Trump Dump with Sen. Chris Murphy

Trump Dump with Sen. Chris Murphy

Released Tuesday, 8th April 2025
 1 person rated this episode
Trump Dump with Sen. Chris Murphy

Trump Dump with Sen. Chris Murphy

Trump Dump with Sen. Chris Murphy

Trump Dump with Sen. Chris Murphy

Tuesday, 8th April 2025
 1 person rated this episode
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

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today. Into it Credit Karma, you can

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count on. So we're

1:25

supposed to start the podcast.

1:27

Ready, one, two, three. Patriots,

1:30

Gatriates, they triates, look off!

1:32

Oh my God, you did it

1:34

and you remembered. I kind of

1:36

killed it, I feel like. I

1:38

feel like you absolutely crushed it.

1:40

Welcome to America's top DEA podcast.

1:42

You guys, there's been a vibe

1:45

shift in the country. Trump has

1:47

proven to be every bit, the

1:49

disaster that we knew who was going

1:51

to be. It is a face

1:53

plant beyond all face plants. We've

1:56

taken the eagle back off the

1:58

shelf rebranded her thanks to a

2:00

great listener. Right. And we've got

2:02

to fight on and try to

2:04

save this country, but before we

2:07

do that, it's time to dip

2:09

our toes and do some petty

2:11

grievances. Pumps, what have you had

2:13

it with? What I've had it

2:16

with, in this, honest to God,

2:18

my head's gonna explode the next

2:20

time I hear it, I've had

2:22

it with right wing media after

2:24

Trump crashes the economy. unemployment goes

2:27

through the roof saying he's playing

2:29

4D chess. I'm like motherfucker what

2:31

evidence do you have that he

2:33

is capable of doing anything? I

2:36

mean let's just take a quick

2:38

trip down memory lane inherited half

2:40

a billion dollars 30 years ago

2:42

bankrupted six times bankrupted casinos which

2:44

is damn near impossible to do.

2:47

The only qualification he has. is

2:49

that he was on a reality

2:51

show called The Apprentice, which was

2:53

all smoke and mirrors. They couldn't

2:56

even feel him at his office

2:58

because it was such a dump

3:00

truck. We've seen the inside of

3:02

his houses. It's dump truck city.

3:04

So if I have to hear

3:07

one more time, he's playing 4D

3:09

chess. I really might explode. I'm

3:11

100% concur. It is embarrassing. I'm

3:13

embarrassed for the people that say

3:16

it. I'm embarrassed for these people

3:18

that they can just never quite

3:20

say, you know? I supported him

3:22

and it was a huge mistake.

3:24

Right. All the red flags were

3:27

there. The felony charges, the grab

3:29

them by the pussy, trying to

3:31

give a microphone a below job

3:33

on the campaign trail could have

3:36

been a really big red flag.

3:38

And I just got sucked up

3:40

into the moment and it was

3:42

a dumb thing to do and

3:44

now I'm ready to join you

3:47

all and fight for this country.

3:49

But instead, these MFers, I think

3:51

we're talking about a double-digit IQ

3:53

situation or just breathtaking. narcissism. They

3:55

just cannot. reverse course. There's not

3:58

a shred of decency to reverse

4:00

course. I'll tell you that brings

4:02

up another one of my, I've

4:04

had it. I've had it with

4:07

people not taking accountability. If I

4:09

fuck up or you fuck up,

4:11

we will go to the other

4:13

one and say, I am sorry,

4:15

I was wrong, I need to

4:18

do better. That's how it's supposed

4:20

to be. But you have ass

4:22

plans from the top Trump, his

4:24

wife, Elon Musk, they all sit

4:27

around and play victim and nobody

4:29

ever says, you know, I made

4:31

a mistake. I probably shouldn't have

4:33

done that, but I'm in a

4:35

reverse course now and I'm going

4:37

to do better because accountability is

4:40

out the window. So now you

4:42

have all these yahoos with the

4:44

balls on their trucks running around

4:46

with impunity thinking nobody has to

4:48

take accountability for anything. I cannot

4:50

believe we're here in 2024. It's

4:52

overwhelming when you think about the

4:55

tens of millions of people that

4:57

went and voted for this man.

4:59

And here's the thing. You can

5:01

only look at videos of him.

5:03

Not of any spin from either

5:05

Fox where they would spin it

5:08

favorably or from CNN or MS

5:10

NBC who might spin it unfavorably

5:12

Eliminate all of that and just

5:14

watch videos of him starting with

5:16

the the blowjob microphone situation and

5:18

listen to what he says after

5:20

that and then ask yourself Should

5:23

this person be in charge of

5:25

anything of anything much less the

5:27

United States of America and the

5:29

problem with Trump 2.0 is now

5:31

he's surrounded by equally inept morons

5:33

at a scale that is just

5:35

staggering and the incompetence from signal

5:38

gate, you know, texting the war

5:40

plans to these hair-brain tariffs that

5:42

are tanking the global economy to

5:44

denying people due process, disappearing people

5:46

off the streets, one poor gay

5:48

barbers shipped down to El Salvador.

5:50

And I think what is so

5:53

maddening about the whole thing is

5:55

that I know that there's millions

5:57

of Americans that enjoy this. And

5:59

that's the biggest heartbreaker in it.

6:01

That really is. They like the

6:03

cruelty. They're in it for the

6:05

cruelty. Yep. All right, I'm gonna

6:08

lighten it up a little bit.

6:10

I have a relatable non-political grievance.

6:12

I've had it with... bathroom procrastinators.

6:14

And what I'm talking about is

6:16

you're traveling with a friend or

6:18

your spouse and you're sitting in

6:20

an airplane gate and you have

6:23

an hour that you've been sitting

6:25

at the gate and then the

6:27

flight attendant says we're going to

6:29

start boarding in one minute and

6:31

then your travel partner says I'm

6:33

gonna go to the bathroom right

6:35

now and you're like wait we've

6:38

been sitting here for one hour

6:40

you've had one hour to go

6:42

empty the tank and you're choosing

6:44

to do it now when we

6:46

all have to shuffle around and

6:48

get in line and make sure

6:50

we do everything properly and efficiently.

6:53

Now you're going to the bathroom,

6:55

you do this and my husband

6:57

does this. I always do it

6:59

because I genuinely have to go

7:01

to the bathroom. I don't try

7:03

to do it on purpose. But

7:05

what about the five minutes before

7:08

that? You know the flight takes

7:10

up at one? Well, here's what

7:12

I do. I try to time

7:14

it so that I don't have

7:16

to pee on the airplane. So

7:18

I'm timing it like, okay, we

7:20

board in eight minutes, that I'm

7:23

going to go to the five-minute

7:25

mark, and then I'm going to

7:27

go to the bathroom, so that

7:29

way I can avoid it. But

7:31

I will say, push back a

7:33

little bit. When they start like

7:35

picking up the microphone, you're standing

7:38

in line texting me. We're in

7:40

line. We're in line. We're in

7:42

line. I'm like, yeah, but we

7:44

have assigned seats. So it doesn't

7:46

matter where I really am in

7:48

the line. But I have your

7:50

shit. You take off for the

7:53

bathroom. You just, it's always right

7:55

standing by you. You're not taking

7:57

it on the plane. Right, but

7:59

then that means I can't board.

8:01

Haven't you boarded? Yeah, because I

8:03

started making you take you take

8:05

your Yeah, I think it's, I

8:08

kind of have it as a

8:10

strategic, I think as long as

8:12

it's five minutes before, I don't,

8:14

I don't want to like be

8:16

walking on the plane and then

8:18

go, but I like to delay

8:20

it so that I can, in

8:23

hopes of avoiding the airplane, P.

8:25

The strategy, I understand a little

8:27

bit. In Josh's case, listener Josh

8:29

is my husband, I think it's

8:31

literally like he's just into his

8:33

phone or whatever it is that

8:35

he is, and it's just like,

8:38

oh shit, we're about to board,

8:40

I better go empty the tank.

8:42

It's not an intentional, but I

8:44

do kind of think it's chicken

8:46

shit. to leave your stuff with

8:48

somebody then, who is then, who

8:50

wants to board on time, who's

8:53

then held hostage, because you know

8:55

how I am about that kind

8:57

of stuff. I like to be

8:59

on time. You like to be

9:01

the first one in line? I

9:03

like to be in line. I

9:05

like to get to my seat,

9:08

put my stuff under, and the

9:10

wheels touched down. Yes, I just

9:12

have a whole rhythmm, and then

9:14

sometimes I'm at the mercy of,

9:16

in your case, this delayed being

9:18

strategy. Just irresponsible urination is what

9:20

I would call it. It's just

9:23

that's just flat-ass irresponsible urination It

9:25

would have been more responsible to

9:27

have done it five minutes before

9:29

Yeah, well, and here's the thing

9:31

Kiley our producer She has a

9:33

strategy to dehydrate before flying and

9:35

it's pointed out what a great

9:38

strategy that is so I've been

9:40

really trying to use that and

9:42

I've been doing better and then

9:44

the pilot who did a triple

9:46

flusher on the plane and I

9:48

went right after so I've been

9:50

trying to avoid toilets on airplanes

9:53

like for the past year. I've

9:55

been really good about water intake,

9:57

but I do, it's a strategy,

9:59

I just go right there at

10:01

the end. Welcome to I've had

10:03

it, I'm Jennifer. I'm Angie. All

10:05

right, Kylie, speaking of dehydrating on

10:08

planes, our listeners tend to be

10:10

follow a little bit of politics,

10:12

follow a little petty grievances, and

10:14

everybody knows that last week, Corey

10:16

Booker, the Senator from New Jersey...

10:18

broke the record for the longest

10:20

speech on the Senate floor because

10:23

he's passionate about fighting for democracy

10:25

and fighting for equality for everybody

10:27

and trying to save this country

10:29

from the idiot Donald Trump in

10:31

his moronic cabinet, a micro penis

10:33

parade cabinet. Interestingly enough, Corey Booker

10:36

went online and talked about how

10:38

he prepped for his 25-hour speech,

10:40

and I think Kiley has a

10:42

clip. Where's anything that allowed you

10:44

to not have to go to

10:46

the bathroom for 25 hours? Again,

10:48

I don't want to send doctor

10:51

to get mad at me, I

10:53

don't want my doctor to get

10:55

mad at me, but I really

10:57

spent time to hide reading myself

10:59

before and so I did not

11:01

have to go to the bathroom.

11:03

You have to go to the

11:06

bathroom at for 25 hours. Kylie,

11:08

did he call you for tips?

11:10

He did. I felt so validated

11:12

when I watched that. I immediately,

11:14

I saw that and I emailed

11:16

it to Kylie immediately and I

11:18

was like, you and Senator Booker

11:21

intentionally dehydrating him for democracy, Kylie

11:23

because she's a germaphobe. Right. And

11:25

because airplane bathrooms are gross. His

11:27

was selfless, Kylie is kind of

11:29

selfish and I've adopted it. Yeah,

11:31

I like it, but you know

11:33

what's interesting is every time I've

11:36

been on a flight with you

11:38

get up to pee twice as

11:40

much. if I didn't try to

11:42

dehydrate. I'm just a peer. Yeah,

11:44

you are. You are. She's a

11:46

big, empty the tanker. Okay, I

11:48

have some news stories here today

11:51

that I would like to review.

11:53

Okay, excellent. The first one is

11:55

study shows cows hate country music

11:57

and listening to it makes them

11:59

produce less milk. Research indicates that

12:01

music tempo and genre can influence

12:03

dairy cows milk production. Slow soothing

12:06

music such as classical pieces has

12:08

been associated with increased milk yield

12:10

due to its calming effects on

12:12

cows. Conversely, country music does not.

12:14

And here's what I have to

12:16

say. What's that asshole that just

12:18

went to S&L and then played

12:21

victim? Morgan Wallace. That guy. So

12:23

this schmuck gets invited to go

12:25

on S&L. He accepts the invitation.

12:27

This is not a command. This

12:29

is not your life. It is

12:31

in danger. He hops on his

12:33

PJ and he flies to New

12:36

York and he does S&L. And

12:38

then he doesn't want to stay

12:40

around in the post credit role

12:42

and hug everybody in commiserie. He

12:44

abruptly walks off stage, gets to

12:46

his private plane, and pops up

12:48

on Instagram, return, can't wait to

12:51

get back to God's country with

12:53

a picture of his PJ. And

12:55

now he's selling merch, get back

12:57

to God's country. And I just

12:59

think, what a whining victim. titty

13:01

baby this always having to be

13:03

persecuted when you signed up to

13:06

go on S&L and he acts

13:08

like he was tortured in some

13:10

liberal bubble you don't have to

13:12

do S&L right go do you

13:14

know go sing it in Nashville

13:16

at Toby Keith you know go

13:18

fuck me bar or whatever the

13:21

fuck that place is called but

13:23

I mean come on I've had

13:25

it with country music except for

13:27

a couple of artists, like the

13:29

Dixie Chicks, and maybe anybody else

13:31

who isn't maggots. But in general,

13:33

when I hear country music, and

13:36

this is old for me, like

13:38

I always just think Republicans doing

13:40

bad shit. Well, who was that

13:42

guy? There's a bunch of big

13:44

trumpers that are country music artists.

13:46

I mean, I don't know why.

13:48

It just seems that you hear

13:51

that. Maybe because the lyrics are

13:53

dumb. There's a tear in my

13:55

beer and I'm crying for you

13:57

dear. Maybe because it's like stupid

13:59

music. Maybe, but here's the thing

14:01

that I take away from all

14:03

that. Just like you said, nobody's

14:06

making you be on S&L. Nobody's

14:08

making Elon Musk, nose dive is

14:10

stock, and go in and harm

14:12

people on purpose. and then sit

14:14

around and cry about it because

14:16

people don't like him. You asked

14:18

for this. This is a consequence

14:21

of your behavior. Be accountable. The

14:23

victimhood that I see in 2025,

14:25

it's like Trump 2.0 makes the

14:27

victimhood of Trump 1.0, which was.

14:29

Unbelievable, blows it out of the

14:31

water. I didn't think that grown

14:33

billionaires could cry around about poor

14:36

me as much as I've seen

14:38

in the 75 days that Trump

14:40

has been in office. It is

14:42

unbelievable. Can you imagine if the

14:44

woman was crying around about what

14:46

a victim she was? She'd be

14:48

hysterical. She'd be unhinged. These men.

14:51

are the biggest whining titty babies

14:53

I have ever seen in my

14:55

life. They are. I've never seen

14:57

such meltdowns. You know, the Little

14:59

Mermaid's Black. Republicans and magga have

15:01

a fucking meltdown. You're scared of

15:03

a black mermaid. What the fuck

15:06

is wrong with you, you pussy?

15:08

They're mad at Snow White because

15:10

she spoke out for the actress

15:12

that played Snow White. She spoke

15:14

out about all of the senseless

15:16

killings in Palestine and Bash Trump.

15:18

And now they're having stage five

15:21

meltdowns over her. They are the

15:23

biggest crying. winging group of titty

15:25

babies. It's just unbelievable. I simply

15:27

don't watch things that I don't

15:29

like that might have an actor

15:31

in it that I don't like.

15:33

I would not go to a

15:36

Kid Rock concert and then make

15:38

a whole thing on Instagram where

15:40

I'm a victim of Kid Rock.

15:42

Right. I would simply forgo the

15:44

concert and hence forgo being a

15:46

victim. It's that simple. Next up,

15:48

we've got a story. wants us

15:51

to stop using the thumbs-up emoji

15:53

as it's deemed too passive aggressive.

15:55

Gen Z is officially calling out

15:57

the thumbs-up emoji saying it feels

15:59

passive aggressive and outdated especially in

16:01

work chats. generation C as simply

16:04

okay or noted, younger users are

16:06

interpreting as cold, dismissive, or even

16:08

sarcastic. And here's what I have

16:10

to say to that. Double

16:12

thumbs up. This is ridiculous. This

16:14

is so ridiculous. This is the

16:17

part where there's a weird intersection

16:19

in pop culture with our podcast

16:21

where we are really liberal and

16:23

progressive and leftist and we want

16:25

to lift up marginalized people and

16:27

validate people's feelings and be politically

16:29

correct. And this is the part

16:31

where I'm not at all politically

16:33

correct because I say if you're

16:36

upset about a thumbs up emoji.

16:38

The problem is not the emoji.

16:40

The problem is you. And I

16:42

would predict that as soon as

16:44

your parents found out you were

16:46

conceived, there was a hideous, obnoxious

16:48

gender reveal party. I would expect

16:50

that you probably slept a couple

16:53

of Stanley cups to work with

16:55

you when you're upset about the

16:57

thumbs up emoji. I just think

16:59

this is insane. to get your

17:01

paines in a wad about an

17:03

emoji. You know, here's the thing.

17:05

I think we've created this whole

17:07

generation and I am guilty of

17:09

this. You're so special, you're so

17:12

great, everything you do is so

17:14

good. And so now they send

17:16

a works text and they... receipt

17:18

is acknowledged with an okay and

17:20

what they wanted was a standing

17:22

evasion. Oh my gosh, little baby,

17:24

you are so good, you're the

17:26

best of this. It's just like,

17:29

that is not reality. I agree

17:31

with all of that and I

17:33

also want to add this. Sometimes

17:35

I think a heart is too

17:37

strong. I agree. Sometimes I message

17:39

somebody something like, hey, I'm running

17:41

five minutes late and then I

17:43

get the heart emoji in response

17:46

and I'm like... You love that?

17:48

Like, were it love already? And

17:50

it's like somebody that I just

17:52

met a new client or something.

17:54

I'm like, we're loving each other's

17:56

text. That's what the beauty of

17:58

the thumbs up. It's benign. It

18:00

doesn't, it just notes an acknowledgement.

18:02

I see your text, I understand

18:05

that you're running late. I'm not

18:07

gonna start saying I love it.

18:09

I love that you sent me

18:11

a text. Sometimes the heart is

18:13

too aggressive for me. And that's

18:15

why, and there's some people that

18:17

you text that you don't. like.

18:19

And the last thing you're thinking

18:22

about is hurting anything that they

18:24

do. And that's the beauty of

18:26

the thumbs up. Sometimes it's fun

18:28

to be passive aggressive. Sometimes passive

18:30

aggressive is a tool that's in

18:32

your toolbox that you can fuck

18:34

with people that you work with

18:36

that you don't like. What I

18:38

have to say to Gen Z

18:41

is learn how to harness being

18:43

stealth passive aggressive and quit demanding

18:45

love and red heart emogies from

18:47

everyone because the world is a

18:49

very disappointing place. Hone your passive

18:51

aggressive skills. I like that. Hone

18:53

them. Get better at it. All

18:55

right. And in a related story.

18:59

News of teens who don't enjoy

19:01

life has doubled thanks to social

19:03

media study reveals. Research published in

19:05

Nature Communication indicates that the impact

19:07

of social media on life satisfaction

19:10

varies across different stages of adolescence.

19:12

The study found that during certain

19:14

developmental periods increased social media use

19:16

predicts a decrease in life satisfaction

19:18

one year later. And here's what

19:20

I have to say. I get

19:22

it. when I'm on social media,

19:24

I'm not as happy. I don't,

19:27

the idea when I'm like down

19:29

on my phone like this, looking

19:31

at it for longer than 20

19:33

minutes, I think, ooh, put your

19:35

posture up, put your phone down,

19:37

live your life. There's a whole

19:39

world out there that you want

19:41

to see. But I do kind

19:44

of think these two things are

19:46

connected. This artificial world of social

19:48

media and getting butt hurt over,

19:50

right thumbs up emoges. People need

19:52

to live their lives and don't

19:54

project like... into social media too

19:56

much as to feeling a void

19:58

and don't put a burden on

20:00

the recipient of a text with

20:03

what emoji they should use. I

20:05

agree. They're totally bedfellows and it's

20:07

just sad to me that because

20:09

of social media and the use

20:11

of it, kids are getting less

20:13

interaction, in-person interaction and I'm not

20:15

surprised that this is a result,

20:17

lonely, sadder, all of those things.

20:20

Plus they're comparing themselves out all

20:22

the time. It's a sad situation.

20:24

It really is. It really is.

20:26

OK. Today, you guys, we have

20:28

a great guest. His name is

20:30

Senator Chris Murphy from. the great

20:32

state of Connecticut. And this is

20:34

a man when Trump first started

20:37

his second term. I know that

20:39

we all felt national paralysis and

20:41

fear and like what the fuck

20:43

is going on. And it felt

20:45

like the Democrats weren't fighting. It

20:47

felt like there wasn't a cohesive

20:49

message. And there was one constant

20:51

with the exception of Bernie Sanders,

20:54

AOC, that really spoke the truth.

20:56

And I would think, are they

20:58

seeing what I'm seeing? And then

21:00

I'd go to Chris Murphy's Twitter.

21:02

And he was seeing exactly, and

21:04

he would explain it perfectly. And

21:06

this man is a fierce defender

21:08

of democracy. He's a fierce defender

21:10

of equal rights, civil rights, social

21:13

justice, the things that are important

21:15

to all of us here on

21:17

Aswhole Island. So let's welcome to

21:19

I've Had It, Senator Chris Murphy.

21:21

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24:04

right, let's welcome. to I've had

24:07

it, a fierce defender of democracy

24:09

and fighter of fascism, Senator Chris

24:11

Murphy of Connecticut. Senator, thank you

24:13

so much for joining us. How

24:15

are you today? How's your job

24:17

going? How's work? Well, okay, those

24:19

are two different questions. I'm good.

24:21

I'm healthy. My children are healthy.

24:24

It stopped raining. My job is

24:26

a pain on the ass these

24:28

days. Yeah, okay. So we like

24:30

to start off with just a

24:32

daily petty grievance. And so we

24:34

ask all of our guests what

24:36

they've had it with. So Senator

24:38

Chris Murphy, what have you had

24:41

it with? Price gouging by sports

24:43

teams. So I just tried to

24:45

buy tickets for me and my

24:47

two cents to go to Red

24:49

Sox game. I'm boss. I'm my

24:51

favorite team. I really want my

24:53

kids to become Boston Red Sox

24:55

fan. I'm not winning that argument.

24:58

Like to get a seat that's

25:00

like, you know, we're just within

25:02

like eyesight of the field $175

25:04

$150, like, I'm not like complaining

25:06

about the amount of money I

25:08

make, but like nobody who's making

25:10

$50,000 a year can afford to

25:12

go to. like a Red Sox

25:15

game or a Bruins game or

25:17

a Rangers game. And like that's

25:19

tragic because that's like a coming

25:21

of age experience for kids and

25:23

like it's now just affordable for

25:25

hedge fund managers and CEOs and

25:27

it's, I don't know, it's heartbreaking

25:29

to me as like a sports

25:31

fan who like my relationship with

25:34

my father was all about our

25:36

relationship to sports and live sports.

25:38

So that's that's that's what I'm,

25:40

that's my headache. Yeah, I get

25:42

that we're big Oklahoma City Thunder

25:44

fans and they're like the top

25:46

team in the NBA which when

25:48

you live in a Little Market

25:51

City like ours, it's a BFD

25:53

to quote the former president and

25:55

I Same thing like they're probably

25:57

going to make it to the

25:59

playoffs and it's so expensive and

26:01

you want to get good seats

26:03

and you want to experience the

26:05

ambiance, but I want to share

26:08

with our listener something I thought

26:10

was really wholesome and sweet about

26:12

you We were trying to book

26:14

you and we kept, we like

26:16

to, Pumps and I like to

26:18

film at like 8 a.m. And

26:20

your staff said that you were

26:22

unavailable because you like to take

26:25

your kids to school. And I

26:27

just thought in this world of

26:29

all this horrible Trumpism and all

26:31

of these horrible men that are

26:33

trying to be so macho, that

26:35

just was like, I was like,

26:37

oh, he takes his kids to

26:39

school every morning. I loved hearing

26:41

that. Yeah, I mean, that's still

26:44

my most important job, you know,

26:46

being a dad. And there's 16

26:48

and 13. So, like, I'm on

26:50

the clock. Like, I don't have

26:52

that many years where, you know,

26:54

I get to see them every

26:56

single day. And, you know, for

26:58

as long as I've done this

27:01

job, but especially right now, like,

27:03

they're to the ground, right? Like,

27:05

you can't get, like, too self-important,

27:07

you know, problem with their, you

27:09

know, the girl they like at

27:11

school. So like to me, like

27:13

that's sort of what, you know,

27:15

what keeps me honest in this

27:18

job is by spending as much

27:20

time as I can with with

27:22

them. And you know, like, it's

27:24

so hard at that age to

27:26

get them to talk to you

27:28

so that drive to school when

27:30

I have them like trapped in

27:32

the car is sometimes the only,

27:35

you know, moment that I can

27:37

actually get them to answer some

27:39

some questions. So yeah, sorry that

27:41

we had to, you know, rejigger

27:43

around the driving to school schedule,

27:45

but pretty important. I was really

27:47

happy to do it, but I'm

27:49

worried about young boys in this

27:52

country right now. I have two

27:54

sons, Pumps has two sons, you

27:56

just mentioned that you had two

27:58

sons, and we have a president

28:00

that ushered in Andrew Tate. He

28:02

had, what was the name of

28:04

that boxer? Connor McGregor. Connor McGregor

28:06

at the White House. The president

28:08

himself, we all know what he

28:11

said on the Access Hollywood tape,

28:13

adjudicated, rapist, all sorts of just

28:15

horrible misogyny that seems to be

28:17

mainstreamed. And I know there isn't

28:19

a political fix for this per

28:21

se, but just as a dad.

28:23

and as a parent, what can

28:25

you speak on to this rising

28:28

surge of misogyny and that the

28:30

boys in this country, they just

28:32

don't seem like they're okay. And

28:34

it really worries me. Yeah, I

28:36

think about this all the time,

28:38

and it's so heartbreaking to me

28:40

that we have outsourced to the

28:42

right. a conversation with men and

28:45

boys and like I just do

28:47

think we have to be honest

28:49

that like men in general are

28:51

going through something right now and

28:53

of course they are because for

28:55

like thousands of years our societies

28:57

were patriarchal men were on top

28:59

of everything on top of families

29:02

the economy. culture, and they still

29:04

are, but all of a sudden,

29:06

women are in the workforce. All

29:08

of a sudden, in 40% of

29:10

families, the female makes more than

29:12

the male. And so, you know,

29:14

the easy way that you used

29:16

to identify yourself, you know, as

29:19

a man, right? Protect your breadwinner

29:21

for a lot of men has

29:23

disappeared. And, you know, the right

29:25

has this really irresponsible, you know,

29:27

tail to tell. Let's just dial

29:29

it back, you know, 1950 or

29:31

18. and that's not right, but

29:33

the left kind of tells boys

29:35

and men, like, just get over

29:38

it, like, just get over it.

29:40

And that's a hard thing to

29:42

get over because you've got to

29:44

replace that identity structure with something

29:46

else. And then, you know, there's

29:48

a couple other things going on

29:50

for boys than you guys know

29:52

this one. I think social media

29:55

has been in some ways much

29:57

more harmful on boys because they

29:59

are, you know, less natural in

30:01

creating social. connections. And so when

30:03

they get given this invitation to

30:05

withdraw into their phone, boys really

30:07

easily take it because they're just

30:09

not as naturally connected, as I

30:12

think as young women are. And

30:14

then let's just be honest, like

30:16

the Me Too movement has been

30:18

confusing for young boys, right? Sort

30:20

of not knowing exactly sort of

30:22

what's acceptable, what's not acceptable in

30:24

terms of how they approach. girls,

30:26

which has also caused a lot

30:29

of them to withdraw, you know,

30:31

not as much dating, boys having

30:33

sex much later. That's been tough

30:35

on boys. There's just a lot

30:37

going on and the left is

30:39

just kind of like, I don't

30:41

want to talk about it. It's

30:43

messy. I'm going to say the

30:46

wrong words. And the only message

30:48

that these boys get is from

30:50

the right, which is, it's, it's

30:52

the women, you know, who've done

30:54

this to you. And we would

30:56

just be better to dial the

30:58

whole culture back. And that's a

31:00

terrible answer. We got to have

31:02

a better one. I completely agree.

31:05

One thing that we talk about

31:07

all the time on this podcast

31:09

is that we have these white

31:11

men in positions of power Trump

31:13

and his wife slash controller, Elon

31:15

Musk, sitting around crying that their

31:17

victims all the time. Yet they

31:19

juxtapose themselves as this. these alpha

31:22

males and I'm like, how can

31:24

people watch this and think, oh

31:26

yeah, billionaires crying about poor me

31:28

is perfectly acceptable? And I just

31:30

wonder from your perspective in a

31:32

position of power. How do you

31:34

perceive the constant self-victimizing? Yeah, I

31:36

mean, it's just a tactic that

31:39

they're using to try to get

31:41

richer. I mean, this whole thing

31:43

is a con. It's Donald Trump,

31:45

Elon Musk, they're Marilago friends, just

31:47

making up arguments. to enable them

31:49

to steal from us, right, to,

31:51

you know, award themselves contracts, to

31:53

shut down programs that matter to

31:56

the middle class like Medicaid in

31:58

order to give themselves more in

32:00

order to reward contracts to them

32:02

and their friends, to give themselves

32:04

more tax breaks. And so, you

32:06

know, they're going to tell whatever

32:08

story is necessary to. engage in

32:10

that kind of theft. I do

32:12

think we have to have a

32:15

conversation about where male role models

32:17

exist. It is true, like a

32:19

lot of young men do look

32:21

up to people like Elon Musk

32:23

and Mark Cuban people who have

32:25

had this tremendous economic success, but

32:27

success is not just becoming a

32:29

billionaire, right? Success is, you know,

32:32

being a leader, being a good

32:34

human being, giving back to your

32:36

community. So one of the things

32:38

that I'm obsessive about is getting

32:40

more men into teaching. So that

32:42

you know, you have more. male

32:44

role models that are just doing

32:46

good, providing an education in the

32:49

classroom. We need more young men

32:51

to have easy attachment to male

32:53

role models early in their life.

32:55

The dad can be your male

32:57

role model, but a lot of

32:59

young men don't have dads in

33:01

their lives, and teachers can do

33:03

that, but we still have a

33:06

hard time getting men into the

33:08

teaching profession. That could help alleviate

33:10

this reflex that a lot of

33:12

young men have to sort of

33:14

look just at the billionaire as

33:16

their set of role models. So

33:18

ever since Trump 2.0 started, there

33:20

was this like paralysis, nationwide paralysis,

33:23

and all of us were kind

33:25

of searching for the truth. Who's

33:27

going to speak truly about what's

33:29

happening and what we're seeing? And

33:31

consistently, Senator, you were one of

33:33

those people that I saw on

33:35

MS NBC or I could go

33:37

to... or Twitter page, and I

33:39

was like, he's telling us, he's

33:42

verifying that what I'm seeing, and

33:44

pardon my language, but this fuckery

33:46

is real and that they're doing

33:48

this on purpose and they're doing

33:50

this for sport or for Vladimir

33:52

Putin or for both. And you

33:54

spoke about it and it was

33:56

so comforting because knowing the truth,

33:59

even if it's not what you

34:01

want to hear, at least you

34:03

know that that's the truth. And

34:05

so with these tariffs, you see

34:07

all of these. Americans losing their

34:09

401 case that they paid into

34:11

their whole life and then they

34:13

may be thinking, oh, this sucks,

34:16

I'm going to have Social Security,

34:18

well, we know Elon Musk, it's

34:20

called that a Ponzi scheme and

34:22

a lot of your coworkers are

34:24

trying to dismantle and privatize that,

34:26

which is not going to end

34:28

well. And so when I went

34:30

after these tariffs, I went to

34:33

your Twitter page and you had

34:35

the most logical example and you...

34:37

beautifully wrote that you think this

34:39

is an additional attack on democracy

34:41

so that corporations and business would

34:43

be beholden to Trump. He likes

34:45

reducing people and reducing businesses to

34:47

come to him and kiss the

34:50

ring which brings me back to

34:52

my one point a lot of

34:54

this is done for sport for

34:56

a broken man with inner child

34:58

issues and it's manifesting in the

35:00

United States of America. Yeah, that's

35:02

that's right. I mean, I think

35:04

you have to see everything through

35:06

one prism, right? This is this

35:09

is a broken man, but a

35:11

broken man who wants to rule

35:13

forever, who wants to crush the

35:15

opposition so that he or his

35:17

family or his chosen successor. can

35:19

rule in perpetuity. And you know,

35:21

there's a playbook for how this

35:23

happens, how somebody who's democratically elected

35:26

never leaves power. You basically co-opt

35:28

all of the centers of power

35:30

in the country and you force

35:32

them to essentially sign loyalty pledges.

35:34

So that's what's happening right now.

35:36

He's doing that with law firms.

35:38

He's doing that with colleges and

35:40

universities and now. he's going to

35:43

do that with industry. That's what

35:45

the tariffs are about. At least

35:47

that's my opinion. Last night, economists

35:49

were like super confused when the

35:51

terrorists came out because they were

35:53

like, this doesn't make any sense.

35:55

Like there's no logical explanation for

35:57

how this is going to improve

36:00

jobs or improve the trade balance.

36:02

And you know, what I said

36:04

is you read. Right. It doesn't

36:06

make sense economically because it has

36:08

nothing to do with economics. What

36:10

he's doing is he setting up

36:12

the system of penalization. on industry

36:14

so that every industry or every

36:17

big business has to come to

36:19

him, bend the knee, kiss the

36:21

ring, and pledge loyalty in order

36:23

to get tariff relief. And that'll

36:25

have a, you know, a double

36:27

impact. First, you know, the economy

36:29

will get a little bit better

36:31

when he releases a certain set

36:33

of tariffs and everybody can shout

36:36

hooray, but then he gets the

36:38

loyalty pled. I don't know what

36:40

that looks like, but the company

36:42

could, you know, decide to never

36:44

publicly criticize the president. decide that

36:46

they're going to police their employees

36:48

and make sure none of their

36:50

employees work for Democrats. It's not

36:53

economic policy. It's just about his

36:55

need to have people prostrate themselves

36:57

to him and his belief that

36:59

in doing that, the democracy will

37:01

become so weak, the opposition will

37:03

become so weak that he won't

37:05

ever have to worry about Democrats

37:07

winning. I don't think that's how

37:10

it's going to play out. I

37:12

still think that we have the

37:14

power to defeat him, but that's

37:16

the game that he's playing. All

37:18

right, let's do a little trash

37:20

talking on your former co-worker Marco

37:22

Rubio. And what an abject disappointment

37:24

Lil Marco has become. And I

37:27

think Trump kind of pegged him

37:29

when he first ridiculed him back

37:31

in 2016. I am just so

37:33

embarrassed for him because he knows

37:35

better. He knows what happened with

37:37

Zilinsky in the Oval Office was

37:39

an ambush for a party of

37:41

one for Vladimir Putin. Russian state

37:43

TV is in there. And he

37:46

just sits there and goes along

37:48

with this bullshit. And I just.

37:50

I don't know the guy personally,

37:52

but you do. What is your

37:54

take on this? The emasculation by

37:56

Donald Trump of so many of

37:58

these maga men. And there's a

38:00

theme that's running through this whole

38:03

conversation with you. And it is

38:05

this masculinity, either realized or unrealized

38:07

or in search of. But Donald

38:09

Trump consistently enjoys emasculating people because

38:11

maybe Freud would say he's never

38:13

been realized as a strong man

38:15

himself. But, you know, we'll do

38:17

a psychology episode another day, but

38:20

let's gossip about Marco Rubio. Yeah,

38:22

I can't explain what has happened

38:24

to Rubio. When he first came

38:26

to the Senate, I mean, he

38:28

was an interesting guy. He, you

38:30

know, participated in a big bipartisan

38:32

negotiation to change the immigration laws.

38:34

He actually signed on to a

38:37

bill that would have provided a

38:39

pathway to citizenship for, you know,

38:41

12 million Americans. And then... you

38:43

know over time he just stopped

38:45

being interesting so this wasn't terribly

38:47

surprising to us who have watched

38:49

Rubio I mean he hasn't participated

38:51

in any bipartisan talks he hasn't

38:54

had an interesting idea in a

38:56

in a decade I think and

38:58

so like I think it's really

39:00

hard to understand like what happens

39:02

when the cult takes over right

39:04

yeah like if you had a

39:06

friend right who like went away

39:08

and joined a cult for three

39:10

years right, came back a fundamentally

39:13

different person. Like, and somebody said,

39:15

well, what happened? You'd be like,

39:17

well, I don't know. Like, I

39:19

wasn't with him in the cold.

39:21

I wasn't, you know, I didn't,

39:23

I didn't see the indoctrination they

39:25

were doing on him. That's kind

39:27

of my view. It's like, they

39:30

go into this. closed information ecosystem,

39:32

right, where they are only hearing

39:34

from the magga voices in which

39:36

Donald Trump dominates. That's not the

39:38

world I live in, but something

39:40

in that world, like, corrupts both

39:42

your mind and your soul. So

39:44

you go from being interesting and

39:47

sometimes independent, like Marco Rubio was,

39:49

to a stoge in which which

39:51

like you just take orders. It's

39:53

like a cult. And I don't

39:55

understand how it works. And like

39:57

maybe there's a, you know, there's

39:59

like a magic potion that they

40:01

give these guys, but they just

40:04

come out on the other end

40:06

of it, fundamentally different people. And

40:08

Rubio is not alone. There's plenty

40:10

of other members of Congress who

40:12

used to be interesting, who are

40:14

now, you know, just sick of

40:16

fits. Yeah, totally. Okay, another person

40:18

that I've totally had it with,

40:21

I've always had it with him

40:23

forever, is obviously Mitch McConnell. But

40:25

the fact that he's now like...

40:27

an asshole that's finding a moment

40:29

of clarity really sits in my

40:31

craw because it's just like, dude,

40:33

you've been an asshole forever. You

40:35

have, you built, you fed, you

40:37

coddled, you rocked this entire beast

40:40

in this moment where we are

40:42

right now. Your Supreme Court, you

40:44

dicked over Obama. You're one of

40:46

the main architects of this entire

40:48

dismantling. And now you found Jesus

40:50

and you're voting like you voted

40:52

a couple nights ago with you

40:54

all. And it just... Pisses me

40:57

off because it shows that they

40:59

just like to own the libs

41:01

for sport and then when it

41:03

gets down to it He's like

41:05

oh shit hold up. I don't

41:07

I don't want what I do.

41:09

Oh, yeah It really pisses me

41:11

off. I mean like what's it

41:14

like when you see him at

41:16

work? I mean, but I have

41:18

the same like I have the

41:20

same feeling that you do right

41:22

because like I can't I can't

41:24

not have some Appreciation this like

41:26

this is his baby and and

41:28

he he midwifed the tea party

41:31

into existence which which led to

41:33

magga and then you know his

41:35

this he's got a number of

41:37

sins that he will have to

41:39

account for but you know at

41:41

the heart of it is the

41:43

second impeachment trial right there were

41:45

six there were six Republicans that

41:48

came out and voted for it

41:50

that meant that we only had

41:52

to get about ten more Republicans

41:54

and we would have qualified Trump

41:56

from ever running for office again.

41:58

If Mitch McConnell, who was very

42:00

powerful then by the time he

42:02

left being the minority majority leader,

42:04

he was he'd lost a lot

42:07

of influence. But back then, had

42:09

he come out and put his

42:11

vote where his mouth was, right?

42:13

He condemned Trump's role in January

42:15

6, but then he wouldn't vote

42:17

to impeach him. Had he voted

42:19

to impeach him, I'm almost sure

42:21

that another eight or 10 Republicans

42:24

would have come along with him.

42:26

Trump would have been disqualified from

42:28

office. This would still be a

42:30

dark moment, but it wouldn't be

42:32

as dystopian as it is. And

42:34

so I'm with you, like I

42:36

have such complicated feelings about McConnell

42:38

in part because he also did

42:41

some good things, you know, before

42:43

this election, like we passed the

42:45

bipartisan gun bill, which has saved

42:47

a ton of lives in this

42:49

country in 2022, because McConnell decided

42:51

finally to do something about guns,

42:53

like he literally pushed that bill

42:55

into existence on the Republican side.

42:58

So there's like. There's like a

43:00

decent handful of good things that

43:02

he has done, but those original

43:04

sins, I mean, you just can't

43:06

wash them away. All right, listener,

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up. I

53:51

mean, had it, but there's no

53:53

better options. Like, I mean, it's

53:55

not like, yeah, the better option

53:57

is Hacking Jeffrey. So if that's

53:59

my option, then. had it, but

54:01

like if the option is like

54:03

whatever the new map gates is,

54:05

I would, you know, reconsider the

54:07

had it. Yeah, yeah. Okay, Senator

54:10

Murphy, thank you for joining us

54:12

today. Keep fighting fascism and fighting

54:14

for democracy. We really like you

54:16

and tell your kids you were

54:18

on a cool podcast and carpal

54:20

tomorrow. Will do. See you guys.

54:22

Bye. He does have Rizz. He

54:24

has some riz. I think, you

54:26

know, I loved that he trash

54:29

talked as co-workers. Because everybody loves

54:31

to talk shit on their co-workers.

54:33

Everybody loves it. And you know

54:35

if you were a senator or

54:37

a congressman, the trash talking at

54:39

that level, it's epic. I mean,

54:41

that is like peak trash talking.

54:43

And so I'm glad that he

54:45

came on here to do a

54:47

little trash talking of some of

54:50

his co-workers, because everybody likes to

54:52

do it. Now, here's a question.

54:54

Do you think when we leave

54:56

Kylie and Seth trash talk us?

54:58

Oh my god, 1,000 million percent.

55:00

A million percent. As they should.

55:02

As they should. I mean, bitching

55:04

about your boss is just something

55:06

that you do. It's a rite

55:08

of passage. Right. And if you...

55:11

Don't expect to be trash talked

55:13

at work. Then you're probably in

55:15

the wrong job I would be

55:17

disappointed in them, right? If they

55:19

didn't trash talk us, right? Just

55:21

don't let us ever hear it.

55:23

That's the only thing Okay, guys

55:25

listen. I know that this has

55:27

all been overwhelming all this maga

55:30

stuff Trump But we all meet

55:32

here on asshole island pups say

55:34

it We will see you next

55:36

to no. The fuck wait wait

55:38

There you go. There we go.

55:40

Okay, listen, we have merch, we

55:42

have a book coming out, the

55:44

link will be below in the

55:46

comment section if you're on YouTube.

55:48

Make sure you're subscribed. Pumps and

55:51

I listen. We have a very

55:53

ambitious lofty little goal here. We

55:55

are trying to get to one

55:57

million subs on our YouTube channel.

55:59

And surprisingly, it's within... striking distance.

56:01

It is. But we need your

56:03

help because for two barely competent

56:05

broads like Pumps and Me, we

56:07

need this other YouTube trophy. We got

56:10

one. We got a hundred thousand. We

56:12

were really excited. Oh my gosh, we're

56:14

so excited at our age. But now

56:16

to be 55 and receive this trophy,

56:18

this trophy, this would be my Oscar.

56:20

Let me know. She's 55. I'm 50.

56:22

Okay, you are such a bitch. You

56:25

said that like we, like it was

56:27

a we. And I just wanted to,

56:29

I just wanted to inject in the

56:31

permanent record, I'm significantly younger than Pumps,

56:33

but we do want that trophy, that

56:35

YouTube trophy. Okay, so subscribe, get your

56:38

friends to subscribe, log into your

56:40

friends, YouTubes, and subscribe there as

56:42

well. We love everyone, we're going

56:44

to get through this together, we're

56:46

going to fight for democracy, Pumps.

56:49

Tell them. We will see you

56:51

next Tuesday and Thursday and Thursday.

56:53

I'm from Oklahoma. God, what a

56:55

morgue. I'll tell you what

56:58

I've had it with. What's

57:00

yours? I'm added with that.

57:02

Listen up, Patriots, Gatriates, and

57:04

Natriates. We have a new

57:07

podcast that has dropped. It's

57:09

called IHIP News. It's Monday

57:11

through Friday, Friday, every day.

57:13

15 to 20 minute hot

57:15

takes on the political landscape

57:18

of the United States of

57:20

America always served with a

57:22

side of petty grievances. We

57:24

are on all the available

57:26

platforms, Apple, Spotify, Google, whatever

57:29

you get your podcast and

57:31

YouTube. Please go rate, subscribe,

57:33

and review so that we

57:36

will chart upwards with

57:38

America's greatest legal mind.

57:40

Pumps, what does an

57:43

eagle say? Kakaw! A

57:45

little bit more enthusiasm.

57:47

Kakaw! That's it. That's

57:50

it. That's... Kakaw! That's

57:53

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57:55

this country needs

57:58

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