, you know, end this kind of rogue.
you know, operation.
Right.
And my father, a week before he died, my father was asked by Pete Hamill, who was a famous New York kind of street reporter, you know, and very close to my father.
He was a high school dropout who'd become this, you know, incredible reporter, important reporter in New York.
And Hamill asked my father, they were on a bus in California campaigning.
And Hamill asked him, what are you going to do about the CIA?
And my father essentially paraphrased what this earlier memo said, which is that he was going to separate the plans division, which is the dirty tricks division, from the espionage division.
And those are the two main functions of the CIA.
Espionage is what you want the CIA to be doing.
That's information gathering and analysis and analytics.
And the president needs that service.
He needs to know what's happening around the world, what the ramifications of various decisions will be.
And so that is necessary.
And that was why the CIA was founded to do that.
But Alan Dulles, very early on, had changed the function of the CIA to allow it to do all these other malevolent tasks, which are overthrowing governments, fixing elections, bribing public officials, all of the sort of dirty tricks.
That's called the Plans Division.
And my father had seen that that tail, the Plans Division tail, was now wagging the espionage dogs.
And the espionage division had become the servant to the plans division.
And the espionage division's function was to provide tasks for the plans division to fix things in other countries.
And then it served the function of justifying those and making sure none of the blowback was ever accounted for or weighed or measured or reported.
My father saw that that was catastrophic.
And that the espionage division was enabling the plans division to do all this stuff and making sure they were never held accountable.
My father wanted to break them up into two separate agencies.
The Azbihana division would be looking over the dirty tricks of it and saying, okay, what was the blowback?
If you asked the CIA, one of the greatest coups in their history, that's not a good word to use because that's the actual word.
But one of the greatest triumphs in their history was overthrow, throwing Mohamed Mossadegh in Iran in 1953.
And then the next one in 1954, they overthrew Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala.
Guatemala has never recovered.
It's got the highest murder rate in the hemisphere.
It's, you know, got terrible poverty.
It never recovered from that.
Iran has never recovered from the overthrow of Mossadegh.
The problems we're having in Iran today and the problems that Gaza and Iraq and everything else all come from that overthrow.
We took the first democratically elected president in the 4,000 history of Iran who would love the United States and he loved us.
And Churchill tried to overthrow him first.
And his advisor said to him, they threw out the British, British embassy clothes.
And his advisor said to him, you should throw out the United States too, because they're part of it.
And he said, no, the United States would never do that.
The United States is a colonial nation and they stand up for democracy and they believe in us.
And that was when Truman was president.
But as soon as Eisenhower came in and Eisenhower kind of had this relationship with Dulles, where Dulles became very powerful.
And for good reason, Eisenhower had been the general in World War II.
He did not want to go into another war.
And he saw the CIA as kind of a way to manipulate public events and to get rid of problems without sending U.S. troops abroad.
And so he relied very heavily on Dulles.
And Dulles, you know, had this, Dulles was able then to just run amok.
And there's a terrific, probably the best book on Dulles is by David Talbot.
It's called Devil's Chessboard.
It's a fantastic book.
But one of the things Talbot says about him is that he was incapable of distinguishing between the corporation, the welfare of the corporations that he had represented.
He had been an attorney for Sullivan Cromwell, which is the biggest white shoe law firm in New York.
And his clients had been Texaco, United Fruit Company, and these other companies that were operating.
Oh, and Texas wanted to, you know, when When Mohamed Mozadegh said, hey, we're going to start actually charging BP and Texco for the oil that they're taking from our country.
Dulles said, oh, that's God.
Western Leaders Protecting Oligarchs00:17:06
I mean, they're communists and overthrew them.
But it was protecting the financial, the mercantile interests of Texaco.
And then the same thing happened in Guatemala.
Jacob Arbenz was democratically, one of the greatest leaders in Latin American history.
And he said 80% of Guatemala's arable land was controlled by United Fruit.
And they weren't using it.
They were keeping it fallow to keep the price of labor low and the price of bananas high.
And so Jacob Arbenz said, no, we're going to distribute it all to the peasants.
And we're going, including his own land.
He nationalized his own property.
And he said, we're going to pay them for it.
United Fruit had claimed on its tax returns that all of his property, 80% of the land in the country, was worth only $17 million because they wanted to keep their taxes low.
But then when he said, okay, we're going to nationalize it and here's your $17 million.
They said, no, no, no, we were making a mistake.
It's really $300 million.
And he said, that's not what you've been saying for 20 years when you're paying tax and we're going to give you what you said it was worth yourself.
And so they got on the phone to Dulles and had him overthrow the government.
And Guatemala has never been so the espionage division ought to be looking at these blowbacks and say, okay, Obama, you used a drone and you killed the terrorists and his kids with that drone attack.
And it was a bad terrorist.
We got rid of him.
What's the long-term cost?
Correct.
His 14 brothers.
Are they now all going to be calm about it or are they now jihadists?
And that kind of blowback is never, ever assessed by the CIA.
And that's one of the problems with having those two divisions melded.
So with that being said, I think everybody has changed.
I know I have changed dramatically since September 11th.
Because I've seen the things, you know, when they said they hate us for our freedom.
I don't think so.
They hate us because we say one thing and then we ghost plane people.
You know, we are not the nation I thought we are.
Can we get there?
Are we too far gone?
Can we get back to our Constitution and Bill of Rights and equal justice under the law, being colorblind and all of those things that I always thought we were, but I guess it never really were.
Listen, I think if we have a president who understands what America is supposed to look like and is determined to do that, that we can do that.
My uncle did that.
My uncle changed U.S. foreign policy dramatically.
And just in the thousand days he was in the White House.
U.S. foreign policy before he came in had one objective, which was anti-communism.
And the way that they were executing that objective is putting U.S. foreign policy in and U.S. military aid.
The leaders who said, I'm anti-communist, I'm killing communists.
But a lot of times, they were in league with an oligarchy.
And any peasant who complained about, you know, I'm not getting enough wages to live, that became a communist.
And so the U.S. was on the side of the, you know, of the oligarchs.
And it was actually empowering.
Yeah.
In fact, you know, my uncle had two trips when he was in his three years in office that were the happiest he's ever been.
One was when he went to Ireland and, you know, he was the first Irish Catholic president.
And it was like a homecoming of a hometown boy who made good.
And then the other was to Colombia.
And he met the president of Colombia then was a man named Yeroscar Margot.
And Jackie and Jack said that all the people they'd met, and they'd met the greatest leaders in history.
They'd met de Gaulle in France.
They met Eamon de Valera, who was the George Washington of Ireland, who had fought in the Easter Rebellion against the British, and he became the president.
They loved him, but they said the smartest and the most charming and brilliant of all the statesmen they met was Yeruscan Margot in Colombia.
He had a million people come out to see my uncle in the main square in Colombia.
And Yeros Ganmargo turned to him and he said, do you know why they love you?
And my uncle said, no, why?
And he said, because they think you put America on the side of the poor.
And my uncle made a decision that he was not going to send troops abroad.
He kept us out of Lao.
He said, his best friend Ben Bradley said to him, what do you want in your gravestone?
And my uncle, Jack Kennedy, said he kept the peace.
He said the principal job of a president of the United States was to keep the country out of war.
He said he didn't want African children and Latin American children, Asian children, when they heard the United States of America to think of a man in a uniform with a gun.
He wanted them to think of a police corps volunteer of the Alliance for Progress, which was helping the poor people create a middle class, the USAID, which that's what it was supposed to do.
It's now a CIA.
CIA up front.
But that's not why he created it.
But anyway, he succeeded in doing that.
He kept the country.
He never sent a combat troop abroad.
And he instead projected economic power abroad rather than military power.
And today there's more statues to him in Africa, Latin America, Asia, more universities, more parks named after him, more hospitals than any other president, and probably more than all U.S. presidents combined, because it was an effective foreign policy.
And I think that's what we need to get back to.
We need to tell the world we're not going to be on the side of the oligarchs and, you know, the power brokers.
We're going to be on the side of the poor and of fairness.
And, you know, and it's going to be good for our country because we need to build ourselves economically.
That's the best national defense.
So it's strange.
We're sitting with two candidates besides you, two candidates.
One is always against war.
Donald Trump has been against war the whole time and did some really great things in the Middle East, I think.
Then we have another president that was running for president, who I swear to you, it's almost, to me, it's almost like there's a lot of people that want to go to war.
And it all seems to be these Western leaders that I don't understand.
Ukraine is corrupt.
We know that.
We're sending boatloads of money over to them with no checks or balances on it.
We know a lot of it is being taken by oligarchs and all the payoffs that go along with it.
What is our foreign policy now?
And there's no audit.
Right.
And it's the most corrupt country in the world.
So, you know, that's, you know, independent assessors have said for years, it's the most corrupt country in the world.
By the way, my son went over there and fought or, you know, on the side of Ukraine for the Foreign Legion over there.
And he was a machine gunner for a special forces unit.
And, you know, he and I don't see eye to eye on the war.
But, you know, I'm proud of him for what he did.
And I, you know, I also have, I share his pride in the fighting spirit of the Ukrainian people.
And I don't, I, I, we have a problem mixing people with leadership in politics.
Exactly.
And that, and, you know, this war is an immoral war because it was unnecessary.
Putin tried repeatedly to settle the war, the Minsk Accords, which in 2019, it was a negotiated settlement, very fair to Ukraine, very fair to the United States.
The U.S., Britain signed on to it, France signed on to it, Germany signed on to it, and Ukraine.
And Zelensky ran in 2019.
He's a comedian and a television actor.
He wins with 70% of the vote.
because he ran on a peace platform because Ukrainian people wanted peace and they wanted to sign the Minsk Accords and we could have all walked away from it and Russia would not have debased Lugans.
Instead, Zelensky got in there and he pivoted.
Why did he pivot?
Well, nobody really knows, but the suspicion is that he was threatened by ultra-nationalist Reed, sort of neo-Nazis in his own political party, and by the U.S. State Department, by Victoria Newland, who's head of the neocons.
And that she said to him, you will not get U.S. support unless you oppose that agreement.
So Putin then goes in, and we say, we're all told this comic book story, he's a supervillain who's going to take over Europe.
Really?
I don't think so.
He said only 40,000 troops.
He clearly doesn't want to take control of the country.
It's a country of 44 million people.
And that's what he said.
He just wanted us back at the negotiating table.
So we won't help Zelensky negotiate.
Zelensky goes to China.
They won't help him.
So he goes to Israel.
And Naftali Bennett, the Prime Minister of Israel, said, I'll help.
And then he goes to Turkey and Ahmed Erdogan, the prime minister of Turkey, says, I will help.
And they sit down with Putin's people.
They negotiate another agreement.
And the main thing in both agreements is Putin doesn't want NATO in Ukraine.
He wants Ukraine to be neutral.
We promised him that for a long time.
We promised him in 92 and again, you know, Gorbachev in 92 and again and again.
And they told us from the start, if you go into Ukraine, don't go to any of these countries.
We went into 14 countries, moved NATO a thousand miles to the east.
They said from the outset, NATO is a red line.
We've been invaded through NATO three times.
The last time we were invaded, they killed one out of every seven Russians.
And we're not going to allow anybody to control NATO and then put Aegis Tomahawk missiles four minutes from Moscow.
Correct.
We could decapitate the entire Russian leadership in four minutes.
The Cuban missile crisis in reverse.
Exactly.
And of course the Russians don't want that.
And my uncle always said, if you want peace, you better understand.
Put yourself in the shoes of your opponent.
Nobody's doing that.
Nobody in our government will talk to Putin.
Why?
Are we this dumb or do we have everything?
I've never seen an administration make this many errors that all fall out of the interest of the United States.
I mean, it is a cluster of bad policies.
Here's what I would say, because I never put myself in other people's heads.
I don't, you know, to answer why is he doing it?
I'll never do that unless I can tell you.
I can tell you the incentives.
One is that every time we move NATO into a new country, that country is under a contractual obligation to conform its weapons purchases to NATO specifications.
That means billions of dollars.
Eraytheon, General Dynamics, North Grumman, Boeing, and Lockheed.
And those companies, which are all owned by BlackRock, control both the Republican and Democratic Party.
And, you know, that's part of this whole engine that keeps us in a constant state of war.
So they want to go into NATO.
And, you know, and then you have a president, President Biden, who always has been, it's like the big, the only foreign policy tool that he has is military.
It's like the guy, Carpenter, has a hammer and is the only tool he's got.
Lindsey Grant.
Everything looks like a nail to him.
It's a go-to.
And, you know, Biden was the first guy into Iraq.
You know, my uncle was against the Iraq war.
A lot of other people were, but Biden was the guy who was leading the charge for Iraq, which was the worst foreign policy blunder in the history of our republic.
We drove Iraq.
Iraq today, we spent $4 trillion there.
We killed more Iraqis than Saddam Hussein.
We created ISIS.
We left it.
It's an incoherent battle between Shia and Sunni death squads.
We pushed it into a proxy position with Iran.
So now, you know, it was our bulwark against Iran.
The reason that Gaza happened is because of Iraq.
We destroyed Iraq as a bulwark against Iran.
So now Iran is flexing its muscles all over the region.
It owns Iraq.
It owns Hamas.
It owns Hezbollah.
It owns the Houdis.
And it's an expansion mode.
We drove 4 million refugees up into Europe and destabilized every democracy in Europe for the next probably three generations.
We created Brexit.
Brexit is a result, direct result like linear from the Iraq war.
And we created BRICS, which is the end of the dollar as a global reserve currency because everybody's so angry at us about it.
So it was crazy.
But if you ask, What would happen if you asked Joe Biden today?
Was that a colossal error?
I don't think he'd say so.
No.
I think he thinks, oh, we got rid of Saddam Hussein.
So I feel as though we're right now fighting Democrats, Republicans.
And I don't think it's Democrats and Republicans.
I think that's a stage show.
I think it is the elites and the people.
Brexit is not because they're wild conspiracy theorists or anything else.
It's they're proud of their nation in a healthy way, and they want to make their own rules.
Here in the United States, over in France, the same thing with the French, or not the French, but the Norwegians coming out with their tractors.
Look, this is bad for us farmers.
Why are we playing this international game?
Do you agree with any of that?
I think it's a populist and a class war, like you say.
But not in a, not in a.
Well, here's the thing about populism.
Populism is easily hijacked by Democrats.
Yes.
But it doesn't necessarily have to be kind of, you know, dark.
Yes.
It doesn't have to be fascism or Nazism.
Yes.
Populism, you know, it was the populist movement in our country in 1903 that got rid of the Gilded Age.
And, you know, we got the 40-hour work week.
We had the child labor.
We got women the vote.
We got, you know, we got the Sherman Antitrust Act passed.
And we made corporations pay taxes for the first time.
And we passed a law that made it illegal for corporations to donate to federal political click candidates.
That came out of the populist movement and the country and the progressive movement.
So it was an idealistic impulse.
But it's often hijacked.
And I'll give you this example that my father ran a populist campaign in 1968.
Silenced Doctors and Bioweapons00:11:59
He had all the elites against him.
He had the big city mayors against him.
He had the labor unions all against him, except for the UAW and then Cesar Schaff Union.
All the other ones who had been with him in 1960 were now against him.
The liberal newspapers were all against him.
The New York Times hated him.
The Village Voice, all of them, the liberal Democratic clubs were all against him.
On the college campuses, McCarthy, my father always said McCarthy had the A students and he had the B and C students.
But he had, he had, you know, everybody, all the power centers were against him, but he had this, you know, the last day of his life.
He won the most rural state in our country, South Dakota, and the most urban state, California.
And when, you know, when I took that train ride taking his body, I was with him when he died in Los Angeles.
Jeez.
And took that train ride from New York City to Washington, D.C. to take his body down.
Two million people on the train tracks, and they were every color.
It was the entire cross-section of the American people.
There were people in military uniform, Boy Scouts, hippies, or black people, white people, priests, rabbis, people carrying American flags, signing, you know, signs saying goodbye, Bobby, pray for his Bobby.
And it was the, you know, it was all America.
Four years later, a lot of the white people who had stood on that train track between, you know, Newark and Baltimore and Delaware and who had strongly supported my father in 1968, they changed their vote overwhelmingly, not to George McGovern in 72, but to George Wallace, who was antithetical to everything my father, but he was now the standard bearer for the populist movement.
But it was a dark kind of populist.
So I think all of the, you know, we're seeing a revolution in this country that's going to happen.
You can't have a situation.
57% of the people in this country can't put their hands on $1,000 if they have an emergency.
54% of the people in this country are not making enough money to pay for basic human needs.
And there's going to be a revolution.
And is it going to be captured by the dark regressive forces?
Or are we going to be able to keep it for as an expression of idealism?
But I think that the problem that we have is the sides are all mixed up.
I don't know who's who anymore.
And you have the federal government colluding with gigantic business.
I'm a conservative.
I used to be one of the dummies that used to say, Apple's not going to do anything.
Google can.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah, they can.
The liberals used to be the ones who would be telling me that.
Now I'm like, I'm on your side.
They're gone.
They're gone.
The liberals are now for censorship, which is astonishing to me.
The liberals are pro-war, which is astonishing to me.
The liberals are anti-Israel.
They're on the side, not the Palestinians.
Well, I'm on the side of the Palestinians, but I'm not on the side of us.
Yes, and I'm not on the side of Iran.
No.
You know, what's happened to the Liberal Party, the Liberal Parties were skeptical of corporate control of our government.
And now it's like, you know, the pharmaceutical companies are like, you know, they're like the angels of heaven for them.
Where do you stand in the WEF, the World Economic Forum?
It is like, you know, we shouldn't be paying any attention.
It's a billionaires boys club as arranging the world to shift wealth upward and to clamp down totalitarian controls on everybody else.
And now they got the capacity to do it.
They got all these countries running around doing what they tell them to do.
It's astonishing to me that, you know, these people go to Davos in their private jets and they're able to tell these world leaders, you know, how to govern us in ways that eradicate our constitutional and civil rights and constantly shifting wealth.
I mean, COVID, during COVID, you know, and I know you're a President Trump fan, but President Trump got rolled by his bureaucrats.
Oh, I agree.
And he came in saying, I'm a businessman.
I'm going to run this place like a business.
He gave the keys to all of our shops and stores and businesses at Tony Fauci and shut down 3.3 million businesses.
Let's talk about this.
But we shifted $4 trillion of wealth upward.
We closed all the little guys.
Home Depot was open and Google, and they're all colluding with each other to censor the people who were like me who were complaining about it.
Correct.
So I agree with you on that.
And I give everybody the benefit of the doubt for a few weeks because we didn't know necessarily what was coming.
So good intention, bad intention.
I'll give you the benefit of the doubt.
But there comes a point to where you're like, oh, wait, wait, wait, you're shutting down the entire economy.
And the New York Times wrote about me when I said, you know, there are people my age, we'll go into work.
Let's keep the thing running so our kids aren't put behind.
They said I was trying to kill old people.
It's ridiculous.
And I'll tell you something about that, but the only kind of well-known person who would talk to me, come on my podcast early in COVID was Kelly Slater, who's the world greatest surfer in the world right now, arguably.
And Kelly saw what they were doing.
He said, look, there's people in Malibu, people out surfing in the water, okay?
And the sheriff is going and giving them $1,000 tickets on the beach and telling them not to come back, but go home.
And by that time, we already knew that COVID only spread indoors.
The way to stop it was to stay in the sunlight and get healthy.
They were putting, in Venice, near where I live in California, they went to the skateboard parks, the half pipes, and they threw sand on them so the kids couldn't exercise because they couldn't be outside.
They went to the black neighborhoods like Compton or here, Harlem, Pet Stye, and they shut down the basketball courts.
And if they couldn't lock them down, they took the hoops out.
So you're locking all these kids in.
The only dish of poverty that actually improved during COVID was there were fewer reports on child abuse.
And why is that?
Because most reports on child abuse happen in the schools, and we closed down the schools.
And we locked all those kids in the apartment with their abusers with no meals because they're getting their one hot meal a day from the schools.
And what we did to our kids' development is just criminal.
About half of the kids now are going to need remedial education all the way through high school.
We just destroy this generation.
And CDCs, there's a report that came out from Brown University that said there's a 22 IQ point loss among toddlers, 22 IQ points.
And CDC's response to that is that a year ago, they rewrote the child milestones.
So it used to be that a child would have to walk, you know, that you were normal if you walked to 12 months.
They changed that to 18 months.
You would have.
Just lower the bar.
You would have 50 words by 18 months.
Now they say a year and a half.
And so on.
So they, you know, they're trying to normalize what they did to our children.
And it's so, the whole thing is so criminal and so corrupt.
So there's a couple of things.
And I'd like to know specifically what you would do.
First of all, Donald Trump has said that if he wins, he'd like to make you put you over CDC or FDA.
And I'd like to talk to you about that.
But I also want to hear from you, what do you do to restore the trust?
If there is, God forbid, Ebola starts circling the world.
Who's going to believe it?
Who's going to listen to the expert doctors?
Because the good doctors were all silenced.
They all lost their license.
It's just the doctors that are left that played the game.
How do we restore the process?
I mean, the medical profession disgraced itself.
Disgrace.
And, you know, the Thousands of doctors who were trying to tell the truth were punished.
They were delicensed.
They were gaslighted.
They were vilified and demonized and silenced.
And it was, you know, it was really criminal.
I mean, the way, and by the way, because of what we now know, because of the Wuhan Lab, et cetera, they're messing with Ebola and they're messing with Chichamunga and all of these really horrific diseases, not with 0.01 infection mortality rate, but with 50%, 20%, 10%.
And, you know, and they're making bad, they're making these diseases.
And of course, some of them escape every year.
So, you know, that needs to be stopped.
We need to restore the Bioweapons Convention of 1973 that Richard Nixon signed.
And he said, and he closed down Fort Dietrich and said, we're not making bioweapons anymore.
And after 2001, the Patriot Act passed a week after 9-11.
9-11 happens.
One week later, there's an anthrax attack on our government.
And at that point, Patrick Leahy and a couple of other senators were fighting the Patriot Act and saying, you can't do this.
This is an attack on American constitutional democracy.
Those senators, the ones who are fighting the Patriot Act, are the ones who all got the anthrax.
And so they were silenced.
Congress was shut down and they passed the Patriot Act.
Well, the Patriot Act had a provision in it that says, we're not getting rid of the Geneva Convention on Bioweapons.
We're not getting rid of the 1973 Bioweapons Convention.
We have a new rule that says that any federal officer or employee who violates those treaties cannot be prosecuted.
And that relaunched the bioweapons arms race.
And the Pentagon didn't want to do it at first because it, you know, violating Geneva's hanging offense.
So they started redirecting all that money to Anthony Fauci to do bioweapons research under the guise of vaccine research.
So why isn't he in jail?
Well, he's not in jail because Joe Biden is president and because, you know, unfortunately, Donald Trump colluded with or was run over by him.
Right.
Donald Trump knew what was wrong.
Why Trump Knew About Lockdowns00:02:58
He knew not to shut down our businesses.
And he knew about, you know, the he knew about lockdowns.
He knew about ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine.
And yet, and he said it, he tried to speak up, but his own bureaucrats told him to shut up.
But he unfortunately did what he was told.
And that's, you know, why I think that he doesn't deserve another chance.
And you maybe defend him on that.
I don't defend him on the vaccine or any of it.
I think you could make the case early on.
Everybody was trying.
I try to believe, except for Fauci, I try to believe that everybody had good intent doing what they thought was right.
And then it just started dogpiling.
And then it became, I don't even know, communist China.
It just became a country that I didn't recognize.
And no one was willing to stop it.
I want to talk to you about having access to medication in tough times.
And that tough time could just be you're on vacation, you're up in the mountains, somebody starts to get sick.
Do you have antibiotics?
You don't have to go down off the mountain to get to a doctor.
It also could be the latest is bird flu, but Tamaflu is supposed to handle that.
Do you have Tamaflu?
Would you like to have some Tamaflu?
I don't know if Jace has the license to carry Tamaflu yet.
I'm sure they're working on it if they don't.
But they carry and are carrying more and more every day of the things that you might need in an emergency.
Or in an emergency, just the regular everyday medications that you need to live have a year's supply worth there at your home.
Now, they can start with the emergency kit, five essential antibiotics that treat most common and deadly bacterial infections.
And they are working to expand their medications.
They have ivermectin as an option for the Jace case, just in case the Jace case.
I recommend highly that you go there now, get some for your own family, make sure your family is taken care of.
You can even give a gift certificate to friends or to your family members that no longer live in the house so they can do it as well.
JaceMedical.com.
Use the promo code Beck at checkout and you'll save.
It's j-a-s-e-medical.com.
So I want to be real honest with you.
I both like you, want to like you, love some of the stuff you say, and also I'm a little terrified by you because I don't know who you are yet.
I don't know if you've changed or what, but you're saying a lot of things that I think you deeply believe.
The vaccine, the COVID stuff, all of that.
The Honest Cost of Debt00:10:49
I know you believe that stuff.
But then there are things like, for instance, the First Amendment.
You talk about people going after people and shutting them down.
But I don't know if you remember this, but you said, and so I'm going to tell you that the next time you see John Stossel or Glenn Beck or Rush Limbaugh, these flat earthers, I believe the earth is round, these corporate toadies lying to you, lying to the American public, telling you that global warming doesn't exist, which I never said.
I believe in global warming.
I just don't believe in the answers that we've come up with so far.
I'm telling you that global warming doesn't exist.
Send an email to their advertisers and tell them that you're not going to buy their products anymore.
This is treason, and we need to start treating them now as traitors.
You're smart enough to know what that means constitutionally.
That's execution.
Well, let me say this.
I wouldn't say that today.
And part of it is, part of the reason I wouldn't say that is because I watched our country run over not only the First Amendment, but all three arms of the First Amendment, the freedom of worship.
We close a million churches per year.
Who could have imagined that would ever happen?
No.
You know, ever happened in this country with no due process, no just compensation, no scientific citation, no public hearings, none of the safeguards of democracy.
We then roll over rights to freedom of assembly and association by, you know, with this weird science-free, you know, social dependency.
You can be in a BLM riot, but you can't protest COVID.
Or you can get on a, you have to wear a mask on a plane, but except when you're eating your meal.
You know, I mean, it was like a kabuki comedy.
Correct.
And then they shut down the Fifth Amendment, right?
You know, they shut down 3.3 million businesses, no due process, no just compensation.
They got rid of the Seventh Amendment, which is a right to jury trial.
They said if a vaccine company or any other entity that was responding to COVID countermeasures injures you, no matter how negligent they are, no matter how malicious they are, no matter how much they lie, no matter how grievous your injuries, you can't sue them.
And, you know, the Seventh Amendment says no American shall be denied the right to a trial before a jury of his peers in case of controversies exceeding $25.
There's no pandemic exception.
There's no exception really on any of the amendments.
None of them.
And they were written for hard times.
They weren't written for easy time.
The First Amendment was not written to protect speech that we all want to hear.
It was for the speech nobody wants to hear.
It's embarrassing.
That's appalling.
That's ideas that are horrible ideas, but that's what it was written to protect.
And During the Civil War, when our country was really this far from falling apart, and we killed 659,000 Americans, the equivalent of 7.2 million today, Confederates were sending agents provocateurs to the northern cities to drum up draft riots.
And those were really destroying northern morale and destroying our capacity to fight the war.
And so Abraham Lincoln suspended.
They knew who the people were as soon as they came in the city.
And Lincoln suspended habeas corpus and started arresting them.
And Judge Taney, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, said, you can't do it.
Even if the life of the nation is forfeit, you can't do it because the Constitution is more important than anything.
So, you know, it was much worse than anything that happened in COVID, which was a bad flu.
If we had treated it like a bad flu, it would have been a bad flu.
We treated it like an emergency and told all these people, you know.
So, yeah, I would never say anything like that today because my thinking on it has evolved and I can see how dangerous statements like that are because, you know, the government actually is doing some of this stuff.
Yeah.
I accept people changing.
So thank you for that.
I wondered because there are the WEF, the part of the Green New Deal has shut everybody up from talking.
And I really don't care.
If we want to change our country, then let's be honest about it and say, this is what we want to do.
These are the things.
And then let's vote on it.
And if that side wins, that side wins.
At least it was fair and we were open about it.
We all know what we're getting into.
But we are in this place now of shouting people down and saying, you don't have a right to say this.
You don't have a right to talk.
That's a danger to democracy.
Quite honestly, I think almost everything that our government is doing is a danger to democracy right now.
Yeah, I mean, I would agree with that.
And for starters, it just lies about everything.
Yes.
And there's no transparency and there's no effort.
I mean, you know, you're a senator and you ask for, you know, correct information on the Wuhan lab and you get 150 pages fully redacted.
There's no oversight.
And you talk to these senators and congressmen who are just not allowed to see what's happening inside of the U.S. government agencies.
And, you know, what does this have to do with democracy?
And everybody's treating it like it's normal.
So what is it?
I mean, you watch Congress and Congress just gave their power away to the administrative state years ago.
I don't think any of them want to pass.
Some of them do.
Some of them are really good guys.
But a lot of them don't want to.
They don't want to be held responsible for anything.
We just did an episode where we showed how many of them are performing well over the S ⁇ P 500, you know, with increases of 232% year over year.
What do you mean?
You mean congressmen's investments.
Investments.
Their portfolios.
Yeah, their portfolios.
I saw my kids showed me a website where you can, it's like a fund where you can bet on Nancy Pelosi's bets.
Right, right.
Because she's exceeding that.
Yeah, she's consistently.
She, I think, was 89 or 92% over the S ⁇ P 500.
I mean, it doesn't happen.
It just doesn't happen unless you're insider trading.
So everybody seems to be getting rich.
The American people are getting poorer.
We have out-of-control spending, which honestly, you know, at least could we get a nice car for everybody?
I mean, I feel like we spent all this money and we've got nothing to show for it.
Nothing to show for it.
We have worse than nothing.
We have a $34 trillion debt.
Yes.
We're now, the cost of servicing that debt every year is more than our military budget.
And within five years, 50 cents out of every dollar collected in taxes is going to go to servicing the debt.
Within 10 years, 100% of the money we collected in taxes is going to be needed for the debt.
And so how is nobody?
So how do you talk about it?
So how do we stop it?
Well, that's the thing is I'm going to stop that.
President Trump's not going to stop it.
He ran up the biggest debt of any president in history.
He ran up after saying, you know, I'm going to address the debt.
He ran up an $8 trillion debt personally, which is more than all the presidents before him combined since George Washington for 283 years.
And Biden is now on the route to matching that.
And it's insane.
And it's unsustainable.
It's going to destroy our country.
Destroy our dollar.
The only way, you know, we need to cut.
We need to do huge cuts to our defense budget.
That's the big.
And then we need to cut our health costs.
The only way to stop our health costs is by ending the chronic disease epidemic, which we can do very quickly.
But, you know, right now we have agencies that are all tied in with the food processors, the pharmaceutical companies that are driving this, you know, the chronic disease epidemic.
When my uncle was president, the annual budget, the cost of healthcare was about 4% to 6% of our GDP.
Today, it's almost 20%.
And the cost of health care, the cost of treating chronic disease is $4.3 trillion.
The cost of diabetes alone is as large as the, which is, you know, mitochondrial dysregulation.
The cost of that is larger than our defense budget.
When I was a kid, a typical pediatrician would see one case of juvenile diabetes in his whole lifetime.
Today, one out of every three kids who walks through his office door is either pre-diabetic or diabetic.
Nobody's talking about this.
The cost of autism is now a trillion dollars a year.
My generation, I'm 70, you're 60.
I'm 70 years old.
I didn't know anybody with autism.
No, we knew nobody when we were.
I didn't know anybody with peanut allergies.
No, my kid, my wife, I have 11 siblings, 70 cousins, nobody with a peanut allergy.
Why do five of my seven kids have allergies?
Why does, you know, the autism rates in my generation today, right now, 2024, one in 10,000 70-year-old men have autism.
In my kids' generation, it's one in every 34 kids, one in every 22 boys, according to CDC.
Nobody's talking about this.
Autism Epidemic and ESG Collusion00:02:17
These are bankrupting our country.
It's a trillion dollars a year just for autism.
All these kids who are disabled.
Nobody's talking about why is this happening?
But we're living in a time where the big corporations, big food, big pharma, everything, big food destroying our local farms.
Destroying them.
Destroying them.
I'm a rancher.
With the government.
Yeah, absolutely with the government.
There's only four meatpackers in this whole country.
Why?
Why?
Because, you know, the first thing I'm going to do is file antitrust against them because they're all owned by BlackRock.
Right?
And so, and BlackRock, that's the way they want it.
So the government has the absolute power to, and they're squeezing the ranchers and they're squeezing the consumers and they're making all the money and shifting the money upward.
It's completely illegal and they're getting away with it because they have political control.
What are your thoughts on ESG?
ESG.
You know what ESG is?
Environmental social governance standards for the banking.
You know, I believe in free markets.
And I think, you know, we should have markets in our energy sector and elsewhere that we need to get rid of subsidies.
Most environmental pollution is subsidies.
In fact, all of it is.
It's a way of liquidating the environment for cash and putting it on your profit line.
And what I will, you know, what my policy is, is get rid of the subsidies, including the environmental subsidies.
But will you get rid of the collusion between the governments of the world and the banks with ESG standards saying you have to have certain social practices, environmental practices, and governance practices, and the banks refusing to give loans to those companies that say, no, you don't have a place to tell me these things.
You don't have a place to tell me you have to be on the banks.
I don't think that that's a good idea.
Why Gun Violence Happens00:09:34
And by the way, I, you know, listen, I've been working on civil rights issues my whole life.
My first case as an environmental lawyer was NAACP against the, representing NACP and against the town of Austin for putting a waste transfer station in the oldest black neighborhood in the Hudson Valley.
And I've worked on environmental justice issues my whole life.
20% of my career has been spent representing American Indians in litigation against polluters and big resource companies.
I've worked in all these areas.
I've been for 35 years.
I've been on the board of Bedford-Stuyves and Restoration, which is the oldest and biggest community development corporation in the country, which is the purpose of it is to get capital and entrepreneurial expertise into black community, into one of the biggest black community in New York.
And has been very, very successful at doing that.
And I think that you can't eliminate racism by telling people don't be racist.
What you can do is we can make our kids resilient.
When I was a kid, I was, you know, it was, my uncle was running for president.
He was the first Irish Catholic president.
And there was a lot of Irish Catholic prejudice at that time and bigotry.
And I was called a mackerel snatcher when I was a kid.
I was called a Mick and all of these other, you know, pejoratives.
It never affected me.
Somebody would call me those names and say something's wrong with them.
And we want to make sure that, because I knew I had a good education, I had a loving family around me, I had opportunities, and that was not going to get in my way.
There were just people who were nasty or people, and that's just what life was.
I want to make sure that every black kid in this country has that resilience so that if somebody says something or does something racist to them, that they can stand up for themselves and stand up with confidence.
And the way you do that is by making sure our education system works for them.
There are, you know, there are charter schools in New York like the Success Academy, which brings kids in by lottery.
So, okay, it's bringing, choosing kids from the most impoverished neighborhoods by lottery.
And they have a better graduation rate, a better college placement rate than Scarsdale High School, which is the best public high school in the state.
But that's what we're doing.
We can fix our education system.
And again, I think it's ultimately through giving people choice.
But so are you for school choice?
Yeah, I'm for school choice.
And I'm for, but I also want to make sure the principals have control over what happens in their schools so that they're held responsible for it.
And you saw the effect of the labor unions because of COVID on their schools.
Right.
And I disagree with a lot of things that children's, or that the teachers' union did.
But I would say this, that the people who've been very, very successful in this have been able to figure out ways to work with the unions.
What you need is you need principals who have the power to fire people.
And you can negotiate and work with the unions to buy out contracts and to do it in a way that is as least disruptive and as least tension as possible.
But I think we need to have choice.
We need to give principals control over their own schools and then hold them responsible.
But you can't hold them responsible without giving them control.
And then if the school doesn't work, if they're not educating our children, they're gone.
Second Amendment, where do you stand on this?
I'm not taking anybody's guns.
So I, you know, you know, there was a time in my life, you know, my father was killed by a gun, my uncle was killed by a gun.
I, you know, I know other people whose lives have been, I saw what it did to my family, seen what it does to other people.
But I also understand how I, you know, I've spent years of my life in rural areas in this country.
And I spent, lived for two years in Alabama.
I've lived in South Dakota.
I grew up in Virginia.
And I know that there's a gun culture in this country that sees that you know that as an existential right for them and that you know um, do you see it as a right?
I mean, it is a right, it's in our building it's, I believe, in the constitution and it, and it's part of the second amendment.
So yeah, and I think that we need to work with each other to understand why we're having the gun violence in this country that no other country has.
So do you believe?
I mean, I think these are kind of separate.
I mean, the law-abiding gun owner they, they're not the ones you know going out and shooting.
Usually um, it's the ones who aren't either taking care of them correctly in their home or it's, you know, criminal activity um but but, but the idea of a gun is not to hunt, it is to protect against an out-of-control government.
So, you know, I think something happened because, you know, when I was a kid, we had uh, gun clubs in our schools and people would bring their right 22s to school and leave them in the car, or they bring them in and, you know, nobody was shooting at people and something happened.
There's never been a time in human history where individuals with guns were walking into crowds of strangers, crowds of children and starting to butcher them.
That's never happened.
Suddenly that started happening around Columbine and uh, the question is why it's happening.
Why is it happening in this country?
And you know, Switzerland has a comparable level of of gun ownership.
Everybody's required to have a gun in their house and they the last mass shooting they had in Switzerland was 21 years ago.
The last mass shooting culture is sick.
We have we have mass shootings every 21 hours.
So the question is, why is that happening?
And you know, I think that we need and NIH is under its own rules, is not allowed to look for the answer to that question.
There's a lot of things NIH won't do.
NIH won't look for the the cause of the autism epidemiology.
They won't look for the cause of peanut allergies.
They won't look at any of these things because they're frightened that there's a big, a big shot, a big food processor, big AG, big Pharma that is going to have be angry at them with the answer.
So they simply won't do it.
And one of the things they have not looked at, they have a rule, since 1997 they have not been able to look at the cause of gun violence.
When Columbine happened, five of the family victims of the family sued, I think, Prozac and you know the.
There are Ssris.
I've talked about this.
I'm not saying this is the answer, saying it's something that we should look at, that SSRIs have black box labels and Benzos that say known to cause suicidal and homicidal behavior.
It says that.
And we're the only country that has this level.
120 million, 240 million doses a year of these.
Correct.
And all of a sudden, and after Columbine, that's when it started happening.
So I'm not saying there's other things that could be done.
Yes, yes, yes.
I understand.
It could be video games.
It could be social media.
There's a lot of factors.
It could be a lot of factors.
There's a lot of factors, but we should know what it is because one thing we do know, it has nothing to do with the number of guns because there hasn't been any legislation out there that has diminished or increased the number of guns during that period.
It's been roughly constant.
If you have a scientific mind, which I do, I'm looking for the variables that change during that period.
And that's what the CDC ought to be doing.
And now, you know, because I'm having this conversation with you, I'm going to get ridiculed.
I'm going to be, you know, that Kennedy said that SSRIs are calling it, which I've never said.
But it's reasonable to put that on.
It makes sense to everybody in the world, which is let's figure out why that's happening and not, you know, and then deal with it.
Let's make sure we know what the culprit is.
My only thought on that is I don't trust everything's been so politicized that I don't trust any of that's why you need to vote for me, Glenn.
Why I Could Win Now00:04:16
Because I know how to dismantle corporate capture in these agencies.
Let me ask you two quick questions.
One, historically, person who has run as the third party, I think Ross Perot did the best in history.
He had 19%.
He ran as.
Teddy Roosevelt did better than him.
But he's still, he's the reason we had Woodrow Wilson.
Well, yeah, but that has nothing to do with the point.
All right.
So how, so do you believe you can win?
Yeah, I believe I can win.
I'm already beating both President Trump and President Biden among all Americans under 35.
I'm beating them in the battleground states under, among all people under the six battleground states under 45.
I'm beating them among independent voters.
And independents are now the biggest political demographic.
This is the first election in United States history in which independent, self-identified independents represent more people than either Democrats or Republicans.
43% of Americans self-identify as independents versus 27% for Democrats, 27% for Republicans.
My favorability ratings are 10 points ahead of President Trump or President.
My net favorability is 20 points.
And, you know, we have a, we're living at a time when we have two presidents who are running, former presidents, who each, if they were the only one running, would be the least popular person to run for a major party in history.
They are the two worst.
And 80%, 70 to 80% of Americans say they don't want that contest.
And so I think if there was a time that an independent could run and could run successfully, it would be now.
You know, if we have debates, I think that would be a very, very big turning point.
But I'll tell you what, the only group that I don't, that is a large group.
We're at a three-way tie with Hispanic voters, and I'm got momentum with me.
The only group where I don't do well is with baby boomers.
And I should do great with baby boomers because they all remember Camelot and the Kennedy years.
And I was a big hero to baby boomers, you know, when I was known only as the environmental champion.
But they watch baby boomers get their news from television, from MSNBC, and from CNN, and from the New York Times and the Washington Post.
And if you're living in that ecosystem.
I include Fox in that.
Well, yeah, but Fox actually lets me on all the time to do interviews.
And, you know, I and so, but the other MSNBC does and CNN does not.
What does that feel like to go from hero to zero on that side?
I mean, you've been a Democrat.
Your family is, they're the lions of the Democratic Party.
And all of a sudden, that party really doesn't like, the party really doesn't like you.
And you're even having problems with your own family.
How, how, what?
I mean, that's a big sacrifice.
Yeah, I, well, let me just say this about my family.
I have a lot of family members who support me and a lot who are working on the campaign, particularly the younger generation.
But my campaign's being run by Amarillus Kennedy, who's, you know, my daughter-in-law, my cousin Anthony Shriver, is running Florida for me.
So I have, you know, it's a big family.
But there's a lot of family who are against me as well and are horrified.
I have five members of my family who are working for the Biden administration.
And, you know, President Biden, long-term friend of my family, has a boss of my father behind him at the Oval Office.
He, you know, he talks about how my father inspired him to get into politics.
Embracing Family Anger00:02:23
So I understand why they're, you know, upset.
But, you know, I come from a family also that we, you know, we were raised debating each other.
My father would instigate debates every night the same way that his father did.
And we were expected to debate with passion and commitment and information without hating each other.
So I love my family.
I feel loved by them.
They differ with me on that.
They're going to fight like hell.
Make sure I don't succeed.
Would I like it if they were all on my site?
Yes.
But, you know, does it ruin my day?
No, not at all.
And, you know, I feel like this, Glenn, that every person who I've admired throughout my entire life, the people who I really, you know, the historical figures, all of them went through periods where they had to, you know, march through the dark night of the soul.
They felt alone where people betrayed them, people that they, you know, that they felt betrayed and alone during periods.
And that was part of their journey.
And that you have to embrace that.
And, you know, I do.
And I have my wife who is incredible, who supports me.
My kids absolutely support me and are proud of what I'm doing.
And they're bright, intelligent, and, you know, wonderful counselors to me.
And, you know, it's part of the adventure of life, right?
That you're, you know, to have all of your friends basically drop you at once and, you know, over an issue of principle.
And so, you know, I just feel like this is, you know, my lot and that I have to embrace it.
I can't, you know, I can't ever sink into self-pity or vituperation or, you know, anger at people.
I just, it's their choice.
I have to walk my path and I have to do it with joy and with, you know, magnanim and forgiveness.