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Scott Horton: Provoked

2024/11/27
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Part Of The Problem

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Scott Horton: 本书作者并非专业作家,而是长期关注国际政治的广播节目主持人。本书写作方式并非基于个人观点的阐述,而是基于大量事实资料的整理和呈现,力求客观完整地展现事件全貌。作者认为自己擅长通过事实讲述完整的故事,并填补信息空白,而非进行观点阐述。作者在书中提供了大量证据支持其观点,并提供了方便读者查证的链接,力求做到客观公正。 作者认为,美国长期以来对俄罗斯的挑衅行为是导致俄乌战争的重要原因,并非如某些说法那样是俄罗斯单方面的侵略。他列举了大量美国官员的言论,证明他们早就意识到这些行为会激怒俄罗斯,但仍然坚持这样做。作者认为,这些行为并非出于美国国家利益的考虑,而是出于某些政治人物的个人政治遗产的考虑。 作者还详细分析了“通俄门”事件,认为这是美国情报机构对特朗普总统的政治迫害,目的是为了阻止特朗普改变美国的对俄政策。作者认为,这一事件对美国公众的认知造成了严重影响,也为俄乌战争的爆发制造了条件。 作者在书中还讨论了其他一些与俄乌战争相关的事件,例如克林顿政府时期对车臣的干涉、波黑战争等,并对这些事件的来龙去脉进行了深入的分析。 Dave Smith: 本书的观点与作者的观点基本一致,认为俄乌战争并非俄罗斯单方面挑衅的结果,美国长期以来对俄罗斯的挑衅行为是导致战争爆发的重要原因。 Dave Smith 认为将俄乌战争描述为“未被挑衅”的说法是荒谬的宣传,并质疑了这种说法存在的必要性。他认为,如果战争确实未被挑衅,则无需反复强调。 Dave Smith 还批评了美国政府在中东和欧洲的政策,认为这些政策导致了大量无辜平民的死亡,并且这些政策的制定者与“通俄门”事件的参与者存在关联。 Dave Smith 还批评了美国媒体对俄乌战争的报道,认为这些报道缺乏客观性和公正性,并且对美国政府的政策进行了过度的美化。 Dave Smith 还批评了美国民众对政府暴行的麻木,认为即使承认过去战争的错误,也不会质疑政府的整体行为。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why did Scott Horton write the book 'Provoked'?

Scott Horton wrote 'Provoked' to provide a comprehensive history of post-Soviet Union actions leading up to the Ukraine-Russia conflict, filling in gaps and offering a context that he believes is missing from mainstream narratives.

What is the significance of the 'Nyet means Nyet' memo in the context of Ukraine-Russia relations?

The 'Nyet means Nyet' memo, authored by then-U.S. Ambassador to Russia William Burns, warned the U.S. against offering NATO membership to Ukraine and Georgia, predicting it would provoke Russia. This memo highlights the U.S. intelligence community's awareness of the potential for conflict.

How does Scott Horton view the role of Russiagate in the lead-up to the Ukraine war?

Horton believes that Russiagate, the conspiracy theory alleging Trump-Russia collusion, played a significant role in shaping the perception of Russia as an implacable enemy, influencing the mindset of American Democrats and contributing to the escalation of tensions that led to the Ukraine war.

What does Scott Horton argue about the U.S. foreign policy establishment's intentions towards Russia?

Horton argues that the U.S. foreign policy establishment, particularly under Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, pursued policies that were recklessly provocative towards Russia, often for reasons of legacy building rather than national interest.

How does Scott Horton justify the length and detail of his book 'Provoked'?

Horton justifies the extensive detail in 'Provoked' by arguing that every piece of information is crucial to understanding the full narrative of the Ukraine-Russia conflict, and leaving any part out would diminish the comprehensiveness of the story.

What is Scott Horton's view on the intelligence agencies' framing of Donald Trump during Russiagate?

Horton views the intelligence agencies' framing of Trump during Russiagate as a gross overreach and a clear example of the deep state's power to manipulate narratives, which he believes was a significant factor in the ongoing tensions with Russia.

Why does Scott Horton believe that the U.S. should reconsider its policy towards Ukraine?

Horton believes the U.S. should reconsider its policy towards Ukraine because the current approach, which includes arming Ukraine, is seen by Russia as a direct threat and is cumulatively provocative, potentially leading to further escalation and conflict.

What does Scott Horton identify as the key mistake in Donald Trump's handling of Russiagate?

Horton identifies Trump's failure to coherently and effectively counter the Russiagate narrative as a key mistake, arguing that Trump missed opportunities to clearly articulate the truth and undermine the false accusations against him.

How does Scott Horton view the potential for nuclear war in the context of U.S.-Russia relations?

Horton views the potential for nuclear war as a serious concern, especially given the historical and current provocations by the U.S. towards Russia, which he believes could lead to a catastrophic miscalculation by either side.

What does Scott Horton argue about the legitimacy of the U.S. intelligence agencies?

Horton argues that the U.S. intelligence agencies, particularly the CIA and FBI, lack constitutional legitimacy and have often acted beyond their mandate, including in their handling of Russiagate and their actions against the elected president.

Chapters
Scott Horton discusses the challenges and motivations behind writing his book 'Provoked,' detailing his approach to presenting factual information and his comparative advantage as a radio host.
  • Scott Horton considers himself more of an information guy than a gifted writer.
  • He emphasizes the importance of telling the whole story without leaving out key facts.
  • The book is about half a million words long, reflecting the depth of research and information included.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
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What's up, everybody? Welcome to a brand new episode of Part of the Problem. I am very excited for this episode. Thrilled to be joined by the great Scott Horton. This is the one. We've talked about this a bunch of times over the last few years, that as soon as the book's out, we're going to have to do an episode talking all about it. And the book is out. It is right here. I got a copy in my hand. I have the advanced copy still in my hand. No page numbers for you, Smith.

Well, I have a few more coming and a few more that I've sent out to other people. So I'm doing the best I can to get this book in as many people's hands as possible because it really is – it's a masterpiece, dude. Congratulations. I mean it really is – for people who have read Scott's other books –

It is as much as enough already is like just the best book on the terror wars provoked is just the absolute best book on the on the new Cold War and the history of post after the collapse of the Soviet Union and everything that led up to the disastrous war that's going on in Ukraine right now. I'll ask. I'll start this way.

Me and you are close friends. We talk on the phone quite a bit. Every time I've talked to you over the last few years, I mean, I always just reflexively say, hey, what are you up to when we start a conversation? And every single time the answer has been working on the book, working on the book. What's it like before we get into the substance of it? But just to...

Obviously, Fool's Errand and Enough Already were big projects. But I mean, this one really does dwarf it in terms of the work that you put into it in terms of the size of the book. How does it feel to be done with this thing? How do you feel looking back on it? And you know, just producing something with that had this much information in it? What was the experience like?

Well, it's nice to be done with it. I mean, quite frankly, I'm not a writer. I'm a radio host. I'm not really smart enough to write well. Like if you compare what I do to say, Justin Raimondo, for example, he was my mentor basically at antiwar.com and closest analog to what I'm doing, I guess.

he could go on for paragraphs and paragraphs telling you stuff that he thinks and you should also think or whatever. Eh, I really just have a stack of 8,000 note cards for you that I tried my very best to put in order for you to sort of tell the story just through facts. And that was actually my job working for Justin was filling his articles with links. So that's my thing is just, uh, I'm the information guy. So, um,

But that also means it's a miserable task. I'm not a gifted writer at all. And it's a terrible chore, but I guess I feel like

I have a bit of a comparative advantage because I'm a radio host, frankly, because I've been doing this for so long in a row and explaining this stuff on the radio for so long in a row that just like in the case of Eastern Europe, or sorry, just like in the case of the Middle East, it's the same with Eastern Europe where I think I do have a comparative advantage in being able to tell the whole story going back at least to a certain amount of time and really filling in the gaps for you. There's a lot of stuff that you know about this already, right?

I tell you that George Bush sponsored the Rose revolution in Georgia in 03, you may well know all about that, but I'm just going to put that in context with a lot of other stuff for you too. And, and also give you a version of that story that you can really stand on. I hope. And so the same kind of thing I tried to do with enough already, right. Is is, is,

I guess when I hear other people tell the story, I'm always like, yeah, but the key to the whole thing is the Shiite uprising of 1991 that Bush encouraged and then betrayed. But why? It was because Iran was coming to lead the thing. And so then that was the status quo that held. And that was why the Bill Clinton bombed the thing that caused the terror attack. So it's it's a huge part of the story if you don't.

talk about the Shiite uprising, you're kind of missing the whole kind of key to the 1990s and the advent of the terror war, for example, right? So the same kind of thing here where I'm just trying to tell the story and not leave anything out. And so I did get a little bit carried away. Maybe the book is, uh, it's about a half a million words, but, um,

But yeah, I try to, you know, if there's a color-coded revolution out there and you want to know about it, I have a section on there for you. You sure do. Well, it's, you know, so me and you, of course, have, as people who listen to the show know well, we've been doing podcasts together for many years, and

I mean, I know... I remember we met... The first time we met, I think, was in 2016 or 2017, but we had been doing podcasts together for a couple years before that. So it was around 2014, 2015, me and you started, like, you know, became friends and started doing regular shows together. And this would be a...

topic would be something that you wanted to talk about a lot like this as well before the, you know, the war in Ukraine. And it was right around the time of the Maidan revolution. But this would always be, you know, you would go through this. In fact, I remember where was it at a I think it was at a Ron Paul event.

um when the that you were giving a speech about this topic um years ago maybe in 2019 or something like that yeah that's right huh right you know and and the the topic of how the U.S just kind of blew this amazing opportunity with the the fall of the Soviet Union so this has kind of been like something that you had uh

researched a lot and really cared about well before the war took off. So I'm sure it must have been, you know, frustrating for you as it was for me, as when the war first starts, it's like all of this history is just supposed to be buried. We're not even supposed to discuss any of it, let alone put this into context

And of course, obviously your title, "Provoked," is refuting the propaganda, which was, it was wild to see when the war first started that everybody, everyone used the term unprovoked, like some type of religious dogma or something like that. Like that is the only way you are allowed, that has to be the starting point that we agree that absolutely nothing happened, which by the way is just,

is just absurd. I mean, you know what that reminds me of the first time I remember that in my life was white separatist, Randy Weaver.

You could never just say Randy Weaver. For all I know, the guy's middle name was Wayne, like a serial killer. But you're not allowed to just call the guy Mr. Weaver or the accused, alleged criminal. No, he has to be white separatist Randy Weaver, which just means he lived in the woods with his wife and his kids. But meanwhile, actually, his job was he worked as a mechanic at the garage in town

His boss was a black guy. They got along just fine.

He was no Nazi. He just lived in Idaho. But you're supposed to hate him. You have to hate him. White separatist Randy Weaver. And then, of course, they've done that to a million things since then. But it really is something, isn't it? To see how they can do that. Just stick an adjective on the front of an actual noun or a verb that you want to talk about. You have to use their weird little adjective that they coined first. And to me...

I swear to God, don't ever take me out of context that I used this word in the way that the people use the word. I mean, in a very specific way, it offends my sense of like reason. You know what I mean? I don't like, I don't like when people try to manipulate me. I kind of rebel right against it. You call him white separatist, Randy Weaver. It must be because you murdered his son and his wife, huh? Oh, I get it. You guys are murderers and he's innocent. Oh, I see.

Yeah, well, and by the way, for people who don't know a lot about the story, which we're not going to dive into right now, because Scott will talk to us for three hours about Ruby Ridge. But yeah, no, he totally was not a white separatist, too, by the way. I think he like the closest they had is that he knew some

people who were and like they wanted him to saw off a shotgun and he refused to or something like that like it's anyway whatever it's not he might have subscribed to some of those beliefs but he's certainly never acted negatively toward any other people or any kind of thing the whole thing was they tried to frame him just so they could extort him into being an informant against somebody else right they are the criminals full story that's the one with with

As it relates to Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine, the thing that I always found so funny, like the example that I used to use when I was mocking it was saying like, it's almost like if a dog bit like a neighborhood kid or something and you came out and you were like, hey, what happened? The dog just bit this kid and all of the kids were like...

i'll tell you what happened we weren't throwing rocks at the dog and then this dog just uh bit this kid and i just want to let you know that we weren't throwing rocks at him and all the dogs we were not throwing rocks at this dog and then he just bit any right after we weren't throwing rocks at him and you kind of be like why do you keep saying that part like i'm starting to think maybe you were throwing rocks at this dog and that's why he bit you and it is just even like what if vladimir putin wasn't provoked

Why do you need to keep saying unprovoked? Like then wouldn't it just be a given? Why do you have to, why does every single public official and every person in the corporate media, every single time they talk about this conflict have to use this word. And then it's like, if you study, if you study the history of it at all, it turns out this whole goddamn thing is just provocation after provocation, undeniably. Even look, even if you support the policy,

You'd still have to admit, well, yeah, it's clearly a provocation. I mean, this is clearly provoking the Russians. I mean, even if you're for NATO expansion, let's say in the 90s or where we're up to today, you'd still have to admit that like, yeah, the Russians sure don't like this and they have feelings about it. But again, one of the things that's been really eye opening to me over the last few years has just been how much.

There isn't a counter argument. Like, I don't I don't know if I could recall any other conflict in my lifetime where there there actually isn't a counter to any of this. There's all you'll get is NAFO retards on Twitter saying you're a Putin propagandist or something or that dummy who you were on Piers Morgan with the other day.

who goes, when you say that the U.S. overthrew the government in Ukraine, that means you don't believe it's possible to have democratic revolutions, which, as I said to you on the phone, separate conversation. I don't think it is. But regardless of that, it's like the logic of it would be like if you were to say that woman was murdered and he goes, oh, so I guess you just don't believe people die of natural causes. You're right. What?

What are you talking like? And so there is no counter. Nobody really is. Nobody out there is going to be like, I've found flaws in Scott Horton's book. He's got this wrong and this wrong and this wrong. Half the thing is freaking footnotes. So I don't know how they're going to. But it does just seem that there is no there is no coherent argument that Vladimir Putin wasn't provoked.

into this invasion and it's in all of their own words. I'm afraid that's true. And look, I try my best to steal me in the thing. You know, I have no need to be sensational here because I'm already right anyway. So, you know, I, I give the other guy's side of the story, not meaning the Russians, but I mean the American war Hawks side of the story as much as I can. I link directly to their arguments. I show, look, this is what the daily beast would have. You believe you can follow the link. And in the Kindle version, there are links to all, uh,

well, there's 7,800 citations. Some of them are books, but anything that is online will have a hot link in it. And we're going to have a PDF file very soon at scotthorton.org slash provoked or provokedbook.com. We'll forward you over there. And it's going to be the PDF file of all 6,600 something footnotes with all active links for you there for everybody to check the work. Cause that I show my work the whole time. And at the bottom of the page where you can double check, come on, that can't be true. And then you look and go, oh, yeah,

Wrote that in his diary, huh? Okay, well, you know, or State Department document or whatever the quote's from. So, yeah, and look, I think, pardon me if I'm being redundant, I think I may have said this to you on your show last time, but it is true, I promise. I did not go searching Google for...

Clinton and Bush and Obama era officials using the word provoke when it comes to talking about Russia. Okay, I did not do that.

I did a hell of a lot of research. And what happened was it just came up. These quotations come up over and over and over again. That's their word for it. Man, we better be careful. We don't provoke the Russians with this. Well, you know that's going to provoke them. And it just comes up over and over and over. That's what they all say because that's what they were doing. And that was what they knew they were doing. And they said over and over again, yeah, but what are they going to do about it?

And that kind of crap, because they they had no argument even against themselves. You know, Fiona Hill, who I pick on, she's one of many characters that I pick on mercilessly throughout the book for her horrible sins. Rightfully so. Yeah. And she will say, oh, you've been brainwashed by Russian propaganda in the same New York Times article.

where she again for the 10th time boasts that she told W. Bush on behalf of the entire intelligence community and all of the Russia experts on the National Security Council, don't offer the membership action plan to Ukraine and Georgia in Budapest in April 2008. You are going to cause a conflict. They will invade. They will destroy these countries before you let them, before they let you bring them into NATO.

That was what the CIA told Bush. That was what the National Intelligence Council told Bush. That was what Fiona Hill told Bush. Now, if you quote Fiona Hill, she'll tell you you're the victim of a psyop. No, that's just the reality of it. And why did Bush do it? And I quote it in the book. Come on. I'm sorry to say this. I hate to say this to you, Dave. I hate to, but it was legacy building for W. Bush.

Simple, stupid public choice theory. Had nothing to do with America's national interest. If we're going to go with America's national interest, we need to listen to Angela Merkel saying this is a bridge too far. Don't do it.

Because I love you. Listen to me, was what she said. Now, this was because W. Bush's legacy was supposed to be Iraq War II. Oops. Yeah, it turned out he fought that one to get Baghdad to Tehran and Mosul to Osama bin Laden and company. So, yeah, that didn't really work out that well. But I'll tell you what we'll do.

We'll offer membership action plans to Ukraine and Georgia and start to bring them into NATO. And that'll be Bush's legacy for going out in his last year in 2008.

And of course, he's the same W. Bush that did Iraq War II, the same W. Bush that tore up the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, the same W. Bush who didn't have the slightest idea what he was doing, but was always malevolent in his intentions and certainly in his behavior. And so, of course, it was Iraq.

Just as all of his best advisors told him. And, you know, we talk about the yet means yet memo. That was at the same time. Fiona Hill was talking about that same consensus. This was William Burns, who's our current CIA director under Biden, who's a career foreign service guy from the State Department. He's not a spy or a military guy. He's a diplomat. And he was stationed in the embassy over there since the 90s off and on and was the ambassador to Russia during W. Bush.

And he told Condoleezza Rice, man, don't do this. Please don't do this. Anyone can read it at WikiLeaks. Nyet means nyet. And there are also, and I have many more quotes in the book from his memoirs as well. And whatever, I guess other articles and interviews, I guess, no, mostly it would be his memoirs. And then he's quoting his own emails in his memoirs and things like this, where he says, Madam Secretary, look, if you're not already with me, you could just stop reading right now. That's what he says in a private email to her.

You might as well just stop reading right now because essentially, like, I don't know what to do with you. I'm telling you, this is a bad idea. Don't do it. And so, you know, I don't know what I can say. I'll just quote one more. Here's what the CIA says. There's a guy that writes for Yahoo News, Zach. Oh, oh, Horton.

Oh, it's right on the tip of my tongue. But instead I thought of that other horrible guy from Vox.com's name instead and it screwed me. Zach, I'm sorry, but Zach at Yahoo News and he, God dang it, that's going to bother me. He quotes this CIA guy. He had this great investigative series at the start of the war and he,

And he quotes the CIA guys, Dave, who were in charge of bringing in the weapons in the Obama and Trump years. And they say to him, man, we tried to tell him you should stop doing this. We're not deterring Russia. We're provoking them. We're giving Ukraine enough weapons that the Russians see it now as a threat that they better do something about rather than a threat that they better not mess with.

And he says, but the politicians, they don't listen. The bosses, they don't listen. They only see one shipment at a time. They don't understand that from the Russian point of view, this is cumulative.

That's the CIA talking on the eve of war, Dave. Right. That's the guys in charge of bringing in the weapons saying they tried to tell their bosses to tell the elected officials, this is stupid, man. We should stop doing this. So therefore that's it. I'm right. Hell, even Robert Kagan admits that I'm right. Cause I am. And you can call that confirmation bias, but no, it's just the one time that Robert Kagan was right about something. When he says Horton is right about everything. That's it. All right.

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Well, in terms of the Nyet means Nyet memo, which, of course, this is one of the things that you would bring up all the time back in the day in 2015 and 2016. You would talk about this all the time. But the...

at least in my opinion, probably the, the words, the seven or eight words that stick out the most from that document is Burns saying, and I think I'm quoting this correct is he says a choice. The Russians do not want to have to face or something like, right. That,

that may not be intervening yes but he's talking about how if you do this they're very concerned about a civil war breaking out which did end up happening they're very concerned about you know what i mean like the the country falling back and they're very concerned that they might have to intervene and they're going to have to face this choice a decision russia does not want to have to do so he's telling them and this is it's really amazing to think that

The guy who wrote that was the sitting CIA director through this entire war. So like our top, the head of the central intelligence agency is on record knowing that this was not what they wanted. Now, listen again,

People can caricature what we're saying or straw man or do whatever you want. We are me and Scott are radical libertarians. We don't like governments. We don't like leaders of governments. And we're no fans of Vladimir Putin, who there is no question has certainly violated international law in this war, has certainly, more importantly, violated our libertarian principles, has killed a lot of people, is is a thug.

essentially we're not fans of vladimir putin he has a conscript army yes that's right he's enslaving his army he's killing other people who have been conscripted in an army who are enslaved by the ukrainians oh just a lot of horrible stuff

But isn't it a pretty big detail, like a pretty important piece of information that even our CIA chief has said he didn't want to fight this war? And like as soon as you know that, you're like, oh, oh, all right. Well, that's it. Oh, maybe that's what he's been trying to negotiate this whole time. It's like that's a pretty interesting piece of information about this war. The big bad wolf, the Adolf Hitler in this case, actually doesn't want this. He doesn't want this policy. And of course not.

He's not an idiot. And the other side, you mentioned the other side of the story. That's it. Well, Putin just wants to retake everything. Well, look, he's been in power since the year 2000, since the first day of the year 2000, right? Midnight, he took over. So how come he waited until 2014 to seize Crimea? And how come even after the horrible civil war did break out in 2014, completely backed by the West on Kiev's side,

How come he only sent in deniable special operations forces twice in August of 14 and February of 15 and otherwise essentially stayed out other than sending quote unquote volunteers and advisors and this kind of crap and some weapons. But he did not take responsibility for occupying Donbass and protecting those people for eight years.

for eight years. So what was he waiting for? He had plenty of men. Even after the plebiscites he didn't take, which, you know, like whatever people can argue about the legitimacy or whatever. I know in the case of Crimea, I believe there's been independent polling done, right? That, that pretty much said came very, very close to the same results as those. But,

Including Pew and Gallup, by the way. American polling firms said, yes, no, this is fine. And the Germans and whoever else. But let's just say for the sake of argument is Kathy Newman would, not Kathy Newman, Kathy Young, you know, when you debated her on this topic and just absolutely destroyed her, it was quite...

enjoyable watching. But as she she kind of mocked you for even mentioning the Oh, you believe these please Vladimir Putin doesn't have honest, you know, elections, this, this is all nonsense. Okay, let's say that's true. Let's say every single, you know, like, it's just complete, completely fake.

Still, that's not the point. If Vladimir Putin was hell-bent on recreating the Soviet Union, and obviously he can take Crimea, he can take the Donbass, nobody's going to be able to stop him, why would he not do that when he had the perfect opportunity where he could look and say, oh, no, no, no, I'm not even annexing them. They democratically decided that they'd rather be part of the Russian Federation than part of Ukraine. If that was his goal...

he obviously would have done that it otherwise makes no sense right and meanwhile he waited eight years while the west armed his enemies up to fight him and resist him and which was effective when he finally did invade and they busted out their shoulder-fired anti-tank missiles and you know severely crippled his invasion in the original uh plan in there and um

But yeah, I say that in there. Like, look, there's no reason. Why would a Texan have faith in some election the Russians held in the Donbass? I don't care about that. I'm just telling you like whose fault it is, which is Joe Biden. Like you can there you don't have to presume the legitimacy of anything that the Russians are doing up.

anything, like quite literally take, take my word at that. I mean, I don't care. I don't, I don't, I'm not rationalizing what they've done or excusing it in any way, any more than in enough already. I'm excusing the attack on the towers. I'm just telling you what causes these enemies to fight the United States. And ain't that America is a nice boy minding its own business. And just these implacable enemies keep turning up. And by the way,

As everyone in your audience knows and has known their whole life, well, at least since 1989, we're number one. America is the global superpower. There used to be another. Now there's not. Now there's one global superpower.

And the European Union and China have big economies, but they're not global superpowers. They don't have political and military and dominance in other people's countries on other continents the way the United States does. The United States has the greatest world empire that's ever been created right now. And so...

How could it be that just all this stuff keeps happening to us? Come on, man. Everybody knows better than that. Like, what is this? You know, 11th grade civics? Because by 12th grade, you should be over it and know that like, you know, these wars ain't all they're cracked up to be a lot of the times. Remember the main to turn a phrase there.

Yeah, well, I mean, that's right. And somehow it's fascinating to watch just from doing, you know, like doing a lot of shows and a lot of debates over the last few years, how much people compartmentalize the atrocities that their own government commits. And that somehow and even when.

they'll kind of grant, you know, like nobody, when I go, if I go on Pierce Morgan's show or if I do a debate or anything like that, I never catch anyone who's like defending the terror wars still.

everybody basically concedes like, yeah, we shouldn't have fought in Iraq and we shouldn't have tried to overthrow the Taliban in Afghanistan. Because how could you not at this point, you know, just look at it and be like, well, yeah, sure. That did not work out. That was not wise policy. And yet they'll still, if you bring up Vladimir Putin, you know, to someone like Pierce Morgan, well, immediately the first thing that comes to the front of your mind is all the crimes that he's committed. And fair enough. Like, I think that's,

Okay, you know, you bring up Vladimir Putin. It's like, he imprisons journalists, he does this, he does that, you know, whatever. Oh, okay, fair enough. And yet, why should that not be the first thing that comes up when you bring up any of our political leaders? Like, okay, I'm fine with that. Let's go with their crimes. Here's the crimes of our government. And even you'll admit,

Right. We just started this war off lies and just slaughtered all these people. And then to turn around and somehow it's like, yeah, that was a mistake. It didn't exactly work, but we're still the force for good. That like that, that's just not questioned in the next text, you know, encounter. And at the same time, you'll be like, well, look, I mean, if you know anything about this,

George W. Bush's disastrous wars. It's like, okay, well, who were the people in the upper echelons of power in George W. Bush's administration? Well, it's these neoconservatives. Okay. Well, the neoconservatives also had this plan for expanding NATO. It's like, okay, so the same people who are managing our foreign policy were managing our foreign policy at that

time. And it's not just in the Middle East. We also have a foreign policy in Europe. And so if you'll all concede that not just like they got it wrong in the Middle East, you're conceding like they got it wrong to catastrophic consequences with...

hundreds of thousands to millions of innocent people slaughtered by that. It's like, okay, then why is it such a big leap to say they also got it all wrong in Europe? And they also were not concerned with protecting innocent life or something like that. This show is sponsored by BetterHelp.

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them out at betterhelp.com slash problem today, and you'll get 10% off your first month. That's B-E-T-T-E-R-H-E-L-P dot com slash problem for 10% off your first month. All right, let's get back into the show. And seriously, before W. Bush was Bill Clinton, the face fighting rapist, the guy that burned the Branch Davidians to death.

The guy that lied you into war with Serbia. The guy who caused September 11th by backing Al Qaeda terrorists for 10 years at the same time that he's provoking them.

by bombing Iraq from bases in Saudi Arabia, site of the two most holy places in Islam, Mecca, Medina, and helping the Israelis to mercilessly slaughter the Palestinians and steal the third most important site in Islam, the Al-Aqsa Mosque, from the Muslims there.

And doing absolutely nothing to protect the United States from the terrorists that he had emboldened and provoked. So, oh yeah, and you're telling me what? Like he didn't have the soundest, most well thought through policy toward Latvia? Yeah. Right.

Why would he? Why would you think that he would do the right thing ever? He burned those little babies in Waco to death and called it a suicide. He said those people poured gasoline on their own kids and set their own kids on fire when he did it. He did it. Him and the hostage rescue team and the Army's Combat Applications Group, a.k.a. the Delta Force, they murdered those people. The national government of the United States of America and held back the fire trucks while the building burned.

Yeah. Oh no. That guy, he couldn't, Hey, how dare you talk bad about America, Dave? Yeah, it really is. And it criticized William Jefferson Clinton, Osama bin Laden's, I don't know, mentor patron sponsor. Yeah. I mean, it's a, it is wild. I remember, um,

There was one time I had a Twitter exchange with Joe Scarborough, Morning Joe over there, which was kind of wild to me. Even though there's this weird thing where nobody really watches the corporate media anymore and so many people watch podcasts now.

And like, I'm regularly on much, much, much bigger shows than Morning Joe. Like that's that way. If I was invited, I would go on Morning Joe if they invited me on tomorrow, but I wouldn't be like, I wouldn't be calling you, Scott. Like, I got my big break, dude. I'm going on Morning Joe. Like, it wouldn't even be a big thing yet.

I was just really surprised that he knew who I was. Like, you know, like, so I tweeted something about him being an elitist. And he was he replied back to me. And he goes, Oh, yeah, the guy who says that Putin was provoked and that Osama bin Laden was provoked into 911. You know, he thinks that blah. And I was like, Oh, you like know me and know what I think about this, which was kind of weird. And then I remember I said to him at one point, he stopped

replying to me after this one. We went back and forth a few times, but I was like, okay, fine. You don't agree that we provoked Osama bin Laden into attacking us on 9-11. Fine. But can we all at least come together and admit that it was probably a mistake for your wife's father to bankroll him? And like, it

It's just like, this is the big new Brzezinski's daughter's husband is like, oh, the idea that we had any hand in this is absurd. Like, what are you talking about, dude? You know, you don't pretend like you don't fucking know. Like you, and it's just, oh,

Anyway, that's why the book is so important and why people really got to read it because it's like they do, they rely on you not knowing anything about history. And when you actually look at the history of the thing, it's just, again, it's not, and it's not,

What they cartoonishly try to say, it's not, oh, you come away from this book realizing that Vladimir Putin is the good guy. He's not a good guy. But you do come away from this book realizing that the American foreign policy establishment is just, they sure as hell aren't the good guys either. And not only that, but just that...

the profound recklessness of the policy, literally from 1990 to today, is just, it's even for people like me and you who live in this world of constantly focusing on how evil and corrupt the government is. As you read the book, you're just like, my jaw's on the ground the whole time. I just can't believe it. I still, even just the news over the last couple weeks, I can't believe. It's just so reckless. You know, I'll tell you, the

Look, I mean, I'm a horrible, hateful person. I wrote the book. The book is a collection of things that piss me off. Like, what are you going to do? Like, that's what it is. But the thing, and a lot of it, when I read it, I just think, God, these people, you know, especially Bill Clinton and Bush. Those are the ones I made. It was just because that was when I was younger or whatever. Those are the ones I just hate the most, those two. But, yeah.

See, I got off on a tangent about how much I hate them. I forgot what I was going to say. Oh, I know the part of the book that, you know, cause I had to reread the book a hundred times to finish the writing and get it all edited and straight and everything is not fun. But, um, the part that no matter how many times I read, it just drives me absolutely off the wall is Russiagate.

And Russiagate, reading about Russiagate is like reading about Waco or something. It's just like, I don't want to. It's like reading about what's happening in Gaza. Oh, God. Oh, so ugliest thing. And here, it's not mass murder. I mean, they're framing a president that I don't really favor that much. But like, still, like, really, dude, if they did the same thing to Obama or Bernie Sanders or whoever, I still would be this upset just because I hate all lies this much. You know what I mean? But like,

The list of things that the FBI pretended to not know yet as they continued to pursue that case or pretend to. Like just that, even when I say it that way, it doesn't sound like that big of a deal. You know what I mean? But like, no, it's such a big of a deal, dude. Oh, no, it really is. What they pretended to not know for three years about how fake that whole thing was is just incredible to me. And it's funny, I've noticed on Twitter,

Nobody said a word about Russiagate yet. Nobody's that far in the book yet, right? Like nobody said anything about Bill Clinton back in the tariffs in Chechnya yet. Nobody said anything about the Boston bombing. I got all this stuff in there. Nobody said anything about the Kyrgyzstan revolution and, but Russiagate's toward the end, like that's Trump. So it's going to be like a few weeks before those reviews start coming in. You know what I mean? But, and, and again, I'm not the best writer. So it's really, it's just subject by subject by subject by subject under the Russiagate outline there.

But it's just, I don't know. I get it. I freak out just thinking about it now. Like it bothers me. They would dare. Well, look, I'll say this about Russia. Because, you know, aside from my kind of claim to fame or whatever is, you know, there's there's

There's several issues that have kind of like come to define my public, you know, persona or whatever. And like being anti-war is obviously like a big one of them, particularly with, you know, Gaza and Ukraine over the last right on the term. Well, that's another one that the COVID stuff that I, you know, did, did really well through that. But before that, it was Russiagate, like Russiagate was the if there was a topic that

that was at the center of this show for people who listen through the years know well, I mean, in 2016, 17, really 2017, 18, 19. That was because it was like the biggest story going on. And it was, you know, and it was so obviously bullshit from the very beginning. And so I've been reading the Russiagate chapter in this book I got, by the way, I got an advanced copy. So I'm a little ahead of the general public who just got this thing a few days ago. But

Yeah, it's interesting because obviously I haven't been talking about it as much, but just so everybody listening understands, when Scott says how much the FBI pretended not to know, it's like an example for that is like that Carter Page wasn't a Russian spy.

They knew this from the very beginning. They had been told by the CIA that he was working with them. The bosses refused to let the agents interview him for seven months to make sure that they couldn't just say, this is completely ridiculous, boss, and this kind of thing. And that's just one example, but then there's a hundred of them. And I should say, by the way. Major things like that. I've actually wanted to say this for months now, and finally I have a chance. I'm really mad at John Durham.

the special prosecutor who did not a perfect but a really really great job of his report and he tried to prosecute a couple of the liars behind the uh dossier and um and the alpha bank hoax and this kind of thing um which he failed to win his prosecutions but he was right and his his defendants were guilty so screw them but anyway

I'm really mad at him, dude, because I did so much work that then when his report finally came out, it just completely like washed away two thirds of the research that I had done. Well, I had all of these notes. I had all of this stuff. And then here comes a special prosecutor is like, no, I'm telling you this.

This is what happened. And then so the way he puts it is just superior to whatever I had. And so whatever I had had to get canceled and replaced with what he had. So now you read my Russiagate section. You're like, okay, Horton, so I guess you can read the Durham report. And I'm like, screw you, man. I had all of this stuff. I had done such a good job. This book took me forever to write. And, man, I had done –

I spent a lot of the early part of the book working on Russiagate. Then this guy Durham comes and I'm just plagiarizing his ass now, but it's okay because he's a government employee and so he's got no copyright protection. So screw him. Yeah.

Yeah, there you go. There you found a nice libertarian justification for it. I mean, the Durham report was, I mean, a scathing indictment. Oh, I beg your audience to read it. I beg your people to read it. Everyone read it. I mean, it's a stupid, horrible government report, but you read that thing. This is a federal prosecutor writing about the FBI and the Department of Justice. And, you know, he's the same guy who let Bush get away with torturing people to

death. You know that? He's the one that they brought in to be the narrow it down, narrow it down, narrow it down until it's nothing and drop the case guy. Same guy. Although he's the same guy who prosecuted the FBI for employing Whitey Bulger all those years too. So kind of a mixed bag there. But he did a hell of a job on that. It could have been worse, but...

Well, I assumed it was going to be much worse. I assumed it was going to be another. He was coming in to do the same thing that he did under the Bush torture regime and that it was going to be to downplay it. And then when you actually read the report, you're like, oh, no, he gave a pretty good report, actually. It's like, yep, here's what happened. And I say this all the time.

on shows because I'm always trying to provoke somebody to fight with me about it, where I always say it's like the intelligence agencies framed the sitting president for treason. Simple as that. That's actually what happened. Anyone want to argue about that? Because that's a pretty bold claim I just made there. So if anyone wants to argue, go ahead. But then when no one ever does want to argue because they all know this whole thing is bullshit, it's like, okay, but take that in now.

like that if you're not going to argue with me then you must incorporate that into your world view now and that does it just understanding russiagate it's like this narrative shattering understanding because almost everything that's talked about in say like the corporate news uh

All of it's shattered now. All of it. Like, whenever you're talking about Donald Trump, whenever you're talking about America, whenever you're talking about democracy, all of these things you must view through. Right. And particularly this war. You must view all of this through a different lens now because we already know what's going on here. So, like, wait a minute, because now the other half, which I'll admit I did not focus on nearly enough during those years when I was talking about Russiagate all the time.

Which you did focus on. I give you a lot of credit for that. I also, as I mentioned the other day on Glenn Greenwald's show, she certainly is not perfect on foreign policy. And there's some areas where she's really, really bad. But Tulsi Gabbard deserves a lot of credit for this, too. You know, when Tulsi Gabbard was running for president in in.

Well, it was the 2020 campaign, but I guess it was in 2019 when she was still in the Democratic primary. Every single time they asked her what her number one issue is, she would always say nuclear war, nuclear war. And I remember I at the time, I kind of would cringe when she would do that. And I would kind of I was like, I kind of wish she didn't say that. And she just because it does sound a little bit like a.

I don't know, like you're kind of catastrophizing things. No one really thinks we're on the verge of nuclear war right now or whatever. It's like talk about the wars that we are fighting and why we should be against those. But man, she was right. You were right. And I was really wrong to not focus more on the Russiagate narrative because really framing Donald Trump was only 50 percent of it.

And the other 50% is that they were framing Vladimir Putin. And this is, you know, fast forward a minute nowadays. So look at, you know, they sort of kind of dropped Russiagate a little bit, but then it came right back with the laptop thing. They all immediately jumped to say, oh, see, is just like the last chapter in Russiagate in a sense. Oh, it was all true anyway, because now they're doing it again. Right.

by introducing this fake laptop, which of course that was completely fake. And I have a whole treatment on that in the book too. The accusation that it was Russian. So that reinforced it. Well, that was just right on the eve of Biden's election. Biden was sworn in two months after that, three months, three, four months after that. So then, and then we spent, you know, just one year in the lead up to war there. So it can be hard for somebody like you or me

who are not Democrats and don't think that way, to put ourselves in the shoes of a Democrat who never stopped believing in Russiagate, really.

And the war in Ukraine could really be seen as one more thing that Russia did in a row after inflicting Donald Trump on us and trying to rig the election against Biden by introducing this fake Russian laptop and all of these things. Right. So now Glenn Greenwald pointed this out to me the other day and I agree.

I think a friend reassured me that now the implication is in there. But I think I wonder if I say it strongly enough. I wonder if I I should have brought it up when we get to the war that you see. You have to wonder what role the fake Russiagate hoax scandal played in the minds of America's Democrats in the lead up to the war in Ukraine, that this is the same implacable argument.

enemy that you've been grappling with since 2015 when he launched this coup d'etat to overthrow Duchess Hillary and usurp her rightful throne for their secret agent Trump. That's a lot of stress from a foreign enemy. You know, I mean, and remember...

You know, they weren't lying. They were expressing themselves when they compared it to September 11th, Pearl Harbor, Kristallnacht. Lady on MSNBC said this is like that time when the Holocaust started in Germany. Talking about Russiagate. Yeah.

But the thing is, that was how they really felt about it. They were terrified. They were terrified that Russia had done this to us. And it's hard to take that away. Even after the report was a dud, Rachel Maddow took the night off and then they just talked about something else after that. They never said, geez, guys,

This, we really were barking up the wrong tree here. Turns out Carter page was a loyal CIA asset who debriefed the agency. Every time he ever met an important Russian in his entire life. Oops. We really got that wrong here. No, they didn't do that. They never had to say they were wrong. Just like with the Republicans in Iraq, they just sort of let it go and stop defending it anymore. Yeah. Well, and that's, you know, and another element to it is that Donald Trump, uh,

um despite being the best ever at putting on a show and making things entertaining which just undeniably he is the greatest ever at doing he's just the best self-promoter who's ever lived but he is not good at

at making that argument. He never really stood up for himself and in a clear, concise way, which is something, by the way, I was very critical of him during this campaign, which I got to say, again, he didn't even run a very good campaign. He put on a great show, which is what he always does. So that element of it was good. But Donald Trump does this thing, the example I always use, it's like a perfect microcosm of Donald Trump when he's at the debate with Kamala Harris.

And she starts talking, the question's about immigration. So she immediately pivots to insulting his crowd sizes. And he, of course, can't not take the bait. So he just starts going off on how great his crowds are. But it's like...

The opportunity that's right in front of it, like it's right there. It writes itself, dude. Like, no, don't start defending your rallies. Point out that she's only bringing up your rallies because she doesn't want to talk about immigration. And like, how easy is it to say, hey, guys, I made this the central issue of my campaign in 2016, and they all said I was a Nazi for doing it. They reversed my policies. Look

look what a disaster this is. Now they're all pretending they're immigration hawks and just like make the devastating case. Instead,

he goes and he goes my rallies are tremendous blah blah blah defending his rallies and then he goes they're eating the dogs they're eating the cats and like okay if you are following that story maybe you get the thing he's referencing but if you're not he just comes off like a total loon and similarly in this moment which is really what the whole hunter biden laptop uh the

the Russiagate accusation, the Russia accusation about it was designed to do is that when Donald Trump brings it up in the debate with Joe Biden, Joe Biden can say 51 top intelligence people all signed a letter saying this was Russia. And then Donald Trump has this opportunity to respond. And he goes, you're telling me it's another Russia, Russia, Russia.

And it was just like, okay, yeah, if you already knew, you kind of get what he's saying. But if you didn't know...

That didn't really explain it to you ever. You know what I mean? Like he never just coherently said ever once, listen, the intelligence agencies are framing me for this. And here's how we know this. And here's the best reporting on this. Like he's not capable of doing that. And so, yeah, this did this lingered on. I mean, look. And by the way, I have to say, where the hell was Stephen Miller and where the hell was hoping?

And these people who were like the most loyal staff to him. You're telling me Stephen Miller can't read Twitter and see that Aaron Matej.

just debunked Russiagate today in The Nation magazine. Mr. President, Mr. President, you gotta see this. This Democrat magazine says, sorry, but it's just not true. All about it today. Tweet that in all capital letters, sir. Nobody, so never even mind his incompetence, but what about all of his people, dude? Nobody handed him that and said,

Man, look at this. He debunks all of these things. And of course, for people not familiar, Aaron Mate was 100% on it. He was never wrong when he debunked a Russiagate lie. I mean, when he put out a feature article in The Nation magazine, you could have beat an FBI director right out of his job with it if you'd wielded it right. You know, it was huge. So that's on them too. You know, I mean, seriously, like that lady Hope Hicks, who was supposed to be like his...

He was like number one confidant, you know, Trump whisperer. What's going on in the world? What's going on in the media? What's happening today? And what are we going to do about it? And all of that stuff. Like, boy, did they drop the ball on that? Especially when you had Glenn Greenwald, Aaron Matei, Matt Taibbi, at first Robert Perry, but then he died, but still Joe Loria, Ray McGovern, and Michael Tracy. I'm sorry, but I'm leaving out, but those are...

some of the most prominent leftists and progressives who were good on Russiagate. Never mind Chuck Ross and Mariel Hemingway and Miranda Devine and whoever else on the right who were also great on it. But I'm just talking about the liberals. Like if you were working for Trump, you wouldn't make sure that he knows that he can say, look, even these leftists say that I'm innocent because I am.

Like, God, that would have... Oh, man, what a weird time. And when you think about it, you know, it's a theme that I talk about a lot on the show, is that human beings, all of us, we just... We outsource knowledge. It's the reason why we don't live in hunter-gatherer communities and we get to live in these advanced, sophisticated societies is because of specialization, you know, the division of labor, and...

People have expertise in very limited fields if they have any at all. And if there is somebody who has expertise in like two or three fields, they're considered a genius. Like that's so rare that anybody has like expertise across multiple fields. And you think this happens all the time in your life. Like, you know, my freaking hot water heater just broke.

and I had to hire a guy to come here. And he said a lot of words to me that I didn't understand and then said I owe him 500 bucks, you know? And I'm like, all right, I guess I do. I have no idea. He could have just been making all of it up, but I reasonably assume, like, probably that's... And I have hot water again, so, like, it ended up working. And for most people, like, you know, they're...

if everybody obsessed over politics the way me and you do we would all starve to death it's a very good thing that other people are specializing in other areas but i just don't think that people can you like you can't blame regular people for this but when you got you know look man i

I don't know, all the people in Suits and Ties on CNN are telling me there's really something here. They say Trump-Russia collusion all day long, every single day. And then I just heard from the chair of the House Intelligence Committee, and he tells me he's seen the evidence. And I'm not privy to this evidence yet, but he sure is. And he's seen it, and he tells me when the Mueller report comes out, there's going to be mass arrests of Donald Trump. Oh, the former CIA director, Brennan, just said there's going to be, that Donald Trump is going to be put on handcuffs on national television.

wouldn't say that if they had nothing that's a reasonable conclusion for an average american who doesn't pay that much attention to this it's a reasonable conclusion to go like unless this whole system is completely evil and based on lies then obviously they got something or they wouldn't be saying this now the answer is that it is a system based on lies but like

It's understandable why people believe that. There's never a coherent objection coming from out of Donald Trump's mouth. And then, yeah, like you what they're think about the claim. Think about how huge it is. They were claiming that the biggest it was the biggest scandal in the history of the United States of America by far that Vladimir Putin pulled off something that.

the british empire couldn't that uh adolf hitler couldn't that joseph stalin couldn't that that osama bin laden couldn't like all the great enemies of the united states of america none of them ever overthrew our democracy and installed their puppet as the president and that's the claim and so yeah to look at that so on one hand you go you can't downplay how much that would affect

the the views that people have in terms of a war involving Russia only a couple years after that. And then the other flip side to that, to go back to this idea that it was unprovoked, I've literally had this argument before with people where they've said

that the war was unprovoked and I just asked them if they believe in Russiagate. Like, do you actually believe that Vladimir Putin overthrew our election and installed Donald Trump? And they're like, well, no, of course. And you're like, okay, well, that's provocation. Sorry, that already proved, that right there already proves the title of your book.

Think about that from Vladimir Putin's perspective, that the most war-hungry country in the world who's gone – fought in seven wars over the last 25 years and just slaughtered hundreds of thousands of innocent people and left countries in piles of rubble, that they – not like some random guy on CNN –

But the head of the war machine itself, the heads of the war machine are claiming, are laying down the justification for attacking you. They're claiming you started a war with them off complete lies. Yep. And look, man, uh,

This, I forget if we talked about this before, but there's a new book out that came out this year by Annie Jacobson called Nuclear War, a scenario. And it's a fictional scenario about what would happen if nuclear war broke out.

But it's based on her interviews with all of the very top guys from the Strategic Air Command, former defense secretaries and CIA directors and strategic nuclear war planners. She did real research. I mean, you check the footnotes in that book. It's something else. These firsthand interviews that she did with America's absolute greatest experts on our nuclear war policy. And

And, and she would be, you know, right at home at the New Yorker magazine or something. She's absolutely like within that center left liberal, uh, you know, of that generation kind of older baby boomer generation type, or maybe younger, younger boomer. But anyway, um, so point is in her scenario and I'm ruining the book for you. So put your fingers in yours if you don't want to hear it. Um,

North Korea nukes America. Nobody knows why, but that's how it starts. They nuke us twice. And that means, oh, now we got to nuke them off the face of the earth or we can expect them to just keep nuking us and nuking us. So the president launches 50 H-bombs at North Korea to wipe them off the face of the earth and the threat. Well, the Russians see the missiles coming.

And part of the loophole is that unfortunately America can't really nuke North Korea without sailing our ICBMs over Russia to get there. We hit them from subs in the Pacific. But in this case, I guess they use land-based missiles in the Dakotas and Montana or whatever. And so the Russians now have to decide whether these missiles coming in are directed at them or at North Korea.

And the fictional Putin in the book decides that, oh, I see what they're doing. It doesn't matter that it was North Korea that nuked them. The U.S. government, they're ruthless, dude. They don't care. They're just going to lie. They're just going to tell the American people that it was us that did it. And they're already launching a surprise nuclear attack on us, even though we had nothing to do with it. They see those incoming nukes. They immediately think of Iraq.

They immediately think, I don't know if she was thinking this, of Russiagate. They'll tell any lie against me. Here they would even, after getting nuked by Korea, they'd even blame it on me just as an excuse to launch a preemptive strike. So then he launches all of his nukes and America dies. And something that the North Koreans could never do to us would be to erase our whole civilization. They've got a couple dozen nukes at most and they couldn't fire them off before we killed them.

But the Russians, they can hit about a thousand points at once in America, about a thousand targets at once. And likewise on this side there, and then be the end of everything. And based on what you just said, the Americans do nothing but lie. They do nothing but come up with pretexts for war. And not just against Saddam Hussein and Bashar al-Assad and helpless Muammar Gaddafi, but against Russia.

And yeah, like you say, and it's years later and so stupid and silly. Now, Russia gay people forget that. Like, yeah, no, this was way worse than McCarthyism. I mean, maybe that was worse in the sense of like innocent people were getting accused of like, oh, you were a commie in the thirties. Like whatever, dude, you know, a lot of people were commies in the thirties. And a lot of that was like embellished beyond what was fair. But here the whole thing is directed against the elected president, United States. You know, there's a clip of, um,

John Laughlin, who had been the acting director of CIA, and he's at the CSIS or something like this. And they say, oh, Donald Trump says that there's a deep state that's out to get him. And he goes, well, let me tell you something. Thank God for the deep state. And then he says, because the problem is not the Justice Department. It's not the CIA. It's not the NSA. It's at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. That's the problem.

So here he's just outright. And I'm sorry, he gives the addresses of the justice department. It's not the Hoover building. It's not at Fort Meade. Yeah. Oh, did I lose you? I think I lost your audio there. Oh, sorry. Oh, my mistake there. I hit the mute button when I do that all the time. No, no, we played. No, I was just going to say we played the clip on the show. Yeah, it was, it was pretty incredible. Yeah. Yeah. So, but the thing of it is, this is like,

Okay, well, you could imagine a scenario where, yeah, that's right. Thank God that these guys took their oath before God to defend our Constitution from the Russian-installed coup d'etat guy who usurped the rightful elected throne of Duchess Clinton there, except that that wasn't right. The whole thing was a lie. They were the ones who were out of line, and they were so far out of line. Oh, my God, man. None of these agencies are constitutional in their existence at all.

This is all post-World War II national security state garbage. Harry Truman's National Security Act of 47 and so forth. They have no legitimacy at all. You know, the FBI maybe, or, you know, as a Bureau of the Department of Justice would have some constitutional legitimacy. If NSA was wholly under the Pentagon, maybe. But anyway...

Who in the hell are they? A bunch of unelected and acting as secret police, right? They are completely protected. We're talking about the FBI counterintelligence division and central intelligence agency going up against the elected president of the United States of America. So yeah, if he was guilty, then boy, nail him to the wall, guys, and you all get a bunch of medals and you're all heroes. But boy, if this isn't true...

And man, are you guys out of line? You know, it's completely crazy for them to have gone that far. And there's just no mistaking here that John Brennan and Jim Comey really thought so. They were lying. And we know they're lying. John Durham proved that they're lying. And Matt Taibbi proved that John Brennan is the one who cooked the whole damn thing up in the first place. All right, guys, let's take a moment and thank our sponsor for today's show, which is Enterra Skin Care.

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All right, let's get back into the show. Of course. Then, of course, the important question then, you know, once you understand this, is why? Why would they do this to the Senate president? Well, that's right. And so then that's kind of the whole, you know, like this is the thing that I was trying for so many years to pound into people's heads that it's like, listen, left winger who hates Donald Trump. Fine. Fine.

Fine. Hate Donald Trump. And I do think it's a bit irrational. And the fact that he was for so many, this seems to have gone away a little bit, which is an interesting, you know, dynamic. But for years, I mean, the way that just like your average left wing person or liberal person reacted.

would get so worked up over Donald Trump. So, so out of proportion compared to how much they hate any other political figure that never made sense. It was never rational, but at least go, okay, you hate him cause he's a racist or whatever. Do you really think that's why the CIA hates him?

Do you really believe that they are just so profoundly appalled by his insensitivity toward Mexicans or something like that? And one of the best parts of your glorious debate with Bill Kristol, which if anybody listening to this has not seen, you really should go watch. I mean, it's just a delicious moment in history.

in anti-war history. But nobody ever got to say this to like one of these neocons faces before. And I was so glad that you led with it in your opening statement was that it was like, don't get, I mean, I'm paraphrasing my words, not yours. You said it in a much more articulate way, but it was like, don't give me this bullshit about how you guys hate bigotry and nationalism.

This was your whole shtick. And I'm sorry, I'm just not... Maybe a 20-year-old, you could pull this on, but I'm in my 40s, and I remember it quite well. I was an adult as you did it. So, like, you're not going to convince me it didn't happen. Islamophobia? Are you kidding me? You guys tried for...

Because they were opening like a little mosque a few blocks away from the Old World Trade Center. Every right-wing radio host in America made this out to be Armageddon and Sharia law is being spread to...

Kansas or something. And Crystal himself too. Crystal himself was in on that one. The most ridiculous. So no, no, no. Don't give me any of that shit. You don't have a problem with bigotry. Go listen to the way they talk about Palestinians. They do not have a problem with bigotry. They have a problem with

With bigotry being used to sell in isolationist position, that's for sure, which I think we unfairly get smeared as isolationists. I do think calling Donald Trump his rhetoric isolationist is not fair.

like, I think that's somewhat accurate. I mean, he's talking about closing the borders, cutting off trade and not militarily intervening in the world. But like, yes, if you're, if you're using bigotry, um, in order to argue for detente with Russia or something like that, then they have a problem with it. If you're using bigotry to sell the next war, they delight in that. So like, don't give, so, okay. So that's, so this is the heart of it. And this is like,

I understand this doesn't fit neatly into a bumper sticker, but I think this is what people have to understand. It's like, even if you are highly critical of Donald Trump, as both me and you have been over the years, you can also understand that they don't hate him for the same reasons we do. And that's what, like, liberals need to understand. Even if you hate this guy, and even maybe you're justified in some of your reasons for hating the guy.

That's not why they're framing him for treason. They're framing him for treason for other reasons. And the major one is that they saw him as a threat to the war machine and for good reason. Yeah. Hey, look at the I cited in here in the impeachment over Ukraine gate. Son of Russiagate actually got the guy impeached for the third time in American history.

And just go and look at the testimony of Alexander Vindman, the rat on the National Security Council, who turned him in to his CIA buddy, Eric Chiaramella, who wrote up the big so-called whistleblower report and kicked the whole thing off. He wrote an article in The Atlantic essentially elaborating on the same point.

And he's just as unabashed as could be. They just put his brother Yevgeny in the House of Representatives representing the great state of Virginia, if you could believe it. They call him Eugene. So you don't recognize that these people are Ukrainian nationals. And Donald Trump, of course, here's how lazy Donald Trump is. While he's watching with bated breath, just dying to find out what the absolute idiot blonde lady is going to say about him next on CNN.

right he's got ukrainian nationals sitting on the national security council down the hall who hate his guts and want to kill him or at least overthrow him and he has no idea none anyway so this guy bin min he explains to the congress and he explained in his atlantic article article donald trump was trying to change our russia policy

Our Russia policy, says Lieutenant Colonel Vindman. And he explains that, look, the interagency, meaning like a meeting of the deputies of the National Security Council, we decided what we're doing with Russia and Ukraine. Who the hell does this guy think he is to change our Ukraine policy, says the Ukrainian national on the U.S. National Security Council.

And so if Donald Trump thinks that he's going to change our Ukraine policy, he's going to threaten our arms shipments to Ukraine. Well, we're just not going to stand for that. Who the hell does this guy think he is? We at the interagency have our consensus. And there's just no sense whatsoever that this guy won an election to be the president of the United States. And you didn't, Mr. Lieutenant Colonel. And so you don't have a say at all.

The interagency serves him, the chief executive of the government departments. That's it. Right. Unless he's, you know, demanding that you break the law, then you have no say here. But and look.

I mean, we're watching this right now. Donald Trump is surrounding himself with enemies right now. They're all going to stab him in the back, and he's going to be like, well, that's what you get for being too damn lazy to just read and find out who actually agrees with you and likes you. You surround yourself with a bunch of war hawks who hate your guts. That's what you're going to get. I don't know why he doesn't make John Bolton National Security Advisor again.

Yeah, well, it's like, you know, we I had a brief window of optimism when we we kind of launched our never Pompeo campaign. And then Donald Trump came out and put out a statement that Nikki Haley and Mike Pompeo wouldn't be in the new administration. And you're like, oh, all right, we're doing it. You know, it's just a coincidence. And then, well, I mean, it's like the issue is, I mean,

There's just so many of them in DC and they're all the same exact thing. Like it's like, does it make any difference? If you're, if I was talking about any foreign policy posts, any foreign policy post, and I said, Scott,

do you have a preference because either Mike Pompeo or Nikki Haley or John Bolton or Hillary Clinton, or like they'll just list them on and on. And you'd go, no, they're all the same. Like you got the same person, no matter what. So unless you really recognize why you don't want Pompeo and why you don't want Nikki Haley, just scratching their names off the list does nothing because then Marco Rubio is the same as them. And it's all, they're all. And by the way,

There clearly is a full National Security Council staff worth of good America first anti-war guys, conservatives and libertarians with the credentials to sit in the White House or in the State Department or the Defense Department. I'm not talking about like me and my boys at the Institute, maybe Ted Carpenter, but, you know, otherwise.

But anyway, I have a whole list. I don't want to get anybody in trouble. I had a whole giant list of guys who absolutely could staff the National Security Council as well as the top three or four spots at state and defense intelligence and what have you. And and but they don't get the time of day, man. They don't have a say. And we all know why. It's because Miriam Adelson wrote a check for one hundred million dollars. So she gets to decide who's in the cabinet.

Yeah. That's what she bought. A million dollars. And who's she? She's an Israeli who inherited money from her dead husband, who who ran a casino in China. That's who American conservatives obey. That's who's in charge. That's the leader of the American conservative movement, Dave.

the widow heiress of a Chinese Communist gambling Casino line up and click your heels American Christian conservatives obey your master I believe she's uh actually a uh Palestinian if I'm uh being which Donald Trump likes to use as a slur against other people but I'm not double check me on this but I believe she was born before the state of Israel

So I think I could technically say that, just as he accuses everybody else of being. You got a Palestinian working for you, Trump. You got to take care of this problem. Well, I'm not always the best at predicting the future, but I did say I'm on record. I did say on Patrick B. David's show on Election Day before any of the

the polls had closed or any votes were counted. I did predict with certainty that the winner of the 2024 presidential election would be Israel. And I was right. I got that one right. It was a safe, safe bet if ever there was one. All right, listen, Scott, I had a plan in my mind

that on the show today, because there's just so much great information in the book. And so I was like, I really wanted to spend the podcast talking about shock therapy and colored revolutions. We did not get to either of those. So let's just do let's I know you're doing this with Tom already. But let's just make this like, we'll do several podcasts on the book

because there really are like so many different parts of it that I wanted to kind of, you know, there's this stuff that I talk about a lot that I know pretty well, but then there's so much stuff that I learned for the first time from reading this book. So we'll get you back on in the next...

a few days and go over some of that stuff. I do have to cut this, do have to cut this short now, but let people not cut this short, but end the show. Let people know one more time where they can buy the book and where they can find your other fantastic work.

Okay. So the book is at Amazon and you can go to scotthorton.org or libertarianistute.org. We've got the links for you there. It's out in paperback and Kindle so far, working on the hardback version. That company is a little bit slower, but we're in that together. I'm already recording the audio book. I'm done with Clinton. No, no, pardon me. I'm done with H.W. Bush and I'm through Clinton up to the Bosnian War. I was just about to start the Bosnian War.

That is going to be a Substack series. So if people go to scotthortonshow.com, that's different than scotthortonshow.org, go to scotthortonshow.com and subscribe to the Substack there. That is going to be...

beginning pretty soon here. That is going to be a very long form podcast series, just kind of back of the envelope. It's going to be like 48 hours long, double fear and loathing in Jerusalem by a starter made there at least. And maybe more than that. It's, it's a long book. No one gets the only human being I know who could make Daryl Cooper seem not long winded. Yeah. Daryl Cooper.

Dan Cooper is so concise with his telling of history now. Yeah, no, this is what you get with me, man. I had Tom Woods, you know, figurative sort of Damocles hanging over my head when I was doing enough already. And I absolutely have to keep this thing at 300 pages, Iron Law of the Universe. On this book, I blew past three, I blew past four, I blew past five, and I said, ah, what the hell? I actually got up to 1,400 pages before I finally stopped and started whittling it back down again.

So it is what it is. Sorry, what was I supposed to do? Leave stuff out? No, there's nothing that I could point to in the book and go, oh, you should have cut that chapter out. I know, right? It's all so important to the narrative, to the story, to understanding what really happened here. Oh, you know what, though? There is an excise chapter, nuclear war.

I had the second to the last chapter was going to be all about nukes. And so that is now going to be a separate PDF file. It's not quite ready yet, but very, very soon you'll be able to, if you sign up for the email list at the libertarian Institute or at scotthorton.org, then you'll get a free PDF of the ebook of the excised chapter nuclear war saved me about 30 pages there. Um,

but then uh i do a show i do a podcast i've done six thousand something interviews since 2003 they're all at scotthorton.org and at youtube.com scotthortonshow and i'm the editorial director of antiwar.com which is the most important project on the internet and i am the director of the libertarian institute which is the second most important project on the internet

um and i got a great bunch of writers and podcasters and thinkers and journalists and philosophers and just killers over there at the libertarian institute i hope everyone will check it out we published 15 books so far we got another one coming up here very shortly about obama's dirty war in syria by the great william van wagenen and i just couldn't be prouder of the team we put together at the institute and so i guess that's about all i got to say about that dave thank you dude uh

Thank you, Scott. And, you know, listen, I've heaped a lot of praise on you over the years, but it really you deserve it all, man. I mean, you you've really your work has been invaluable to me personally. I just you're you're just your research is so thorough and the case that you make is so overwhelming and you've really helped me understand the world and understand what's going on. And I know you've done that for a lot of other people, too. I cannot to to

the audience listening, I cannot recommend this book highly enough. It is you read this and you're going to understand what's going on in this conflict better than 99.9999% of people out there. And of course, by the way, just because you mentioned, I do want to say the other thing that you've done that I really think is incredible is that you have really built up this this team of like kind of the next generation of

are guys and they really are incredible. I mean, all your whole team of, of course, obviously Keith Knight people know because I've had him on the show a bunch of times and Connor and Kyle, Dave DeCamp, the guys are really incredible. It actually leaves me with a little bit of optimism for the future that we got some really smart, compelling people who are actually like also, you

not social retards, which is kind of nice too. Like they're also just regular guys who like are kind of appealing and not, you know, like what some of our libertarian types end up being. But anyway, thank you so much for the book. Thank you so much for coming on the show. We'll do another episode and get into the shock therapy and color revolutions and other stuff that I want to talk to you about. And thanks everybody for listening. We'll catch you next time. Peace.