Ann Coulter joins me on the show to talk about her views on nationalism and what it means to be a nationalist in the 21st century. She's a conservative commentator, writer, and advocate of a pro-nationalist, positive nationalist vision for the future of the United States of America. I think we're reaching an interesting fork in the road for the conservative movement, as we leave behind the neocon interventionist surveillance state of the past and move toward a more pro-pro-American, pro-civitist vision of the future. And I think there's a good chance that we're headed down the path of a conservative nationalism that doesn't rely on an ideology based on ethnicity, religion, or a single set of ideals, but rather on a set of values that unites a divided polyglot of a religiously diverse group of people into a common set of ideas and ideals. I really enjoyed this episode and I hope you do too. -The Weekly Standard Subscribe to my new podcast, The Weekly Standard, wherever you get your podcasts. Click here to get immediate access to all my newest episodes, unlimited ad-free listening, unlimited webinars, and special bonus episodes. Thanks for listening and share the podcast with your fellow podcasting friends! If you like the podcast, please consider leaving a review and rating/subscribing in iTunes! I'll be looking out for your favorite podcast episodes in the future episodes. Please also consider subscribing to my newest podcast, "The Conservative Lens" on Apple Podcasts! and other podcasting platforms! Thank you so much appreciated! -Jon Soraya Timestamps: 5:00 - What is a good idea? 7: 8:30 - How to be an American nationalist? 9:00 | What is nationalism? 11:30 | What does nationalism mean to you? 12:00 13:15 - What does it mean to me? 15:30 16:15 17:40 - Why is nationalism important? 18:40 19:10 - How does it matter? 21:40 | What do you need to be patriotic? 22:00: How does nationalism have a place in my life? 23:00 + 3:00 Is nationalism a good thing? 26:00 // Is it a bad word? 27:10 25:00 & 27:20
Transcript
Transcripts from "Truth Podcast - Vivek Ramaswamy" are sourced from the Knowledge Fight Interactive Search Tool. You can also explore and interact with the transcripts here.
00:00:00.000There's an N-word that you're not allowed to say anymore, but I'm going to say it.
00:00:19.000That's the kind people usually think of.
00:00:20.000And it's natural because most nations' identities have been built around an ethnicity or a religion or a monarch.
00:00:26.000And in that case, the track record of history hasn't been great for what that type of nationalism produces, either for a country or for its neighbors.
00:00:35.000Distinct from that, though, is civic nationalism.
00:00:38.000And that's the kind of nationalism that I think is relevant in the United States of America because our country is defined not based on an ethnicity, not based on a language or a monarch or cuisine or religion, for that matter.
00:00:50.000Our country is defined on the basis of a civic set of ideals that brought together a divided polyglot and, yes, religiously diverse group of people 250 years ago.
00:01:00.000I don't think that's the kind of nationalism we need to run from.
00:01:03.000I think we believe in the exceptionalism of those ideals.
00:01:06.000That's what American exceptionalism is about.
00:01:08.000It is a belief in the exceptionalism of the ideals that made this country great the first time around.
00:01:14.000And I think we're reaching an interesting fork in the road for the future of our conservative movement.
00:01:18.000You can leave behind the neocon interventionist surveillance state past of the conservative movement.
00:01:23.000But let's talk about where we're headed.
00:01:25.000The pro-nationalist, positive nationalist vision for the future.
00:01:28.000I think there are some interesting Divides that haven't yet been smoked out between, say, a libertarian nationalist movement that I particularly find appealing for the future of our country.
00:01:40.000Believing in the libertarian ideals of freedom from a government.
00:01:44.000A government that we elect, not an unelected class of bureaucrats.
00:01:47.000And yes, believing in the exceptionalism of those ideals at the same time that we believe in a national identity.
00:01:52.000The idea that a nation without borders is not a nation.
00:01:57.000Versus the revival of what I see as a different kind of reactionary nationalism.
00:02:02.000One that says that we can expand and use the tools of the state when necessary to achieve our pro-American or nationalistic goals.
00:02:10.000And yes, one that does believe that there is some element of ethnic heritage that defines what it means to be an American.
00:02:18.000I'm sympathetic to that view, though I disagree with it.
00:02:21.000And that's why on today's podcast, I wanted to bring on somebody who's a fellow conservative, a fellow nationalist, though she frames it in forms of citizenship, and somebody who actually believes in the ideals of this country, but on whom I think we still have some disagreements about the role that ethnicity plays in grounding the identity of the United States of America.
00:02:42.000Somebody I've been curious about, following, haven't met in person yet, but we're going to bring her on the podcast today.
00:03:11.000Most nations are founded on the existence of a single ethnicity, at least as the backdrop of that nation's identity.
00:03:17.000A culture, a religious set of institutions, maybe a religion itself as a state religion, a monarch.
00:03:22.000These are the things that have historically grounded the identity of a nation.
00:03:27.000Well, nationalism refers to the idea of effectively viewing the exceptionalism of your nation relative to those around you and your national pride as a anchoring of your own identity.
00:03:38.000And that's led to, I would say, consequences throughout the course of human history that haven't always been great as judged by posterity.
00:03:46.000You could think about Single-handed dictators for much of American history and global history that have been defined on the back of being nationalist.
00:03:54.000Well, I don't think that's necessarily the definition that needs to apply in the American context of civic nationalism.
00:04:00.000Beautiful thing about America is that we're not a country defined on the basis of necessarily a single cuisine or a single ethnicity or a single religion, but we're a nation defined on a single set of ideals that brought together a divided polyglot and yes, even religiously diverse group of people 250 years ago.
00:04:19.000And so I think that's what's at stake in the context of being an American nationalist, is whether or not you're committed to those civic ideals.
00:04:26.000That's a different question from being an ethno-nationalist.
00:04:30.000Now, I do think that there are many now in our conservative movement, as we look to the future of a conservative movement that puts aside The historical neocon baggage of interventionist foreign policy and a domestic surveillance state.
00:04:42.000I think we're headed to a future where we still have to define what the different branches of a pro-nationalist conservative vision are here in the United States.
00:04:50.000I see the emergence of a strain that's skeptical of civic nationalism.
00:04:55.000Believes that civic nationalism is really just a siren song, something that we can't really hang our hat on.
00:05:01.000It's too thin to anchor our identity to.
00:05:03.000A vision that says, you know what, somebody who has been here as long as fourth or fifth or sixth generation as an American, descended from people who have been here a long time ago, have a different claim on this country than somebody who may have come here as an immigrant.
00:05:16.000Yes, went through the oath of pledging allegiance to this country, but nonetheless haven't yet vested in citizenship in the same way as somebody who inherits a country that's more than just an economic zone.
00:05:27.000I think it's an interesting discussion to have.
00:05:28.000I think the future of the conservative movement depends on where we land here.
00:05:31.000On one end of our nationalist movement, a libertarian nationalist movement, That says that, you know what, you can subscribe to the ideals of this country, that you should achieve anything you want, and you're equally American as long as you pledge allegiance to those ideals.
00:05:44.000But I think a subtext and a strain on the other side that's skeptical of that, that says, you know what, we should be open to using government as an instrument to advancing pro-nationalist ends.
00:05:55.000And there is a difference in how American you really are, depending on how long you've been here.
00:05:59.000And I think we ought to smoke that discussion out and have that open dialogue in a way that's been Uncomfortable because of the Overton window that we accept around these topics.
00:06:10.000And I think we would be best served taking a truck and driving it through that Overton window so we can actually have an honest discussion about the future of where the conservative movement is headed from here, not just on the issue of national identity or nationalism or immigration, but more broadly.
00:06:24.000And that's why I brought on today somebody who I think has some thoughtful perspectives on the future direction of our country, of our conservative movement, and on this question of nationalism and national identity.
00:06:34.000Somebody I've been fascinated by for a long time and have interacted with on social media, but for the first time we're having at least a live form conversation in the offline sense of it.
00:07:14.000Oh, and I agreed with many, many things you said during, in fact, probably more than most other candidates when you were running for president, but I still would not have voted for you.
00:08:43.000So you do see basically every other ethnic group very proud of their ethnic group.
00:08:49.000And the thing I'd say about America, okay, no single cuisine, but you can get Chinese food and Mexican food in Paris and Tokyo.
00:08:57.000Food has definitely migrated across countries.
00:09:00.000There is a core national identity that is the identity of the WASP, and that doesn't mean we can't take anyone else in, a Sri Lankan or a Japanese or an Indian, But the core around which the nation's values are formed is the WASP. We've never had a president who didn't have at least partial English ancestry, never.
00:09:26.000We've only had one Catholic president, There was only one Catholic sign, signatory to the Declaration of Independence.
00:09:34.000They were all not only Protestants, but pretty much Presbyterian.
00:09:37.000King George referred to the American Revolution as that Presbyterian War.
00:09:42.000So there is a lot in the whole, in the freedom thing.
00:09:46.000Samuel Huntington of of Harvard has written about this, a fantastic book I recommend to everyone, Who Are We?, and he describes how, you know, back in colonial times, interestingly enough, for example, Jews could vote, but Catholics couldn't because people thought that was, they would be more loyal to Rome once they became more American Catholic and less Roman Catholic, then they were just, you know, part of us and part of Americans.
00:10:13.000But you do notice, and he describes why so many countries that have not done very well are dominated by Catholicism.
00:10:25.000It lends itself to authoritarian governance.
00:10:30.000Whereas, you know, Calvinists, it's between you and God.
00:10:34.000And moreover, because of the Presbyterian, I think every ethnic group has this, you know, the WASP. We're good to go.
00:11:00.000In Catholic countries, not so much this country because American Catholics have basically become Protestants.
00:11:06.000And that is this worship of being poor, as if you are closer to God because you're poor.
00:11:13.000That's not the way to create an on-the-go developing country.
00:11:18.000No, I think that that's an interesting tour through that historical lane, but I want to pick on one point you said, which is citizenship, right?
00:11:25.000Let's talk about what does it mean to be a citizen of a nation.
00:11:29.000And it's interesting, if a lot of people trip up on this, they'll say, well, it means what you get, right?
00:11:33.000Do I get to vote or do I get some other claim?
00:11:47.000In my book, and I think that this is true with the American conception of citizenship, I think it's true of the Roman conception of citizenship, is it's about your loyalty, actually.
00:11:56.000To whom do you actually pledge loyalty?
00:11:59.000And so I think you and I share that in common, actually.
00:12:02.000I don't know, I've never asked you this, Dan, but I assume from seeing the things you've said, tell me if I'm right about this, you're probably against the existence of dual citizenship as a concept.
00:12:20.000How could you possibly have a loyalty to two different nations where the essence of citizenship is which nation to whom you had your undivided loyalty?
00:12:28.000That's what the essence of citizenship is all about.
00:12:33.000But where I, I wouldn't say lose you, but I may fail to fully understand you, Is on that axis of citizenship, what does ethnicity have to do with the matter?
00:12:45.000And I think you'd be well served, and maybe this could be a great platform for you to do it, to make the case for why that, what you put it, WASP basis for the American identity.
00:12:57.000How is that relevant against a backdrop of which you got the WASP Seventh generation descendant of some rich guy on the Upper East Side in Brooklyn that pretends to hate this country because it's the cool thing to do, versus somebody who came here is the kid of immigrants, but pledges loyalty to this country.
00:13:12.000If loyalty was the access for citizenship, aren't you actually committing a bit of a sin reverting back to a conception of citizenship that has nothing to do with loyalty in the first place?
00:13:20.000Well, I will say many of those seventh generations wasps I definitely hate.
00:13:25.000I know we have a lot of really, really bad ones.
00:13:28.000But like I said, anyone can adopt this.
00:13:31.000I guess what I just said, if any of your children marry a DAR, I would definitely vote for them for president.
00:14:34.000That part of that identity is tied to a certain Anglo-Saxon heritage of this country and that you're more American if you vested into that over the course of generations that are descended from that rather than somebody who came here with a civic commitment to the country.
00:14:49.000Went through the naturalization process and then their kids made some real sense of the word.
00:14:53.000And the reason I respect you is that you actually have the, so to speak, the stones to be able to say it, is that you think that there's a difference in the status of the Americanness of that person.
00:15:03.000And that's where I think I disagree with you, but I want to give you the opportunity to air the case for that strand of national identity that I think we ought to just smoke out and be able to have a discussion about.
00:15:15.000Well, the reason I mentioned the national-born citizen is I'm only talking about president of the United States.
00:15:22.000So obviously the framers thought there was something different about being president, the one man who holds one entire branch of government in his hands.
00:15:32.000It isn't to say anything about who could be a Supreme Court justice, and they have a little more power than the president, by the way, or secretary of state, or governor, or obviously senator, or any other position, but president, and I guess by extension, vice president.
00:15:48.000That is something that the framers didn't think was, it was so important that you had this deep Generation-wide loyalty, and why would they think that?
00:16:01.000Well, as many said at the time, freedom is a wonderful thing, but it's a very hard thing to learn.
00:16:07.000And one of the things, and I cite these polls in my book, Adios America, it's striking and depressing that lots of our very best immigrants just do not understand the Second Amendment.
00:16:21.000They do not get the First Amendment, and you take polls of them, You know, should you have a right to bear arms?
00:16:31.000And it's noticeable that large percentages of immigrants and children of immigrants really don't get that.
00:16:41.000And I think that is the point of having natural born citizen only for president, that this is This is a really delicate thing we have, this freedom to bear arms and there being no such thing as hate speech.
00:16:56.000And it's just an additional little safeguard.
00:16:58.000Here's my question for you on that is, because the left is actually very good at using what I call proxy logic.
00:17:04.000I reject proxy logic, but the left is actually very good at this.
00:17:07.000They'll say, we need diversity in a corporate institution.
00:17:10.000So we're going to select for diversity of thought, not by screening candidates for the diversity of their thoughts, but by screening them for the diversity of their skin color, which is a really curious thing.
00:17:19.000If you care about diversity of thought in a boardroom, why do you care about diversity of shades of melanin or the diversity of your X or Y chromosomes?
00:17:26.000You could have a room full of people that look really similar to one another and think very differently, or a room full of people that look really different and think the same, which is much of what you get in corporate America today.
00:17:34.000So that's what I call reasoning by proxy, where one of the things I've often said to the left is if you want to select for diversity of thoughts, screen candidates for the diversity of their thoughts.
00:17:44.000If you want to select for diversity of experience, screen candidates for the diversity of their experiences.
00:17:49.000That might be a better way of achieving your stated goal than to use the logic of proxy.
00:17:55.000So again, the constitutional questions decide.
00:17:57.000I think we're talking about a cultural matter relating to national identity.
00:18:00.000My question for you is, I worry that you may, I say this respectfully, maybe making Some of the same category error that our friends on the left make to say that, yes, it is shameful that immigrants and kids of immigrants often have no idea what the heck the Bill of Rights is actually about.
00:18:18.000The Second Amendment exists not to protect some guy who wants to go sport hunting, but it's the one amendment that puts the teeth in all of the other ones.
00:18:25.000The First Amendment, the right to free speech, means nothing if hate speech is carved as a category because the definition of free speech is the right to express any opinion, no matter how heinous it is.
00:18:35.000And that's protected and backstopped by your ability to protect yourself physically, if necessary, from a tyrannical government that otherwise will be prone to overreach.
00:18:44.000And so these are basic concepts that many immigrants, first-generation Americans, and for that matter, I could say it from having gone to school with many of the waspy varieties that populate places like Harvard, too, where I've gone.
00:18:55.000Goes for any sixth or seventh generation American, too.
00:18:59.000It's shameful, the level of civic absence of knowledge, a black hole of understanding of the history of our country.
00:19:06.000And I guess my question for you is, why solve for that through what I would argue is a pretty poor proxy, whether or not you're talking about a safeguard.
00:19:15.000If there could be a safeguard to ensure that you have leaders in this country or citizens of this country that have a better understanding of that, I would love that safeguard.
00:19:23.000I personally believe that every high school senior should have to be able to pass a basic civics test, the one we ask immigrants to pass, before becoming a voting citizen of this country.
00:19:32.000Before you cast that ballot in a ballot box, you better darn know what branch of government the president leads.
00:19:36.000And yet, You actually have more people would fail the test that naturalized citizens are likely to pass who aren't even naturalized citizens.
00:19:43.000Why not solve for the actual target that you and I both care about, which is loyalty and an understanding of what you're actually pledging loyalty to, rather than using what I would argue is a left-like false proxy target that you use to solve for the same thing.
00:20:01.000First of all, what you just said, what you started with there.
00:20:04.000Liberals, you say you love diversity so much, but it's diversity of ethnicity and not diversity of thought.
00:20:12.000If what you want is diversity, you need to have diversity.
00:20:16.000You should be focusing on diversity of thought.
00:20:18.000That was the essay I wrote for my law school application essay, and my mentor at Cornell read it and just threw it over his shoulder and said, fine, take the flamboyant route.
00:20:31.000So anyway, that's what I argued, lo, these many years ago.
00:20:36.000And no, of course, they don't care about diversity.
00:20:40.000Number two, I mean, it isn't really true that That the seventh generation WASPs are voting worse than the immigrants.
00:20:48.000One of the problems with the immigrants we've been taking in, actually probably any immigrant, but definitely 90% of legal immigrants come from the third world.
00:21:01.000They're used to authoritarian governments.
00:21:17.000Every election is decided by slight movements of the white vote.
00:21:21.000Now, the fact that the white vote is that close, yeah, okay, I hate 50% of them.
00:21:27.000But they're the ones who, you know, change their mind and look at the different candidates.
00:21:33.000It's much more easy to boss around people who've come from an authoritarian culture.
00:21:38.000And yes, take your point that this is at least for this one position, president, you are looking at something other than just what the person actually believes.
00:21:48.000Nobody really knows what a person actually believes, so why not have a fail-safe?
00:21:52.000I want to hear you say it, and I'd also be more comfortable if you're third generation and have some English or British blood in you.
00:22:08.000I think it's a far less effective way of achieving the same goal.
00:22:13.000My question on the immigration point, though, is how do your views change on that legal immigration paradigm if we actually did a better job of selecting for who actually gets to come to this country?
00:22:25.000Yes, it would be something totally, totally different.
00:22:27.000I want to go back to pre-Teddy Kennedy's 1965 Act rules, where, as I've said many times, I'm so sorry if I'm boring you at this point, pre-1965 immigrants were So much better than we are.
00:23:31.000So if you came here basically at any point from, I don't know, 1632 up until 1965, if you couldn't make it, you went home or you starved to death.
00:23:42.000There was no warm bath of welfare benefits that you would be sunk into.
00:23:47.000And most people don't know this, but about 30% of the prized Ellis Island immigrants went home.
00:23:54.00060% of Southern Italian immigrants went home.
00:23:58.000So that's how, without having any laws or having to pick this one or that one, we just naturally got the best the world had to offer.
00:24:51.000When I was speaking quite regularly to Donald Trump during the 2016 campaign, I told him he could get rid of the entire immigration apparatus and just send me pictures of every immigration applicant, and I could decide them all with a picture before breakfast.
00:25:19.000Yeah, there might be a few who would slip through, but oh my gosh, it would be better than what we have now.
00:25:24.000Yeah, and your point is you want to build a championship team.
00:25:26.000I'm not sure you could have better proxies.
00:25:28.000I believe we could talk about other proxies, but your point is we want to select for an immigration policy that best advances the interests of the citizens who are already here.
00:25:43.000And by the way, I don't have the same fatalism that you do with respect to that great society, the greatest misnomer in American political history of a set of policies.
00:25:54.000Whatever we do with our immigration policies, irrespective of that, we're doomed unless we Ultimately do the hard thing and take aim at Lyndon Johnson's destructive great society that we're paying for 60 years later.
00:26:07.000I think that the future existence of our country depends not just on tinkering around the edges of immigration policy, but doing the right thing at the heart of what's going on right here at home.
00:26:20.000It's a future requirement for the continued existence of our country.
00:26:23.000But my view is on the other side of that, and the reason I'm actually very Empathetic to your point of view on probably this narrow sliver.
00:26:31.000I mean, rather than picking the 99% of things we already agree with, which would be rather boring, I thought it'd be interesting to focus on the sliver.
00:26:37.000But the reason I'm very sympathetic to the sliver and where we disagree is that I understand it's the product of failed policies, of an immigration policy, even legal immigration policies that reward.
00:26:51.000We reward people who are willing to break the law.
00:26:54.000We reward people who are willing to lie, right?
00:26:56.000If you lie on an immigration application or an asylum application, that's the quality that's rewarded.
00:27:01.000So if those are the qualities rewarded in an immigration policy, stochastic randomness, willingness to lie, and then through illegal immigration, willingness to break the law, you get what you actually incentivize.
00:27:12.000So that's not surprising that that's what we have today.
00:27:16.000I worry that the reaction, maybe the understandable reaction, but the reaction unless of folks like yourself, bluntly, is to embrace an artificial vision of American identity that serves as an antidote to the thing that we actually are trying to solve in this country.
00:27:32.000But actually then may miss the real target, which is to know this is who we are.
00:27:36.000And it's manifest itself through failed immigration policies and failed domestic policies in this country that we would rather confront by actually reviving the Constitution that our founding fathers set into motion and the beliefs of our founding fathers.
00:27:50.000And Thomas Jefferson said, what is it?
00:27:51.000The tree of liberty is fed every generation by the blood of tyrants.
00:27:55.000That we suggest that our founding fathers weren't.
00:27:57.000You either believe they were crazy or you believe they were right.
00:28:02.000That's what we should focus on rather than this, I think, understandable but somewhat regrettable reinvention of an American identity that I just don't think Thomas Jefferson particularly shared at the time he wrote the Declaration of Independence.
00:29:00.000The smart, successful, making more money, contributing more than your Native American is, even those immigrants, you, Vivek, you don't want to take in too many at once, and this really doesn't apply to you, but you do create, I mean, you see it in Detroit, and I think Dearborn now, where one of my friends was a U.S. turning up, or a citizen of U.S. turning up there, and he drove me through.
00:29:29.000When you take in that many immigrants from one area of the world at once, and we're taking them in from all kinds of different areas, we've already taken in one third of all Mexicans.
00:30:03.000I mean, obviously, the wall, number one.
00:30:06.000And then just, you know, just take a pause in immigration for a while.
00:30:10.000Give us some time to assimilate the ones who have already come in here to turn them into these great Americans that you are, that Miguel Estrada is, that many of my immigrant friends are, and I believe at least the ones I know are better Americans.
00:30:52.000I mean, if somebody's working in Washington, D.C. or somebody's working as a federal bureaucrat, should they have to disclose whether they are loyal to a different country?
00:31:00.000Is that something that you think should be done in the United States today?
00:33:16.000But Americans, I mean, among the things that de Tocqueville said, Huge respect for women.
00:33:25.000I hate listening to feminists talk about these brutal, sexist American men.
00:33:31.000Whoa, wait until the third world has moved in.
00:33:35.000You're going to see that this is the best you ever had at American women.
00:33:39.000So rape was punished like murder in colonial times.
00:33:43.000This was Absolutely something that Tocqueville noticed.
00:33:46.000The equality, the social equality, to use my friend Mickey Kous's term, and that was, you know, it's a violation of the Constitution for the government to confer titles on you.
00:34:01.000So, you want to become a lord in Great Britain?
00:34:04.000Give up your American citizenship first.
00:34:10.000So no matter what rank you were, and a rich person may have a really big house, a poor person may have a smaller house, but there was a sense of what you were saying before.
00:34:51.000Because the first people who, the first Western Europeans who landed and created the country known as America, well I guess it was still a colony America, the United States of America, they were heavily fleeing religious persecution.
00:35:06.000We got the Presbyterians or Protestants from France and they fled to the Netherlands.
00:35:12.000You had Well, a lot of people, the crazy Puritans, and they were crazy, but it was kind of a great, great opening for this country.
00:35:21.000So that's why the freedom of religion was so important to the framers of our Constitution.
00:35:29.000This freedom is just so deeply ingrained From the founding of our country, and I think it could be said without contradiction, America remains the freest country in the world.
00:35:44.000And so you think those attributes, the honesty, the compassion, generosity of spirit, social equality, the absence of caste or lordship or title or an honor system of hierarchy, and of course freedom, you think that those are distinctly American ideals.
00:36:02.000Yes, and the massive respect for women.
00:36:35.000I don't know the answer to that, but you bring it up.
00:36:36.000Actually, in those countries, it's the rape victim who gets stoned.
00:36:41.000But even in Western Europe, I mean, this is certainly what, and I'll believe Alexis de Tocqueville on this, that the American respect for women and opposition and seeing women as pure, and feminists may sneer at this and say it's putting women on a pedestal, but women would live up to it.
00:37:02.000And would live up to another thing de Tocqueville said that the reason American women were so much better than European women was that, you know, they had to come to this continent and, warning, hate facts coming, and fend off the Indians and go conquer the West rather than, you know, these European women sitting on their couches eating bonbons and suffering the vapors.
00:37:25.000It was, women were stronger in the United States of America They were extremely respected, and probably that thing Trump said when he came down the escalator about how we're bringing in rapists.
00:37:39.000Look, a lot of that is from Adios America, which I wrote, and sorry if I'm boring you because you've heard this before.
00:37:46.000Immigration was just going to be one chapter in another book, and then I'm just trying to get the basic facts on immigration and crime.
00:37:53.000And I'm kind of a fanatical researcher, and the information is not there, Vivek.
00:38:00.000So I thought, oh my gosh, I've uncovered this huge conspiracy to hide immigrant crime from us.
00:38:07.000There are other things you can look at, like prison populations.
00:38:11.000I'd have to wait for trial transcripts in a lot of cases and just search, you know, control F for the word interpreter to find out if this was an immigrant legal or illegal.
00:38:22.000And whoa, no other cultures do not have...
00:38:28.000In fact, there was one case that I mentioned in Adios America, a couple of, a rocking man had, and they were like, you know, 50 years old, and they had a couple of 13-year-old girls sold to them by the girls' parents.
00:39:46.000I think actually a lot hangs on the answer to that question, actually.
00:39:49.000What percentage of the deranged anti-American spirit in this country is the consequence of somebody who immigrated to this country or is the kid of one?
00:40:00.000I personally, from what I see, this may be an empirical question, so I'm not giving you empirics, I'm giving you my impression.
00:40:07.000Believe that of the total set of people who are deranged in their anti-American conviction and passion for their ideology being guided by anti-Americanism at its core, and I think that is what's at work in this country, I think it is a minority, maybe a small minority, that are themselves either immigrants or the kids of immigrants.
00:40:27.000Do you think that that contention is false?
00:40:32.000Now, they aren't immigrants like Indian immigrants, by and large.
00:40:36.000And you can't look at the group of, you know, just count up the numbers for who the protesters are, though, at least from all of the protests I've seen throughout Manhattan.
00:40:46.000No, it has heavily been Do you think the people watching the BLM protests...
00:40:50.000And who knows, they can be first or second generation, but they are heavily, heavily Muslim, but it's per capita, Vaik.
00:40:56.000I mean, there are a lot more Americans in America, or white Americans, let me put it that way.
00:41:01.000So, you know, how many Arab immigrants or Muslim immigrants do we have in the country compared to how many are participating in these protests?
00:41:10.000And wow, the ones I've seen, yeah, I mean, it's sort of arresting when you see just some douchebag white American kid doing it.
00:41:21.000If we could deport them, I would totally deport them.
00:41:24.000You know, one interesting fact there is And this is an empirical question, and it might be more true for this wave of post-October 7th stuff that's going on in the United States as distinct from what I saw in this country in the aftermath of George Floyd's death in 2020. And this is really what, I wouldn't say radicalized me, but certainly motivated me to take a different direction in my life in the business career that I was on.
00:41:56.000It was a firestorm of controversy, and, you know, that took me on the journey that I've been in.
00:41:59.000But I remember looking at this very closely at the time.
00:42:01.000Who is actually showing up at these BLM protests across the country, the mostly peaceful protests that were somehow riots that were burning down cities?
00:42:09.000And I think that, I mean, push back on me if you see it differently, but I have some conviction in this.
00:42:15.000That was not in any sense of the word any majority or even significant plurality or even significant minority led by immigrants.
00:42:22.000I mean, these are self-hating people who have been in this country for generations, whether they're of black or white skin.
00:42:29.000The BLM riots in this country in the middle of COVID-infested America, COVID policy-invested America, really, in 2020, was really something that has very little to do with illegal migration or even legal migration, but something else of a national self-loathing that exists in this country.
00:42:47.000And even when I visited the South Side of Chicago, and this is where I went to interface with people who don't agree with people like you and I, The kind of comments I got there were interesting, which was, you know, these are people who are pushing me on my policies on racial reparations, which I'm dead set against in this country.
00:43:03.000Maybe there was a time for racial reparations in 1866 or in 1870, a time of reconstruction, but not the year 2024. That is no place in America.
00:43:10.000I'm dead set against affirmative action of every kind.
00:43:13.000And the thing I was told more than once, and not particularly in civil terms, was that this country was built on the back of my ancestors and not yours.
00:43:26.000That, I think, was a better representation of what was represented in the violent riots of the post-George Floyd death, BLM riots of 2020. And yet there's an element of that that, to me, feels familiar in at least a strain of what underlies your own vision of American identity too, which is what I think is fascinating and just worth exploring.
00:43:48.000I don't think that that BLM... Do you agree with me on the BLM piece?
00:45:19.000Thank God the North won the Civil War, which of course they were going to.
00:45:23.000I mean, it's like Israel versus Gaza right now.
00:45:26.000Not that I'm comparing Southerners to these bloodthirsty Hamas types.
00:45:33.000But The South was incredibly backwards, and it was backwards because of slavery, much in the same way cheap illegal alien labor or cheap foreign labor is holding America back now.
00:45:45.000Instead of using more AI, instead of farmers learning to use robotics, ah, no, let's just farm the way we did in, you know, 1880. We have all this cheap labor, cheap labor, so they're bringing it in, bringing it in.
00:45:57.000They make money short term, but But it's a disaster for the country long term.
00:46:03.000The South was so far backwards, so much behind the North.
00:46:09.000The North was, you know, literate, on the go, had factories.
00:46:13.000And slowly, you know, we brought the South into it.
00:46:17.000But this idea that America couldn't have been built without slaves, no, it has been a black mark, I mean, especially morally, on this country.
00:46:28.000From the moment it began, and it began for the same reason we're bringing in masses and masses of third world immigrants, because the rich want cheap labor.
00:47:32.000We'd have to, I don't know, interview their shrinks.
00:47:35.000But they do, and they used to help foreign countries try to take down America.
00:47:41.000Well, now they can do it without leaving home.
00:47:43.000Now they can, and they make a lot of money doing it.
00:47:46.000These NGOs, this business about, oh, we will volunteer.
00:47:50.000No, they're not, none of these groups.
00:47:51.000The Lutheran immigrant group, the Catholic immigrant group, the Jewish immigrant group, they are getting check after check from the government and paying themselves quite hefty fees.
00:48:01.000And in your view, and I wanted to get to this before we wrap, too, because I think you have such a, at least, coherent view of national identity.
00:48:08.000Say, agree or not with particular tenets of it.
00:48:11.000It's interesting because it's coherent.
00:48:13.000What role does Christianity and religious identity play in that American national identity as well?
00:48:52.000The template that everything else grows around.
00:48:55.000So, I'm sorry I'm repeating myself, but there just is a lot about Presbyterianism or Protestantism.
00:49:04.000That supports, that dovetails with a free country, that believes in freedom of speech, that believes in freedom of religion, that I won't say worships success, but admires success instead of revering poverty.
00:49:34.000So that's for you less on the hierarchy of backstop security policies versus taking a look at lineage, at least, from a birthright citizenship perspective.
00:49:58.000I know my friend Miguel Estrada had it.
00:50:00.000I know a lot of first-generation immigrants are already somehow deeply imbued with the American creed, with the American ideal, but it's a backstop.
00:50:15.000The longer you've been here, the more it just...
00:50:30.000I think we view each other through a very interesting prism.
00:50:33.000You know, I may take some liberty here, but I think you see in me or the other friend you've referred to, oh, what a good exception to the rule and what about somebody to actually help do a good job for this country and let me help you even though while I couldn't have voted you free for president, let me root for your success in a good-hearted kind of way.
00:50:52.000And the equivalent of that emotion or reaction or view that I have of you is Gee, how terrible it is that we have become a country where our national identity is completely gone, we have immigration policies that have contributed to it, we have domestic self-hating policies like the Great Society of Lyndon Johnson that have contributed to it,
00:51:12.000that has led otherwise Thoughtful, patriotic, country-loving, history-understanding Americans to have missed the mark ever so slightly on what actual American identity is as part of an understandable reaction to an assault on this country.
00:51:30.000And I think that the counterpart to your, I'd say, favorable but couched reaction to someone like me being the U.S. president or running for U.S. president is my reaction to, I think, What you represent is a view of many Americans who rightly,
00:51:47.000if we were having this conversation against the backdrop of sensible immigration policies, whose sole goal was to advance the national interest of the citizens who were already here, the backdrop of a shared language that we could all share in common, English, as the single national language of the United States,
00:52:04.000which I think is a no-brainer, against the backdrop of actual policies that embody those basic Protestant values, including the value of hard work, Embracing and lionizing success, and maybe not worshiping it, but lionizing it rather than vilifying it.
00:52:19.000Against that backdrop, I suspect deeply that your own views of what constitutes the most American somebody could be, even in the office of U.S. President, might be different than what they are today.
00:52:33.000I think you could be right, and I'll give you...
00:52:36.000Your response is guiding our conversation a little bit.
00:52:38.000I think you could be right, and the example I would give to back up, I'm not necessarily agreeing, but this is something I'd give you to back up your position.
00:52:50.000JFK was the first Catholic president, and like I say, there was actually...
00:52:56.000A couple of centuries of, no, we don't trust the Papists.
00:53:00.000But that was before his brother Teddy's 1965 Immigration Act, and I think people were perfectly comfortable with that.
00:53:09.000There's a President Kennedy joke that asked if the Pope and the Constitution disagreed, which would you defer to?
00:53:51.000But since then, it's been Biden and Kennedy.
00:53:54.000You know, I think that if it was against that backdrop of an America that reflected the America that both you and I want to see in our manifestation of our actual core values, then I think the discussion we'd have about what actually comprises American identity would be even, I think, a more pure version of that than one that is tainted by reactionary impulse.
00:54:17.000And this is how I worry that we lose to the left in part.
00:54:20.000Is that we lose not with a bang, but with a whimper in many ways, allowing our own vision of our nation to be defined by our reaction to them rather than by, you know, turning the page and starting with a blank slate and actually asking ourselves, as our founders did in 1776, who are we?
00:54:41.000Irrespective of what these people on Columbia's lawn, immigrant or not, Black Lives Matter protest or not, who are we and what do we stand for today?
00:54:49.000And I think that that's part of what I see missing in our conservative movement.
00:54:53.000We either have the blithe, donor class, Republican, puppet master control types, foreign interventionists and domestic surveillance statists, Dick Cheney 2.0, wing of the Republican Party today.
00:55:05.000But we might have even in what I may call our wing, if I may take that liberty of the future conservative movement, One that is accidentally defined by the threat we're reacting to, rather than affirmatively defined on our own terms, right?
00:55:23.000Individual, family, nation, and God serving as the alternative vision to race, gender, sexuality, and climate.
00:55:30.000And I think it's a hard thing to do, but You know, that's a wish that I have, and I'd love to hear you, in closing, maybe react to that to say that so much of our energy, I've done this, I think you've done this, many of us in our movement do this, allow ourselves to be defining ourselves in opposition to the thing we're trying to defeat,
00:55:50.000as opposed to creating some space to just say, you know, that flag independently behind me stands for something else in its own right, on its own terms, regardless of what some anti-American Left-wing person who hates this country has to say on a given day, it's irrelevant to the way I define American identity.
00:56:09.000And my definition of American identity has nothing to do with what that person has to say.
00:56:13.000It's gonna be independent and stand regardless of it.
00:56:17.000And I just worry, we've had such a candid conversation and I'll just close in candor, I worry that a little bit of, even a deep, thoughtful, philosophically grounded and committed person like your vision of our national identity may itself Be, in part, a projection of a response guided by people who hate this country, who should have nothing to do with defining what a person like you believes it means to be a citizen of this nation.
00:56:41.000Sometimes an overreaction, or a reaction, I'd say, is necessary, and I don't think these...
00:56:51.000I haven't had a Nicorette for an hour now, so I'm not coming up with the best examples.
00:56:55.000But for many years, federal judges, especially after a lot of Democrat appointments, they were doing what New York judges, California judges and DAs are doing now.
00:57:08.000They were not imposing proper punishments.
00:57:11.000This is the last time we tried this experiment with releasing criminals and the streets ran with blood.
00:57:19.000At least it could be done at the federal level.
00:57:21.000If you're not going to follow the law, if you're always going to, you know, let off these rapists and murderers or give them a slap on the wrist for murder, you get, you know, 15 months in prison.
00:57:31.000Well, that's when we have the Sentencing Commission, which I think Justice Stephen Breyer was the head of.
00:57:36.000If he wasn't the head of, he was part of it.
00:57:39.000Instead of allowing judges discretion, they said, no, no, we gave you discretion.
00:58:07.000We can't trust, number one, the people running immigration, not Republican, not Democrat, not any place up or down the entire system.
00:58:15.000And we can't trust a lot of the immigrants they've brought in.
00:58:19.000I mean, again, manifestly present company excluded, but the polls of immigrants, including second generation immigrants, they have not imbued the belief in freedom, freedom of speech, freedom to own guns.
00:58:36.000And so sometimes you need the overreaction for a while to get back to what the center is.
00:58:43.000There's a time and place for everything, I suppose, right?
00:58:52.000I do believe that you can't win a war unless you recognize that you're in one.
00:58:57.000And we are in a kind of war for the future of this country right now.
00:59:01.000And our only chance of winning it is to first recognize that we're in a war.
00:59:05.000I also think that it is worth preserving clarity of purpose of what we're actually fighting for, rather than just clarity of the enemy that we seek to defeat.
00:59:16.000And I think part of what's going on is many of those people on the other side, and here we're not going to draw the immigrant, non-immigrant distinction.
00:59:23.000I think this may even be more true of the non-immigrant variety than the immigrant variety, is that it's not that the other side actually even stands.
00:59:31.000Their anti-Americanism does not stem from conviction.
00:59:35.000It stems from an utter absence of purpose in the first place.
00:59:40.000And I think that that's part of what you see when you see the random guy whose father was the billionaire private equity guy on the Upper East Side showing up on Columbia's lawn.
00:59:56.000You've rejected your family identity, or maybe your family never took the time to foreground one in the first place.
01:00:03.000You don't think of yourself as a citizen of a nation.
01:00:05.000You're some nebulous global citizen somewhere fighting climate change.
01:00:09.000And, you know, hard work and success has itself been penalized in the culture you grew up in.
01:00:13.000And so all you've been taught is to hide your own gifts or achievements.
01:00:17.000You're unmoored from purpose since you're latching on to the most easy one that's available.
01:00:21.000And I worry that for that segment of it, when we win this war, half the enemy is really not particularly, at least half the enemy is not even ideologically opposed to us, but is just lost and going through the aimless passage of time and going through the motions.
01:00:35.000That if we define ourselves in response to the things they were saying, the things they were saying were rather arbitrary in the first place, and we lose the opportunity to actually ground them in who we are in the first place.
01:00:45.000Grounded in, I think, what I open with is that civic nationalism that I do think is a real basis for national identity.
01:00:51.000And you can't do that if you're Georgia Maloney or, you know, maybe not even, Maloney isn't even the right example in Italy anymore, but, you know, Georgia Maloney 1.0, in Italy it's a hard thing to do because Italian identity is a hard thing to nail down.
01:01:03.000It's tied to You know, the shadow of, you know, Roman history and how do you think about a civilization defining itself in the shadow when it was at the peak of the world but no longer is.
01:01:14.000And there's a deep ethnic component to that and a linguistic component to that.
01:01:21.000Complicated as well in terms of what Hungarian identity is, but it's grounded something relating to being the only language spoken on earth and that specific small space.
01:01:31.000The history of the palace is built on the riverbanks of the Danube and Budapest and remembering an era that's once bygone.
01:01:38.000Those are part of Hungarian identity or Italian identity in a way that's just different here, which is a set of ideals that were enshrined in a declaration of independence manifest in an operating manual known as the Constitution.
01:01:51.000That should be accessible to those very enemies on the other side who are really lost, just need to be moored in purpose, and it's sitting right here.
01:01:58.000I worry we will miss our opportunity to do it if we take too seriously our reactionary response to something that actually doesn't deserve to be dignified with that reactionary response, but instead just an alternative vision of our own.
01:02:10.000Could I say one more thing in defense of ethnicity having something to do with this?
01:02:17.000Yes, these are ideals accessible to anyone.
01:02:20.000The Statue of Liberty, the genuine purpose of the Statue of Liberty, not what socialist Emma Lazarus slapped on it 50 years later.
01:02:29.000That poem has nothing to do with why France gave us the Statue of Liberty.
01:02:33.000It's supposed to be liberty Lighting the world.
01:02:35.000It was our country being an inspiration to the rest of the world.
01:02:39.000We have certainly deployed troops and money and aid and pamphlets and Voice of America around the globe trying to get other countries to adopt this country's ideals.
01:02:54.000And yet, No other country's really been able to do it.
01:02:59.000The closest you have is Australia, Canada, obviously, you know, basically British colonies.
01:03:37.000But they were never going to become us.
01:03:40.000So there does seem to be some mystery secret sauce by giving these ideals to Anglo-Saxons or at least a culture that is dominated by Anglo-Saxons.
01:04:07.000And I think that part of that, I don't mean to be your analyst here, but I think part of that comes from a reactionary response to a left-wing assault in this country that you need not dignify with that reactionary component to your vision of American identity.
01:04:24.000If we had a different circumstance, and I think I'm focused on creating that different circumstance so that we can actually be clear-headed about who we really are, which I think is grounded in civic ideals that are pretty much devoid of that actual ethnic grounding.
01:04:39.000And, you know, somebody would have to be blind to not look on the screen and predict what each of us would say on the matter.
01:04:45.000But, you know, we each have our vantage point there.
01:04:49.000At the very least, I want to thank you for a thoughtful conversation and the courage to voice opinions that other thoughtful people like you, it's not the intelligence they lack, it's the courage they lack.
01:04:59.000And I want to thank you for showing a bit of what we could all use more of in this country is exactly that courage.
01:05:06.000Thank you, and thank you for running for president, even if I wouldn't have voted for you.
01:05:11.000You were absolutely the most articulate Republican running in that race, and I had so much fun watching you.