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Dave Smith: 2024年是美国政治报道中最疯狂的一年,甚至比2020年的疫情封锁更甚。特朗普的政治复出,以及他在面临各种指控和法律挑战后再次当选总统,堪称历史奇迹。特朗普遇刺未遂事件是2024年最重要的事件,它不仅震惊了美国,也暴露了民主党和媒体的虚伪。此事件也提升了特朗普的形象,为他赢得了更多支持。 对现任总统拜登的政变是2024年第二重要的事件。民主党放弃初选程序,媒体掩盖拜登的痴呆症,最终导致了对拜登的政变。拜登在总统辩论中的糟糕表现,彻底摧毁了CNN、MSNBC等媒体机构的剩余信誉。 以色列和巴勒斯坦的冲突也持续不断。以色列在政治上获胜,但其在巴勒斯坦的行动却严重损害了其国际声誉。 特朗普政府的任命主要由战争鹰派和新冠病毒否认者组成。 总的来说,2024年是美国政治格局发生重大变化的一年,觉醒文化和企业媒体的衰落,以及言论自由的提升,都为美国的未来带来了新的希望。 Robbie Bernstein: 2024年是疯狂的一年,但就单一事件而言,没有什么能比得上2020年的全国封锁。就单一事件而言,2020年的全国封锁是最大的事件。 尽管对觉醒文化的反对和言论自由的改善令人鼓舞,但政府支出问题仍然存在,这将是2025年面临的一个问题。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What were the major political events discussed in the 2024 recap episode?

The major political events discussed include the assassination attempt on Donald Trump, the coup against Joe Biden, and the broader political realignment in the U.S. The episode also touched on the cultural shift away from wokeism and the decline of corporate media credibility.

Why was 2024 considered the craziest year in politics according to the hosts?

2024 was considered the craziest year due to unprecedented events like the assassination attempt on Donald Trump, the coup against Joe Biden, and the cultural and political realignment in the U.S. The hosts compared it to the chaos of 2020 but argued that 2024 surpassed it in terms of political and cultural upheaval.

What was the significance of the Trump assassination attempt in 2024?

The Trump assassination attempt was a pivotal moment that changed the political landscape. It shocked the nation, exposed the deep state's efforts against Trump, and rallied more support for him. The attempt also forced Democrats and the media to denounce political violence, undermining their previous rhetoric about Trump being a threat to democracy.

How did the corporate media's credibility suffer in 2024?

The corporate media's credibility suffered due to their blatant lies about Joe Biden's mental acuity, particularly after his disastrous debate performance. Their attempts to cover up Biden's senility and their role in the coup against him further eroded public trust in mainstream media institutions.

What was the cultural impact of the Israel-Palestine conflict in 2024?

The Israel-Palestine conflict in 2024 led to a significant cultural shift, with Israel losing the PR battle globally. The widespread exposure of the suffering in Gaza, including images of dead children and the destruction of hospitals, turned public opinion against Israel, marking a watershed moment in how the conflict is perceived internationally.

What were the key takeaways from the 2024 political landscape according to the hosts?

The key takeaways include the death of wokeism, the decline of corporate media, and the political realignment in the U.S. The hosts also noted the resilience of Donald Trump, the exposure of the deep state, and the cultural shift in the Israel-Palestine conflict as defining features of 2024.

How did the hosts view the future of the U.S. after 2024?

The hosts expressed optimism about the future, citing the decline of wokeism and corporate media as positive developments. They believed that the political and cultural shifts in 2024 set the stage for a more open and free society, despite ongoing challenges like proxy wars and economic issues.

Chapters
This chapter reviews the biggest political events of 2024, highlighting the Trump assassination attempt, the coup against Joe Biden, and the impact on the political landscape. The authors' personal perspectives and analyses are included.
  • Donald Trump assassination attempt
  • Coup against Joe Biden
  • Impact on the political landscape
  • Democrats' reactions
  • Corporate media's role

Shownotes Transcript

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that. YoCratom.com. All right, let's start the show. What's up, what's up, everybody? Last episode of 2024. Of course, I'm Dave Smith, and I'm joined by Robbie the Fire Bernstein. How are you doing? Happy New Year, sir. Happy New Year, Mr. Smith. It's 2024 is going to be over in, well,

a few hours um it is wow what a year what a year it's been this is our this has become a tradition uh on the show where on new years we do a year in review episode and um you know i'm not sure we can cover everything from this year because this has been a wild one i think i i think it's safe to say

that this was the craziest year that we've been covering this stuff me and you have been doing so I started this podcast in tooth I believe it was in 2012 when I first started it and I was fairly inconsistent with it at the beginning and then I stopped for a little bit then I came back to doing it I want to say was it 2017 that you joined the podcast

Sounds about right. I want to say it was somewhere around there. I remember doing the...

I remember doing a reaction episode to the 2016 election with Mike Brancatelli, who was in Rob's slot years before Rob came on. So it must have been the next year, in 2017, when you came on. So we've been at this together now for a while. It's been quite a while of me and you doing the show together. And I just never... I remember after 2020...

thinking like, well, this is the craziest year we've ever covered and nothing could ever top that, you know, like the year of lockdowns and riots and all of this crazy shit. It was just wild. And I was thinking about this earlier today and I don't know, Rob, I mean, you tell me, I think 2024 topped it in terms of like a crazy year as crazy as COVID and lockdowns and all of that stuff was this year, just as I'm almost like, as we're going back, like, what are the big events to cover? You're like, wow.

This one, to me, was the craziest year of politics to be covering and doing a show about. It really was just truly wild. I don't know. What do you think, Rob? 2024? It sure is a loony year of assassinations, presidents with dementia, stirring up wars. But if I had to pick one, I would go the primetime COVID year when they shut down. Primetime COVID year, I guess. I guess in terms of one story, probably there's nothing as big as shutting down the country. But in terms of like...

every story. Well, look, we'll jump into it as we wrap up this year. And I have a feeling 2025 is going to be a pretty interesting year, too, although in a different way. It does, it feels to me, Rob, and I'm not a kook.

uh, this is people who listen to the show. I'm really not like in terms of like, I'm not like, I mean, I've, I'm sure I would be considered a conspiracy theorist by some people, but really, I think just an anti-Semite. Well, that's, that's clear. If my Twitter replies are any indication, I've been informed by many people that I'm a self-hating Jew. Uh, but there something, uh,

Like, I'm not, I don't get into kooky conspiracies. Anybody, listen, if you're paying attention, you're a conspiracy theorist to some degree. If you're paying attention and being honest, you to some degree believe in conspiracies. But I don't get into, like, real kooky stuff. And I don't, like, talk a lot about spirituality or things like that. I will say there was a feeling that,

particularly from like November 5th on, then the end of this year, but even a little bit before that, it did feel like, you know, when people talk about like the fourth turning or like, it felt like there was like some new chapter that we entered where like, almost like there, it was a massive realignment politically, culturally, like Donald Trump is about to be sworn in as president again. And there's not even that much hysteria.

about it. It seems like it's just kind of been accepted. And I don't know, it's just, it's wild to me. And it was something that I got wrong, which I'm not known for doing. But something I got wrong this year was that I just, to me, it seemed like all of the signals, like coming into 2024,

I was like, look, all the signals are they're not going to allow this guy, Donald Trump, to win the presidency. Like they'll do anything to steal it from him. And it certainly does seem like they tried just about everything and it failed. And then Trump made peace with Netanyahu.

Well, yeah, something something happened. But anyway, that's just like but kind of my almost like my biggest takeaway from the year is that it seems like we've just entered a new chapter where there's a whole different dynamic. And now, you know, we're getting ready to go into a second Trump term without the hysterical left, it seems. It looks like the Trump term.

temper tantrum has come to an end and on top of that i believe at least for now it feels like we're done with the woke nonsense uh which is particularly relevant for uh what i've come up with now from i guess year eight to year 12 in comedy or maybe even earlier let's go year six or seven in comedy to year 11 or whatever the hell i am i don't really keep track of these things

But there was definitely the woke landscape and having to, you know, pick if you want to be completely outside of the mainstream and just do what you're going to do, which was kind of nice that I relegated myself to that early. But it does seem like the wheel is turning and that we're kind of done with that shit. I think that quite possibly the two biggest results of 2024 are the death of wokeism and the corporate media.

And those are, you know, look, you never know for sure with any of these things. And it's, you know, perhaps they both reemerge in some way. I don't think they will. I think they're kind of I think they've both seen their heyday and are now in real trouble. But there's like grunge music. You'll still have some people holding on to it.

Yes, that's right. There'll still be some people today who swear to you that Nirvana is one of the greatest bands that ever existed, but then there'll be the broad consensus amongst adults. It's like, no, they are not.

They're certainly not the greatest. I don't want to show Nirvana. I like Nirvana, but they had some good songs. I'm not even trash. I'm not trashing Nirvana. I'm just saying they're not what they were built up to be by their most hardcore fans. I'm sorry. I'm pissing a demographic off unnecessarily on this. I don't even have that strong opinions on. I don't think there's that many people holding on to Nirvana is number one.

Probably not that many, but there was a time when lots of people would have sworn that they were number one. Anyway— And I've heard Eddie Vedder pitch abortions too many times to think that guy's cool anymore. Yeah, there you go. I will say—so the death of wokeism and the death of the corporate media, or at least their—

being tremendously damaged this year. And of course, there's something about them where they kind of go hand in hand. And obviously, like the corporate media used woke ism as a tool constantly. But it does seem to me that there is something where both of them needed to die in order for us to have a chance at anything. Now, that doesn't mean that

all the problems are solved because they're gone and it doesn't mean that there aren't bad alternatives that can also rise up but they both had to die because you can't even start to have a conversation with those forces around like the the kind of at the core of wokeism is uh in opposition to free speech

And one of the things, you know, this was like one of the points that early Jordan Peterson used to make, and early Jordan Peterson was great before he became political and went to the Daily Wire and all this stuff. But like when he was just a cultural thing, not a political thing. We have to protect the Jews. The Israel doesn't have enough. Yeah, it's, well, look, man, I mean, he's like said it himself. Get your act together and give money to Jews. Right, right, yeah. Um...

Well, he's look, he's made the point himself before, but sometimes being like being highly intelligent, particularly high verbal intelligence is a great quality, but it's also a dangerous one.

And there's something dangerous about a person who has very high verbal intelligence because they can take a bad position and rationalize it very well and make very compelling arguments for very bad positions. And anyway, but one of the points that he made, which I always thought was very interesting, this is early Jordan Peterson. And of course, he rose to fame for anybody who doesn't know that he was battling wokeism on college campuses and well in Toronto.

And then more generally just kind of got into, you know, I don't know, picking fights with, you know, trans activists and stuff like that. I shouldn't say picking fights, responding to their insanity. But one of the points that he would make at the beginning was,

uh was you know there was this bill it was a bill c-16 i believe and it was about um like it was compelled speech was his big beef with it that it was uh essentially it was a law that was like mandating that you call people by their preferred pronouns or something like that and he took a big stand against this and he was like listen this is not a small deal this is a huge deal you cannot have compelled speech laws and he he started talking about

freedom of speech. And I think I always had the attitude that, which I still do, but I always had the attitude that freedom of speech was a good in and of itself. Like, I don't need, you know, in the same sense that, like, the Declaration of Independence just says God wants people to be free. And it's like, there's no more explanation needed than that.

Like, like liberty isn't something that you should even have to debate. It's, it's your birthright. It's a natural right. And same with freedom of speech, you have the right to say what you want to say. And that's a value in itself. Like, and what I mean by that is that it would be evil to stop somebody's ability to say what they want to say.

regardless of whether it's a good point or whether it's true or what, it doesn't matter. You're a human being. You're not a slave. You're a free man and you have the right to express yourself and women too. If, if women could do it a little less, we would all appreciate it, but whatever you do have the right to do it. Um, but, but,

The point that Jordan Peterson made, which I thought, I remember at the time being like, oh yeah, there's really something to this, was that he was like, freedom of speech is also necessary for...

consequentialist reasons. And that you can't, you need to have freedom of speech so that we can figure things out. And then if I can't say whatever I want to say and then you can't respond to that and we can't synthesize and get to the best idea. Like we can't get there if we're, anyway, my broader point is that what wokeism would do

what's known as woke these days, is that they would lay down landmines all around any controversial opinion. So it's like there'd be these things where it's like,

Okay, whether it's trans kids or, you know, tax policy or war or whatever it is, if there are all these landmines around and everybody feels like they can't speak their mind, then we can never get anywhere, you know? And so, like, wokeism almost has to die in order for us to even have a shot to start thinking through these ideas and talking about them. And then also with the corporate media,

They just had to die. It's just like this state-sponsored propaganda machine that's purpose is to ruin anybody who might be a threat to the regime's power. And so I will say that while – look –

America is still a mess in a lot of ways. We have two very dangerous proxy wars going on. We're $35 trillion in debt. We have a very dumbed down culture and still very kind of hot culture.

um racial and political and cultural divides in this country uh the dollar is in bad shape we've got a lot of issues but i do leave 2024 feeling very optimistic like i i i think that

Coming into this year, if I had gotten to see at the beginning everything that happened, it'd be like, whoa, this was really a remarkably revolutionary year in this country. And I do think we go into 2025 with...

Like, I would say the prospects for liberty, the prospects for prosperity are just, to me at least, look better than I could have imagined. Like, I feel better about the future of the country than I have at least since the COVID insanity. I don't know how you feel, Rob. Culturally and from a freedom of speech perspective and maybe putting the deep state a little bit on its toes, except for the whole Israel war funding thing,

All seems exciting. However, Trump, he's a low interest guy and he wants to spend as much as anyone's ever spent. And it seems like we're coming to the end of pretending like we're in a good economy here with I don't want to get in too much trouble with Gene, but boosted job numbers. I'll just float it. I'll take I'll take an angry.

I just I wonder when the I mean the problem with screaming about the bill coming due on all the government spending and what it's done to prop up the markets and when some of these bubbles are going to burst you become a broken record who seems to be wrong for over a decade but I feel like that that problem continues to linger and I don't think Donald Trump's any better on actual fiscal policy so

I think that's a problem coming into this next year. But a lot of the biggest stupidity of the woke culture, censoring the Internet, having an open border and a lot of the other shenanigans that we've had to to deal with does seem to be going away.

Yeah, yeah. No, I think I agree with all of that. I think that's spot on. All right, so let's just get into it. Biggest stories of the year. I think I got to start with the number one. I just think the biggest story of the year is the Trump assassination attempt. And I think the analytics are behind you.

Yeah, well, I mean, look, like Donald Trump, the man who has you kind of can't overstate this, right? Like and that's why I like some to do these episodes sometimes, because when we do the show three days a week, four days a week now, you know, you're you're in the news cycle. You're talking about the latest thing. But it's good sometimes to try to zoom out and look at the big picture, as I regularly try to do. Donald Trump in 2016.

You just can't overstate how incredible what he pulled off was. Donald Trump is the, however you feel about him, 2016 was historic. He was the first president in the history of the United States of America who had zero political or military experience. The only one.

There was no other. Every single president in the history, you know, you go look on a, you know, they have like those rulers with all the presidents on the back of them. Every single one of them was either in the military at a very high level, like a general, like Eisenhower or something like that, like a five-star general, or they had a bunch of political experience. They all came from kind of like political royalty, et cetera.

donald trump's the only one and in order to win in 2016 he had to defeat the two most powerful political families in modern american history in my lifetime no question about it he took out the bushes and the clintons it's just an unbelievable accomplishment okay

So he does that in 2016. He is then after the year of 2020, he loses to Joe Biden. People can feel however they feel about that election. But the final result was that, you know, Joe Biden became president. Less than two months after that, you have January 6th. After January 6th, Donald Trump is finished.

I mean, as finished as any political figure could be. He even had to come out and denounce January 6th and throw his own people under the bus and then admit that Joe Biden will be the president. He gets on a plane, doesn't show up to the inauguration. The first president in my lifetime to not even show up to the inauguration for the next one. Even amongst Trump voters, most of them are just tired.

And over it. And after the year that was 2020, just such a disaster. The guy whose big pitch was you'll get so tired of winning. And in his last year was nothing but losing. Then he loses the election. Then there's this thing that, you know, they make out to be an insurrection. And he is done. He's done.

Then on top of that, he's got the legal system weaponized against him. His home in Mar-a-Lago is raided. He's convicted of felonies. He is just and he comes from that position to come back and win a dying victory.

and bad midterm elections, in which most of his picks did particularly bad. That's right. Very good point. Which seemed like, hey, is this the end of the Donald Trump run, and does the Republican Party need to move on from him because he just cost us the midterms?

So, right. So this got somehow is that's a very good point that 2022 is a disaster for Donald Trump. So this guy comes back and wins this historic presidency is the greatest political comeback of all time. I mean, people are before this, people used to say Richard Nixon was the greatest political comeback and just.

It doesn't even compare. I mean, Trump's comeback is so much more impressive. You know, Nixon's like, oh, he lost to Kennedy and then he came back and won. Like, oops, all right, whatever. That's nothing. But Nixon wasn't contending with the Democratic Party that went full retard.

Yeah, well, that's also true, although he was contending with the deep state. But that's a whole other show for another day. But so in the middle of this process, as Donald Trump is coming back, or not even the middle so much as kind of the end of it, he is nearly assassinated on national television.

I mean, this was something that... It was the biggest moment of the year. It was the... And I'm talking about the first assassination attempt. Obviously, there was the second one, too, and all of them are very shady, which we talked about before. But when I'm reviewing the year, I'm talking about the first one, where he's actually... You know, if you watch the trajectory of the bullet, like they've done all these cool things online, it's about to blow his freaking brains out until he just happens to turn his head and it nicks him in the ear in unison

an unbelievable moment that really did i think i just think it changed the landscape of everything in this country you know tucker carlson spoke at the republican national convention which was uh only what was it a couple weeks after donald trump's assassination attempt it was very it was very soon after and the thing he said there was he goes the first thing we got to recognize that we live in a new world this is a whole new world now after that i do think like it was um

there was it was shocking to see it was um there's a lot of crazy things have been happening in this country in the last 20 years and then particularly in the last 10 years and then particularly in the last four years but political assassinations on that level felt like something that happened in the 60s that's not something you really deal with anymore

But it was, in many ways, it felt to me, it was kind of similar to the way I felt on 9-11, where, you know, I'm showing my age here now, but I was 18 on 9-11, so I was old enough to, like, think about this. And I remember, you know, coming out of the 90s and being a kid of the 80s and the 90s, when 9-11 happened, it almost felt like this reminder that history is real, right?

and that we're also humans and that we're also a part of this, it almost, it felt like before 9/11 that something like that, this is what you'd read in a textbook happened in 1941. You know what I mean? But like, this couldn't happen now to America. And then when it happens, you're like, oh, we're actually part of history. You know, we're not like sitting above it, looking back at the rest of it. Like this is, we're participants in this. And, you know, to think that like in the 1960s,

you had high profile assassinations of beloved American leaders. I mean, you had obviously the biggest one being Jack Kennedy getting his brains blown out on national television. You had Martin Luther King and Malcolm X and Bobby Kennedy. I mean, there's like really influential leaders who were all taken out, you know, and that always seemed like

in modern America just seemed like something that can't happen. And when Donald Trump got shot, you were kind of like, oh, that's like a real possibility that's on the table, that somebody could be assassinated. And I do think in many ways it shook up America. It made us uncomfortable.

understand how real the game that we're playing is. And the other factor that was so interesting about it, and I remember us joking about this at the time, and I was joking about this on stage that night when Donald Trump got shot. I was at the comedy mothership. I'll be back there in August, by the way. But it kind of called the bluff of the Democrats, right?

Because all of them had to come out and wish him a speedy recovery and denounce political violence. And it was like, oh, so he's not Hitler.

So then your whole thing does not actually make sense because you don't wish Hitler a speedy recovery and you don't denounce people for using violence against Adolf Hitler. If democracy is really on the line, then you should actually be happy. You should be upset that the guy missed. That's the only logical conclusion. And so it just had this like double whammy effect of kind of rattling the country and then exposing the Democrats in the corporate media for the liars that they are.

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That's the website. Go there to learn more, or you could just click the link in the episode description, monetary-metals.com. All right, let's get back into the show. All checks out. I don't know how much to add to that. That lines up.

All right. So now the other... It also just made him look... It just made him look super fucking cool. I mean, that's kind of part of... Oh, yeah, for sure. And part of what just rallied people more to the Trump cause, I think there were two big variables, but one was they did see that the deep state was working against him, and they started to see that so much of the reaction to Donald Trump was actually just a media temper tantrum and everyone actually treating him unfairly. And I've called Trump like the...

racist old lady being harassed in the street that while she's being harassed in the street you're going to take the old lady side and go why is this person being harassed and then if you leave the racist old lady alone to say racist comments you're like my god that's a racist old lady and so

So I feel like Trump benefits the more he's being attacked because he's not perfect. But the more you attack him, you just kind of show, well, you're not giving the guy a fair chance, which it's hilarious to look at Trump and see him as the underdog that's not getting a fair chance.

But that's what they did. And so I think in part people did realize, oh, the system's being unfair. They let Trump be the underdog. I think that that won him a lot of support. I don't think any of the court cases helped him. I helped them. I think it helped put him in the news and had people going, hey, I don't think that this is the way the system should be working. And then also for I've said this before on the show, for all the talk of the dignity of the office and that that was the complaint with Trump.

I think people did look at Kamal and say, that's just too stupid to represent me.

I mean, 100%, 100% with all of that. Yeah, I mean, I think that the, as we said before, I think when they raided Mar-a-Lago is when he won the nomination. I think there was a real shot that he wasn't going to be the Republican nominee. He still might have been, but I think that's what really won it for him. Okay, now the other biggest story right after the Trump assassination has got to be that Trump,

The sitting president of the United States of America dropped out of his reelection campaign after the most after. OK, let me rephrase that. There was a coup against the sitting president of the United States. Now, I will say, by the way, you know, I was watching earlier today, um,

uh gnome from the comedy sellers i uh had scott horton on and i was watching um yeah it's it wasn't very good but i was watching it no i mean scott did great but it's just you know anyway whatever i like gnome but i just did not think he handled that interview particularly well um but they're

They were arguing about the Maidan revolution, and he was taking issue with me and Scott calling it a coup. And...

you know scott's just sitting there and he's like all right well call it whatever you want to here's what happened the the u.s through the national endowment for democracy and through usaid and all this poured tens of millions maybe even over a hundred million dollars into a protest movement then brokered this deal and he's going through the whole thing he's like so what i don't know what do you want to call that so i understand when i say biden was cooed

you're going to argue with me about whether coup is the correct word or not, or was it a coup d'etat or a coup de whatever? But the point is that, like, you know, the point in Maidan is that the West backed

a movement that overthrew a democratically elected president of Ukraine to put in the people they wanted to get the deal they wanted done. Call that whatever you want, call it a fuck shit job, like whatever you want to call it, that's what it was. And whatever you want to call this with Joe Biden, like it is not how the system works or how it's supposed to work. And it is crazy that look, there's there's a primary process.

and there's a 25th Amendment. The Democrats decided to abandon the primary process, the corporate media decided to pretend he wasn't senile, and they all decided, up until this day, not to invoke the 25th Amendment.

So instead, they just had all of the big donors and all of the high profile Democrats force him against his will out of the race. And then he drops out in the shadiest of fashions, the shadiest of fashions, a letter, like not even a not even an address to the nation, a letter that's not even White House stationary, just utterly bizarre. And but but.

This story being, I'll say, second to the assassination attempts or maybe maybe third to Trump winning on Election Day and the assassination attempts. But this is right up there as the biggest story of the year. And I'm not even sure which aspect of it, because there's lots of different parts of it. But I'll say for I guess the first part, even before the coup or whatever you want to call it, was just the...

What I think is even more so than that, even more so than the way they removed Joe Biden, what I think will have a bigger lasting impact was just the corporate media pretending there was nothing wrong with Joe Biden and then that debate performance. Like nothing could have come together more perfectly to just put

totally destroy whatever remaining credibility the institutions like CNN and MSNBC, and ABC News and stuff like this, whatever little bit of credibility they had left was just utterly destroyed. And by the way, I mean, it just it cannot be overstated. We have a clip here. I saw this. I'm not sure if this is the same one. You said that Trump had tweeted out one of these, but the one I have is from I believe it was end wokeness.

Is that right? I think it was. I sent you a New York Post article that had a link to a truth social. And the truth social was about a two minute clip of just everyone vouching for how sharp Joe Biden is in meetings.

Well, let's, oh, you know what? I think it was, by the way, I should, I guess the, because I'm looking here now and End Wokeness says amazing job to at DGrayTexas45. So maybe that's the account that actually made the video. By the way, End Wokeness is a great account. Great follow on Twitter at End Wokeness. Anyway, let's play this version of it because it's a fun one. I mean, they're all great. But anyway, just let's play this just to remember that this was this year. This was earlier this year. It's unbelievable.

Does the president have the stamina, physically and mentally, do you think to continue on even after 2024? Don, you're asking me this question. Oh my gosh, he's the president of the United States. You know, he, I can't even keep up with him. The most difficult part about a meeting with President Biden is preparing for it. He

because he is sharp, intensely probing and detail oriented and focused. I can testify because I've been working very closely with this president for the past two years. I've been knowing him for 30 years. And I'm telling you, this guy's tough. He's smart. He's on his game. Joe Biden has vision. He has knowledge. He has

a strategic thinker. The president is focused. He's detail-oriented. He's always thinking about the big picture. He's engaging. He is capable. He has an incredible record as president. And I'm often with him on foreign trips.

he's at the top of his game. So he has a vision, he has knowledge, he has judgment, he has a strategic thinking. I met with the president, I don't know, five or six weeks ago, and he seemed fine to me. I have complete confidence in the president.

I have watched him expertly guide meetings of staff and cabinet members. I could not have more confidence in the president. I would just tell you that I meet frequently with the president, and every single time I meet with him, he is

just fine. But he is again knowledgeable, wise, incredibly sharp, incredibly probing, incredible command of the details. He is sharp.

He is on top of things. There is nothing to these challenges, these suggestions that somehow he's not sharp and he's not capable. We see Joe Biden up close. We know how attuned he is to the issue. And you're going to see how smart he is and the experience he has. I say his age is an asset. Aha!

- Aha, he's wise. - Yes, he's wise. He has wisdom, he has experience. - And his experience because of his age and his wisdom has been invaluable to this country. - A lot of countries, people who've been in office a longer period of time are praised for their wisdom. - I have seen a lot of 72-year-olds

Not as capable as this 80-year-old. It is hard for us to keep up with this president. His mental acuity is great. It's fine. It's as good as it's been over the years. He's fine. All this right-wing propaganda that his mental acuity has declined is wrong. And this kind of sense that he's not ready for this job is just a bucket of BS that's so deep, your boots will get stuck in it. ♪♪

Oh, right. I mean, it really is always just invaluable to take a stroll down memory lane and just remember. Because it's even... I will say it's like even for me, and I'm me, and even... You know, I live in this world much more than I would ever expect the average person to or desire the average person to. But it's like even as I watch it back, I'm like, oh, these motherfuckers. Are you kidding? You know, and it does...

I know I probably bring this up too much, but there's something kind of weird about, you know, the fact that Sam Harris called me out. But, you know, like it doesn't go back to that thing. It's like it was like, oh, we're listening to comedians, you know, like Dave Smith, like he's the authority on this. And it's like, yeah, I know. Right. But the one advantage that we have that these guys don't is that we are not fucking liars.

like every person on there is lying through their teeth it's so unbelievable you can't even believe they'd they'd have the gall to make up such an outright lie like you could really just say this and and attempt to sell it and sound like you really mean it first of all half the people up there nancy pelosi hates joe biden's guts listen to the way she talks about him now that he sabotaged the whole thing but we're think about i mean guys

Anyone who's ever seen a video of Joe Biden already knows where Joe Biden is at. This idea that I've said this before, but I don't know, I'm kind of fond of it as an analogy, but it would be on the level of me telling you, like, listen, Rob, I've met privately with Chris Christie and the guy is shredded.

he's ripped he's in really good shape i don't know what are you falling into this right-wing conspiracy that he's an obese man dude that's yeah you've seen a couple clips here or there that make it look like he's obese but go sit down with that go do sit-ups with this guy man you just cannot keep up i mean that's the biggest struggle of going to work out with chris christie is i'm just like will i be able to keep up with him like we're gonna run laps and i

you know, I obviously he's gonna lap me a few times. But like, if I could just keep it within a few laps, like it's on the level of that. What the fuck are you talking about? That is a senile man. We have seen her. And then of course, this all culminated in the debate performance that was, I mean, geez, what can you say? You know, I remember saying, I was on Piers Morgan, I guess the like the day after

uh, the debate or maybe a couple of days after the debate. And I remember I said, and you know how it is on that show. It's like a panel. So you get a little time and that goes to the next guy, to the next guy, to the next guy, and then back to you. But I remember I said at one point that I went, it was the, um, it was the worst, uh,

debate performance in the history of televised presidential debates. And then it like went to the next person, the next person, the next person. And then when it came back to me, we were on a different topic. And I remember thinking to myself being like, oh, that's, that's so understated.

You know what I mean? Like, I should have said something more than that because, yeah, it clearly is the worst performance in the history of televised presidential debates, but there's not even a close second. There's just nothing that's even comparable. I mean, like, if you look back at the debate...

Debates where people say, oh, this person did a really bad job, had a really bad debate. There were it was one of the, you know, Obama versus Romney. One of them, they said Obama had a really off night and Nixon versus Jack Kennedy. They say Kennedy did really good with the television audience. But it was from the moment Joe Biden started speaking. I remember watching the debate. I was watching it with my wife in our in our bedroom.

And I'm laying in bed and I had a snack and I'm put on the debate. And the first words that Joe Biden spoke, you went, oh, my God, they didn't give him whatever cocktail they needed to give him or it's not working or whatever. But you I mean, literally the first it was the first sentence that he spoke. And you were like, this is it.

He's ruining he this is the moment we've all been waiting for. And this was I you know, I had a bit about this. I don't know if it made my last special or not. But I was doing a bit about this in my act that I was like, that's the exciting thing about Joe Biden is that every time he speaks, you're like, this might be the end.

that like he might collapse so bad here that there's no recovering from it. And we all knew that. I remember, you know, I could have to go back and tweet, but I tweeted something about this the day of the debate before the debate that I was like, this might be it. This might be the one where Joe Biden just completely collapses and can't recover from it. And then it was very clear to everyone from the very opening of it that it was in fact that.

It was not a bad debate performance. It was a senile old man who had no business being out in public. He didn't look like somebody – again, Rob, you can't overstate this. The guy who we saw at the debate and the guy we've seen every day since that, every day that he's been visible, which hasn't been that much –

The question wouldn't be, is he sharp in private meetings? Is this guy capable of being president of the United States of America? The question would be, does this guy need assisted living or not?

It could. Can he live on his own or does he need a full time nurse with him? That's the question you'd be asking about Joe Biden. That's just a fact. That's just where we're at with him. That's the debatable question. Can this guy live outside of a nursing home or does he need round the clock, 24 hour supervision? And they're going to sit there with a straight face and tell you it's right wing propaganda and that this guy is sharp as a tack. Just.

Man, if it wasn't for so many other crazy things this year, that should be the number one story of the year. But, you know, Donald Trump almost got his brains blown out, so it falls down to like number two or number three.

It was fun how long that was just sitting out in the open and that if you watch politics on a regular basis, you saw these moments of him wandering off stage. Like there were all these things that the normies just weren't aware of. And I used to say it to people in casual conversation of, you know, that guy has demand. What are you talking about? Like people, when you said that, that was, you might as well have said, Hey, aliens are actually running the white house. It was total conspiracy nonsense. Yeah.

And he could not have failed harder on the biggest stage in that a lot of people who even just casually follow politics, they'll tune in. It's a little bit like the Super Bowl. You know, you cannot watch a game all season, but people watch the Super Bowl. People will not watch politics for four years, but they'll tune in for the debate. And so if you needed to get your shit together for an hour and a half and just come off okay, that was the an hour and a half to do it. And from the first stutter step that he took...

It was, oh, they they the drugs aren't working or didn't take him, just as he said. And he couldn't have felt better. But I mean, we still need an investigation of the cover up that existed for his dementia and who's actually been making decisions. One hundred percent. One hundred percent. It is it's wild that that guy was is allowed to be president still.

And all the way since that debate, I mean, it's just so crazy. And I think that was one of the, you know, there's, you know, what you're talking about when there'd be the, you know, talking to normies and they'd be like, what are you talking about? He's senile. It's almost like, yeah, because the thing is that for most people, I think, I think it's the majority, certainly for large portions of the population, they have to be given permission in order to believe something.

It's just the way it is. They have to be told that you're allowed to feel this way. And then if they're told that, then they'll go, oh, yeah, OK, I see it now, you know. But in the same way that everyone, you know, you think about the war in Ukraine breaks out and everyone has a Ukraine flag in their Twitter bio.

You know, Black Lives Matter protests happen. Everyone's got that black fist in their Facebook profile. It's like these people, the people who put the Ukraine flag in their bio right away. What percentage of them you think know anything about the history of Ukraine? What percentage of them know anything about the history of this conflict? Like if I just sat down and just asked them basic questions, not even like what your opinion is, just like what what happened here? What date was this? When did the Soviet Union fall? When did it?

nato expansion happen when did the maidan revolution happen when did the you know like ask him any does they know nothing about it all they know is that i've i've been told this is the thing now and so now i'm gonna do this it's just for better for worse it's the way uh people in modern society at least in this one the way they work and so they needed to be given that permission but the issue was that once they were given that permission it was over

You know, and there was just no and there really is something where I think even to just like normies, once you admit that the guy's too senile to run for president, it's going to be really hard to explain to them why he's not too senile to be president. You know, it's not as if there was something it'd be one thing if, you know, like he got diagnosed with some degenerative disease. And they were like, in two years, this is going to be really bad.

And that's why he has to drop out. You know, like he's fine now, but in two years, this three years, it might be really, really bad. So he can't sign up for another four years, but that's not what happened. What happened is you couldn't get through this debate tonight.

You're not like, how could you possibly argue that somebody who can't handle a 90 minute debate can handle being commander in chief of the most powerful military in the history of the world, which is involved in two white hot proxy wars right now.

If anybody has an answer to that, if anybody can answer that argument to me, I'd love to hear. I would love to hear anybody attempt to make the case that you can be incapable of debating Donald Trump, yet capable of being commander in chief.

an argument for that simply does not exist. It's just too absurd of a proposition. And so that again was another thing that really just exposed the whole game, exposed the whole racket for what it is. So yeah, that was a huge story, a wild one to live through and to cover and talk about with all you fine people. It's

Man, luckily for me, the world has always handed us a lot of shit to talk about, but that was a wild one and one that I think will... The damage that it's done to the corporate media and the democratic establishment is just...

It's immeasurable right now. Okay. Unless you have anything else, let's move on because there's a couple other things that I think need to be hit. Obviously, we only have an hour show here, so we won't hit every big story of the year. But I did... Yeah, I mean, I guess since we haven't talked about it yet, we really should talk about, just for a few minutes, Israel-Palestine.

You know, this latest war started technically in October of last year, but it's been going on every single day this year. And so really the bulk of it has been in 2024. I think that while in many ways, in terms of, I'll say this, and I think this is very in line with the prediction that you made, Rob, late last year.

very, very early. I believe it was in October, I'm almost certain, when you made the prediction where you said, you basically said Israel is just not going to be able to get away with this PR game. Like, they're not going to be able to sell this. There's too many videos. There's too many, like, it's just too easy to see what's going on there. And I would say that after now having had this, you know, again, I hesitate to even call it a war because war is,

War to me kind of – and maybe I'm wrong. I could look up like the actual technical definitions here. But war to me seems to imply that there's a government here and a government here and a military here and a military here and these two militaries are having a conflict. That's not what's going on in Gaza.

There is no government in Gaza. There's no state in Gaza. There's no military in Gaza. And it's not as if... And there's no hospitals left to bomb. Well, that's... And at this point, there's not too many hospitals. It's not as if Hamas militants are engaging with the IDF, and that's what's going on. What's going on is a captive people who have been occupied since 1967 are being slaughtered. That's what's happening. Um...

I would say that kind of my bigger takeaway on where the what is the result of all of this is that you kind of have almost if you look at this in two different ways, like politically speaking, Israel is winning. No question about that. Israel is getting more funding than they've ever gotten before. And they're the largest recipient of foreign aid from America in our history by far.

They're getting more funding than they've ever gotten before. They're getting more logistical intelligence support, all of these things. They're destroying Gaza. In that sense, they're winning. They had this very successful covert special ops attack on Hezbollah. They got their regime change in Syria that they've been after since at least 1996.

They've, you know, in many ways, politically speaking, they are winning. Culturally, they have lost so badly that it would have been like if you were predicting

in September of 2023, that the reputation of Israel would take such damage in the next year and a half, it would have been, you would have sounded nuts. You'd be like, there's no way this is about to happen. But Israel, I do believe, has been exposed in a way that I don't think they're ever going to recover from.

And interestingly enough, you know, all of the people who are so concerned with anti-Semitism and the fate of Jewish people and the ones who say that Jews are in such a precarious position and anti-Semitism is such a big threat and another Holocaust is around the corner don't ever seem to recognize that this policy

that Bibi Netanyahu has embarked on has actually put Israel in jeopardy in a way that I think would have been impossible for any other outside force to do, because there were always people who weren't very big fans of Israel. But the way that they, the conversation about Israel has just...

dramatically changed from what it ever would have been in the in the popular consciousness. Israel was like, oh, this was like a homeland for the Jews, the biggest victims of the 20th century. And then they got their own little homeland here. And this is like, come on, leave these nice Jewish boys alone. And now the conversation is constantly about like, how can you justify doing this to the Palestinian people? This has been a real

you know, what's the term? Watershed moment or something like that. But this is really, I think, I think essentially what I'm saying is that your prediction came more true than probably even you could have imagined and that they've just totally lost the PR front.

Yeah. I, by the way, I mean, there was a, there was a bad joke, but, uh, there was footage last week of Israel. I mean, it was reported, took out the last hospital in Gaza. Um, so which, uh, you know, I, I don't, I don't, I don't even know what goes on there now. If, uh, if someone's having a problem, I don't know. Uh, cause this stuff is not the, for the scattered images you get on Twitter, you don't get great reporting past that. Uh, you know, uh,

quite give us the numbers of civilian casualties and I guess what people are going through. It's amazing every time you see an image, it looks like it's the Hollywood set for a single World War II scene that you would film. You know what I mean? It seems like you can get a picture of any one block and just everything's bombed out. I don't know. It seems what's happened over there is pretty terrible and I wonder if we'll ever get the full picture of it.

Yeah, well, I mean... So now we're two years in the running. It's just ongoing. Yeah, I mean, this whole time. I mean, it's just so... And the more time goes on, especially seeing as how there is... Like, if you follow it at all, you know, like, even just a little bit, it's like almost everybody, every major player, you know, aside... I'm not even talking about politicians. I'm more talking about, like, intelligence and the war cabinet and stuff like that. They all admit that they can't get rid of Hamas. Right.

Hamas has popped back up in all just like we predicted, you know, that this type of action is only going to create more Hamas or Hamas like groups. And so when you realize that that mission is inachievable, it's kind of in some sense, like Iraq or Afghanistan, it's like, well, once you realize you can't spread democracy there, well, then what the hell are we doing? What is this? And

It's just so indefensible, man. It's like the fact it still blows me away that people can even try. I mean, watching, you know, I've done over this year or I guess starting late in 2023. And then this year I've done a bunch of debates on this topic and it never ends.

Like every time I'm always just like, I can't believe you want to see people on social media defending. It's like the pretzels that you have to twist yourself into to try to justify this shit is just like it's eye opening. It's eye opening because you realize you're like, oh, I kind of get it.

now. You kind of get how like throughout human history, there have been all these atrocities and at every single turn, there's somebody willing to rationalize it or justify it or tie themselves into knots, you know, doing mental gymnastics to, to, to find some justification. But the bottom line is like, you just can't do this to people, man. It's just so evil. You know, the one, the, I mean, I've seen so many images of, uh,

of dead kids over there and just like unspeakable suffering. The one thing that I remember always stuck with me was there was this interview of a doctor. He was an American who had just returned from Gaza. And he was talking about how, you know, this is, I guess when they had one or two hospitals still rub back in the good old days. But he was talking about the anesthesia shortage and,

That was like a big issue there because, you know, they still have a full blockade around the country during this whole war. And they're, you know, they let some humanitarian aid in. And then there's this really unfortunate, like, coincidence where then...

They open machine gunfire on the people bringing in humanitarian aid and we're supposed to believe this is all just an oopsie every single time. And those happen multiple times. But he's talking about if there's an anesthesia shortage.

You just like then starting to get into what the implications of that are, you know, and you've got Gaza. There were two million people there at the beginning of this. I don't know. You know, I don't think anyone knows exactly how many are there now. But one of the things about Gaza that makes it such a difficult situation is that half the population are children.

it's a million kids you know half the population was under 18 at least at the beginning of this conflict and so you you know you imagine you're in a war zone and you don't have anesthesia this means you're operating on children without anesthesia just you know this is stuff it's like biblical levels of evil that you can't even imagine really exist in 2024 but it has existed every single day

Um, of this year. So yeah, that's one of the darker things about this year, but it does, uh, feel like there's been a real cultural shift that I, uh, again, I don't, I don't think they're going to be able to undo. Um, all right.

I guess we could leave it. We could leave it there. Just hitting the big ones. Trump's, I guess, the Trump administration coming in, I guess the other thing we should just quickly mention is that Trump's, so far the indications from Donald Trump's appointments and cabinet picks and things like that are essentially, I mean, if I'm reducing it down, a bunch of war hawks and a bunch of COVID dissidents. That's what we got out of Donald Trump. And so, you know,

Better than we would have gotten out of Kamala Harris. That's for sure. Still far from perfect and a lot of a lot of room for improvement. All right. Before we wrap up, I do want to say spend just a couple minutes on more of a personal note. This this year has been an incredible year for me. It's been the the best year of my career by far.

And I just wanted to thank everybody who listens to this show. Obviously, we launched our new site, partoftheproblem.com, and have our own subscription service now. So I'm just so incredibly grateful to everybody who listens, and I'm particularly grateful to everybody who signed up and is supporting the show. We...

we will continue to do what we do and um you know be right about everything and hopefully be entertaining uh along the way i do want to um

uh, thank you, Rob, for another year of being the best goddamn co-host that I could have in this. I want to thank Natalie, um, for, for coming on and being the producer. And she's done a great job despite how cruel the live chat is to her at times, uh, blaming her for every goddamn thing. If it snows, Natalie's getting ripped up in that live chat for making it snow, but you've really done a great job, Natalie. Of course you've done a great job as always, Rob. Um, I want to thank everybody, uh,

with a big platform who, uh, who platformed me this year, of course, uh, first and foremost, uh, the legend, the, the great one, Joe Rogan, um, Tucker Carlson was just unbelievable for me this year. Like really gave me a boost. Um, and having, having those two guys, particularly, you know,

like having the biggest guys in media really not just have me on multiple times, but to really like give me, you know, like their support and endorsement has been, you know, enormously helpful to me in my career. But everybody with big shows, Candace Owens had me on a couple of times this year. Of course, Patrick Bet-David, you know, debating Chris Cuomo this year was perhaps the highlight of my career and was just

Just an incredible thing to get to do. And then him having me on his election night show as well was huge. So very grateful to all of those guys and all the other... I know there'll be people I'm forgetting. I really do apologize for that. But Tim Poole, I did that show, I think, a couple times this year, and always a great time doing that. Pierce Morgan, I've got to give him thanks. He's had me on a whole bunch of times, and that show just does incredible numbers. So it's been great for me. You know...

I'm kind of blown away about that. My career is a bit surreal to me. All of this is, you know, I was always just like, I was just a kid in the Ron Paul army who got in front of a microphone and started talking about this shit. And me and Rob, we were just, we were stand up. When me and Rob met, we were stand up comedians at the absolute bottom together. I mean, the bottom.

We were at LOL Comedy Club. It's hanging out, you know, sharing a free beer or something like that. But it's really cool that we've been able to build this thing up. And it's I just I'm

It's for whatever reason, maybe at some point this will change and I'll just get accustomed to all this shit and take it for granted. But I really don't. I really don't. At least as of right now, I think it's so cool that we can go do shows all around the country and around the world. And we got fans who come out to them. I'm really grateful for all of you guys. Thank you for listening. And I promise you, uh,

Going into 2025, I will, you know, if you guys keep supporting, I will continue to put everything I have into this show and make it what I think is really, you know, if I do say so myself, I think a really valuable show in this space. And I think we do a good job of getting a perspective out there that is valuable.

needed in this country. So again, thanks to Rob, thanks to Natalie, thanks to all of our fans, thanks to all the people who platformed me. Come check us out on the road in 2025, ComicDaveSmith.com. Me and Rob are traveling all over the country doing comedy clubs in a city near you. So come on out. The live shows are really, really fun. People love them. So come on out and meet us and hang out and grab a drink and all that good stuff.

Thank you for another great, great year. If there's anything else you want to say, Rob, you can jump in here. You want to thank your cat or anything like that? Go ahead. Those were fine and elegant words. Thank you, everyone, for a lovely year. And check out Run Your Mouth going live later this evening. I'm a comedy special still out there. And, you know, subscribe, rate, review, masturbate in my honor. And have a great year, everybody. All right. Happy New Year, gang. Catch you next time. Peace.