The Commentary Magazine Podcast

Dems vs DHS

69 min
Feb 10, 20264 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

The Commentary Magazine Podcast discusses the looming DHS funding shutdown centered on ICE operations in Minnesota, examining disagreements over officer masking, judicial warrant requirements, and the broader political dynamics around immigration enforcement. The panel also explores declining American life satisfaction (62% current, 59% future expectations) and connects societal pessimism to vice proliferation, institutional distrust, and the Epstein scandal as a symbol of elite corruption.

Insights
  • Immigration enforcement has become a proxy political battle disconnected from actual policy solutions; Democrats block ICE operations to prevent deportations while Republicans struggle with optics, neither side pursuing comprehensive immigration reform
  • American dissatisfaction stems from 'soul sickness' rather than material deprivation—unemployment is 4%, living standards are historically high, yet only 49% report thriving, suggesting a crisis of meaning and institutional trust
  • The democratization of vice (gambling, marijuana, pornography, social media) combined with perceived systemic rigging creates a dangerous feedback loop where people abandon legitimate paths and embrace destructive behaviors
  • Primary election insurgencies (AOC model) force mainstream Democrats leftward on immigration, making legislative compromise politically suicidal for individual members despite party-level incentives to negotiate
  • Elite corruption narratives (Epstein files, Lutnick revelations) fuel populist movements across the political spectrum by validating public perception that the system is rigged, regardless of actual prevalence
Trends
Immigration enforcement becoming increasingly militarized and symbolic rather than policy-focused, driving public discomfort despite majority support for deportationsDeclining American optimism and life satisfaction tracking with rise in institutionalized vice and social media addiction, suggesting connection between hopelessness and self-destructive behaviorPrimary election dynamics shifting power to activist wings, making bipartisan compromise on contentious issues (immigration, law enforcement) politically toxic for individual legislatorsElite accountability narratives dominating discourse (Epstein, Lutnick, Maxwell) as proxy for broader systemic corruption concerns, driving anti-establishment sentiment across political dividesPopulist movements gaining traction by positioning themselves as anti-elite reformers, even when proposed solutions lack coherence or feasibilityComprehensive policy reform (immigration, institutional rebuilding) stalled as both parties benefit from status quo dysfunction and culture war positioningSocial atomization accelerating as material abundance fails to deliver meaning, creating vulnerability to radical ideologies and vice proliferationGenerational shift in Democratic politics where younger activists successfully primary establishment figures, forcing party-wide repositioning on law enforcement and immigration
Topics
DHS Funding Shutdown and ICE OperationsImmigration Enforcement Policy and Judicial WarrantsLaw Enforcement Masking and Officer DoxingAmerican Life Satisfaction and Thriving MetricsVice Proliferation: Gambling, Marijuana, PornographySocial Media Addiction and Mental HealthElite Corruption and Epstein Scandal ImplicationsPrimary Election Insurgencies and Democratic Party DynamicsComprehensive Immigration Reform BarriersInstitutional Trust and Legitimacy CrisisPopulism and Anti-Establishment SentimentMaterial Abundance vs. Spiritual FulfillmentClassical Liberalism and Institutional RebuildingCensus Apportionment and Illegal Immigration DemographicsBody Cameras and Law Enforcement Transparency
Companies
Netflix
Recommended documentary 'Miracle' about 1980 Lake Placid Olympics as antidote to societal pessimism
Disney+
Hosts fictionalized 'Miracle' film version with Kurt Russell as Herb Brooks
Google
Sergey Brin mentioned as part of Epstein's elite social circle in Michael Wolff profile
Harvard University
Larry Summers and institutional connection to Epstein's social network discussed
People
Tom Homan
ICE official who agreed to body cameras, advocating focus on violent criminals in deportations
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Model for primary insurgency that knocked out 20-year incumbent Joe Crowley in 2018
Jeffrey Epstein
Central figure in elite corruption narrative; Michael Wolff profile discussed his social influence
Bill Clinton
Part of Epstein's elite social circle; Clinton Global Initiative connected to Ghislaine Maxwell
Howard Lutnick
Recently implicated in continued business dealings with convicted sex offender Epstein
Ghislaine Maxwell
Epstein associate; reportedly co-created Clinton Global Initiative with Bill Clinton
Donald Trump
Administration drawing down ICE operations in Minnesota; rebuilding elite networks post-Epstein era
Ron DeSantis
Contrasted with Trump for sending migrants to Martha's Vineyard rather than military operations
Tom Malinowski
New Jersey Democrat who lost primary due to perceived pro-ICE and pro-immigration reform positions
John Ossoff
Georgia Democrat using Epstein scandal as cultural criticism of elite corruption
Barack Obama
Deported millions quietly without militarized operations; contrasted with Trump's visible enforcement
Larry Summers
Harvard economist mentioned as part of Epstein's elite social network
Leslie Wexner
Billionaire businessman in Epstein's social circle
Leon Black
Private equity executive in Epstein's social circle
Jim Craig
1980 Olympic hockey goalie featured in Netflix 'Miracle' documentary
Herb Brooks
1980 Olympic hockey coach portrayed by Kurt Russell in Disney+ 'Miracle' film
Ben Shapiro
Gave speech at City Journal award ceremony defending America against left-right pessimism
Brink Lindsey
Author of 'The Permanent Problem' on mass flourishing and abundance liberalism
Quotes
"This is disagreement over real issues between the two parties. This is over the funding of the Department of Homeland Security. And this has been brought to a head by the ICE operations in Minnesota."
Eliana Johnson
"The point of immigration enforcement is to enforce immigration law and to set on top of that this idea that if you only commit certain crimes once you're here illegally, the whole discussion sounds kind of funny to me."
Abe Greenwald
"When people say they're not thriving, or if they're looking forward without optimism or something like that, they are saying we are soul sick."
John Podhoretz
"The system is rigged in favor of elites. And if you're not a member of that, and this I think also explains why the Epstein scandal continues to dominate everybody."
John Podhoretz
"Hungry dogs run faster, James, and I've been running fast ever since."
James Patterson
Full Transcript
I'm James Patterson. I write way too many books. Welcome to Hungry Dogs. The title comes from my maternal grandmother, Isabel Zelvis Morris. Nan used to always say, hungry dogs run faster, James, and I've been running fast ever since. Here's what will be coming your way soon, and this is a really terrific list, I think. You'll hear from some incredible people like Stacey Abrams. Yay! BJ Novak. Yay! Kathy Bates, Dolly Parton, Josh Gad, and Pope Leo. Okay, maybe not Pope Leo, but who knows? Maybe he'll show up. Hungry Dogs Run Faster. Thank you, Grandma, for turning me into a hopeless, obsessive-compulsive. Listen to Hungry Dogs with James Patterson, that'd be me, on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Welcome to the Commentary Magazine Daily Podcast. Today is Tuesday, February 10th, 2026. I'm John Putthortz, the editor of Commentary Magazine. With me, as always, Executive Editor Abe Greenwald. Hi, Abe. Hi, John. Social Commentary columnist Christine Rosen. Hi, Christine. Hi, John. Senior Editor Seth Mandel. Hi, Seth. Hi, John. And Washington Free Beacon Editor Eliana Johnson. Hi, Eliana. Hi, John. Well, Eliana, being a responsible person in Washington with a real sense of what we need to talk about as opposed to our own personal obsessions with their own stuff. The government is about to shut down again or shut down for five hours or shut down for 72 hours. And some of it may shut down and some of it may not shut down. And the question is, is this just this is just dysfunction as usual? Or should we be more concerned about the dysfunction and what it portends for the rest of the year and for the election? Well, I'm not sure this is dysfunction per se. This is disagreement over real issues between the two parties. This is over the funding of the Department of Homeland Security. And this has been brought to a head by the ICE operations in Minnesota. Notably, ICE is already funded. And so this disagreement is about funding the rest of the Department of Homeland Security, including TSA and other things. The rest of the government was funded about two weeks ago, and they agreed to extend DHS funding for two weeks to try to reach an agreement about reforming ICE operations. And so the question now is when funding expires Friday, will the two parties, Republicans and Democrats say, we're going to extend it again, pass another CR to continue negotiations. And the disagreements at this point really seem to be over whether ICE officials will remove their masks, number one, which Republicans argue would expose them to doxing and more, more doxing and harassment than they are already exposed to. And two, which I think is a bigger issue, should ICE have to get judicial warrants for their operations, which would essentially grind their operations to a halt. They would have to present evidence and get a judge's approval before most of their operations. And in any situation that's quickly moving or they're trying to get somebody who might flee, it would really delay their actions. And this would flood the courts and the courts are already overwhelmed in Minnesota. We've seen this coming through many judges rulings. And so I think it's hard to see Republicans ever agreeing to this, but, but, um, if there are good faith negotiations taking place between the two parties, we may see another extension on Friday. So the question is, do we get another one of those for two weeks, a month, six weeks, um, for the parties to debate this? And does the white house weigh in? And how much does the White House press John Thune and Republican senators to give, if at all, on this? Or does it press them to be hardline? Notably, I think the farther away we get from the killings in Minnesota of Alex Preddy and Renee Good, the harder a line Republicans will take on these two issues. And I also think it's worth noting they have already agreed to one of the Democrats demand, which is body cameras, which Tom Homan in Minnesota said that was something he wanted, that they want these things recorded for everybody to see. In many cases, it actually exonerates the behavior of the ICE officers. So that's what's happening on Capitol Hill in D.C. and between Capitol Hill and the White House. It would be I'm curious if the Republicans will have, or perhaps this actually is the administration's role, because much of what the, I know Senator Jackie Rosen and others said, well, we want Border Patrol and ICE to function more like our FBI does. Our FBI doesn't wear military gear, it doesn't mask, it doesn't do all these things. But of course, they have a different job. They get these detainers, they have people who are sometimes certainly at risk of high risk of fleeing, but also potentially violent criminals. And they have a different role going and getting them and working through the system that way. It would be nice to hear the Republicans offer a thoughtful message about why they have to conduct their business differently than, say, an FBI agent would, because they're both federal law enforcement. I'm curious what that would look like. The masking thing to me is tough. That's a tough issue because they are getting doxed, but it also leads to a much different approach to civilian behavior. One answer, obviously, is to get the local police to deal with the crowds of protesters so that we don't have these interactions directly with ICE or Border Patrol. But the body camera thing is fantastic because years ago, this was a left-wing cause. Every police officer should have a body camera. So lots of departments ended up getting body cameras, and it did, as Eliana said, often exonerate the officers because you would see someone running at an officer with a knife, and then they got shot, and then there was no claim of police brutality. I think they should have cameras as much for their own protection in terms of what the chain of events is, as well as for transparency. But I'm not I don't know about the masks. I'm kind of ambivalent about that. See, the thing about the masks is they have so much symbolic power among the anti-ice crowd like they're really worked up over the mask. It's an easy issue to promote and to use to demonize ice. And I've got to say, as far as I can tell, on balance, they should have masks if they're getting doxxed. It's very serious. People are going after them with intended deadly force. I'm very troubled by the masking, I have to say. and I think it is optics and it is emotional and maybe it's irrational but part of the role of law enforcement is to represent authority and the idea is that there's a person there and of course you can see his face because he's doing something righteous and when someone is masked it makes who think there's something untoward. It's a little creepy. Looks like, you know, in the middle of a street, people can't, who are federal law enforcement officers, can't be, their faces can't be seen. We know from masking altogether, from having lived under masks, everybody in the United States for a year, practically, depending on where you lived, that all kinds of bad stuff happens when people are masked socially, that social interactions are very much crippled by masking because you cannot see the full face of the person that you are facing and that you therefore misread all kinds of social signals that are taking place under the mask. Someone's looking at your child. I mean, this is back to the pandemic. You look at a kid, you have a smile on your face, but the mask is covering your mouth, and the parent thinks you're a predator because they can't see the full face, that kind of thing. I find it disturbing. And I think many people find it disturbing. And this is not the hill, in my view, politically, for Republicans or supporters of law enforcement or ICE to die on, which is, I mean, maybe this is a terrible thing because it'll mean that people will resign from ICE and the Border Patrol if they can't mask. But if that's the case, then we have way bigger problems. I mean, I don't know quite what to say, but the other problem is that the FBI does not do a lot of arresting. In fact, I think the FBI probably does an unbelievably, you know, if the FBI actually stages arrests in the United States, maybe it's half a percent out of all of the hundred percent of arrests in the United States. The FBI is not the, is not the like lead agency in hardly any crimes except for like kidnapping. I mean, there's no, the FBI is not, does not, it can, it obviously is a law enforcement agency, but it for everybody that the FBI arrests when they arrest, say, a white-collar criminal or something like that, is gotten through as a result of a warrant. So what the argument is for ICE's behavior without warrants is that they are a, they're doing more of a policing job. That is, police obviously don't get a warrant if they see somebody doing something illegal on a street or if they have to bust into a, I mean, depends on the circumstance, but if they are in, if they're chasing someone or something, they don't have to get a warrant and they are, therefore, there are all kinds of rules written about when you need a warrant and when police can arrest somebody in the normal course of business. But the police are not usually wearing masks. It's not just that though. The police are first responders and ICE is kind of a first responder. So maybe it shouldn't get a warrant, but part of the reason that you don't have to get a warrant is that it's presumed that if you have some kind of intelligence or information that suggests that X, Y, or Z place is a workplace or something like that that is only made up of illegals, that you have a justified reason not to signal your approach and to go on a raid or something like that. But there's a reason the public finds this discomforting, because it's not what law enforcement looks like to us. You know, and so the people who are already on the who are in the world that says that everybody who is illegal in the United States should be deported. And I know I know in polls, 60 percent say there should be mass deportations. but we are seeing some weird disjunction between that number and the way people seem to be then they say 70 say they've gone too far in minneapolis well how have they gone to what does that mean that they've gone too far what it means is that it doesn't look right to people the combination of the confrontations with the public the shootings the masking and the general sense that these guys seem to be out abroad in search of monsters to destroy does not seem to be giving the American people confidence in the behavior of ICE and the Border Patrol. Right. I actually think that like what this and we all sort of know it what the debate is really about is that Democrats don't want illegal immigrants deported. They really, really don't. And the masks, like we can really, we can have a debate about. The Trump administration has conceded much of the point by drawing down in Minnesota. And I believe that in other jurisdictions where there aren't hostile confrontations between the, uh, between the public trying to impede ice operations and putting the agents at risk. Um, it, you know, in other cities, the mask probably wouldn't be necessary, but the judicial warrant issue is about actually trying to stop these guys and making it much harder for them to deport immigrants, which is why Democrats are for them. Like we, the, the, the four of us can debate it on the mayor. It's all we want. But for Democrats, it's like, hey, let's throw sand in the gears and slow you guys down and make it harder because we want to keep these people here. And it may be worth talking about the CBS News story yesterday, which I don't have it up in front of me, but I think it's, you know, the upshot of it was like, you know, only 40% of the people deported were convicted of crimes or arrested by ICE were convicted of crimes you guys can correct me I think 14% were violent crimes but it was a larger percentage let me pull it up less than 14% of those arrested by ICE in Trump's first year back in office had violent criminal records right um and i think it's 40 percent were non-violent you know drug trafficking nearly 40 percent right did not have any nearly 40 percent didn't have any criminal record of all at all so that means that 60 percent had some kind of criminal record well and and even also like you know there was i i read that piece and thought i'm not sure this shows what they're trying you know what they what they're trying to show because that seems to me like a lot. And then it does raise the question of you know what Homan got at in his press conference which he said we're going to focus on the violent criminals but you're not it doesn't mean you're safe if you came over the country illegally. So what is the posture that we want to adopt in this in this country like should we deport people who merely, you know, committed the civil offense of crossing over illegally. Like that's a debate we can have. And we know the Democrats answer. In fact, I heard, I can't remember who it was being a Democrat being interviewed, um, on a podcast and they were asked, well, where are you on deporting someone for a DUI? And like the person would, you know, wouldn't give an answer. And it's like that, that is an offense. That's actually a life endangering offense. Yes. You know, you could Kill somebody doing that. And one, you know, that happening one time is unacceptable. One death because of that is unacceptable for someone who shouldn't have been in the country in the first place. There was one other story over the weekend. Yeah, go ahead. I was just going to say there was one other story over the weekend that ties into the CBS story. And it was in the New York Times Sunday paper about it was a very gauzy profile of a family that is self-deporting back to Mexico. And they've lived here, I think, 20 or 30 years, had kids here. And it goes on and on. And I'm reading this, trying to be open minded about their story. But it's revealed during the story that they don't just commit the offense of crossing the border. They stole Social Security numbers, used them as their ID the entire time we're here. That's identity theft. If you've ever been the victim of identity theft, you know it can cause huge headaches. There have been other stories we know of this ruining the lives of law abiding American citizens because someone stole their identity. So they actually are committing crimes, just even if they don't get a DUI or they don't, you know, rob a bank. That is a kind of crime that has a trickle down effect on the on American citizens. And so I agree with Eliana. There needs to be a clarification of what the posture is about nonviolent people who come here, steal IDs, work and then retire back to Mexico. Each of them getting the payout that the Trump administration is giving people who self-deport, which they acknowledge in the story was always their intention to come here, to work illegally, to build money, to have kids here. who have the benefits of citizenship, and then to retire back in Mexico. And so I didn't really feel, I didn't feel they were terrible human beings, but I also didn't feel sorry for them. I kind of thought, all right, you had to move your retirement up by 10 years, but you've committed a federal crime for decades and never been brought to account for it. Look you know you carry a lot of responsibility in your household If something happens to you there are real consequences like a mortgage that needs to be paid tuition that needs to be paid Everyday bills don't just disappear. Thinking about that used to feel overwhelming for me, but taking steps to protect my family financially changed that. And that's why you should consider getting life insurance through Ethos, which makes getting life insurance fast and easy, 100% online. You can get a quote in seconds, apply in minutes, get same-day coverage. There's no medical exam. You just answer a few simple health questions. You can get up to $3 million in coverage, some policies as low as $30 a month. As of March 2025, Business Insider named Ethos the number one no medical exam instant life insurance provider with 4.8 out of five stars on Trustpilot and over 3,000 reviews. So protect your family with life insurance from Ethos now by going to ethos.com slash commentary. In as little as 10 minutes, you can get your free quote and up to $3 million in coverage at ethos.com slash commentary. That is E-T-H-O-S dot com slash commentary. Ethos.com slash commentary. Application times and rates may vary. nobody would ever accuse me of being a fashion plate but i do know because i am almost 65 years old that a well-built wardrobe is about pieces that work together and hold up over time and that i can tell you from personal experience is what quince does best premium materials thoughtful design and everyday staples that feel easy to wear and easy to rely on even as the weather shifts During this cold snap, for example, I put on a nice thick quince sweater. I put on my puffer jacket, which I can wear when it's 50 or I can wear when it's zero degrees and feel the same level of comfort. Quince works directly with top factories, cuts out the middleman so you're not paying for brand markup, just quality clothing. Everything is built to hold up to daily wear and still look good season after season. So look, refresh your wardrobe with quince. Go to quince.com slash commentary for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. Now available in Canada, too. That's q-u-i-n-c-e.com slash commentary. Free shipping and 365-day returns. Quince.com slash commentary. Christine brings up something very important here. The truth is, if you're here illegally, you can't make your way without committing follow-on crimes. You cannot get around. You cannot make a living. You cannot find housing. You can't because you have no legal documentation for yourself. So you need to subvert the system in order to get by. And that, as Christine says, is not victimless. Right. But also, I think, like, in some senses, the discussion kind of misses the point, which is why do we need a line about who to arrest if someone is here illegally? Why can't – like, I'm the biggest squish on immigration I know. But why do you need a follow on or follow on conviction for something once they're here? This is what I don't understand. The point of immigration enforcement is to enforce immigration law and to set on top of that this idea that if you only commit certain crimes once you're here illegally, the whole discussion sounds kind of funny to me. So that's one thing. The other thing is that I don't I never like the stats that say X percent of those arrested were, you know, whatever. People get arrested in the course of raids, in the course of investigations, get arrested, they get released. The investigation, you know, it's kind of like when New York was going through this debate over stop and frisk and the people arguing against stop and frisk were like, less than 4% of people stopped by the cops and stop and frisk had an illegal gun on them. And it's like, well, yeah. And that number is going to keep going down. That's why they're doing stop and frisk because it's stopping people from carrying guns on the street. Okay. But deterring, using, using people, excuse me, using people who are not members of a criminal underclass to provide the mass numbers for deterrence is the reason stop and frisk ended. Because when they were stopping half a million people a year in New York City on stop and frisk, and 450,000 of them had never even held a gun, there's a point at which you start saying there are diminishing returns from this policy and that it seems to be going slowly on on entropic terms and that you are starting to alienate ordinary law-abiding citizens by having a cop say hey you stop there i'm gonna frisk you for a second now we all go through this at the tsa you know you get you get sort of called out and then they frisk you so it's much less of an offense that it might have been in other times, but that example may not work the way you want it to work. If the numbers suggest, I mean, Eliana's looking at this and says the numbers are, look, according to this, 40% of the people who have been detained or something have no criminal record. So as Abe would say, if you add everything up together, including what you have to do to stay in the country, 60% have broken the law. But that's where you have to say, is that percentage sufficient to make people comfortable with the aggressiveness of ICE and the Border Patrol in 2025 and 2026? That is a Rorschach test because overwhelming numbers of Republicans will say yes. And I think relatively overwhelming numbers of Democrats will say no. And I don't know. But see, that I agree with because those are two different things, though, as I see them, is whether ICE can arrest someone who's here, can or should arrest someone who's here illegally, and whether they should put on masks and go to the Twin Cities and do the things that they're doing. That's the thing. If if if they arrest somebody who is here illegally and it and it doesn't cause any sort of ruckus, no one's going to really object to that. Right. Because it's it's part of their job to enforce immigration. The question is, is how the enforcement. So what I what I'm saying is, I understand why we're saying what they're doing in Minnesota is bad. I don't understand why you would the solution to that would be restrictions on who they can arrest on top of their found their foundational mandate. okay so this is i just add one thing to that which is important because we we talk about this in terms of optics but it actually look during obama's two terms as president he deported millions of people millions i think it was like three million people just deported they were arrested they were deported they're arrested they're deported these are this was not a situation that became a natural uh national culture war in the way it has now and the pro the one the the sticking point here is that there are people in the Trump administration and around, you know, the MAGA movement who want it to be aggressive, who want it to look, you know, military, who like what that says about the strength of the country as they understand it. The problem is voters don't like that. And Trump also campaigned on it. He made it a big issue. It was a big failure for the Biden administration. It's like, it's a core issue for Trump in a way that like Obama wanted to hide it away. He didn't say, this is a central issue that I'm going to solve for you. But he was solving. Until the voters, you know, he would brag about it when he had to, though. No, but until the people defending him would say Obama deported more people than Trump. How can you say that this is all Obama's fault? All immigration policy appears to have on it appears to be directed or guided or comes a cropper because of the law of unintended consequences. Right? So Obama deports people the way presidents have always, the way these agencies have always deported people. Then he announces the legalization of the dreamers. And then 3 million people try to cross the border because the word gets out in Mexico and South America that the policy is changing and that if you could just get yourself across the border, even though that's not true, what they were being peddled was not accurate. Get yourself across the border and you'll get legal. And so he undercut his own quiet success at dealing with the immigration problem, which, by the way, had already been cut in half because of the financial crisis. Like people stopped crossing the borders in the number that they were crossing them in the 2000s because America was in recession. And you don't like go to America to look for a job when the unemployment rate is 10%. Like that's not a rational way to spend your time. But every time you look at this, so Trump, obviously, if Trump is going to get more aggressive, the number of people who are going to be arrested or taken by ICE or whatever, who are not violent criminals, who are not violent, is going to go way up. because you're doing more of it. And therefore, your net is not only going to be focused on violent criminals, but on civil people who commit these civil offenses, like the identity fraud that Christine talks about or whatever. Yeah, like taking on, that's I think probably the biggest one, is my guess, is like false use of a social security number or something like that. Which can take years to correct if you're the person whose number they stole. There's a huge market in the dead social security number, which is why sometimes there's trouble. But you remember when they found that thing where it's like, we're paying social security to somebody who's 150 years old? Do you remember when they did that? Well, there's survivor benefits to people, though. I mean, it can mess up survival benefit payments for people when they steal those dead people's numbers. It can, but it also works in reverse, which is that you have a person in your family who dies. And you, A, don't want to say that they're dead, number one. So you collect their benefits. And then, two, once you do that, you also sell the number. There's like millions of these numbers around. You sell the number so that someone can deploy the number and say they're somebody else. It's a crime. Of course, it's a crime. And yes, and you can be deported for it, but it's not violent. So when Homan says, we're going to focus on violent criminals, that is a huge step down because the number of nonviolent civil offenders of immigration laws went way up in 2025 because they got so aggressive. aggressive. And then you have this Warshaw test thing, which is, yeah. And this is the problem when you have a socially controversial thing happen, which is that if you don't have consensus on this across the political spectrum, you turn something that shouldn't be controversial into something controversial. And that's why you don't necessarily want to make the most aggressive stand on a delicate issue because you have the danger of discrediting your approach when people are a lot less comfortable with it than you might wish they would be, which is, I think, what Trump had discovered in January, which is that you come at them with all this polling that says, everybody's for your mass deportations. Let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go. and then some bad stuff happens in Minneapolis and then they turn and then Trump's like, we need to change policy here because you- But to the point that we began with, which is discussion of the government shutdown and really masks and a few little things, the Republicans and the Democrats in the Senate bickering over masks actually is great for both of them, both sides, because then they don't have to deal with comprehensive immigration reform, which is something neither party has wanted to touch for decades, but that is clearly necessary because it doesn't, the system does not allow for us to deal with all the people who came here illegally and stayed under Biden. And it certainly doesn't deal with the question of what Americans actually want in terms of a path to citizenship for people who come here legally or on a temporary work visa or what. We haven't, we need comprehensive reform. And so both sides don't want to touch that. I think it's even worse than that because you say both sides don't want to touch it. And I don't think that's true. Republicans touched it twice. Bush proposed comprehensive reform in 2005. And in 2013, after the Republican autopsy of the Romney defeat, the Gang of Eight tried to come up with an immigration reform package that Trump used as a lever to say Washington is insanely out of touch. So there was this there is this centrist there was this center block that wanted to come up with a solution that involved increased this but with some naturalization and some this and some that and a the right doesn't like it anymore in any way shape or if it ever did but the right doesn't like it because if you're going to do comprehensive immigration for it you have to have some path to citizenship you're not just going to say here's our comprehensive no immigration and everyone gets thrown out. That's not immigration reform because you're not giving anything to the other side to let them sign on. And then there is the Shonda of the Democrats on the left who don't want immigration reform. They are perfectly happy in a weird way with the system as it is because it demonizes Republicans and sufficient numbers of illegals get into various states to keep their numbers up for the census. Like that's the weird quiet issue here is the democratic interest in not having massive deportations because under Supreme Court rulings, a state's, the census, will count non-citizens as residents and thereby apportion congressional districts and electoral votes based on those numbers. If you have some math- Well, that was all the flights, all those flights during the Biden administration where people would come across the border and then they'd fly them to some other, they'd paper them and then fly them to weird locations all over the country. It wasn't a conspiracy theory. I mean, it was somebody in the administration understood that. Yeah. I mean, very cynical. It's a very cynical thing so that the emotional- At least if you're Ron DeSantis, you're nice and you send them to luxury Martha's Vineyard. No, but it's like, you know, we're a nation of immigrants and, you know, no one's illegal, no human being is illegal and all of that. So you stir up the sort of sentimental opinions of, you know, sort of mushy left-wing people when you're actually doing something unbelievably cynical. That means that you have no interest whatsoever in reform because the status quo is serving your political interest defensively, which is to say that there is a massive problem in blue states of net emigration. I keep reading about this, 2030, there's going to be this huge shift in electoral votes and congressional seats. And at the very least, if they can keep things where they are now, with the same numbers of population that exist now, that will prevent a total catastrophic collapse of the sort of the Democratic base in the House in particular, and maybe make sure that the electoral college isn't made incredibly more difficult for Democrats to get over the 270 number. So that's also at work. And then you have this third thing, which I wanted to mention, because there are some weird things happening in democratic politics. Because of the Mamdani, you know, the squad leading to Mamdani, leading to Mamdani winning, every Democrat in a district that might, you know, every ordinary Democrat now has a vested interest in being pretty radical on immigration issues or on this DHS issue in order to prevent someone from rising on their left and knocking them out in a primary this year Like this it this is like 2015 this is like Eric this is like Bratt knocking over what was his name? Eric Cantor, right? I mean, as, as the radical movement that ended up culminating in Trump and the Republican Party started showing weird success in weird places, knocking out people in primaries. Every standard issue Democrat is now afraid of their left, somebody in their district coming out of nowhere, you know, and eating their lunch. And, you know, when they've never had to run before, you know, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez did this in 2018. That started the whole thing where she knocked off Joe Crowley in a race in which she got 15,000 votes, and he got 10,000 votes, and he'd been in the House for 20 years and didn't know that he had to run for office against this sort of cocktail waitress, essentially. And he did. And she's obviously a huge star now. She was a server. I don't think she was a bartender. Wasn't she a server? I don't think she was a mixologist. The proper term now is flight attendant. Okay. Anyway, I'm just saying like, you know, so they now, you now go to them and say, okay, we need to make this deal on DHS. And they're like, I'm not making any deal. You want to say I, I, I surrendered to Trump. You know, I'm going to have some, you know, 24 year old psychotic running against me and they're going to win. So I put in front of me. This is what just happened, literally just happened in the New Jersey primary. That's right. Tom Malinowski, he, it was, it was, I mean, we could talk about the fact that a pack went in against him and you know what but the purpose of the the way that a pack went against him was to reinforce the idea among democratic voters that he was too pro ice and he was too pro immigration reform and a an aoc type yeah snuck in a three-way battle and um and and one at least at i don't know if it is it official uh it's official very very it's official yeah but so i just lost tom malinowski a primary last week so we're watching it play out in real time yeah so i'm just saying so you have a democrats needing to make sure that like there isn't there aren't mass deportations because it's politically disadvantageous for them Morally, they believe there shouldn't be mass deportations. And defensively, they need to protect themselves, elected officials, against insurgents on the left who will use any idea that they are making any kind of deal with the evil Republican Nazi monsters. They're handing somebody a cudgel to beat them with. So I don't understand how they come, they make a deal, is what I'm saying. even though it seems to me it's really bad, like they can get out over their skis, overplay their hand. They had great political success in the last month as Homan's climb down and everything shows, like this is a net negative for Trump and they have made very good use of it. They could go too far. Like I guess as Eliana says, the further we get from the pretty and good killings, the more likely it is that the public will say, hey wait a minute like stop talking trash about people who are putting their lives on the line as federal law enforcement officers like we like law enforcement law enforcement i don't know how where where i got a boston accent there for a second um speaking of which could you believe how bad that ben affleck uh ben affleck was on two different commercials one he did a boston accent and the other he was like d-aged to be goodwill hunting and like seriously was terrible. Okay, anyway. The point of that commercial I think was bringing Urkel back. Was that Urkel who was there? It was Urkel and there was Saved by the Bell and there was Friends. Fresh Prince. And Fresh Prince. A different world. What's her name? Jasmine Guy. Come on you guys. None of you watched television in the 80s. But where was Dwayne Wayne? How could you not have Dwayne Wayne show up and flip his glasses? for too much money you don't you don't know what his agent did anyway okay so uh to move on from the sublime from the from the uh from the ridiculous that we i just moved us into uh i want to talk about something depressing because you know that's really our mandate here um gallup came out with a poll this morning. It's a, I'm sorry, I'm just trying to find the numbers here. Where is it? Okay. So this is a thing they do every five years, which is how do you feel about the coming five years? Optimism, pessimism, right? So, or no, they do it every year. I'm sorry. But so the lowest number in history. They've been doing this poll every year for 20 years. Do you anticipate life will be better or you will have a high quality life in five years or not and current life satisfaction where you are in that? And we have current life satisfaction at 62% and expectations for future life satisfaction at 59%. And though you might think, wow, 62% say they're happy with their lives. 20 years ago, that number was routinely 78% to 80%. It was one of those amazing facts when people said Americans are so unhappy in life, everyone is so unhappy and the system is so terrible and then you actually ask people whether they were whether they were generally happy or generally unhappy and like were satisfied with their lives and close to 80 percent of people would say they were and now we're now at 60 percent and falling um that's very striking and it just is what it is like you you can't argue it's this is where people are going to be like, they shouldn't feel that way. And I agree, like Ben Shapiro gave a wonderful speech, which you can read on the City Journal's website today. He won an award at the City Journal in Florida, and he gave a speech about how America is awesome, and how the right and left together seem to have this weird predilection for trashing and, you know, trash talking America, and they are contributing to an atmosphere of hopelessness and despair among americans when they should be when they have no business doing that particularly the right but whatever whether whether that's true or not this is measuring something real existential which is a sense of american dissatisfaction and so when i when i read the uh gallup poll i did have my first thought was wow i am surprised that that the number is over 50 percent um just based on what you hear from people on both sides about how terrible everything supposedly is. And then, by the way, in the same poll, when asked if adults were asked, do you consider, are you thriving? That was below 50%. That's 49%, which is in some ways more depressing. half the country, little more than half the country, doesn't consider their lives to be thriving at this moment. There's an interesting debate that's been going on for a couple of years now. And a recent book by Brink Lindsey, The Permanent Problem, which is about mass flourishing in an era of mass plenty. And I think the discussion we've had off and on on the podcast about the abundance liberalism, this idea that the populist revolution that's happened, not just here, but in a lot of the Western developed nations, is the result of people looking for spiritual fulfillment, feeling a void, feeling mistrustful. And so you have people on the left who point to that and say, that's because capitalism is terrible. We're in late stage capitalism. Capitalism is the villain. We should burn it all down and become socialist, like in the city of New York. And then you have people on the right saying, all the institutions betrayed you. We shouldn't trust them. We should burn it all down and build something new, whatever that might look like. And then there's a whole roiling center on the right and the left trying to figure out, is there a future for liberalism? Can we actually rebuild these institutions? They're the squishes. They're the moderates. I would put myself in there too. It's not actually a political discussion. You should make clear when you say liberalism, you do not mean what we consider democratic liberalism. No, not progressive politics, but small L, classical liberalism. Classical liberalism. Right. What our founders thought the country should look like. Yeah, the centrality of the rights of the individual. and rule of law, individual rights, freedom. But Lindsay's books has sparked a really ongoing debate, particularly among economists, about what happens when you have material abundance, which really by measures of poverty and whatnot we have. Now, not everybody experiences that material abundance the same, obviously. But once you have that, what happens to a society? What does it look for? What's its purpose? If it's not conquering a frontier in one century and then building wealth the next century. And those are actually existential questions. And so it doesn't, I was not surprised at all to see those figures because we're at this weird transitional moment in many ways in terms of how we understand what our society should look like and what our individual purpose should be. And filling that void are a lot of bad influencers, bad populists, bad radicals, because they're giving people a message that seems like an answer. And a lot of our moderate institutions are not doing that well. Let's talk about Aura frames. So I have an Aura frame in the middle of my living room, and last night I glanced up at it, and there I saw a photograph. Actually, two photographs split in half because Aura does that for you. It sort of seems to understand what photos are related to each other and will kind of edit them for you to put them together in the frame. And there was a picture of my late mother and my late sister, Rachel, side by side. And I was, of course, very moved and pleased and touched to have this memory placed right in front of me in my living room for me to experience almost unexpectedly. And that is one of the great gifts that Aura Frames can offer. This is a wonderful, beautiful piece of living room, bedroom, whatever. I wouldn't call it furniture, but it's literally a photo frame. And you download your photos through an app, as many as you want, in whatever order you want, in whatever way you want. And they can provide you with all kinds of unexpected joys and pleasures. there is free unlimited storage. So you can add as many photos and videos as you want. You can add them from anywhere, anytime using the app. If you want to give it as a gift, it comes in a gift box included. You can personalize the gift with a message before it arrives. And if you download the app yourself, you can text photos straight to the frame or to the person whose frame, whom you're giving it to as a present. So that's Aura Frames, the perfect gift anytime, named number one by Wirecutter. You can save on this perfect gift by visiting AuraFrames.com for a limited time. Listeners can get $35 off their best-selling CarverMet frame with code commentary. That's A-U-R-A frames.com, promo code commentary. Support the show by mentioning us at checkout. Terms and conditions apply. I'm James Patterson. I write way too many books. Welcome to Hungry Dogs. The title comes from my maternal grandmother, Isabel Zelvis Morris. Nan used to always say, hungry dogs run faster, James. And I've been running fast ever since. Here's what will be coming your way soon. And this is a really terrific list, I think. You'll hear from some incredible people like Stacey Abrams. Yay. BJ Novak. Yay! Kathy Bates, Dolly Parton, Josh Gad, and Pope Leo. Okay, maybe not Pope Leo, but who knows? Maybe he'll show up. Hungry Dogs Run Faster. Thank you, Grandma, for turning me into a hopeless, obsessive-compulsive. Listen to Hungry Dogs with James Patterson, that'd be me, on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you, thank you, thank you. so uh we've had little bits and pieces of this conversation over the last month on the podcast you know the sort of the the rise in uh online gambling uh as evidenced by all the commercials that you were seeing you saw on the super bowl you're seeing during the olympics and all this draft kings and cal she and i don't know you know polymarket i mean all this stuff that is going on there, which is institutionalized vice. And there's nobody in the world, you know, you can be a libertarian and say the government doesn't have the right to tell you you can't gamble. But I don't think there's anybody on earth who thinks that a society in which people spend a lot of time gambling is a healthy society. I mean, I don't care where you are on the political spectrum. And in fact, one of the best claims of the kind of anti-capital left is that the wealthy, you know, one of the, that it's, it's, there's something morally depraved about the fact that the very wealthy and stuff like that, effectively, a lot of people have gotten there through gambling, which is to say they bet on the stock market and they bet successfully, and then they make a huge amount of money. Now there's all sorts of ways people will explain to you that the stock market isn't gambling because it's balanced by the invisible hand it's hundreds of millions of people making collect ultimately making a kind of not collective decision but you know then it's all a question of interpreting what people want and where it goes but so you have gambling right you have the you have the complete kind of decriminalization almost everywhere of marijuana right and and then you have just the avail the the total availability of pornography and access to pornography. So you have almost all of the vices that all the major religions kind of rose to help give people a reason to engage in healthy rather than life-destroying activities. And we are in a kind of, I don't know, wild west of vice. Charles Van Lament, by the way, has a great piece in that most recent issue of national affairs. Oh, Charles Lehman. Charles Lehman, sorry. Called The Case for Prohibiting Vice. It tackles a lot of it. It's totally on theme for that. But just for our listeners, if they want to kind of go into. Yeah. I mean, so you have this happening and then you have, we're not thriving. You have people saying, we're not thriving. we look forward to the future without much hope and all of that or purposelessness and it all seems i mean i think it's there's no way it's not connected it's all connected people are you know people are losing themselves definitely right people who people who feel hopeless about the immediate future might be more willing to take a gamble, you know, and see if they can, you know, get the dice to roll in their way because they feel that they don't have a sort of legitimate path. Otherwise that the opportunities aren't there. I think if you add social media use into the mix of this as another vice, the endless scrolling and tick talking and Instagramming for young people, the combination of that with gambling, pornography, you can understand why many people feel depressed and despondent. There's a lot of data to suggest a connection between the two and then the attendant feelings of shame that these things bring when people are engaged in them in ways that are addictive and you know, unsettling and the way that they change young people's social interactions and brains and behaviors and dating patterns. It's just hugely, hugely harmful and damaging. You know, John, when you talk about the biblical breaks, excuse me, on our base instincts, don't forget the admonition against covetousness. right which is another huge issue now Right I mean what is inequity about Yeah And what is populism you know basically you know about So that another one that is just that a current running through the body politic right now. Well, and the social media point also obviously plays into politics in a sense that I think often gets overlooked. And that's that rural, angry people who feel like their core institutions and core faith in those institutions been hollowed out over the years, whether you were someone who was a factory worker, you know, kind of a good small town living American, those resentments didn't used to have a way to be amplified and heard by others, not heard by the media, not heard by other politicians. It was something that was very much a local concern. And now these are all in these become instantly national concerns, which I think in some sense is good for the people whose concerns were often overlooked in so-called flyover states. But I think it also fuels the sense of rage and enemy and anger at institutions for having overlooked them for so long. And that, of course, is very harvestable resource for politicians who want to make hay of it, as I think that's where a lot of the populist movement has seen opportunity and also seen some more voting success. That is an unstable coalition, though, as we've seen just with the numbers on a lot of these key issues for MAGA in the last few months with Trump. I just think it's interesting. I just finished reading this remarkable German novel called Effingers, which was published in 1951. And it's basically a story of a German Jewish family over the course of 50 years, culminating in the Holocaust by someone named Gabriel Targit. And the reason I bring it up is that when it moves into Weimar, when the war is over, the First World War, which only comes up in the second half of this very long book, it describes everything that we know at a distance, right? The hyperinflation and basically the feeling among germans that you know they they were being made to suffer that this was an act of vengeance against them uh the behavior of the of the other european powers and sticking it to them and making them you know when at some point you know a billion marks equals a dollar because of the hyperinflation and there's nothing to be done about it and so she describes very meticulously what happens to even wealthy people in a circumstance, very wealthy people in a circumstance like this where, you know, they can't even, you know, they're like eating turnips because they can't, meat is too expensive even for the rich and stuff like that. And how a society starts to atomize on the basis of genuine, even if it's deserved, you know, a penury and pain. We are living in a world in which 96% of people in the United States are employed. Unemployment is 4%, right? The standard of living in the United States is the highest, given all the givens, health, measures of wealth, all of that, is we have the highest standard of living any human being, any peoples have ever had in the history of the earth. The famous thing where a poor person in America has a better life than the royal family in France in the 19th century, or in Spain, or somewhere like that. If you get sick, you can be cured. If you were royal, you had the same diseases as everybody else, and there was no cure, and all that stuff. And so something is going on here. The problem here is not material circumstance, which is what people want. It is soul sickness. And that's what I'm saying. When people say they're not thriving, or if they're looking forward without optimism or something like that, they are saying we are soul sick. And now the question is, what do you do about a society that is soul sick? Because when it's in the middle of the soul sickness, it's going to have a bad way of measuring what the cure is. So if you say you're soul sick, so you know what we should do? Let's liberalize pot laws so everybody can get high. But the soul sickness is combined with a completely legitimate sense that, and this is true on the left and the right, that the system is rigged in favor of elites. And if you're not a member of that, and this I think also explains why the Epstein scandal continues to dominate everybody. But it's this idea that the elites have the game rigged. So it doesn't matter if you find purpose and meaning and you find a good job and you do all the right things, you still are not going to win in the game of life because the system, the game itself is rigged. And I think that sensibility combined with enemy and purposelessness is why there's a lot more openness, as Seth was saying earlier, to just getting stoned or taking a risk because you're like, well, if the system's rigged, I might as well roll the dice. And that's dangerous for long term. What do I have to lose is a very powerful motivator. But I think that even that is the result of the revolution of rising expectations. Because I don't think there was ever a moment in the history of the world where people didn't think the system was rigged. And it was like, and complaining about the system being rigged was like saying, was like complaining about the weather. Like it was the nature of things that society was stratified. People at the top had too much and people at the bottom didn't have enough and all of that. There was no modality to deal with it. And the way you dealt with it was trying to find satisfaction in your own, tending to your own garden, as Pangloss would say. Just try to take care of yourself and take the pleasures of life as they come rather than measuring yourself against others. But that's comparison and envy. I'm talking about the fact that even someone who makes that choice these days feels like they still struggle because of the way the system is rigged. So they can't buy a house and just hang out and tend their own garden because they can't afford it. They can't. Again, I'm not in total agreement with the perception. I'm not disagreeing with you either. There's a lot of transparency in terms of also seeing who is the person inside the system doing these things or rigging. And that's why I think the Epstein files, not to keep bringing it up, but the absolute dump of information, you know, people sorting through and trying to find a name. Because it reassures them that they were right all along that the system was rigged, even if it's not, in fact, rigged. Right. Well, so there's a piece on Toby Young's Daily Skeptic. This is a website out of London. And it is by Michael Wolff, one of the most despicable journalists who has ever lived. and he wrote it in 2015 and he wrote it at the behest of Jeffrey Epstein in some weird notion of Epstein trying to cleanse his reputation to get Bill Gates to give him more control over Bill Gates's money. It's sort of explained in a preface. I don't really understand it and I don't really care and as I say Michael Wolff is a despicable person but this piece which is about 10,000 words long is absolutely eye-opening and precedent-shattering because it is the only time that you have ever heard in anything someone, like you hear Epstein's voice, you don't hear it because you're reading it, but he's quoted on the record extensively. And it's about the world that he lived in and in which people came to his townhouse and basically courted him and dealt with him and all of this. And partially it's a defense of Epstein saying he didn't really do it. It was all a cash grab by the people who sued him and all kinds of stuff, which is, again, despicable. But the portrait, the reason that it must be read is that it is like the world that Trump came around to destroy, even though Trump himself is a part of it. And now he's rebuilding it in his own image with the multi-billion dollar games he's playing with Gutter and the you know, and the Whitcoffs and his sons and all of that. But this is the number of A-list, billionaire, academic celebrities and famous people who are at his dinner parties coming to his house. He sits there all day like a potentate as people come to hear his wisdom and eat his chocolates and eat the special pistachios that he got from the finance minister of, you know, Abu Dhabi or, you know, or the Emirates or whatever it is. And his advice and guidance to them and what he was interested in and all of this, and you read it and you're like, this is demonic. Like it is, you're like looking at a world and refreshingly, And at this case, I don't feel any implication with this world because it's all kind of this mushy neoliberal Clintonian world of the kind of like post-Cold War liberals who decided that they loved money and that they loved Silicon Valley and they loved the progress and they loved – Not just liberals though. I mean, John Ossoff in Georgia is getting some mileage out of talking about the Epstein class. He's a Democrat. I know, but I'm saying he is because I'm saying the world in this piece, which was written in 2015, so it's important to point that at, is the world of the Clinton and post-Clinton ambit. Right. And the Times piece that ran the other day was centralized on the Clinton Global Initiative. Right. And not necessarily Epstein, but Ghislaine Maxwell's involvement literally in that. And apparently she was, it was her and Bill's brainchild, according to her. And the article seems to substantiate that to some extent. Well, and Lutnick is now implicated, though. This is interesting. This is the most recent. Right. Howard Lutnick. Yeah. So he went to the island. I mean, there's a lot of stuff. They were in business together. They had a business. They lived. They were next door neighbors. So they were. He lied about how much he continued his affiliation with him after he was convicted child sex offender. Yeah. My favorite detail. This is a dividing line. I will give a lot of look, I'll say people had poor judgment or maybe they just got caught up in the net. But once he was a convicted sex offender, you probably should not hang out with him or have any business dealings with him i clearly told people that you know how it is i had to i you know it was going to be a lot worse i had to make a deal you know they mistreated martha stewart and they're mistreating me now and that kind of non you know i mean martha was not procuring children i agree with you he claimed They did misnareed Martha Stewart. In this piece, Wolf offers the argument that Epstein would make that he didn't actually do it. And I'm sure Epstein made that argument to plenty of other people who may have raised this. And I'm sure it's absolute garbage. But the thing is, it is a portrait of this world that spreads from Larry Summers at Harvard and his wife, Elisa New, to Sergey Brin and the people at Google, to the finance ministers of the Middle East, to the Clintons, to Leslie Wexner, to Leon Black. and they're all coming to this townhouse to kind of serve pay obeisance to Epstein and remember the descriptions of what that townhouse was like that there were like the banisters were breasts like when you put your hand on the banister walk up the banister or there were like naked like the subtle decorating and the cortices and the light fixtures were breasts and vulva and stuff like that like it's not like they could turn a blind eye to it or like well i read about it but i don't know it was right there literally installed in the walls of the place that they were visiting a tasteful georgia o'keefe painting come on sorry so you know uh yeah like this is the elite this was the elite this is the democratic elite ossoff is very smart to try to find his way to establish himself as a cultural critic of it because that's kind of trumpian like to say i you know i i thought that this these were and admirable people. I've learned otherwise. They suck, they stink, and we need a new, you know, we need to destroy them. The thing is, like, we do, but I don't, you know, I don't know how you do it exactly. But Seth, you have a recommendation? I do, and it is, my recommendation is the cure for pessimism and this feeling, And in fact, highly appropriate to what we've been discussing today. My recommendation is the new Netflix documentary Miracle about the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics at which, of course, the most famous hockey game worldwide was played, which was when the U.S. beat the USSR in the semifinals and then went on to win the gold. In popular memory, by the way, I think everybody just kind of thinks that they won the gold by beating the Russians. They still had another game to play after that. But it is the Netflix documentary has unseen footage, unaired footage. It has interviews with the players. The players are there at Lake Placid sitting in the box at the arena. Currently, you know, they're current, you know, they came back and sort of had a reunion and they're being interviewed there. They're also interviewed in their homes privately. So they're interviewed together privately. They have a lot of stuff that we just haven't seen before. And we're used to seeing this through. I mean, I think probably the Disney movie is what people think first when they think of the miracle on ice. And that was a dramatization of it. This is you really get to see a lot that you haven't gotten to see. And it's surprising because there is anything left that we haven't seen about this this thing. But it is framed beautifully. And they they talk about how, you know, we as American America needed a win. You know, Carter was still president. They were interviewing. They show interviews of people on Gasline. One guy rolls down his window and says to the newsman, this is my second gas line today and I'm out of gas again. Like there was a feeling that America needed – The hostages were in Iran in the embassy. And all of this and the Olympics to top it all off, the Olympics were hosted by the United States. So they were here. So the Russians who were a hockey machine, right? One of the points made in the documentary is that although the Americans were not allowed to be professionals because the rules said you couldn't be professional hockey players, all the Soviet teams were essentially professional because the state took very good care to cultivate and reward these things. So they were like the professional team. They were this this hockey machine. And you meet all these all the players, the American players. And they were, you know, half of them are, you know, Irish Catholics from Boston. You know, one guy, the goalie, Jim Craig, who is wonderful in this. He talks about growing up. He grew up in a three family house in Boston. Fourteen children, six adults. so these were not um you know uh wealthy summer camp you know kids these were not like these these were working class kids you know who who were really likable and really relatable to an america that at that at that moment was feeling like i can't afford gas to put in my car there was something relatable about the heroes that you know the difference okay because okay I am not. We got to go. Miracle Netflix. Miracle on Netflix. You can also watch Miracle, same title, on Disney+, the fictionalized version, which may not be as powerful as this, but does have an astounding Kurt Russell performance as Herb Brooks. Anyway, so watch that. We'll be back tomorrow for Seth, Abe, Christine, and Eliana. I'm John Podhoretz. Keep the camera burning. Thank you.