Biden’s Leaked Audio: Reactions from Briahna Joy Gray & Katie

00:01
hello and welcome to the katie helper
00:03
show sorry if i’m speaking
00:04
more softly than usual i have some semi
00:06
sleeping um
00:07
beasts in the in the room from which i’m
00:10
broadcasting
00:11
um but so excited to be joined by
00:13
honestly like basic
00:15
major staple of the show uh beyond the
00:17
joyride
00:20
it’s always such a pleasure katie you’re
00:21
my number one favorite stop you know
00:22
that
00:23
thank you and we’re both like i guess
00:24
we’re both kind of night owls right so
00:26
we’re taking advantage of that
00:27
to have this emergency
00:31
this is like the beginning of my evening
00:33
usually i know we just woke up
00:37
but uh hi everyone thanks so much for
00:38
stopping by and brie you want to just
00:40
kind of walk us through
00:41
what is happening what we’re responding
00:44
to basically it goes under the umbrella
00:45
of biden’s leaks but um
00:47
can you set up the context yeah so
00:50
i believe it was two days ago
00:56
the intercept released a
00:59
video of um a meeting that joe biden and
01:03
kamala harris had with representatives
01:05
from
01:06
the black community um reverend al
01:08
sharpton um
01:10
uh the head of the naacp um
01:13
vina gupta from um a legal defense fund
01:17
um cedric richardson who has been in the
01:20
press a great deal
01:21
because he was picked as a environmental
01:24
liaison and one of
01:26
biden’s chief aides who on the tape he
01:28
says is going to be in the room with me
01:29
all the time and yet comes from one of
01:30
the most
01:31
polluted districts in the country but
01:34
is black and that was kind of put out
01:37
there as a shield for him
01:38
by certain journalists on twitter
01:43
sunrise movement for criticizing him
01:45
right influential black staffer as he
01:47
calls him yeah
01:48
right um so what the gist of this
01:51
meeting was
01:52
each person takes 10 minutes or so to
01:55
outline their request of the
01:56
administration
01:57
and what was so kind of galling as joe
01:59
biden
02:00
responds in that kind of classic joe
02:03
biden
02:04
pushy dictatorial bullyish tone that
02:07
we’ve seen from him a lot but which for
02:08
some reason never really got picked up
02:11
by the media or he never got
02:12
characterized as a bully in any
02:14
meaningful way
02:15
especially when you compare him to how
02:17
bernie sanders was treated
02:18
um but he basically tells them all the
02:21
reasons
02:22
why they should know that he’s gonna do
02:23
the right thing i mean what i say
02:25
um and says a lot of particularly choice
02:28
things that we’re gonna run through and
02:30
play some clips i think
02:32
but i think the biggest story and the
02:34
focus of the intercepts reporting
02:36
is the extent to which um uh
02:40
sorry johnson what’s his first name from
02:41
the naacp um
02:44
uh what is it derek johnson where
02:47
the naacp very gently raises to joe
02:51
biden and everyone
02:52
is operating in the most gentle
02:56
way almost like they’re dealing they’re
02:58
like i don’t want to say abuse victims
02:59
but like
03:00
they know that he has a temper and they
03:01
are making the most
03:03
you can clear they really care about
03:04
what they’re off they’re asking him for
03:06
but they’re
03:06
asking him in a way that they hope is
03:08
going to maximize him listening and not
03:10
responding in the reactionary what he
03:12
kind of does at all
03:14
right and so he suggests that appointing
03:16
tom vilsek
03:18
to secretary of agriculture would be a
03:21
mistake in particular in georgia
03:23
where he has a bad reputation for two
03:24
reasons one because he’s a big ag guy
03:27
who small farmers detest because he
03:30
supports a lot of trade policies that
03:31
are very harmful to small farms he’s
03:33
been a dairy industry lobbyist
03:35
um since he left the obama
03:37
administration where he had the same
03:38
post
03:39
and second of all a lot of black groups
03:41
were pushing for
03:43
um marsha fudge to be in that position
03:45
she’s well qualified to do it
03:47
and instead marcia fudge has been
03:49
sidelined into hud which is
03:52
classically a post that black people get
03:56
sidelined into and something that she
03:57
had raised as a concern before the picks
03:59
were actually announced
04:00
and secondarily uh vilsack is a problem
04:03
because he very
04:04
famously fired shirley sherrod after
04:07
some out of context
04:08
statements were made public um during
04:10
the obama administration
04:12
um
04:17
and before the full remarks were ever
04:21
examined very very quickly she was let
04:23
go and she by contrast was very popular
04:25
in the state
04:26
is a civil rights icon of sorts and is
04:28
very popular
04:29
despite being black with georgia farmers
04:32
um
04:33
so uh after hearing that vice joe biden
04:36
did not react
04:38
pleasantly do we want to go straight to
04:41
the clip
04:42
yeah and just so people know it’s just
04:43
so it’s like you kind of can’t make it
04:45
up because she literally said a few days
04:46
ago martial fudge
04:48
as this country becomes more and more
04:49
diverse we’re going to have to stop
04:51
looking at only
04:52
certain agencies as those that fit
04:53
people like me in
04:55
you know it’s always we want to put the
04:57
black person in labor or hud
04:59
and then biden turns around and as you
05:02
said despite her interest and expertise
05:03
in agriculture
05:04
puts her into hud so yeah showing
05:07
instead of telling
05:09
but yeah let’s should we go to some of
05:10
the audio tape yeah it’s at it’s at
05:13
121.51
05:14
okay great
05:20
okay 121
05:25
here we go
05:28
okay 121.51 ish
05:36
okay
05:39
everyone like while i’m getting this up
05:41
and also make sure you follow brianna on
05:43
twitter obviously
05:44
um like subscribe to this channel
05:48
so one section katie lose her voice no
05:50
katie’s trying not to wake up all the
05:51
other people
05:52
in her house yeah uh i dragged her into
05:54
this my apologies
05:55
late night very very very persuasion
05:59
um i was i was did not need to be peer
06:02
pressured okay
06:03
you ready freddy let me make sure i have
06:05
this can you guys hear me though i know
06:07
i’m not being as
06:08
expressive as usual
06:13
but i’m audible
06:20
okay
06:28
equity equality fairness
06:31
the work that we need to do as an
06:33
administration cannot get done without
06:35
your involvement partnership support
06:38
and influence she sounds like she’s
06:40
reading and so i say
06:42
hello to all of the friends yeah she
06:43
didn’t talk really quickly
06:45
i’m worried that i didn’t give me the
06:46
right time
06:59
as soon as she stops talking it should
07:01
be the clip that we’re talking about
07:02
what happened it’s actually me it’s my
07:03
bed
07:04
oh okay somehow it moved
07:07
it’s 121.50 you said yeah you wanted me
07:11
to be concerned
07:12
derek i think it was you said it yeah is
07:14
it earlier than this oh this is it
07:16
okay that was right on he’s talking to
07:19
derek john
07:20
johnson right from the naacp in case
07:21
you’re just joining us uh
07:23
dealing with um vilsack as uh
07:26
in uh in terms of uh agriculture
07:30
well first of all you can learn more
07:32
about vilsack’s record but my point is
07:34
this
07:34
you’ll learn more about it i think we
07:35
should make that a big issue going into
07:37
before
07:38
january 5th when the election takes
07:41
place
07:41
down in in
07:46
georgia but i also don’t think we should
07:48
get too far ahead of ourselves
07:51
on dealing with police reform
07:54
in that because they’ve already labeled
07:56
us as being
07:58
defund the police anything we put
08:00
forward in terms of the organizational
08:02
structure
08:03
to change policing which i promise you
08:05
will occur
08:06
promise you just think to yourself and
08:09
give me advice whether we should do that
08:11
before january 5th because that’s how
08:13
they beat the living hell out of us
08:15
across the country saying that we’re
08:18
talking about defunding the police
08:20
we’re not we’re talking about holding
08:22
them accountable
08:23
we’re talking about giving them money to
08:26
do the right
08:27
things we’re talking about putting more
08:28
psychologists and psychiatrists
08:31
on the telephones when the 9-1-1 calls
08:33
through
08:34
we’re talking about spending money to
08:36
enable them to do their
08:38
jobs better not more
08:41
with more force with less force
08:45
but that’s i just raise it with you to
08:47
think about i mean part of what
08:48
i’m amazing about between now and
08:51
january
08:53
at him he’s like trying not to he’s
08:55
literally like trying to keep his mouth
08:56
closed i mean part of what’s amazing
08:58
about this is how
08:59
little pushback anybody gives in the
09:01
context of this call with the exception
09:02
of sherlin eiffel who
09:04
like kind of does like she interrupts
09:07
him
09:08
later on to bring it back to an earlier
09:10
point and he kind of bulldozes it
09:11
through it again she still does so
09:13
very very very gently so obviously
09:15
what’s wild about this response is that
09:17
he took
09:18
a legitimate concern about what’s going
09:21
on
09:21
in georgia and the risks of a tom velcek
09:25
appointment to this crucial state that
09:26
the whole party has turned its eye to
09:29
and ignores that legitimate critique and
09:32
pivots to defund the police
09:34
as the be-all end-all destroyer of
09:36
democratic
09:37
futures and when of course we know
09:39
there’s absolutely no
09:40
evidence in the world to point to the
09:42
fact that to fund the
09:44
defend the police is what caused the
09:46
terrible down ballot results
09:47
um on election day yeah and also who
09:50
said it that’s the other thing like who
09:52
was who was
09:53
uh campaigning on that slogan nobody i
09:55
mean well corey bush
09:56
thank you what right now in a purple
09:59
sting
10:00
right right yeah completely defying all
10:02
of the subtle
10:03
logic and expectations so we all know
10:05
that joe biden is crap you know
10:07
sorry i could measure my moderate a
10:09
little bit because
10:10
there’s room for improvement right
10:12
there’s some cooling paints
10:13
right but it’s almost as though you can
10:14
see them setting up the narrative
10:17
for if they lose in georgia it’s going
10:20
to be defending the police and there
10:21
won’t be even a modicum
10:22
of press attention to whether or not the
10:25
tom vilsack
10:26
appointment had an effect in an estate
10:29
that
10:29
is heavily rural and his rural
10:31
population is diverse
10:33
and black and white farmers alike have a
10:35
problem with this pick
10:37
right and also there’ll be no
10:38
examination of you know what
10:40
the effect of assaf being totally
10:42
moderate not inspiring running on
10:44
literally nothing except not being a
10:45
republican and to be fair
10:47
his guy his opponent is so awful that
10:49
that’s like some
10:50
you know that’s a that’s something to
10:52
run on but of course that’s not really
10:53
that doesn’t get people out to the polls
10:55
right of course and we also need i mean
10:58
i’m just making them
10:59
on the most cynical level like forget
11:00
the fact that this is medicare for all
11:02
is a life and death moral issue like
11:04
putting that aside it’s just a stupid
11:05
tactic to just be running against the
11:08
republican incumbent
11:10
um yeah it’s interesting though it’s
11:12
kind of like he’s like well you know
11:13
since we’re talking about the whole
11:14
georgia black thing
11:15
let me just draw your attention to
11:17
another whole georgia black thing i
11:18
would like you to address
11:19
like it’s not it doesn’t respond to what
11:21
they’re saying at all
11:23
yeah like not only not taking
11:25
responsibility
11:26
or addressing it he’s like and i’ll tell
11:27
you something else
11:29
yeah he’s like that throughout too i
11:30
mean people can characterize it how they
11:33
want to characterize it and i know a lot
11:34
of liberals are very offended by the
11:36
idea that
11:37
he perhaps is not as you know cogent as
11:40
he used to be
11:41
but the reality is i called obama
11:44
uh clean and articulate yeah but the
11:46
halcyon day
11:48
but when you listen to the whole thing
11:50
like i was listening to roland martin
11:52
did a breakdown and he
11:53
actually was making some solid points um
11:56
but
11:57
there was somebody on the panel who was
11:59
like i can’t i don’t respect this clip
12:01
because one is from the intercept and
12:02
two it’s only 18 minutes and then i’m
12:04
sure they doctored it well here’s the
12:06
whole clip and i was you know the whole
12:07
i had listened to the whole clip and the
12:08
whole clip
12:09
is not better for bite and what it
12:11
really reveals is how
12:13
meandering and unfocused he is
12:16
and how he keeps dipping into these
12:18
weird racial asides one of which i want
12:20
us to go to next katie because i haven’t
12:22
heard anybody draw any attention to this
12:23
yet
12:24
because it’s not really substantive
12:25
enough news value but it’s just so
12:27
bizarre
12:28
where is it it’s at 128.
12:32
so i mean kamala finally gets a chance
12:33
to speak and he interrupts her
12:35
immediately to say this okay
12:38
128.
12:43
is it 128-0 more or less yeah but i want
12:46
to just catch the end of kamla so we can
12:47
hear the interruption
12:49
of course so let’s just come up with a
12:50
plan and
12:52
and a road map for how we mark you’re
12:54
going to be angry
12:55
yeah i want to say one more thing i am
12:58
incredibly
12:59
optimistic let me tell you why
13:03
i’m incredibly optimistic because
13:06
society is changing
13:08
the z generation and young millennials
13:11
are changing
13:12
the ones he has no empathy you’re not
13:13
going to remember maybe please know
13:14
about
13:15
millennials take a look at what is
13:17
happening
13:18
watch this 15 years ago
13:22
could you turn on the television and see
13:26
three or four out of seven commercials
13:28
be biracial commercials
13:31
what do you think guys huh what do you
13:33
think
13:35
you want to know where society’s going
13:37
erc
13:38
watch entertainment watch the profit
13:41
motive
13:43
why are these commercials
13:46
so many of them biracial the young
13:49
generation
13:50
is changing they’re demanding
13:53
more they don’t come with the baggies
13:58
maybe 10 20 25 of them are pure racist
14:01
who knows
14:02
but the vast majority the vast majority
14:06
are my racial commercial enthusiasm
14:10
when i was coming up and the second
14:12
thing has changed
14:14
is that you and i have talked about this
14:16
al
14:19
remember what dr king said okay he’s
14:22
about to go to another crazy thing
14:23
for a second yeah so when i listened to
14:25
that for the first time
14:26
i like i lost my mind
14:31
i i i truly don’t know what that is or
14:34
what that’s supposed to mean
14:35
like the idea that you just sat through
14:37
an hour of
14:38
some of the most preeminent civil rights
14:40
figures of our time
14:44
green book was a great film like he just
14:46
these people everyone on this call very
14:48
seriously and meaningfully put
14:50
to him a whole list of really grave
14:53
concerns
14:55
serious concerns to the black community
14:57
in particular is dealing with in this
14:58
car at this crisis point
15:00
you know sherlock eiffel called on him
15:01
in particular please please please
15:03
mr future president president-elect can
15:05
you use your executive authority
15:08
to do all of these things she gave a
15:09
whole list of things that he could do
15:12
that he could do even if things go south
15:14
in georgia
15:15
and he came back and there’s a whole
15:18
soliloquy that we should
15:19
go back to about how he wasn’t going to
15:20
use executive authority and then was to
15:22
come back and interrupt
15:24
kamala harris his the first black vice
15:26
president
15:27
to offer this little tidbit about how
15:29
things aren’t really looking so terrible
15:31
because there are a lot of biracial kids
15:34
and television commercials these days
15:37
yeah someone wrote anthony uh wrote um
15:40
wait where is this someone wrote
15:42
arrested development it went really
15:44
quickly
15:45
but someone said this is like arrested
15:46
development did i
15:48
make that up no this is like arrested
15:49
development i don’t even know what you
15:50
mean
15:51
sorry the randomness of it it is it is
15:55
like
15:55
there’s something about it i don’t know
15:56
what it is but that that really rings
15:58
true to me yeah
15:59
also like how i mean commercials should
16:03
be more bi-racial
16:04
you were born in the what the 40s like
16:08
they didn’t have black people on
16:10
commercials much less families
16:12
right yeah and in the idea that the
16:16
profit motive is difficult
16:18
right well capitalism recognizes black
16:20
people can buy things now so
16:22
look at that guys do you ever think
16:23
about that naacp people
16:26
oh my gosh okay so where’s the
16:28
outrageous so he goes on i don’t know i
16:30
mean this isn’t like
16:31
the most news substantive bit either but
16:33
the next little
16:35
soliloquy is him talking about dogs
16:38
biting the flesh of black people in the
16:40
civil rights movement
16:42
and it’s just it’s visceral it’s a lot
16:44
yeah
16:45
i mean when you’re the thing is that
16:47
that’s what kept him away from the civil
16:48
rights movement he really
16:50
fears dogs so that’s why he wasn’t there
16:52
well according to him
16:54
he was one of the leaders of the civil
16:55
rights movement and it’s a little quick
16:57
that i don’t think we should play
16:58
he talks about how well maybe it’s a
17:00
part and parcel of this but he talks
17:01
about
17:02
how you know he knew how much it changed
17:04
because when he was a student
17:05
out of college in delaware and he used
17:08
to stand on the train tracks he could
17:09
see one side of the town that was white
17:10
and developed on one side of the town
17:12
that was black and not
17:14
and later as he stood on the train
17:15
tracks waiting for the train to arrive
17:17
to take him
17:18
to the inauguration or to meet up with
17:20
barack obama or whatever to be the
17:22
first black president of the united
17:23
states of america um
17:25
he thought wow we went from that to now
17:27
i’m catching the train to to get barack
17:29
obama inaugurated and look how far we’ve
17:31
come
17:32
yeah i mean it’s like texas he said that
17:34
during one of the
17:36
news things right during one of the um
17:38
town halls
17:39
oh this is a bit that he’s been playing
17:41
oh yeah he did that where was the one in
17:42
florida where he where he was like
17:44
you know totally pandered to some
17:46
miamian
17:47
uh concerned about like the socialists
17:50
and he you know was one of the many
17:51
times during the campaign
17:52
he mentioned that he he’s the one who
17:54
beat the socialist but yeah he brought
17:55
up that story i’m sure it’s in a book
17:57
too
17:57
i’m sure but okay let’s let’s uh
18:02
yeah okay let’s play this
18:05
i mean he did to be fair i just want
18:06
people to know he was a lifeguard in a
18:09
swimming pool that black people swam in
18:12
um he did a lot of work anti-racist
18:15
training with corn pop
18:17
um peace be upon him and he also
18:20
um black children would would play with
18:22
his golden leg hair do you remember that
18:24
yeah you can’t make this stuff up and
18:26
somehow you know
18:27
look this this i will acknowledge that
18:29
that stuff isn’t the most important
18:31
stuff
18:31
but it’s important in so far as it’s
18:33
useful i think it’s necessary that we
18:34
point out the media’s bias angle of this
18:37
because if i’m sorry bernie sanders or
18:39
any other
18:40
progressive candidate who was on the
18:42
wrong side of the corporate aisle
18:44
would have said any of that it would
18:45
have been playing non-stop
18:48
yeah how about just lying how about
18:50
saying you got arrested visiting
18:52
um nelson mandela and you then didn’t
18:54
get arrested at all there was no
18:56
arrest yeah andrew young was like no i
18:58
was there he didn’t get arrested i mean
18:59
it’s just insane
19:00
yeah okay so let’s play some more of
19:02
this
19:05
on those black women and sig the dogs on
19:07
them ripping their clothes off
19:08
going to their sunday go to church best
19:11
and they’re ripping the skin off of
19:12
those kids
19:14
he said it was response that was
19:16
straight from the heart of the civil
19:17
rights movement
19:19
remember what he said the quote that was
19:24
most significantly and happened in terms
19:26
of freedom
19:28
what happened was we got the voting
19:29
rights act and the civil rights act out
19:31
of that
19:32
that young man who stood with a camera
19:36
a cell phone like millions of people
19:38
have
19:39
and stood there for eight minutes and 46
19:42
seconds
19:43
and took a picture of george floyd
19:46
asking for his mom
19:48
seeing his nose broken against that curb
19:52
all of a sudden what happened you saw a
19:55
response around
19:56
america and around the world the world
20:00
doesn’t mean we don’t have a big fight
20:02
to go but the first thing we had to do
20:04
because of you we get it done is get rid
20:07
of the racist
20:08
donald trump the first thing don’t
20:11
define the police thing all we got to do
20:13
is go back and appeal to those folks he
20:15
won right i mean who
20:16
just tell me that some of that 70 by
20:20
giving them anything
20:21
but appeal by moving hard
20:24
toward what will benefit them as well
20:28
if you notice they’re giving them
20:29
something whenever i make those speeches
20:30
about
20:32
civil liberties
20:40
i make them to white chambers of
20:42
commerce i make them the white
20:44
audiences because i got to remind them
20:47
you want your community to look better
20:50
make sure black folks can own a house
20:53
you want to make sure your community
20:55
does better make sure everybody’s making
20:57
15 bucks an hour minimum
20:59
you want to make your community better
21:01
make sure everybody’s making more money
21:04
it’s never never never never never
21:07
never never hurt the wealthy they always
21:11
do better
21:12
but it gives the poorer way up and the
21:14
middle class is shot
21:16
so yeah i just think we have a way i
21:18
think the americans we should probably
21:20
move to a different part but like that’s
21:21
you you get the gist of how this goes
21:22
right he just he grant he grandstands
21:25
and tells his
21:26
classic tales in a way that’s completely
21:30
non-responsive to the specific and
21:31
substantive concerns that have been
21:33
raised by this panel
21:34
right um and to see if there’s any
21:37
remarks from the people on the panel
21:39
just then as you saw in that clip it was
21:41
it was people kind of ushering him on
21:44
and saying yes that’s right that’s right
21:46
um no pushback at all except from anyone
21:49
except for sherlin eiffel and very
21:50
little revealed even in the facial
21:51
expressions
21:52
i i don’t i’m almost impressed i know
21:55
did they take something before
21:57
i don’t know what you could even take
21:58
that would make you like that
22:01
yeah um okay
22:05
fire’s taken off oh my gosh yeah
22:08
i mean there are a couple of okay so one
22:11
significant
22:12
another significant moment that hasn’t
22:13
really been reported out as of yet
22:15
is at 1 19 16.
22:19
um there has been
22:23
there have been i don’t know if you saw
22:24
this katie some stories floated about
22:27
maya harris who’s kamala harris’s sister
22:30
and was hillary clinton’s campaign
22:32
manager she was something senior on the
22:33
hillary campaign
22:35
senior adviser or something like that
22:39
her husband tony west who’s chief legal
22:42
officer
22:43
at uber being floated for attorney
22:45
general
22:47
and one of the points that was made
22:49
really strongly by vanita gupta from
22:51
the naacp legal defense fund here
22:54
was that the whoever fills that role
22:58
needs to be really familiar with the
23:01
office and to be able to start on
23:02
on day one given how much donald trump
23:05
has done to degrade
23:06
all the civil rights protections all the
23:08
voting rights protections all the things
23:09
we’ve been talking about the last four
23:10
years
23:11
that we’re supposed to care a lot about
23:12
which democrats have done a lot of
23:14
posturing around
23:15
and tony west would be kind of a clear
23:17
nepotism
23:18
slap in the face um and joe biden is
23:22
somewhat responsive
23:24
and might give it gives us some clues
23:25
here into who it might be
23:28
at 1 19 16.
23:34
the department you will see that as well
23:37
who need you did a hell of a job in the
23:39
civil rights event i
23:40
i really mean it but you will see
23:43
that is critical and i
23:46
think it matters how
23:50
we start off i’ve again i
23:53
i’ll conclude by saying one of the
23:55
things i learned
23:56
early on was that
23:59
if in order to get things done in the
24:01
congress or the senate
24:04
i start off by always going after my
24:07
opponent’s
24:07
motive i’m never getting done saying
24:10
that
24:11
when i talk about dealing with the whole
24:14
notion
24:14
of what we’re going to do in terms of
24:17
infrastructure
24:19
i’m talking about it across the board
24:20
i’m not talking about just building
24:22
highways
24:23
i’m talking to making sure that we have
24:25
safe water
24:26
i’m not going to make sure we have clean
24:28
water i’m going to make sure
24:30
that we can breathe the clean air i’m
24:32
going to make you realize
24:33
all the folks who are getting clobbered
24:35
by climate
24:37
are all fence line communities which you
24:39
all come from frontline
24:40
community the poor community they’re the
24:43
ones who are dying
24:45
overwhelmingly as a consequence of the
24:47
impacts of
24:48
climate change and he’s saying that with
24:50
cedric richardson
24:52
sitting right there my climate policies
24:55
climate’s about equity it’s not just
24:58
about being able to breathe clean air
25:01
is this woman and we’re going to build
25:03
one
25:04
in a way that we’re going to make
25:06
significant jobs
25:08
for folks that in fact represent
25:10
minority communities
25:13
i don’t know maybe i oh maybe it was
25:15
116. that’s already doing that
25:17
and no one’s fought harder to get rid of
25:19
assault weapons than me i think
25:21
he’s bringing up assault weapons
25:24
you do that next guy comes along and
25:26
says well guess what by executive order
25:28
i guess everybody can own machine guns
25:30
again let’s talk about that
25:32
so we got to be careful i know you all
25:34
know this
25:35
i know you know it i you and poor commas
25:39
heard me say this and so is cedric
25:41
i used to have a friend named bob gold
25:43
who was a really bright guy
25:45
not much of america we don’t need the
25:46
power he wasn’t an academic quiz
25:48
but bright as hell well and as he grew
25:50
up he became very successful i look at
25:52
him
25:53
he died a heart transplant and so
25:56
like about 30 years ago
25:59
bob you understand what i’m saying do
26:01
you know what i’m talking about john do
26:02
you understand me
26:03
you looked at me said joe i not only
26:05
understand you i overstand you
26:08
i’m sure you overstand me here i did
26:10
okay
26:11
that’s yeah i’m i don’t sorry i might i
26:14
was rushing
26:14
to write this down and i might have
26:15
missed that but the point of that he
26:16
says he will pick an ag with a
26:18
significant record
26:19
on civil rights and to me that would
26:22
exclude tony west well
26:25
he has a record with with civil rights
26:27
because uber violates civil rights
26:30
um all the time we say katie he’s pretty
26:33
appropriate
26:34
touche i mean we can go back over
26:38
obviously the main clip that everyone’s
26:39
been playing today is him ranting about
26:41
how he’s not going to use
26:42
executive authority and the constitution
26:45
the constitution the constitution we
26:46
have to follow the constitution
26:48
because if we you know i’m not going to
26:49
use executive action to ban assault
26:51
weapons which
26:53
nobody asked him to do i mean what
26:54
hasn’t been played for
26:56
you know good reasons because it’s a
26:57
little bit dry is what each of the
26:59
panelists
27:00
asks for in the first half of the
27:03
of the thing but when you listen to the
27:05
very detailed requests that cheryl and
27:07
iphone video gupta in particular
27:09
offered up specifically saying this is
27:10
what you can do with executive
27:12
orders this is what you can do with
27:14
executive orders
27:16
and then to hear joe biden bluster
27:18
through it so defensively
27:20
it’s it it does not bode well
27:24
you know it does not inspire hope that
27:27
he will bring the same
27:29
tenacity to the presidency that trump
27:31
very effectively had
27:33
and used to you know destroy the country
27:35
yeah
27:36
it’s we we should do another stream
27:38
where we do a deep dive of this breed by
27:40
the way
27:41
yeah re-edit it and stuff but i i wanted
27:44
to also talk about um
27:46
i don’t know which clip it is but he
27:47
says something like i gotta go but
27:50
which is what he did also on um uh the
27:53
breakfast club
27:54
he likes being like i gotta go but and
27:56
then he chastises everyone in the room
27:57
for not giving him more respect
27:59
he basically says the equivalent of if
28:01
you’re black
28:02
um and what was it like if you’re if
28:04
you’re not going for joe bye and you’re
28:06
not black
28:06
yeah he does that kind of with the with
28:08
this group of people
28:10
yeah absolutely um let me see if i can
28:13
find
28:14
and then we should make sure we talk um
28:16
briefly about the media responses which
28:18
is just
28:19
stunning we should and i see some people
28:21
who want us to talk about asd too i’m
28:22
not sure if we wanna
28:23
get into that so i think it might be at
28:25
105.
28:26
um this is when he’s going he’s going
28:28
out on sherlin eiffel about how
28:30
he’s been talking about this stuff
28:31
longer than her
28:33
and i think that might be i think that
28:35
might be the section that we’re talking
28:37
about
28:42
black farmers be able to own their own
28:44
property jesus christ
28:46
it’s so offensive to like go into speech
28:48
mode when you’re talking to people
28:50
like this is supposed to be discussion
28:52
right with experts we’re on the same
28:55
exact page the same exact page
28:58
we talked about closing away the the
29:01
racial
29:02
wealth gap that’s the single biggest
29:05
thing i want to get done
29:06
it’s the ultimate equalizer no matter
29:09
what else happens
29:10
because i plan on spending over 15
29:13
billion dollars
29:14
to provide for opportunity for young
29:16
black entrepreneurs
29:17
to get them off the ground black farmers
29:20
to be able to own their own property
29:22
young people being able to get their
29:23
first 15 000 bucks
29:25
down payment on a home making sure that
29:28
they have an opportunity
29:29
to gain wealth we can do all the rest of
29:32
this unless the black community is able
29:34
to make up the wealth gap
29:36
in my humble opinion is real trouble
29:39
i support same day the race rachel
29:43
was the problem for 25
29:46
years as a united states senator
29:49
before cheryl and you were even involved
29:52
i got it and i started off i’m much
29:54
older than you
29:55
that’s why i got involved in politics
29:57
the assault on the black vote
29:59
and voting rights across the nation has
30:02
never
30:03
been more ugly than it is today
30:06
you got to go all the way back to the
30:08
original jim crow to get where this guy
30:10
is
30:11
if in case you haven’t looked we have
30:12
the largest voting right
30:14
kristin my operation 1 000
30:18
lawyers bigger than you or anybody else
30:20
out there on voting rights i’d have more
30:22
lawyers than that
30:23
at least 1 000.
30:29
i want you to know i understand this
30:32
i know look at the 38 cases that have
30:34
brought against
30:35
my being president of the united states
30:38
all about phony phony actions
30:43
and so i think there should be same-day
30:45
registration
30:46
automatic voting rights i’ve been
30:49
pushing and i got
30:51
a number of people to contribute
30:52
significantly to the effort down in
30:54
florida
30:55
to make sure that that that federal
30:58
um prisoners who are pre-prisoners are
31:01
served their time
31:02
have every single right restored to them
31:06
that’s been my position before was
31:07
anybody else’s position
31:09
i’ve been out pushing that in addition
31:11
to that i think it’s really important
31:14
that no one goes to prison
31:17
for a drug offense really nobody change
31:20
they go into rehabilitation how is this
31:23
rehabilitation
31:24
that’s we should be building yeah with
31:26
patient centers not
31:27
more prisons i have a i have a 20
31:30
billion dollar effort that i’m proposing
31:32
to get states to change their
31:36
sentencing guidelines so that there’s no
31:38
more mandatory sentences across the
31:40
board
31:42
in addition to that we’re talking about
31:44
having diversity hiring in every agency
31:46
i promise you that is going to happen
31:49
we’re just getting started here
31:51
police reform judicial reform look
31:55
you know when i was if you notice when i
31:57
was chairman of the judiciary committee
31:58
and when i was advising the president
32:00
who did we get on the court
32:03
we got on a woman who worked for me
32:05
became a member of the supreme court
32:07
another woman who was a leading hispanic
32:10
in america and no one paid attention to
32:12
is on the court no one paid attention
32:16
we found her i’ve been really pro-civil
32:19
rights
32:20
judges clarence thompson across the
32:22
board and i like you
32:24
the idea kristin that we have to
32:26
everybody has to be a prosecutor
32:28
i’m a public defender when i’m president
32:30
of the united states of america
32:32
with the public defenders federal
32:35
defenders get paid the same as federal
32:37
prosecutors
32:38
so sherlock
32:41
i guess earlier trying to say here that
32:42
the federal judiciary has been taken
32:44
over by prosecutors
32:45
and it’s funny because obviously kamala
32:48
harris is california’s top cop by her
32:50
own description
32:51
and it was you want to be able to see
32:54
their faces more clearly because cheryl
32:55
and eiffel it seemed almost like she was
32:57
throwing a little shade
32:58
saying you know it’s irresponsible that
33:00
we have so many prosecutors it seems to
33:02
be almost a requirement to be a
33:03
prosecutor be on the federal bench we
33:04
need to support
33:06
public defenders you were a public
33:07
defender and really goading him on
33:09
and so he clearly liked that because
33:11
that was like 20 minutes ago and he’s
33:13
bringing it back up again
33:14
meanwhile calm was just sitting there oh
33:17
my god
33:18
twiddling your thumbs wow so i don’t
33:20
know how much more
33:21
of this you want to do at 109
33:24
he does the whole i’m the first person
33:26
of color to talk about racial
33:27
disparities bit
33:28
that people have been playing yeah and
33:31
and covet i’m sorry i’m the first person
33:33
sorry not of color
33:34
my bad but i’m the first person to talk
33:36
about racial disparities in kovid
33:38
um and i know that because uh my white
33:41
mayor friend
33:41
called and told me okay let’s go what is
33:45
it 109. everything
33:55
exist because of racial discrimination
33:58
and miss campbell that’s what this is
34:00
all about
34:01
making sure that you may remember i’m
34:04
the first person black or white
34:06
who called attention to the fact that
34:08
you were finding that
34:09
there was the the rate of people who
34:11
were african-americans are dying was
34:13
three times that of
34:14
of of white people that’s because a
34:16
friend of mine a white guy who happens
34:17
to be
34:18
as you well know derek the mayor of the
34:20
city of detroit
34:21
called me to tell me about it i insisted
34:24
that we keep a record on everything that
34:26
happened since then
34:27
guys guess what i’m saying guys do we
34:29
have i mean i i wish we had a research
34:31
team to cut into quotes of other people
34:33
talking about this issue before he did
34:35
i mean also the idea that it should give
34:37
us confidence that
34:39
that kind of really necessary
34:40
information is getting out there and
34:42
trickling up to the top because
34:44
a white guy who’s the mayor of detroit
34:45
who happens to be my friend got me on
34:47
the phone and talked to me about it like
34:48
cdc
34:49
much like is there anybody else
34:53
in the channels of information flow who
34:56
you can rely on
34:57
than this kind of ad hoc network um
35:01
that bob gold died because he would have
35:03
overstood this
35:06
um a little bit he’s about to get into
35:08
the the clip
35:10
um dude he had been leaned on to
35:13
about appointing more black people and
35:15
so he gives his response about why he
35:17
cannot tell you about who it is
35:19
at this moment please tell me he’s
35:21
standing literally behind kamala
35:23
what i say the hard part here is i’m
35:26
going to have a lot of trouble we’re
35:28
going to have a lot of trouble
35:29
getting a lot of this done with this
35:30
congress and so the question
35:33
is for example you know i’m going to be
35:36
appointing
35:37
at least and i’m you know look the
35:39
reason i’m not telling you
35:41
who the other black made me cabinet
35:43
positions i’m going to appoint
35:44
are because it’ll get out and guess what
35:47
i can’t defend them they’re going to be
35:48
out there
35:49
by themselves without any defense before
35:52
their name
35:53
they’re going to get ripped to shreds
35:55
that’s why i’m going to wait
35:56
you will be pleased i believe you will
35:59
be pleased to see
36:00
major there will be more
36:02
african-americans and major positions
36:04
within a cabinet and major spots and
36:07
more hispanics in major spots
36:09
than ever in american history you know
36:11
what i don’t understand about that
36:12
i promised you that i would get if it
36:14
were before an election or something
36:16
for example what’s he waiting for what
36:18
is it gonna be
36:19
that they will be safe from public
36:20
criticism
36:22
you know he’s he’s president now i mean
36:24
he won so
36:26
what is it he thinks that if you can do
36:28
it closer to inauguration then what
36:30
we won’t talk about it but it’s it’ll be
36:32
set in stone
36:33
after georgia i guess his thing is after
36:35
georgia well that would be
36:36
of import for someone like tom vilsack
36:38
who’s already been announced
36:40
i don’t know i mean if you want to have
36:42
to run to the bathroom
36:44
okay sorry you want to keep um do you
36:46
want to take some questions
36:48
oh sure i was not planned my uh yeah
36:51
yeah
36:52
okay all right i’m gonna uh should i
36:54
close the square i wish i could
36:56
sure should i just scroll down into the
36:58
chat and look at what people are saying
36:59
yeah i’m gonna pop okay then on i’ll
37:02
keep do you want this on or just you
37:04
i’ll keep it this way yeah this is this
37:05
is fine okay
37:07
so i’m looking at the chat i’m scrolling
37:11
i don’t see a ton of questions
37:14
uh when’s door coming on i don’t know
37:19
i’m not sure about that that’s katie’s
37:21
department
37:24
um we’re going to talk about asc sit
37:26
tight we are getting there
37:29
i just was i’ve this this stuff has been
37:31
driving me crazy and when i was watching
37:33
roland martin
37:34
and they were acting as though the full
37:36
video isn’t out there
37:38
and claiming that it was somehow altered
37:41
uh
37:41
in some way it was making me nuts okay
37:44
who’s
37:45
burns hey hoot hoot biden shouting hurts
37:47
my ears but gotta love he’s at his most
37:49
passionate and telling people you can’t
37:51
have nice things or talking about
37:52
himself
37:55
i don’t see the lie you know it’s
37:58
it’s hard to put into words and i’m wary
38:00
i i don’t want to be seen as
38:02
kind of like knifing in the back or like
38:05
twisting the knifeness in or anything
38:07
i’m not so that i’m rooting against him
38:09
per se but it’s
38:10
when no one else is willing to leverage
38:13
even the most moderate criticism of the
38:14
guy and you see these kind of like
38:17
blatant errors and blatant missteps that
38:19
would be a whole new cycle for any other
38:21
candidate
38:22
i think it forces us to go harder in the
38:25
paint as it were than we might otherwise
38:27
and you know i don’t know man
38:31
um did i skip any others
38:37
uh talk about jay jackson asd yeah we’re
38:39
gonna do it we’re gonna do it
38:41
love you guys too um
38:46
when will the progressive media unite
38:47
and call upon the real base to rise up
38:49
and demand with one
38:50
voice medicare for all
38:53
you know we recorded an episode of bad
38:55
faith today with two comedians who i
38:57
really like and respect but who aren’t
38:59
like big political
39:00
people and i asked them you know
39:04
what do you think is going on like as
39:06
someone who’s more of a normie
39:08
how do you as an outsider how do you
39:09
perceive this in fighting between
39:11
the left and the more moderate ring or
39:13
conservative wing of the democratic
39:14
party
39:15
do you think this is gonna be reflected
39:18
in the comedy that comes out going
39:20
forward are we gonna still just get all
39:21
this trump as bad stuff
39:25
i i don’t know i i think that the people
39:28
are with us they were very receptive
39:29
they liked the ideas like the politics
39:31
but
39:31
it was a star trek theme themed episode
39:33
and we’re talking about expanding
39:35
using star trek and how sci-fi can
39:36
expand the realm of what’s possible what
39:38
people believe are pop
39:39
is possible and it’s like they’re there
39:42
we’ve already done so much of that work
39:43
bernie sanders has already done so much
39:45
of that work the polls are with us like
39:47
they’re with us in so many respects but
39:49
there’s just some spark that’s missing
39:51
and maybe it’s the spark that sarah
39:53
nelson was talking about on on
39:54
thursday’s episode yesterday’s episode
39:57
um that people just really need to
40:00
believe that
40:01
a different kind of action can help that
40:04
you know withholding labor can be the
40:07
thing that gets people’s attention that
40:09
protesting on the streets isn’t as
40:10
effective as protesting in front of the
40:13
homes or offices of the representatives
40:15
who are actually withholding aid
40:17
is more effective you know i don’t know
40:22
um
40:28
brianna what are your thoughts on nina
40:30
writing as a dim should she run as an
40:31
independent
40:32
you know i think that we all understand
40:35
the need
40:36
for a third party and senator turner has
40:38
been very supportive of the people’s
40:40
movement
40:41
it’s a somewhat different question of
40:43
whether or not
40:44
you can be more effective and at this
40:48
i think senator turner’s choice is being
40:50
driven by the fact that the seat in her
40:52
home district is opening up
40:54
and it feels like it would be a missed
40:56
opportunity frankly to not
40:57
go for that it’s not like she randomly
40:59
is you know picking some
41:02
house seat in some random district it is
41:04
her home district it is a seat in
41:06
cleveland and a community
41:07
that she is known in and loved in
41:11
and i think we all understand the value
41:13
of having squad members in the squad
41:15
growing the whole reason we’re even
41:16
having this conversation about
41:18
the jimmy dore theory of how they should
41:20
withhold their votes um
41:22
uh and threaten not to you know make
41:25
nancy pelosi speaker again unless they
41:27
put medicare for all to a floor vote
41:30
is because they have more progressives
41:33
more leftists than they do the margin
41:35
between
41:36
um democrats and republicans right they
41:38
need them to make a majority
41:40
so you know obviously there’s utility to
41:42
having people
41:44
democrats in congress if you’re asking
41:46
why she didn’t just run
41:47
on that seat as an eye
41:50
i don’t know i don’t know it’s an
41:52
interesting question
41:54
um oh how do i do how do i look at this
41:57
does it just take longer than two to
41:59
three election cycles to roll back
42:00
40 years of neolib neocon alliances
42:05
you know that’s a really interesting
42:06
historical question and i’d like to know
42:08
someone who
42:08
is more of a new deal expert to say you
42:11
know
42:12
how do you know what were the steps to
42:14
get from the gilded age to the
42:16
new deal because it wasn’t that long
42:18
chronologically
42:19
um
42:22
and you know i’d like to think that with
42:24
technology and everything we have today
42:26
that things can move a lot more quickly
42:27
than
42:28
they have in the past information can
42:30
spread a lot faster and minds can change
42:31
more quickly
42:32
but maybe that’s my own um self-soothing
42:36
optimism
42:42
hey katie come back okay
42:46
sorry about that so what were we talking
42:48
about what’s
42:49
what did i miss um i answered a question
42:51
about nina turner writing as an
42:53
independent
42:54
and this question about how long it
42:55
takes to get rid of
42:57
entrenched neoliberalism oh
43:00
good question um well
43:03
not sure about that but do we want to
43:05
talk
43:06
uh quickly about the response to this in
43:10
terms of
43:11
yeah let’s let’s talk about the response
43:13
with the aoc thing too
43:15
yes yes yes yes okay so which one should
43:17
we start with let’s start with um
43:19
let’s start with the response of this
43:24
yeah
43:26
this this is huge i mean there’s like
43:28
four or five different reported stories
43:30
that could come out of this right
43:32
everyone cares about georgia there’s
43:33
implications for georgia
43:35
there are obvious racial implications
43:38
the the optics of joe biden yelling at
43:40
some of the most
43:42
you know high-ranking black luminaries
43:44
in america
43:45
is not good um we haven’t even hit some
43:48
of the big ticket
43:50
clips that have kind of been fleshed out
43:52
in the media right now that i’m not aoc
43:54
but i get more done than anybody you
43:55
know
43:56
the whole thing about how you’re going
43:57
to have to work with hispanics because
43:59
there’s more of them than you which is
44:00
obviously factually true but like
44:02
said in a way like there’s like a
44:04
zero-sum game and like
44:06
racial uh fisticuffs that have to be
44:09
done to see who can come out on top
44:11
um and obviously the whole executive
44:13
order thing which we’ve touched on
44:15
but in spite of all of that
44:18
the the kind of black media
44:21
intelligentsia has been
44:22
largely silent on this today the
44:26
media elite media class in its entirety
44:28
has been largely silent on this today
44:30
into this one that they’ve spoken up and
44:31
has been
44:32
in defense of joe biden and critical of
44:36
the intercept
44:37
casting aspersions on the integrity of
44:39
the outlet
44:41
um and then april ryan in particular
44:44
who is one of the most known white house
44:46
reporters
44:48
we have right who has gotten a lot of
44:50
attention because she’s been the
44:52
lightning rod for some racist comments
44:53
from donald trump
44:55
which is not good she doesn’t deserve
44:57
that
44:58
um but she came out today
45:01
um are we gonna throw the tweet up or
45:03
should i just read it
45:04
yeah can you read it um okay or i can
45:08
find it let me see i can read it
45:09
yeah i dm’ed it to you
45:12
so she said um uh
45:15
so someone tweeted um she said
45:19
it someone said it uh who tweeted that
45:22
well first first first we had an
45:24
inclination that she was
45:26
opposed to it um because she tweeted
45:28
[Music]
45:31
the question is who uh who leaked this
45:34
and why i’m also told by a rights leader
45:36
in that meeting that joe biden was being
45:37
more passionate than defensive
45:39
can’t wait to hear what the biden camp
45:41
has to say this is a reporter right so
45:43
her
45:44
her first instinct is to say oh here are
45:46
all these stories i should report out
45:47
let me follow up on whether any of this
45:49
stuff is true
45:50
let me use what i learned from this
45:51
meeting to press the campaign on what
45:53
its picks are actually going to be
45:55
and does it have concerns about how tom
45:57
bilsick is going to fly in georgia and
45:59
doesn’t have a plan
46:00
to meet those concerns off at the pass
46:02
and you know can i talk to these
46:04
civil rights leaders and see if they had
46:06
concerns and that’s why maybe one of
46:08
them leaked it
46:09
you know like who knows no her
46:12
her her her investigative instinct just
46:15
to say
46:16
can’t wait to see what the biting cam
46:17
has to say that’s embarrassing it’s so
46:20
embarrassing
46:21
and so then most kind of hilariously
46:25
um a leftist laid some bait
46:28
[Laughter]
46:30
so um this guy edward
46:33
angueso who writes for jacobin
46:36
apparently
46:38
i’m not familiar with him but i’m
46:39
definitely gonna do a deep dive now
46:40
because
46:41
he quote tweeted april ryan and wrote it
46:43
is irresponsible and sets a dangerous
46:45
precedent for journalists covering the
46:46
incoming administration to be able to
46:48
use secretly recorded conversations in
46:50
their stories
46:51
to parse out biden’s thoughts and
46:52
anticipate his policy commitments you
46:54
must go through proper channels
46:56
so he was being tongue-in-cheek this was
46:58
an ironic tweet
46:59
okay phew he was if this is my mom
47:03
he’s great he writes that um the new
47:06
republic
47:06
okay he seems but april ryan first
47:10
responded to him
47:11
agreed and then seemed to like want to
47:14
highlight
47:15
this take even more because she agreed
47:16
with it so hard
47:18
um and ended up quote tweeting it
47:22
um and saying you hit the nail on the
47:23
head this is not good at all
47:25
she felt emboldened by someone who is
47:27
being sarcastic
47:29
so not only is that the idea that a
47:32
journalist shouldn’t be interested in
47:34
information that is a utility to the
47:37
public and in the public interest
47:39
coming out this isn’t i mean obviously
47:40
i’m supportive
47:42
of you know wikileaks and
47:46
edward snowden and julian assange and
47:48
like i’m supportive of those which are
47:50
even closer to the line but this is just
47:53
this is not espionage okay like this
47:55
isn’t someone defending trump that way
47:58
exactly and here’s the thing april ryan
48:01
has been on the other side of this issue
48:03
so um she
48:07
uh has tweeted you know cnn obtains
48:09
trump cohen tape
48:10
like eagerly awaiting the results of
48:12
that um she tweeted who is eagerly
48:14
waiting to hear the audio tapes of
48:15
melania trump talking about
48:17
talking bad about the real donald trump
48:19
ivanka trump and the rest of his adult
48:20
children
48:21
i’m ready exclamation point
48:25
well you want to i have to again i have
48:28
a
48:29
a friend visiting me uh this actually
48:31
sounds much more exciting than it is
48:34
there’s a little person here and um
48:37
so i have to get off but we could
48:38
continue this and this for us bree this
48:40
was still almost an hour for us this is
48:42
like
48:42
it’s like five minutes for most people
48:44
we were gonna we were like do a 15 to 30
48:46
minute thing
48:47
but you’re right i’m sorry right i do
48:50
this with you all the time but you want
48:51
to stay on you can just
48:52
you can hijack the stream i can let you
48:54
what happens when i
48:55
how do i control it uh well that’s the
48:58
thing you can’t really control it but i
48:59
can check in
49:00
you can go with for as long as you want
49:01
you just no that’s okay i would actually
49:03
do is just figure out twitch
49:05
i’ll figure it out
49:09
anyway thank you for indulging me i was
49:10
like all my things we never talked about
49:12
the asc justin jackson thing
49:15
let’s come back to it tomorrow yeah okay
49:17
so guys i’m gonna we’ll tweet out when
49:18
tomorrow but when it’s not an empty
49:20
promise we’re gonna make
49:21
time tomorrow okay right
49:25
yeah we’ll get into this more loudly and
49:26
more yeah we can have our
49:28
we can we can make it brunch time do
49:30
drinks or we’ll do the evening who are
49:31
we going right
49:32
brunch at this rate i don’t know that
49:34
i’m going to be awake before 2
49:35
p.m it’s a saturday yeah saturday that’s
49:38
the day we’re supposed to
49:40
i mean both of those days i think
49:41
depending on the population
49:43
yeah our labor forefathers worked hard
49:45
for that saturday
49:47
um okay so guys everyone follow brie
49:50
you’ll see us
49:51
sometime tomorrow we’ll put a link in
49:52
this to when we’re doing it
49:55
and uh yeah this is fun
49:58
to do an emergency reaction so everyone
50:00
else is on notice and
50:01
maybe we’ll get a little yeah we’ll do a
50:02
little discussion about aoc
50:05
tomorrow yeah notice progress squad
50:08
squad goals squad goals
50:12
all right good night katie good night
50:16
everyone