How JD Vance Became a “Butler for Billionaires” with Kara Swisher
July 31, 2024
Glennon Doyle:
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. We are in “we can do hard things” mode.
Amanda Doyle:
It’s our era.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s our era. We are awake. We are alive. We are ready to go. (Singing)
Amanda Doyle:
(Singing) That’s for you, Kamala.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay, so we’ll send that to the Kamala team and see if they want to use it.
Amanda Doyle:
Yeah, I mean, I think it’s winning. It’s winning.
Glennon Doyle:
I’m trying so hard to come up with a good slogan. I’ve heard “Yes, we Kam”, which I’m not sure about that one. I made up one last night in bed, which was “Keep Kamala and Carry On.” I’m not there yet. I’m not there yet, but I’m not going to give up till I come up with something good.
Amanda Doyle:
All right.
Abby Wambach:
Who is our guest today?
Glennon Doyle:
Today, we have Kara Swisher, who is the host of On with Kara Swisher and co-host of the Pivot podcast. She’s editor-at-large at New York Magazine, and a CNN contributor. She’s considered the top reporter in the tech game and called Silicon Valley’s most feared but revered journalist. I think that tracks I revere her and I’m also a little scared of her.
Swisher has established herself as the oracle of the tech world, with unrivaled access to the industry’s most significant leaders. She’s the author of the New York Times bestselling memoir, Burn Book: A Tech Love Story.
Welcome, Kara Swisher. Tell us all the things about JD Vance.
Amanda Doyle:
And the tech bros who own him.
Glennon Doyle:
Kara, I’m going to explain why it is that I needed you to come here today.
Kara Swisher:
Okay.
Glennon Doyle:
I come from the Christian world. I was in the evangelical whatever movement church for a long time.
Kara Swisher:
I’m aware. Yeah.
Glennon Doyle:
Now, this thing happened when I was in my early twenties, which is that I was listening to what was coming from the pulpit and there was a lot of, you’ll be shocked to know, there was a lot of misogyny and racism and homophobia coming from the pulpit. And I have actually really committed to the Bible, have read the Bible, and was very intensely into scripture. And so, what was coming from the pulpit felt very different than what I understood was the root of the thing.
And so I started meeting with people, thinking that I was just going to get an explanation that would make it make sense. And what I started to understand is, the higher that I met with people, my sister will remember this as a hard time in our lives, the more I understood, oh, the higher the people get, the less they even care about these issues. They don’t care. They have created a group of people who think that this is based upon, we all care so much about abortion. But actually, what I learned over time was that, that church and many movements are created by people who create these banner issues in order to incite and entice people into following them. They create believers.
Kara Swisher:
Yeah, marketing. It’s called marketing.
Glennon Doyle:
Yes, it’s called marketing. But then they don’t actually… They have completely private separate agendas in separate meetings, with separate priorities. So this is how we got Reagan and the religious right united under because of Falwell and racism and segregation in schools. So what I know is that you can’t really understand a movement until you understand the hidden agenda of the leaders behind it. So, what we are asking you to do is come here today and tell us about the hidden agenda of JD Vance and Trump, as it connects to Silicon Valley and the tech world.
Kara Swisher:
I’m all for it. I don’t think it’s very hidden though. I’m not sure it’s hidden. I think it’s pretty much in plain sight.
Glennon Doyle:
Un-hide it even more.
Kara Swisher:
Yeah. I mean, The Post has this thing, democracy dies in darkness, but I think it dies in the full light of day. I think they’re not hiding any of their intent. They think they’re very clear. They say it over and over again. They’re doing it explicitly. They may be doing it in unusual ways by posting, like Bill Ackman was posting, he’s part of their little cabal right now, he’s a hedge fund manager and certainly that makes him an expert on DEI. But they’re posting it rather explicitly what their goals are, which is control, I think, pretty clearly and money making and the ability to slime people in order to get to those goals. And so the first line of my book was, “So it was capitalism after all,” and I think if you start with that premise, you’ll pretty much have your answer to almost everything they’re doing.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. So JD Vance writes Hillbilly Elegy.
Kara Swisher:
He does.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. He comes from Appalachia. Is that true?
Kara Swisher:
No, that is not true. He comes from a suburb of Dayton. His family does. His family does. My grandmother grew up in rural West Virginia. I don’t call myself a hillbilly, but okay, sure. I mean, he certainly had roots there, so did I, but has nothing to do with my life. And he grew up in a relatively, for that area, affluent actually. His family made quite a bit of money for that area. And then he went, of course, to Yale, etc. etc. So I find him to be an elite. I would call him an elite if I had to pick. It’s been a long time since he’s been down in the holler making cornpone grits, but okay. It’s nonsense.
Amanda Doyle:
It’s the equivalent of us saying that… I mean, our great grandfather was a coal miner in Pennsylvania.
Kara Swisher:
So was mine.
Amanda Doyle:
Oh, really? I didn’t know that. So we are as hillbilly as JD Vance is.
Kara Swisher:
That’s correct.
Amanda Doyle:
At this point.
Kara Swisher:
That is correct.
Amanda Doyle:
You mentioned Yale. So JD Vance is at Yale and he meets Peter Thiel at Yale.
Kara Swisher:
At Yale as a student.
Amanda Doyle:
When he comes to speak. And that moment he calls a very big moment, which I would not argue because it created the rest of his life.
Kara Swisher:
Well, he got a sugar daddy, right then and there. And I think what’s interesting is, a lot of these men that I’ve dealt with in Silicon Valley, a lot of men in general, they try to bring up these smart young men. They all have a castle of them. And you’ve seen that. It doesn’t matter where it is. And he was the latest in that particular version, and Peter does that a lot. He does a lot of mentorship stuff and he’s created the Thiel Fellows. And so he creates sort of a cult following among those people. And JD is one of them, and he rides that train for as long as possible, until this, till right now.
And one of the things I really appreciated, which I’ve been trying to get out is, he wasn’t a very successful tech investor, at all in fact. And this is with Yale and the help of Peter Thiel, and he still wasn’t successful during a boom time. That tells me a lot. It means he’s a bad investor. Some people he’s worked with who I’ve talked to just, he just wasn’t good at his job.
And then Peter got him all his jobs. Rachel Maddow calls him Peter Thiel’s intern, perpetual intern. And then Peter paid for his senate candidacy and got Trump to endorse him, which got him to win, and so he’s had a very lackluster senate career so far, completely inexperienced for the job, if you’re thinking of experience. And then he slingshotted him into this, using the help of other tech billionaires because Trump is easily convinced. I think they dragged Don Jr. who’s not the sharpest tack in the box, and so he probably thought it was cool to hang out with Elon Musk and let’s listen to him, and here we are with this guy.
Amanda Doyle:
You just gave such a beautiful overview, a whole overview. Can we break that down into little chunks, because the whole story that you just told and let’s chunk it out. So he’s at Yale. Peter Thiel is there, he meets him. Can you tell us who Peter Thiel is, first of all?
Kara Swisher:
Peter Thiel is a very talented investor in Silicon Valley. Some of his stuff has worked, some of it hasn’t, but he’s definitely, there’s no question, he’s talented. He has a point of view, largely to do with the destruction of current government. He wants to burn it all down. And he’s been like that since college, really. He was very famous in college for being a disruptor, and that’s fine. He had several people like David Sacks and some others around him at the time. I got acquainted with him because he was an investor in Facebook and other things around Silicon Valley. But he’s certainly done well.
He’s very good at tax tricks. He did a lot of tax tricks to keep money that he made. He’s been sort of a lone wolf in Silicon Valley. I think they’re non-political for the most part and he was political. And so he funded Facebook. He was one of the early people, not the only person, and a bunch of other stuff, including Palantir, including Anduril, guess. I think he’s in that one.
Amanda Doyle:
Founded PayPal, right? Co-founder of PayPal?
Kara Swisher:
He’s one of the founders, yes. He was a critical one. Elon was not a founder of PayPal. People have to stop saying that. They merged a company called x.com into PayPal because they were competing and they were both sort of losing. And so you can’t have two competitors in the same space. So they merged together. And Elon was kind of zeroed out by Peter because Peter’s smarter than Elon, I would say, if I had to pick. And so they managed to sell it off to eBay, which was a big win for them. They were lucky because they were not headed in a good direction, but eBay thought they needed it and that’s what saved them. And then they looked like geniuses, which they saw the opportunity and they took it. And then they parlayed that into this mythology around themselves.
Amanda Doyle:
So Vance barnacles himself to Thiel. He decides to go from Yale. This is the Hillbilly guy, decides to go from Yale to venture capitalist position in Silicon Valley. And?
Kara Swisher:
Yeah, he had several. He had a company, he worked for Mithril. He was unsuccessful there. He worked for Steve Case. He was only there 18 months, unsuccessful, and Steve has said it explicitly.
Amanda Doyle:
And he said he didn’t really work there, right? Isn’t he on record for saying he sort of didn’t work much?
Kara Swisher:
He didn’t work much, yeah. He said it to me actually. And Ron Klain was there, who was chief of staff to Biden. Steve was really interested in an important thing, which was talent across the country, in places that weren’t Silicon Valley and New York and Austin. And so JD was the natural person to hire after Hillbilly Elegy, is we’re going to reach down into the small towns and find entrepreneurship everywhere, which was a laudable task for sure.
Amanda Doyle:
But the first company, that executive is on record saying that he gave Vance the job as a favor to Peter.
Kara Swisher:
Yes, they all did. They all did. He’s Peter Thiel’s intern. It’s like that guy that, “Here, my dad told me to hire me,” and that’s the kind of thing.
Amanda Doyle:
And then he goes after the last job, then he says, I want to go into politics, and Thiel gives him, what for the time, is a record-breaking investment.
Kara Swisher:
Yes, $15 million.
Amanda Doyle:
$15 million.
Kara Swisher:
He’s scored, with a very small amount of money from Peter, to get his own senator. He got his own senator, essentially.
Amanda Doyle:
And he’s three years on the job. So bring us to the moment where Trump is deciding who to have for VP.
Kara Swisher:
Well, all these tech people got involved in it, got super involved. Elon’s been moving ever rightward for a couple of years now. And David Sacks, someone who was also at PayPal, he was at school with Peter Thiel and he ran a bunch of different companies in Silicon Valley. He’s sort of a middling entrepreneur, I would call him. He had a company called Yammer that he sold to Microsoft, that was Microsoft then sort of mothballed it really pretty much, just a typical entrepreneur. Again, not the top level, but fine. He wrote a book in college with Peter that I got him to apologize for because he called rape belated regret in the book. You can find the story. He apologized for saying so. He said he didn’t mean to say it that way, but he did say it that way. I know, right? Yes.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s not exactly a slip of the tongue stumble into conversation.
Kara Swisher:
No, yeah, I know. I agree. There was this pack of people at Stanford that were trying to be like disrupty and contrarian.
There was another one named Keith Rabois and he’s gay, as is Peter, and I think they yelled, “die of AIDS” to a professor who was liberal. They just like to be contrarian, no matter who they were.
Amanda Doyle:
Jesus.
Kara Swisher:
JD got money from Peter to do this, this is pretty much. And so it’s kind of a pretty easy straight line. At the same time, he got influenced by a bunch of philosophers and bloggers and theorists that are very troubling. I don’t have the names right in my hand, but there are a bunch of people who have… Patrick Deneen is one. But as you get deeper into them, they get rather problematic. There’s one blogger who was talking about slavery being good and all kinds of stuff. You just have to read it. It’s really wacky once you get into it. And this is stuff that Vance really embraced. And Peter also being one of the people he really embraced.
Glennon Doyle:
So do you believe that Peter actually believes this shit?
Kara Swisher:
Yes.
Glennon Doyle:
So Peter as a gay man…
Kara Swisher:
Yeah. We’ve had encounters, a lot of encounters. There’s a long video of us arguing about, for example… Well, I don’t know if it’s on the video, but we had a meeting where I did it… We were talking about Facebook at the time actually, but after the camera went off, he was talking about gays getting special rights, and I said, equal rights. And he said, special rights. And I said, well, I have children, and so I feel like I should have equal rights to straight people around adoption and everything else. He now has kids, of course, but he’s a conservative and sort of a way out there. One of his big ideas, and there’s a bunch of theory, people around that he also admires, is the idea that the United States should be run by a CEO, an all powerful CEO in the version of Mark Zuckerberg or anybody else, where you can’t fire them, dictator is what you would call it in politics, and they can make better decisions than the government. And he feels that the government is too… The bureaucrats have too much power.
Look, that’s a longtime conservative thing. And so, he’s the [inaudible 00:13:52] that you’ve got to sort of get rid of it all and have it run a company is, or most things in government should be made private. And, oh look, I have a defense company that I can get money from taxpayers from. So what’s really fascinating is, they all insult government and then take government contracts or manipulate the tax system. Or, in Elon’s case, he took a loan that saved Tesla from the Obama administration. He paid it back, but we should have taken stock, obviously. The United States government should have, but he avails himself to government when it suits him and he insults it when it suits him.
Amanda Doyle:
Is it the racism that unites? Is it the… I mean, we know that Vance has promoted this kind of a little bit more sterile version of the replacement theory, which is, white people are… It’s a liberal plot to get rid of white people through immigrants. Is that what unites all of them under this umbrella?
Kara Swisher:
No. They each have their own sad little journey to where they are, I think, whatever it happens to be. I mean, there was a long biography written of Elon, which I thought was just typing what Elon said. I thought it was a very long press release. His story is that his father was terrible to him, and therefore, he must take out his childhood traumas on the rest of us for the rest of his life, although I think he just personally seek therapy.
They each have a different story of something. I’m not a therapist, but I suspect JD Vance’s mom’s drug problems probably contributed to the way he is. He had to really be scrappy, of course, dealing with a consistently problematic parent. And he did have the support of his grandmother, of course, who was a character, sounds like. But each of them have their own little particular journey and demons that plague them, I think.
Amanda Doyle:
He is scrappy in his inconsistency, Vance’s. I feel like he’s kind of like a tofu. I feel like he takes on whatever identity makes him more…
Kara Swisher:
He did that with… I have to say, when I had met him, he was very anti-Trump, too much almost. I was like, just dial it back, okay? Look, I have never called Trump Hitler. I think I studied Hitler in college. It was my minor, Nazi studies and propaganda. That’s a real term to say. He called him, he could be America’s Hitler. I was like gobsmacked when he said that. I was like, okay. But he went way far than most people, than anybody so far in that group that I saw of the Never Trumpers.
And then suddenly, when it suited him, when it was, I would say not doing well in the tech investing space, to make his next leap, he’s a chameleon and he changed his colors and then became the other way. Now the question is, does he really, really believe it now? He might. He might have. A lot of these people get red-pilled into that. I think Elon certainly believes a lot of the conspiracy nonsense. He’s been quite exercised over how [inaudible 00:17:00]
Amanda Doyle:
Does it matter what he believes if he’s owned by, if all of his jobs, including his job as senator, that he’s only had for three years, is a direct result of Peter Thiel’s investment?
Kara Swisher:
I think he thinks he’s not bought. He sees it as the way on his way up the slippery pole essentially. And so this gives him a boost. You have to kind of, at some point, believe what you’re saying, if you’re going to say it over and over again. I don’t think he’s suddenly going to convert to liberalism again. But, especially for a tech person, he was quite vehement against Trump. He went out of his way, which I think very few of them do. Usually, they say nothing. That’s my experience with a lot of those people. But he certainly was quite vehement on the topic.
We’ve had friends who suddenly have gotten right-wingy. I have a bunch of friends who, suddenly, Trump’s not so bad. I was like, how’d that work? And mostly, if you trace it rather simply, it usually has to do with money, taxes, things like that. And again, the opening of my book was about that, was about how all these tech people went to Trump Tower, even though they had decried them to me each personally, to get the tax breaks they so desperately wanted or the money repatriated, the income repatriated into the United States or less regulation, and that trumped everything.
Glennon Doyle:
So you think, you’re saying that the slippery slope from, of course, we do not support this dictator to be Trump, to he’s not that bad. You’ve seen that? You’ve experienced that with friends?
Kara Swisher:
Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Tons of them.
Glennon Doyle:
Which when you peel it back, it’s always, they say tax breaks?
Kara Swisher:
I think it is, and I think a little bit of, if I had to trace some of Elon’s stuff, to one event because he went on and on about it to me, was when Biden didn’t invite him to that EV summit, because unions. He can’t. He couldn’t because he’s a union supporter and Tesla’s virulently anti-union, and so he had GM there, I guess, for whatever. He lost his mind. “I am the father of blah blah blah.” It was crazy. He was very angry about that.
Glennon Doyle:
And the eldest son.
Kara Swisher:
And he was upset that he didn’t get his due. I think, COVID, kind of. We were in an interview and he was really demented about COVID early on. He was like, “It’s only going to kill 10 people. I have looked at all the studies,” and I was like, “Well, last time I checked, you weren’t a medical doctor, so I’m going to not take your word for it. And historically speaking, these kind of things usually kill a million people. That’s usually the number, I feel like.” And then he threatened to leave an interview and I thought that was weird at the time because he wasn’t really like that. He wasn’t foot stampy tantrumy. Well, now he is all the time, but he wasn’t.
So COVID did something. He started to talk about the deep state and them getting in the way of his business. He started to surround himself with people of that ilk. He was somewhat like that, but it was a very small part of his., it was mostly stupid penis jokes. It really wasn’t… Who cares? Although I always found a man, at the time, he was in his forties, a man in his forties still making boob jokes. I was always like, huh, wow, you really need to grow up or something. He’s 52, 53 now, I guess.
Amanda Doyle:
It’s funny that you say about that personal kind of insult of not being included in Biden’s EV Summit, because the same thing I heard about, I’m wondering if you found this to be true also, of Vance’s quick shift when Hillbilly Elegy was made into a movie and it was panned.
Kara Swisher:
Well, it was a bad movie.
Amanda Doyle:
It was a bad movie, but the LA people, the New York people, all were terrible, making fun of this movie, and that that coincided very closely with his “I am anti-elites. I hate…” It was almost like a, “You made fun of me.”
Kara Swisher:
I’m sure that irritated him. I mean, he got so much kudos for the book. Again, there were other books that were better, and I do think he created. He’s a very good writer, FYI, but some of it is embellished, I would say, embellished. It has to be. He’s telling a dramatic story. And I think a lot of people are really attacking him for all this stuff that isn’t… He really isn’t a hillbilly, and he sort of played into a trope about hillbillies. He really did mean. But if you want to talk to an actual hillbilly who actually made it and is of good humor, one might turn to Dolly Parton, who actually did grow up in those circumstances and doesn’t think that people from that area are irreparably damaged. He treats them with respect. These tropes that we have about different groups and definitely people from Appalachia, that’s what he played into and it was successful.
Glennon Doyle:
It is though. That’s always his vibe. Even in Hillbilly Elegy, I remember reading that long, long ago, and I remember distinctly feeling uncomfortable and feeling like, oh, this is not for people. This is not for them. Because there was a self-blaming vibe of it. There was a very distinct like, well, this is, if we did better.
Amanda Doyle:
I love what Tom Nichols said when he said that, he described his book as the smugness of a man who escaped a shipwreck and now has some thoughts about the swimming techniques of the people behind him who drowned.
Glennon Doyle:
Yes.
Kara Swisher:
That’s correct, yeah. That’s a really good way to put it. These areas do have people like JD Vance. We have immigrant stories like that. I got out of wherever, Sudan slash Ireland slash Italy slash whatever, and I made it. That’s terrific. I just think the idea of slagging the people who didn’t is unkind, would be my way of thinking about it.
Amanda Doyle:
So if we’ve established all of these connections, for the American listening to this, what do we say to the question of, how is JD Vance’s deep connection to these tech billionaires a problem for Americans, if that ticket gets elected?
Kara Swisher:
Well, he’s a butler for billionaires who have their own interests. That’s what I call them, butler. I’m sure he doesn’t like that.
Amanda Doyle:
So good.
Kara Swisher:
He’s such a strange guy. At one point, after he became more conservative, what was interesting is, at one point, he tweeted at me, and I should have saved the tweet, but he was like, “Liberals don’t believe in the future,” something like that.
Amanda Doyle:
JD Vance tweeted this?
Kara Swisher:
At me, yes. At me. I’m a favorite of their little group. They recently attacked me for something else the other day. They like to attack a high profile lesbian, that’s their favorite activity, who disagrees with them. What he tweeted was like, liberals, something along the lines of liberals don’t believe in the future, and I think I wrote back, I said, “Well, I have four kids and you just have two, so I believe in the future twice as much as you do.” No response. No response. No response. So they’re just all performative. They’re all performative. The whole thing is performative from these people.
Amanda Doyle:
What, from a policy perspective, does being a butler for billionaires mean? What will he be advancing, as the butler for billionaires, in office?
Kara Swisher:
Oh, they want tax breaks. They want no cyber laws. They want no regulation, so anything that would advantage in any defense contracts, privatization of things, just oligarchs hand over the state blank kind of thing that helps us, and let’s try to hinder our enemies. So I would expect that he try to get the Trump administration to go after open AI but not Elon.
One thing that’s interesting is, Elon is quite behind in AI compared to OpenAI, which he used to work with and now he’s angry at. He sued them and then unsued them, got rid of the lawsuit, but he’s quite behind. If you notice, what was really interesting, that union guy, Sean O’Brien, “I’m so brave talking about unions here at the Republican convention.” He didn’t mention Tesla. He mentioned Amazon, who’s a Trump enemy. Not Tesla, who is the most virulently anti-union company in tech? Period. End of story. How funny that he didn’t mention. How brave of you, Sean, how brave. What a brave thing for you to do. It’s so ridiculous.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s so interesting. It’s down, not only to we are going to pass policies for billionaires, it’s we are going to pass policies for these particular handful of billionaires.
Kara Swisher:
Probably, that’s what they’ll do. You can watch them do it in their attacks and stuff like that, the attacks. And, say, Elon’s attacks at OpenAI are just so obvious. He’s just hurt that he got kicked out essentially, or he left in a huff and then they’re like, “See ya later. Don’t let the door hit you on the way out.”
Amanda Doyle:
It’s like the EV conference. He’s just personally aggrieved.
Kara Swisher:
Yes, he’s a long time aggrieved person. He really is. He’s got a lot of aggrievements. Because being the world’s richest man is such a… It’s hard.
Amanda Doyle:
It’s a burden really. It’s a burden.
Glennon Doyle:
So when these guys are in meetings behind the scenes, when they’re on phone calls, when the Thiels and the Musks and the Trumps and the Vances are on phone calls, or sitting around a table-
Kara Swisher:
Sure.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay?
Kara Swisher:
Yeah.
Glennon Doyle:
Are they talking about only business? Are they talking about how to get tax cuts? Are they talking about how to personally become more powerful and rich?
Kara Swisher:
Probably not.
Glennon Doyle:
Or, are they talking about, we need mass deportation, we need anti-abortion? How does their conservative agenda-?
Kara Swisher:
I don’t think they have any values. I think you mistake this. I think they just now, I think for sure, Elon’s been really red pilled. He loves conspiracy theories now. They were on this idea that there were two shooters with the Trump thing, I don’t quite know why. They’re kind of like grassy-knolling it. And then suddenly, now, Biden is Weekend at Bernie’s and Kamala put out the letter. That’s their new thing, with no proof whatsoever. They’re just-
Amanda Doyle:
People are saying.
Kara Swisher:
And of course, when he appears, I don’t know what they’re going to do. Well, he’s been drugged or I don’t know. This is such a fuckin’ nonsense. It’s just ridiculous. Because they’re terrified. Because actually this invigorates and energizes, so they do anything to cheat. Like now, Republicans are trying to stop the money flow, saying he can’t give the money to Kamala, which will just piss off, say, Laurene Powell Jobs or Sheryl Sandberg or Reid Hoffman who are just as rich as them, and they’ll give more money. Whatever. Good luck. Good luck with that.
Elon uses lawsuits a lot to slow people down, and then ends up either dumping them or losing them, often. That’s one of their techniques. Peter is much more successful at lawsuits than… But they use them as a tool.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. But do you believe that they believe in this extreme conservative agenda? Do you believe that they even believe in mass deportation, in women’s rights being repealed, in all of that? Is that important to them or is that just the banner that they’re putting out?
Kara Swisher:
I don’t think they care. Some of them do believe in certain things. Some of them don’t, individually. I just don’t think they have a value system that you and I might have. I think they think they’re golden gods. Someone told me, which I thought was actually true, that the problem with Elon is he thinks he’s… I did an interview where he talked about that we’re maybe all in a simulation, that this isn’t real. I think sometimes I think they think that. That they actually… Several of them believe it, by the way. Tony Hsieh who died, absolutely was like, “Kara, we’re in a simulation.” I’m like, “Okay, Tony.” He’s the one that ended up dying, sadly, tragically. He was a lovely guy, but really was quite bent mentally. So Elon believed there was a simulation possibly, and that this isn’t real.
And one person pointed out to me that he thinks he’s, and I think this is true, I thought that was the best explanation, he’s living in a video game and he thinks he’s ready player one. He’s the main character, so nothing matters. He has no empathy. Talk about someone who has a trans kid being so vile about trans issues, and pretending it’s because he cares about kids. If he cared about kids, he wouldn’t be so vile to his child. It’s sad, and I’ve been in touch with several family members. That poor kid. The Paul Pelosi thing that he did, that’s where I really-
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, God.
Kara Swisher:
That was just, why? What would possess you? That’s a choice at some point.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s so interesting though, and it helps to sympathize with people who actually do have a set of values and are trying to present a case against this other thing, that you just constantly feel like you’re grabbing sand and there’s nowhere to hold onto and that is the point. It’s just chaos, say whatever, have no value.
Kara Swisher:
I think they do have a disdain for government. They don’t like the system and they think they’re smarter. That is not a fresh thing from [inaudible 00:29:31]. They just think they can do government better. But certain things don’t avail themselves with tech solutions. And by the way, they don’t have the greatest record of safety. They don’t have the greatest record. It’s literally as if chemical companies had no rules on them. You know what they do? They would pollute things, because they’re capitalists.
Amanda Doyle:
Exactly. And the regulations, I mean, and that’s what they’re promising to do in this administration, is they’re promising, the industries that have rules now, they’re saying that they’re going to go in and take all of those away too. But what a better way, if you believe that government is a stupid idea, and that the best case is that it doesn’t exist, then your best choice is to put yourself in the decision-making power of the government.
Kara Swisher:
Sure. That’s right. And they find it easy because it’s so cheap. Politicians are such cheap whores. I mean, it only cost them $15 million to get him into… That’s not anything to Peter. The way it was done, it sounds like to me, that Trump was sort of veering different ways. When you’re rooting for Rupert Murdoch’s choice, you know things are fucked, right? Doug Burgum would’ve been fine. He’s certainly competent, but toady, whatever. He’s certainly competent. He’s certainly not incompetent. And same thing with Marco Rubio. Not a fan, but not incompetent, if you want to be fair to people.
Amanda Doyle:
If you’re interested in actually governing.
Kara Swisher:
Governing, that’s correct.
Amanda Doyle:
There were people. But if you’re interested in not governing, this is your choice.
Kara Swisher:
What was interesting, it sounds like that he made that choice on Sunday, after he got shot, so he’s probably on painkillers. He’s probably having his son going,, and Elon Musk calling him and petting him all day long and oh my God, Elon Musk is calling me. You can see how they could easily, and that Rupert Murdoch was mean to me. I’m not going… This is how decisions are made, just FYI. In some way, I said to someone that weekend, I said, I almost feel sorry. I almost feel sorry for Trump, because I wouldn’t turn my back on any of these people. I think Trump is just the vehicle for them, and they pump him up with, oh, sir, the oh, sir, you’re so smart. Aren’t you amazing? And he’s just a vehicle.
Same thing with Bannon. He’s a vehicle. Bannon called him a vehicle, at least Bannon’s being honest about what he’s doing, which is using Trump as… Trump has no values whatsoever, like zero, I would say. If it suited him tomorrow to say everyone can have an abortion on demand, he’d do it if it suited him. He doesn’t care.
Amanda Doyle:
Well, he wants to be cool. Trump wants to be cool, and that’s the highest value. And he equates cool with rich and powerful. So when he’s in that room, and he literally, in a recent fundraiser where Vance was in the room, and all the billionaires were in the room, he said, who should I pick for VP? And they said, Vance. And he’s like, so I’ll make the cool people think I’m cool. I don’t think the calculus is that, but who’s easier to control than someone who all you have to do is make them feel cool. Very easy.
Kara Swisher:
Yes, I agree. No, he just needs to be petted. That’s all you need to do is say, you’re so smart or you’re so attractive. You’re so virile, with this guy, so he’s kind of pretty easy. He’s kind of an easy one.
I do think, actually, of all of them, I think Trump really does think we waste money on wars. I think where it falls is, this idea that, at some point, the world is an ugly place and we do have to intervene. Imagine this group being in charge during Nazism. There was an America First group that was very powerful, and it was Henry Ford. It was Charles Lindbergh. It was all kinds of powerful people. A guy who ran the Chicago Tribune, which was Colonel McCormack, Tom McCormack. There was a group like this back when, that was doing the same stuff. But in that regard, I do think Trump, that is his inclination, is to not be globally involved. These people take it to an extreme. What do we need to save anybody for? Why do we need to intervene anywhere? And different people have a version of America that’s different?
Glennon Doyle:
Well, if you’re in a simulation, I mean, it really feels that way. If you’re in a simulation, that sort of nihilism, like nothing matters, people don’t matter, that is what they have been trying to wear us into. I feel it.
Kara Swisher:
Yes, that’s correct.
Glennon Doyle:
And so, it’s either nothing matters or something matters.
Kara Swisher:
Well, it’s capitalism at its ugliest, right? There’s a version of capitalism. I’m a capitalist. You’re an entrepreneur, right? It’s a question of, what kind of capitalism do you want? Do you have to do it where everybody loses but you? Or can you do it in a way that’s much more generous, where you lift a lot of people up? That’s my version of capitalism, is that, the more people do better, the better you do, right? The better audience, the better educated, the better this, the the more stable world.
Glennon Doyle:
Do you believe, right now, that the leadership of whatever might be next in the Republican Party, we believe is a chaos and a nothing matter simulation situation?
Kara Swisher:
It’s a Trump party. I wouldn’t call it the Republican Party.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. Well, they’re uniting over there.
Kara Swisher:
Some of them are. There’s a whole lot of discontent underneath. Mike Gallagher who was on the China Committee, boy, don’t I agree with him on lots of things, but he’s a really intelligent, someone you can have a discussion with about it. He left the party. He quit. You know why? Because he didn’t want to be part of the permanent kiss ass crowd. He wants to run for president someday when Trump is gone, as inevitably he will be. And so he didn’t want to sully himself with these people at this point, which is what JD Vance is willing to do. He’s willing to bend his knee to these people.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s the danger of Vance for me, is that, there is, I think, a very naive perspective, that used to be true, which is, when Trump is gone, Trumpism is gone, because it is a cult of personality, because it is all him. And then we will revert to the Republican Party of yore.
Kara Swisher:
Oh, no, no, no. No, no, no. No. There’s got to be any yore. It’s going to be a different Republican party.
Amanda Doyle:
But Vance is the one. He is-
Kara Swisher:
No, he’s not. No, he’s not. There are so many… There are… No, I don’t think he is. I don’t he’s up to the task because everything he’s failed upward. He doesn’t excite people in the same way that Trump does.
And look, I am not pro-Trump, but when he started running in 2016, I had watched every Apprentice. I understood his appeal. He was self-deprecating. He was funny. He was interesting. He seemed like he told it to man. He was a poor person’s version of a rich person. Like, oh, he must be successful even though the facts were not, that wasn’t the case. Talk about failing upward. And I did understand his appeal. And in the way Reagan was, he’s one of these spectacular political creatures. Whether you like him or not, he’s definitely appealing. And I’m not so sure it survives him. Certainly, not with his own children.
Glennon Doyle:
If that side is chaos and nothingness and a simulation. Do you, in your conversations with your friends, behind the scenes, believe that there is there there on the other side?
Kara Swisher:
On the Democrats?
Glennon Doyle:
Yes.
Kara Swisher:
For the Republicans?
Glennon Doyle:
On the Democrat side, do you believe that there is a set of values that they are navigating?
Kara Swisher:
I do. They’re different. They’re different. Years ago, Nancy Pelosi asked me to come speak in front of the Democratic caucus. It was out at a hotel in Virginia, one of those big old empty hotels. And I brought my son, who at the time was, one of my kids, was maybe 12, something like that. And I spoke to them and we stayed there for the day, and we’re just sort of witnessing everything. And my son goes up to Nancy Pelosi, he goes, “None of these people agree with each other. And they’re all arguing and they’re all different arguments and this and that.” And she goes, “That’s the beauty of it. We are allowed to disagree in this group. We don’t have to be in lockstep in this cultish kind of cultish personality.” There was a cult around Reagan, same thing. And she goes, “And I’m the grandma who knocks him into line,” which she’s clearly done in this case.
Glennon Doyle:
Yes, she has.
Kara Swisher:
She’s done it again. And I think that’s the case. Everyone’s like, oh, it’s so dysfunctional. I don’t think it’s dysfunctional to have done this this way. It was a lot of disagreement that got a little bit testy, that’s for sure, but so what. I think it’s very healthy to have these. You’d never see this. There are tons of people in the Republican Party who really think Trump is problematic and terrible and et cetera, et cetera, and they just can’t speak up. Our party has the problem as we speak up too much, right? There’s too much speaking up, and I think that’s healthy. I do think that’s healthy, even if it presents as dysfunctional.
Glennon Doyle:
Me too. Me too. All right, Kara, how are you feeling in this moment about the direction the Democratic Party is going right now?
Kara Swisher:
I feel good about it. I really like Kamala Harris. I’ve known her since she was a DA in San Francisco. I know her very well. First of all, it starts off, woman of color, so therefore, she starts 10 yards behind, no matter what she does. And I think people will start to really, if they get a really good taste of her, will be very interested in her. She’s a really interesting character. I think she’s got a real chance. I really do. People are dying for a choice that’s not two old men. And I think, Biden did a real thing here.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah, he did.
Kara Swisher:
Can you imagine giving up the frigging presidency? I mean, people should not have given him such a hard time. That’s a tough thing to do.
Glennon Doyle:
And he did it.
Abby Wambach:
It was a really beautiful thing for him to do.
Kara Swisher:
Yeah.
Amanda Doyle:
Okay. I know a last thing. Who do you think’s the most effective VP pick for her?
Kara Swisher:
Probably Mark Kelly.
Glennon Doyle:
But don’t we need him? I agree totally, but don’t we need him in the Senate?
Kara Swisher:
No, no, because Katie Hobbs will appoint the senator. He gets to stay Senator. Same thing with JD Vance. If he doesn’t win, he gets to stay senator. And if he does then Katie Hobbs is the one that appoints… The Democratic governor appoints him.
Amanda Doyle:
God, he’d be so good. He’d be so good.
Kara Swisher:
He would be my choice. Obviously, I’d love a Buttigieg one because he’s such a killer debater.
Glennon Doyle:
Yes.
Kara Swisher:
But it’s probably a little too much for people. Gay. I hate to say it, but there’s anti-gay stuff.
Amanda Doyle:
No Cooper? You don’t think North Carolina Cooper is-?
Kara Swisher:
Cooper is another one, I suppose. I don’t know much about him. I think that’s harder because then we have a governor there. Same thing with Shapiro. I’ve interviewed him. I haven’t interviewed Cooper yet, but I’ve spent a lot of time with Shapiro. We did a great long interview last year. Really impressive and very well liked. My brother’s a Republican and he likes him. He’s liked by a lot of people, and I think he’s an astonishingly talented person. I would love a Gretchen Whitmer-Kamala thing. Just come on, everybody. Let’s have women.
Amanda Doyle:
We’re all in.
Kara Swisher:
If it wasn’t such a risk, if it wasn’t such a risk, I would-
Amanda Doyle:
She’s the obvious one, if it wasn’t a risk.
Kara Swisher:
She’s such a talent. Talk about a talented, natural politician. She’s such a natural. People love her in Michigan, even if they don’t like her. She’s one of those. Same with Shapiro in Pennsylvania. You’ve got Gavin. You’ve got the Governor of New Mexico is fantastic. She’s a spark plug. You’ve got Pritzker-
Amanda Doyle:
What about Beshear?
Kara Swisher:
Beshear? They’re all talented. The Democrats have a real bench. And unfortunately, for the Republicans, is they’re killing their top ones. Nikki. Haley is a talented. Whether you like her or not, she’s talented. Same thing with Mike Gallagher. There’s a spate of people who are super talented, that I think would be very appealing to people if they just got Trump out of the way. But Vance is not the way to go, on any of this.
Glennon Doyle:
Kara, thank you.
Kara Swisher:
No problem. Good luck. Don’t look worried. Why are you worried today? Have a little moment of joy. My wife is like this.
Glennon Doyle:
All right.
Kara Swisher:
She came home. She goes, I’m finally… Just stop complaining and get there. Go for it. Stop it. Stop it.
Amanda Doyle:
I feel delighted. I feel like, you know how when you’re like, maybe, maybe, but you’re worried about having your own hope because you think your hope is going to break your heart.
Kara Swisher:
It doesn’t matter.
Amanda Doyle:
And then it happened.
Kara Swisher:
They don’t care. They don’t care on the other side. Let me just say, just stop complaining. This is what we got. This is our ships, people. Play it through.
Amanda Doyle:
Exactly. We are all in. We don’t have time to F around. We are all in.
Kara Swisher:
That’s right. Anyway, thank you guys so much.
Glennon Doyle:
Thank you. Bye, pod squad.
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We can do Hard Things is created and hosted by Glennon Doyle, Abby Wambach, and Amanda Doyle, in partnership with Odyssey. Our executive producer is Jenna Weiss-Berman, and the show is produced by Lauren LoGrasso, Allison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.