
Today on the Matt Walsh Show, as Elon Musk continues to uncover the waste and fraud rampant in the federal government, it's now becoming clear that some of the media outlets panicking over this were, themselves, funded by the federal government. Also, Trump puts an end to men in women's sports. But is this actually the end of it? Will the Left give up the fight? And the NFL has made the highly controversial decision to remove the words "end racism" from the field during the Super Bowl. Click here to join the member-exclusive portion of my show: https://bit.ly/4bEQDy6 Ep.1531 - - - DailyWire+: Watch the movie that triggered the Left, then triggered a landmark new policy protecting women and girls. Lady Ballers is streaming now, exclusively on DailyWire+. Go to https://dailywire.com/subscribe today. "Identity Crisis" tells the stories the mainstream media won’t. Stream the full film now, only on DailyWire+: https://bit.ly/3C61qVU Get your Matt Walsh flannel here: https://bit.l...
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Matt Walsh
Today on the Matt Walsh show as Elon Musk continues to uncover the waste and fraud rampant in the federal government, it's now becoming clear that some of the media outlets panicking over this were themselves funded by the federal government. Also, Trump puts an end to men and women's sports, but is this actually the end of it? Will the left finally give up the fight? And the NFL has made the highly controversial decision to remove the words end racism from the field during the Super Bowl. We'll talk about all that and more today on the Matt Wal did you know that American homeowners have over $32 trillion in equity and criminals are targeting it with a growing scam the FBI calls house stealing. Since scammers can transfer your title out of your name using a one page document they file at county, then they can take out loans against it or even sell it behind your back. 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That's hometitlelock.com, promo code WALSH25. As you may have noticed, every so often I read a promo statement for our subscription service Daily Wire plus. And by every so often I mean three times a day. And I explain the reasons why I think it's a good deal, why you should get one, and then you as a listener can decide whether or not you want to subscribe. I don't force you to pay the Daily Wire any money. I don't steal anything from you. I just make the pitch over and over and over again. And then the free market takes over from there. But after reading reports yesterday on some of the government spending that's being scrutinized by Doge, it looks like I've been going about things wrong this whole time. I'm a sucker. We all are here at the Daily Wire because as it turns out, there's no need for media companies to actually convince anyone to buy their products. Or at least there wasn't up until now. There's certainly no need to come up with a competitive price or anything like that. Instead, all you have to do is make some friends in the federal government and they'll buy millions of dollars worth of subscriptions from you with tax money and you can set whatever rate you want for the subscription. You can charge tens of thousands of dollars annually per person if you want, because after all, it's the federal government. They have limitless resources, courtesy of taxpayers. So who's gonna notice this week as the Trump administration goes line by line through the federal budget, people did notice finally that this was going on. Reporting from Kyle Becker, Liz Wheeler and others has just established that the left wing outlet Politico from fiscal year 2016 to 2025 has raked in more than $8 million in total from federal government agencies. And specifically, Politico has been selling subscriptions to its so called Politico Pro service for $10,000 a year per subscription. 10,000 a year. NASA spent something like half a million dollars on these subscriptions. So did the FDA. They spent nearly $520,000 for just 37 subscriptions. The state Department spent more than a million dollars. The Defense Department spent more than $850,000. And for its part, USAID, the agency that funds secret coups all over the world, spent tens of thousands of dollars on Politico Pro. And it's not just Politico that's receiving massive amounts of money from the federal government. In recent years, the Associated Press has been pulling in several million dollars a year from the government going back several years. So has the New York Times. In fact, just last August, the New York Times reported that it had received a million dollars, or rather millions of dollars from the federal government. This is big Money that before 2021, the New York Times was not making. But after the Biden administration came into power, the fire hose of federal subscriptions opened up. All of this is documented on official government websites. But until now, it's gone unreported. What this means really cannot be overstated. Many countries have state media. There's nothing new about that. You know, it's a hallmark of authoritarian regimes everywhere. But we have something even more sinister in this country, which is state media that claims to be independent. Say what you will about North Korean state television, but they at least admit that that they're controlled by the government. Left wing media outlets in this country don't have the decency to do that. They were happy to continue collecting money from the government, which of course means they're taking money from you, from your paycheck without disclosing their conflict of interest in any of their reporting. The government also never asked you for permission to buy these subscriptions with your money. But fortunately they're not going to be collecting that money anymore. Yesterday, the White House press secretary announced that this funding, and in particular the millions of dollars for Politico has now officially been cut.
White House Press Secretary
So upon coming out here to the briefing room, I was made aware of the funding from USAID to media outlets including Politico, who I know has a seat in this room. And I can confirm that the more than 8 million taxpayer dollars that have gone to essentially subsidizing subscriptions to Politico on the American taxpayers dime will no longer be happening. The DOGE team is working on canceling those payments now. Again, this is a whole of government effort to ensure that we are going line by line when it comes to the federal government's books. And this president and his team are making decisions across the board on do these receipts serve the interests of the American people? Is this a good use of the American taxpayers money? If it is not, that funding will no longer be sent abroad and American taxpayers will see significant savings because of that effort.
Matt Walsh
Now if you look at the left wing response to this situation, they'll tell you that everything's being blown out of proportion. Cnn, for example, ran the headline, quote, white House says it will cancel $8 million in political subscriptions after a false right wing conspiracy theory spreads. So the fact that Politico got $8 million from the federal government is true. Just to be clear. But apparently the story is a false right wing conspiracy theory. And they make that claim because they say that some people are reporting that Politico got $8 million in one year, when really it was spread out over several years. And that's supposed to make this all okay? So rather than Politico getting $8 million in a year, it got about a million dollars per year for eight or nine years. To me, somehow that doesn't make this sound any better. If anything, it's worse. This was not like one single bad decision. This was something that was happening continually for eight or nine years. Meanwhile, an Associated Press investigative reporter named Byron Tal wrote this, quote, I looked at these contracts and I have my own fun fact. This is occurring because agencies, not just usaid, are buying subscriptions to Politico's pro editorial product, not because Politico is getting grants or other federal funding. Then he adds, quote, this is true of every media outlet with a subscription model. Now, that last line is especially amusing because it's very obviously not true. Really? Every media outlet with a subscription model is getting money from the federal government. Really? Now it's true for the AP where Byron Tout works. They're selling tons of subscriptions to the federal government. But it's not true for us, for example, conservative publications. As far as I'm aware, we didn't rake in $8 million from the federal government over the last few years. We raked in nothing. So why might that be the case now? If you listen to Politico, they'll tell you that their product is superior. They just put out a statement claiming that they offer, quote, granular fact based reporting. Now they didn't cite any specific examples of this excellent reporting though, which is pretty conspicuous. In fact, none of the people defending political and social media were able to point to this singular, this granular fact based reporting from Politico, much less were they able to give examples of the kinds of things that Politico pro offers that would justify spending taxpayer money on it. No one was able to give. No one was able to point to a specific thing and say, oh, well, they do this thing here. And so obviously tax money should go to that. And we all know why that is. And that is that Politico doesn't generally offer quality reporting. Unlike the daily wire. When they break news over at Politico, it's often completely fake. It's a lie that's intended to benefit the people who are paying their salaries in the federal government. Maybe the most obvious example of many of this propaganda came just before the 2020 election when POLITICO published the blatant falsehood that Hunter Biden's laptop was Russian disinformation. And here's that headline. What happened here is that dozens of partisan former intelligence officials got together and they decided that they needed to give Joe Biden some cover. They needed to hand him a talking point before the debate. And I'm not speculating about that, by the way. The former acting CIA director Mike Morell literally sent out an email to the former intelligence officials telling them they need to provide a talking point to the Biden campaign. And then when the debate rolled around, Biden used that talking point just like they drew it up.
Joe Biden
There are 50 former National Intelligence folks who said that what this he's accusing me of is a Russian plant. They have said that this has all the four, five former heads of the CIA, both parties say what he's saying is a bunch of garbage. Nobody believes it except his and his good friend Rudy Gianli.
Donald Trump
You mean the laptop is now another Russia, Russia, Russia hoax?
Joe Biden
That's exactly what is this where you.
Matt Walsh
Go now, whatever you call this political story about these intelligence officials, election interference, a fraud on the public, a threat to democracy, you know, or anything like that, you cannot call it journalism. And you also can't deny that the bureaucrats who sent millions of dollars to Politico in the end got their money's worth. They wanted to keep Trump out of office. And in part because of this stunt four years ago, it worked. But that whole episode was nothing out of the ordinary. As anyone who reads Politico understands very well, attempting to keep Trump out of the White House is essentially the mission statement over there, or was. Just ahead of the most recent election, for example, Politico wrote that Trump was delivering a, quote, racist, anti immigrant message, which was getting, quote, darker. This isn't exactly a unique take on the left, of course. Pretty much every liberal blog has been saying the same thing for a decade. But Politico said that they had watched 20 Trump rallies to really provide a comprehensive analysis of all the racism and anti immigrant messages. So they went the extra mile. And that's why they deserve $8 million from taxpayers, because they put a lot of legwork into explaining why Trump is bad. Now, if you show these headlines to Politico's defenders in the federal government, they'll tell you that Politico Pro, which is the product the feds are paying for, is actually different from the free Politico. They'll claim that Politico Pro offers a higher end product that's actually fact based and highly useful to the federal government. But if you go looking at the headlines from Politico Pro, you'll quickly realize that's not true either. Take this headline, for example. The headline states, former Senator James Inhofe, who claimed climate change a hoax, dead at 89. So the reporting on the death of a senator, which isn't exactly a big exclusive scoop, okay, you're paying $10,000 a year for that. Everybody else was reporting on this at the time also. But Politico Pro's special Contribution to the story is to mock James Inhofe because he didn't want to dismantle the US economy in order to change global weather patterns. So they throw that little aside into the headline on his obituary. He's dead. And the most important thing we want you to know about him is that he didn't believe in our climate narratives. That's the keen fact based reporting that you can only get at Politico Pro, and that is apparently worth $10,000 a year. Now, in their defense, in their statement addressing their payments from the federal government, Politico goes on to claim that, quote, politico has never been a beneficiary of government programs or subsidies. Not $0.01 ever in 18 years. So their defense is to rely on semantics. Essentially, they know that subscriptions have such a high price five figures in most cases, precisely because the government will happily pay it. They know that their coverage has been extremely favorable to permanent Washington. But they think no one will recognize this as a payout or a subsidy because in the line item it says subscription. This is the game they're playing. Which again, just to emphasize there's no way they could just the reason why the subscription is so expensive is because tax money was being spent on it. If not that, there's who else would pay $10,000 for POLITICO Pro? Now, as egregious as this particular story is, the truth is that this problem is far more endemic than the journalism industry. As Mike Cernovich has pointed out on X until this week. What we're getting from Doge and from a lot of these revelations is that Basically the whole D.C. northern Virginia economy ran on tax money funneled to NGOs, nonprofits and media outlets. The White House announced the other day that we've spent $20 million for a Sesame street show in Iraq, $8 million to teach Sri Lankan journalists how to avoid binary gendered language, $2 million for sex changes in Guatemala, and $2 million to help the BBC value the diversity of Libyan society. As the writer P.G. keenan pointed out, we also spent $40 million for AIDS drugs for transgender prostitutes in South Africa. Specifically, the money provides accessible clinical interventions for sex workers, otherwise known as prostitutes. There's also $8 million that we spent to study the effects of flavored cigarettes on bisexuals and lesbians, which you would assume is the same as the effect on anyone who is not a bisexual or lesbian. I don't know, but you gotta spend millions of dollars to figure that out. As well as roughly $100 million to combat HIV in Ukraine. Now, again, that's the stated reason for all of these expenditures, but almost certainly most of this money is simply being stolen. Even if it was being spent on what they say, it would still be a major problem. But we also know that when you hear about stuff like this and you think, even if I thought it was a good idea to fund a study into the effects of flavored cigarettes on lesbians, why would that cost millions of dollars? Well, when you hear that it's because most likely it doesn't cost, that the money is going elsewhere. Where else is it going? Who knows? So this is one of the biggest political scandals in American history. I mean, and we've only seen the tip of the iceberg. And this is only a handful of agencies we're talking about here. Imagine what Elon could turn up if he audited the IRS or the ATF or the FBI, other massive federal agencies. In fact, that appears to be exactly what's happening. DOGE officials have just been spotted at FBI headquarters as well as the Department of Education. And last night, the Wall Street Journal reported that DOGE is now looking into Medicare fraud, which is far more pervasive than most people can possibly comprehend. Specifically, DOGE has been granted access to payment and contracting systems at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and they're already on site right now doing this. So if DOGE is successful in just this one area, you know, the savings for taxpayers will be astronomical. As the Journal reports, quote, insurers pocketed $50 billion from Medicare for diseases that no doctor treated. And here's how the Journal explained the problem. Quote, insurers can add diagnoses to ones that patients own. Doctors submit. Medicare gave insurers that option so they could catch conditions that doctors neglected to record. The Journal's analysis, however, found found many diagnoses were added for which patients received no treatment or that contradicted their doctor's views. Close quote. Now, this is the kind of systemic fraud that is defying government spending for generations. There's massive waste, bribery, corruption at every level. Outlets like Politico haven't reported on it for the simple reason that they benefited from that spending. But it's coming to an end. Now. A lot of these corporate outlets are going to have to survive on their own merits, which is to say that they're not going to survive at all. They will run out of money very quickly. And the rest of us, people who are tired of reading thinly veiled propaganda from the intelligence agencies and wasting billions of dollars on various forms of government sponsored fraud will get to keep more of our own money. This is what Doge promised to do. And right now, based on the panic that's overtaking left wing newsrooms in Washington, they are certainly succeeding beyond anyone's wildest imagination. Now let's get to our five headlines. This country was founded on freedom. Freedom from a country that's forced us to buy overpriced tea, then tried blockading us when we dumped their tea in the ocean. How'd that work out? Well, it's time for you to throw your overpriced big wireless contract overboard too. You don't need to pay $100 a month just to get a free phone. PureTalk, my cell phone company, says no to inflated prices. The qualifying plan of just $45 a month, you can chose an iPhone 14 or Samsung Galaxy for $0. And yes, this is for premium service, unlimited talk text, 25 gigs of data and mobile hotspot at a fraction of the price of the big guys, all on America's most dependable 5G network. Get your iPhone 14 or Samsung Galaxy for $0 by visiting PureTalk.com Walsh today. Switching is easy again. That's PureTalk.com Walsh to claim your new iPhone or Galaxy with qualifying purchases from PureTalk, America's wireless company. Daily Wire reports President Donald Trump signed an executive order Wednesday banning men from women's sports, a historic moment in the fight to protect the integrity of women's spaces from gender activists and ideologues. From now on, he said, women's sports will be only for women. The president signed the order in the East Room of the White House, surrounded by young schoolgirls, female athletes and advocates, including Independent Women's Forum ambassadors Riley Gaines, Paula Scanlon and Peyton Edwards. And it is the reading from the executive order. It's the policy of the United States to rescind all funds from educational programs that deprive women and girls of fair athletic opportunities, which results in the endangerment, humiliation and silencing of women and girls and deprives them of privacy. It shall also be the policy of the United States to oppose male competitive participation in women's sports more broadly as a matter of safety, fairness, dignity and truth. So he signed the executive order. We have a quick clip from the event. Let's see it.
Donald Trump
This is one of the big reasons that we all won. And it's one of the big reasons that we had a record, a landslide like they haven't seen before very often anyway. And who could forget last year's Paris Olympics, where A male boxer stole the women's gold medal after brutalizing his female opponent so viciously that she had to forfeit just after 46 seconds. And she was a championship fighter. And actually they had two women or two people that transitioned, and both of them won gold medals, and they won them very convincingly. But all of that ends today because with this executive order, the war on women's sports is over. Thank you, everybody.
Matt Walsh
So he says the war in women's sports is over. And it could be. I mean, this could be essentially the end of the issue. It really depends on what the left decides to do next. They've. I mean, this is a major victory one way or another. But it remains to be seen what the left. How the left's gonna respond to this, because they've lost the battle completely. They've lost politically, they've lost culturally. Everyone is against them. Public opinion is very much against them. The question is whether they want to keep falling on the sword in a desperate attempt to pull the culture back towards allowing men in women's sports again, which would be a fool's errand. But I think it remains to be seen whether the left decides to do that. And I think that. I think right now, they don't know what to do. And I also think they probably won't try to do that, you know, because let's say a Democrat wins, God forbid, in 2028, the Democrat president could sign an executive order just overturning what Trump just did. And it's hard to predict what will happen four years from now. But as it stands right now, I wouldn't see that happening because it would be an extremely politically unpopular thing to do. And what you have to remember about this issue and the trans issue generally, is that almost nobody on the left ever believed in any of it. Almost none of them actually thought it was right or fair or made any sense to have dudes compete against women. They took this position cynically because for a very brief moment in time, like kind of a blip on the screen, but for a brief moment in time, the trans rights, quote, unquote, movement seemed to have the cultural upper hand. And so for a very brief moment, it seemed like the more popular position, the safer bet. And so that's that they decided to ride that horse. Now, if the left had the foresight to see this moment coming, Donald Trump flanked by smiling female athletes, signing an executive order banning men for women's sports with the wide approval of the public. I mean, if they could have seen that, they never would have embraced this position to begin with. And please don't think I'm giving the left any credit here. I mean, precisely the opposite. My point is that most of them knew better. Most of them knew that the trans rights stuff was ridiculous the whole time. The trans agenda was always something that almost nobody truly believed in. How could they? It's objectively, plainly, egregiously wrong in every way, morally and scientifically. This was a political play by the left, and it backfired in historic fashion. You know, if you rewind the clock back to 2017, let's say, and everything plays out the same since 2017, except the left never leans into the trans stuff or tries to shove it down our throats. If it had played out that way, then I think a Democrat probably is in office right now. That's how badly this whole thing has backfired on them. So as always, you gotta remain vigilant, and you never know what will happen next. Now, there's a lot of. There's a lot of the trans activists are fully bought in, and they're getting more and more desperate and more and more angry and panicked. And so you have to worry about that. There's no telling what they're going to do. We also know that, you know, there's an established history of violence among trans activists. So that also becomes a concern that I think is a major concern right now when they start lashing out violently even more. And then the other thing too, as we talked about a couple days ago, is that you have to keep in mind that one of the reasons why the trans ideology caught on so much, particularly in high levels of government, in media, Hollywood, big tech, it was a political ploy, like we just discussed. That's true. But then the other part of it is that for a lot of the people in positions of power, it's personal for them, like their kids, they transitioned their own kids. And for those people, we talked about this a couple days ago, they can't just let it go. They can never let it go, because to let it go would be to admit to themselves and to the world what they did to their own kids. So they can never let that go. So, and that's another factor here, which means that even as the culture moves past trans ideology, there's going to be this core of people, some of whom are powerful, who can never move on from it. And the more that everyone else moves on from it, the angrier, more desperate they get. So how does that play out in the next few years? Well, we're gonna find out. Now, staying on this topic for a moment, I thought this was funny. Here's a tweet from ESPN about this. The tweet says President Donald Trump will sign an executive order Wednesday designed to prevent people who are biologically assigned male at birth from participating in women's or girls sporting events. Now, it may not look like it, but this tweet actually signifies, I think, a major capitulation by espn, because by their uber woke standards like this might as well be them endorsing Donald Trump. The phrase biologically assigned male at birth, biologically the woke thing, the orthodox thing on the left obviously is to say assigned male at birth, which makes no sense. You know, for reasons we all know now, you're not assigned anything, least of all at birth. Your sex is not assigned or decided at birth. It is noted or noticed or recorded at birth. Although actually it usually is noticed and noted and recorded before birth. But that's the woke way of putting it is assigned male at birth. Espn, though, has tried to split the baby here because the two ways of phrasing. There's the correct way, which is to say that Trump has banned biological males from women's sports. Now, yeah, biological male is redundant, but it at least makes sense. You don't need to add male is a biological category. You don't need to add biological male, but it's not a nonsensical phrase. So that's the correct way of putting it. The other way to phrase it is the woke, nonsensical, assigned male at birth. ESPN has tried to combine them, and so they've said biologically assigned male at birth, and this is their attempt to compromise, but they've ended up with a phrase that makes even less sense. This is the most nonsensical way of phrasing it you could possibly come up with. You know, biologically assigned male at birth. Now, biologically assigned male maybe sort of makes sense because I guess you could say biology assigns our sex. That's a weird way of putting it. Not necessarily wrong, I guess. But then they added at birth, as if biology doesn't decide if we're male or female until we emerge from the birth canal. So if you heard the phrase biologically assigned male birth and you didn't know any better, you would think that it means that, like the moment the baby emerges from the birth canal, their sex takes shape in that moment, like this mystical moment of transformation. And that's the way, you know that that's, that's the way that they have presented it in their attempt to compromise ever so slightly and, but it, it makes even less sense because there is no, you know, when you have something that makes sense and something that's nonsensical, any attempt to compromise between sensible and nonsensical, you just end up with something that's nonsensical. That's the problem. All right, I've had this for a couple days. I want to mention. New York Post has a report. Smartphones are making teenagers more aggressive, detached from reality and causing them to hallucinate. According to new research, scientists concluded the younger a person starts using a phone, the more likely they would be crippled by a whole host of psychological ills. After surveying 10,500 teens from between the ages of 13 and 17 from both the US and India, people don't fully appreciate the hyper real and hyper immersive screen experiences which can blur reality at key stages of development. According to addiction psychologist Dr. Nicholas Cardaras, the digital world can compromise their ability to distinguish between what's real and what's not. A hallucination by any other name. A staggering 37% of 13 year olds reported experiencing aggression, compared with 27% of 17 year olds. Frighteningly, 20% of 13 year olds say they suffer from hallucinations, which seems way too high. I mean, how could that possibly be true? 20%. Whereas today's 17 year olds typically got a phone at age 11 or 12, today's 13 year olds got their phones at age 10, the report noted. And the report goes on from there. I mean, and whether it's true that 20% of 13 year olds are having hallucinations, I mean, you have to Wonder if those 13 year olds really understand what a hallucination is. So this is obviously all self reported data, but it does all come back to the same conclusion, which a million studies have found something similar, which is that just to basically summarize it and generalize it, phones are really bad for kids. It's just not, it's not good, it's not making anything better. And of course everyone's heard my rant about this many times. I really think that we're whistling past the graveyard on this issue. Having generations of children who are addicted to screens and phones practically from birth is a major civilization level problem. And I don't think that most of us are facing that or allowing it to really sink in. And in fact, even when someone calls attention to this problem, I think that the focus is often on the wrong things or it's presented in the wrong way. Like in this article, they treat the screen as a kind of medical problem, which means that's often how this is approached. Even the studies that are trying to demonstrate the harms that are done by having kids addicted to screens from the youngest ages, even those studies, they treat it like a medical issue, which means that someone's gonna come up with a medical solution. We already have those, allegedly. Right. There are drugs for kids who have aggression or experience depression and so on. And so that's gonna be the solution that. We already see this happen, and we've talked about ADHD this whole week. It's been a recurring theme. And the screens play a big part of that. One of the reasons why kids are perpetually distracted is that they are surrounded by distraction. What do you know? And when you got a kid walking around with this distraction machine in their pocket 24 hours a day, they're gonna be distracted. And so what's our solution to that is to give them drugs, right? Not to take away the distraction machine, but to just give them drugs to kind of dull the effects. Maybe eventually somebody will come up with a vaccine to protect against the effects of chronic screen usage in children. I mean, you know, and I don't even mean that as a joke, eventually that's gonna happen. But I think the real problem here cannot actually be quantified in a study, because it's bigger and deeper than that. I think the problem is that raising kids on a screen as screen addicts, along with all the other the fact. Does it make them more aggressive? Yes, I think, certainly. Does it detach them from reality? I think yes, certainly. Does it make them distracted? Absolutely. Does it destroy their memory, their capacity to retain information? Yes, yes, yes. But I also think that, again, you go a couple dozels deeper than that, it kind of robs them of fundamental aspects of their humanity. Like, for example. And again, I don't know how you account for this in a study. You probably can't. But one of the defining things about being a person is that you can or should be able to entertain yourself in your own mind with your own thoughts. You should be able to get lost in a thought, right? This is where every great creative idea comes from. It's where every profound philosophical concept that's ever been conceived of has come from. It's where every great song or work of art or movie or painting originates. It originates with somebody thinking, just simply thinking. But now, with the constant reliance on screens and phones, a lot of kids never develop, I think, that very basic ability, which is to sit and ruminate and think and develop a thought, because Any moment that would have otherwise been an occasion for thought and reflection and daydreaming is now used for mindlessly staring at a screen, whether it's a phone or a TV or video game or whatever. And we all know this. I mean, how many people today, kids or adults, how many people have the experience, have had the experience anytime recently of just sitting somewhere, sitting on a chair or on the couch. And that's it, just sitting and thinking. And you might think about this in your own life, like, what's the. In fact, you should try doing it just to get an idea of how. Just get an idea of how screwed up your mind is at this point. Get a read on how bad the situation is for you. I think we should all do this. So just try it. Try. Try sitting somewhere just on a couch. I'm not saying this is not a meditation exercise. Just be clear, okay? I'm not sitting, saying sit on the ground on a yoga mat, cross legged, just, you know, no, no, just sit on a couch, a chair somewhere and just try sitting there. How long can you do it before you pull out your phone and. Cause that's the other part. I'm not saying to turn your phone off and leave it in another room, like have it with you, just like you would. Well, we all do have it with you. Have it on and try sitting on a couch or on a chair and just how long can you do it before you pull out the phone? I think for a lot of people now the answer is 20 seconds. I even think that's an exaggeration. I think there's plenty of people walking around today who could not do that for more than 20 seconds. Just can't do it. Literally do not know how to occupy themselves with their own minds, which is to say they don't know how to think, basically. And probably the older you are, the more successful you will be in this exercise because you lived longer without these things, so you at least developed that ability at some point. Maybe it's atrophied, but you still have it. I think for a lot of kids whose parents just give them the phones as soon as they're, you know, the kids are three year olds running around now with tablets. And those kids, like, what the hell chance do they have when that three year old with a tablet who becomes a six year old with a phone and full Internet Access when he's 25, how long is he gonna be able to just sit here, just out of chair, just kind of sit, just thinking he won't be able to do it. Which again is to say you don't know how to think. You actually don't know how to think, which is. That's maybe the biggest problem a human can have. And then what happens when you have a whole society of people who don't know how to think? What happens there? Extrapolate that for 50 years. What do you end up with? You know, and there's, there's no indication that it's. And then you, you add to that you got a whole bunch of people don't know how to think, utterly incapable of entertaining themselves with their own thoughts. And then you add in the rise of AI and everything, which is getting smarter and smarter, so that you can get away with not thinking more and more. What does it look like in 50 years from now? That's why I've said many times that Idiocracy, which is a very funny movie, but I think that it, I truly do think that it was far too optimistic because it painted a picture of the dystopian future that it imagined was one 500 years from now, where people are just drooling morons who do not know how to think and rely on technology for everything, but they also don't know how to operate the technology because they're too dumb. In idiocracy that took 500 years. It is not going to take that long. We are well on our way. Give it another couple decades and we'll be there. So that's my encouraging thought for the day. Let's get to the comment section. If you're a man, it's required that you grow up in hey, we're the sweet baby gang. You know you can't have a good time in bad boots. That's why you need to covas whether you're a generational rancher or trying boots for the very first time to covas crafts quality western boots that are perfect for you. Born in Texas in 2015, they've made it easy for anyone to find their perfect pair. Every boot is handcrafted with over 200 meticulous steps, which is why they feel so comfortable from the moment you pull them on. If you get the chance, you should absolutely try them on in person at your nearest to cova store. They offer complimentary drinks and hospitality that's pure Texas. Plus with their best in the west guarantee you get free returns and exchanges for 30 days. These boots are truly built to last and impressed no matter where your day takes you. I just ordered a pair of earl boots in midnight cowhide and I've never been more excited about a pair of boots that I know will feel comfortable and sturdy to wear around right out of the box. I've been honestly checking the mail for them. I am super excited to get them every day and they'll be there soon, I'm told. So right now get 10% off@tocovas.com Matt when you sign up for email and text, that's 10% off at t e c o v a s.com Matt tocovas.com Matt cipher details to COVAS Point your toes West Point I say this at least once a week in my regular life. Who's demanding more? Snoop Dogg? I've yet to meet one single person who's an actual Snoop Dogg fan. Seriously, point to me. One single person who is so in love with Snoop Dogg enough to justify him being on television every single ad break for the past few years. Yeah, it's the great mystery. Zero demand for Snoop Dogg. The supply has exceeded the demand by 100%. There's 100% more supply of Snoop Dogg than there is demand for him. And to be clear, I'm not saying that people hate Snoop Dogg. That's not my point. Nobody cares enough about Snoop Dogg to actually hate him. What I'm saying is that nobody has ever turned on a show or a movie or a commercial or anything and said to themselves, man, I hope Snoop Dogg shows up in this. Nobody has ever said that. And yet he does show up in everything. Always. Matt's take on ADHD is very embarrassing, to say the least. It's definitely overdiagnosed, but there's tremendous scientific evidence to show that it's real. And yes, you can see that the ADHD brain is real and different than the norm by a significant amount. Yes, it should be diagnosed with brain scans, but just because it's generally not and is over diagnosed doesn't make it unreal. I like how we quickly jumped over the part about how you can actually see that ADHD brain is tangibly different by blurting out, well then why don't they all diagnose them the same way? Okay, this is the last thing I'll say about this for now, and I'll try to explain this one more time. I am not disputing that an ADHD brain, quote unquote, may be visible in brain scans. My point is that it's irrelevant because they don't consult brain scans at all during the diagnostic process or at any other point. So whether someone's ADHD brain can be found in the brain, whether someone's ADHD can be found in the brain or not, the diagnosis would be the same. So it's not relevant. Right. At best it's an after the fact rationalization, but it doesn't factor in to the diagnosis. But that's not even the point because let's just say for the sake of argument that ADHD is very visible and obvious in the brain. And let's even imagine a scenario where they do diagnose it with a brain scan. They don't, but let's just say that they did. Well, the question still remains. An ADHD brain looks a certain way. Okay, who's to say that it isn't supposed to look that way? If an ADHD brain is ordered a certain way, how do you know that it's disordered? You see, that's the question. So you being able to establish, well, yes, this is how an ADHD brain is ordered, this is how it's structured, this is how it looks like. Okay, that's fine, but that's not the case you're making. You're saying it is disordered, that it looks this way and it should not look that way. That's the part you gotta explain. I don't need to be told that it looks a certain way. Okay, fine, but you're saying that it shouldn't look that way. So you have an idea in your head of what a brain is supposed to look like and which to a certain extent we all agree. I mean there are, there are a lot of things we could say about the human brain and there are certain components of it that if those components are missing, then we know that there's a major problem. But, but with, with the ADHD brain, like there's nothing, it's not gonna, there's, you know, it's, it's not a degenerative illness. It's not eating away at your brain, it's not gonna kill you. It's. A person could have an ADHD brain and live just as long a life as anybody else. So how is it an illness? Maybe this is the best way to look at it. If our technology and our understanding of the brain was sophisticated enough, we would be able to, and I think can already in many cases locate any personality type in a brain scan. So let's just say, and I don't know, I'm not sure to what full extent we can do this now, but certainly if we can't now, there'll be a time in the future when we can look at a brain scan and if we had technology Right. And someone has the right training, they'd be able to look at it and pinpoint many different aspects of that person's personality. Okay. A person prone to optimism probably has in some way a different brain from someone who is not prone to optimism. There is probably an optimistic brain. Well, if we can look at a scan and see an optimistic brain, would that mean that optimism is now a disease that we have to medicate? If somebody is more prone to optimism than average, and we can locate that phenomenon in the brain, should we then give them drugs to drag them back down to the average? Should we just figure out what the kind of average personality is and just give everybody drugs to either bring them down or bring them up to the mean? You know, the average personality? Is that what we should do? Or do we accept that everybody has different personalities and therefore everyone has different brains, and some personalities work better in some situations than others. And that's just how. That's just being a person. That's what it means to be a person. That's my point. And if that still doesn't get across, and I don't know what else to tell you, Stephen Colbert is the biggest bell end on American tv, and that's saying something, because you have loads of them over there. P.S. sorry, Matt, but the best whiskey is made in Scotland. Yeah, Scotch is good. I mean, I like Scotch, but I have to say, I kind of prefer Japanese whiskey recently, which is. I've been on a bit of a Japanese whiskey kick, which is basically Scotch, but made in Japan, and I kind of prefer it, you know? So that's it. That's nothing else to say about that. Sometimes I get the feeling that Matt is not really as happy to lick Trump's boots as he'd have us believe. I mean, he's a team player, but he knows who Trump really is, and it bothers him. Yeah, this is funny. So I'm a Trump bootlicker now. That's the latest. If you've been following my career, that's the latest development. And it's funny because over the past eight years, nine years, I have been accused, alternatively, of being a Never Trumper and a Trump bootlicker. Like, it's one or the other for the last eight years. I'm always one or the other, and it just kind of. It seems to fluctuate back and forth. I'm just kind of trading places as we go along. So maybe what's happening here. Here's a thought. Maybe what's occurring is that when Trump is doing stuff that I think is good and that I agree with. I praise him, and when he does stuff I don't like, I criticize him. And since taking office this time around, I've liked almost everything he's done. I've been very impressed. I just. I don't know what to tell you. I've just been very impressed. I think it's been great. I think he's done a great job. Sorry, I don't know what to tell you. That's just my take on it, and so I'm telling you my take. So could that be it? Could it be that I'm just. The opinions that I give about Trump are based on what he's doing, and when he does different things, I say different things about them. It's possible, like, something to consider. Anyway, let's get to the daily cancellation. I have something difficult that need to talk about today. This is going to be upsetting to hear, just like it's upsetting for me to discuss, but here goes. According to reports this week, the NFL is going to remove the words end racism from the end zone during the super bowl this Sunday. And I know that sounds so shocking that you think it can't be real, but it is. Here's the Daily Wire quote, the NFL has reportedly sent the word to remove the messaging end racism from the end zone for the super bowl in New Orleans on Sunday. It'll be the first time since February 2021 that the message end racism has not appeared in a Super bowl end zone, according to multiple sources. When the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles take the field at Caesar Superdome, the messaging in the end zones will read it takes all of us and choose love. Quote. We felt it was an appropriate statement for what the country has collectively endured given recent tragedies, and can serve as an inspiration, according to NFL spokesperson Brian McCarthy. Now, I don't even know where to begin. All I can say is that obviously I'm very opposed to this move. Not just opposed, but I'm anxious, I'm worried, terrified, because how are we supposed to know what to do about racism now? You know, there are some people that are celebrating this announcement because they're saying, well, this means that racism is over. Racism is done. The NFL ended racism by putting end racism in the end zone. And so now we can all move on. And look, sure, there's no doubt that the end racism message did end racism. I'm not disputing that. I know just from my own life prior to that message being spray painted in the end zone. I myself was racist. But then I saw end racism on the field during a football game. And I said, oh, wait, we're supposed to be not racist. My God, I had no idea. And from that day forward, I was transformed. I was born anew. I stopped going to Klan meetings and I started volunteering at after school programs for disabled minorities. And I'm sure that this is the same thing that happened for so many millions of people out there. But here's the problem. We ended racism. We created a post racism utopian society. Or I should say the NFL did that message. And racism was the glue holding our new paradise together. And now they're taking that slogan off the field. What then? What if everybody starts doing racism again? How are we supposed to know if we should keep racism ended or if we should start it up once more? Is that what the NFL's saying? We should start racism again? Like, people are gonna watch the super bowl and they're gonna say, wait a minute, it doesn't say end racism. I guess we need to start doing the racisms again. And who's to tell them that they shouldn't? Now, sure, there will be a new message. The NFL says it's gonna put the words it takes all of us, and they're gonna put that on the field. That's not good enough. I mean, what takes all of us? Racism. Super bowl viewers are gonna think that it's a rallying cry to join together and be racist again. You know, the other message, choose love, doesn't help much. Who are we supposed to love? Who shouldn't we love? What if somebody loves Hitler? What then? Like, think about it. We need to be more specific. It should at least say choose love. But just to be clear, that doesn't mean Hitler. And there's more than enough. It's a football field. You could write that whole message on there, no problem. So they could give us a lot more information, they could give us a lot more guidance. But they aren't. And that's inexcusable. And now I'm lost. And think about the message that this sends to kids or doesn't send more specifically. Just last night, this is true. You know, my son heard about this news and he came up to me and he said, father, does this mean that we should do racism again? And I didn't know how to respond. The truth is that I'm just as confused as he is. And I said to him, I don't know, my son, I just don't know. And he paused for a moment and his eyes got misty. And he looked at me and said, I'm scared. And I said, I am, too. And then my son started crying, and so did I. And we wept. We wept for hours. This is what the NFL has done. Now, the point is that we are lost without moral instruction delivered to us via slogans painted on football fields. Now, in general, of course, I have always looked to professional sports leagues, athletes, sports commentators for guidance and direction. Like any American, I never form any opinion on anything without first consulting NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, all the sports center anchors, and LeBron James Twitter feed. Professional sports leagues have, over the past 10 years especially positioned themselves as our teachers, our surrogate father figures, really. And I've always been very happy with this arrangement. It makes a ton of sense to me because after all, if a guy knows how to throw a ball into a hoop or run down, run with a ball down a field really fast, it stands to reason that he also has deep insight into the most important questions of life. You know, I think two follows from one there pretty logically. Every time I see a basketball player hit a three pointer, I think to myself, wow, he must be a great philosopher. And every time I see a football player make an open field tackle, I think, geez, that guy must have great moral intuition. And I realize I'm not saying anything that you don't already know. This is what we all think when we watch sports. But the NFL is now abandoning its post. It's hanging us all out to dry. Racism is about to make a major comeback in this country. Millions of people are going to tune into the super bowl, see that the words end racism have been removed, and then immediately run out and commit hate crimes. And I will, too. I'm going to go commit hate crimes. I don't know what else to do. We're all now like lost sheep wandering alone through the pastures without our great shepherd, the NFL, there to show us the way. I feel so alone now and so scared and also so, so racist. All because of the NFL. And that is why the NFL is today canceled. That'll do for the show today. Thanks for watching. Thanks for listening. Talk to you tomorrow. Have a great day. Godspeed.
Podcast Summary: The Matt Walsh Show – Ep. 1531: "Another Insane Government Money Laundering Scheme REVEALED"
Release Date: February 6, 2025
Host: Matt Walsh
Platform: The Daily Wire
Description: Fed up with the talking heads? Matt gives you a no-holds-barred take on today’s cultural, religious, and political issues. Monday thru Friday.
Overview:
Matt Walsh delves into allegations of systemic waste and fraud within the federal government, particularly highlighting how certain media outlets have been covertly financed through government subscriptions.
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Detailed Discussion: Matt criticizes left-wing media outlets for accepting lucrative subscriptions from federal agencies without transparently disclosing these relationships. He points out that Politico, through its Politico Pro service, charged exorbitant fees ($10,000 per subscription annually) to departments like NASA, FDA, State Department, and Defense Department, totaling over $8 million from fiscal year 2016 to 2025. Additionally, The Associated Press and The New York Times have similarly benefited from federal funding, with the latter receiving millions of dollars post-2021 under the Biden administration.
Implications: Matt argues this covert funding effectively turns these media outlets into state media, undermining their claimed independence and biased reporting. This setup allows the government to influence media narratives without public knowledge, as taxpayers are funding both the government’s operations and the media's reporting.
Overview:
Matt discusses President Donald Trump’s executive order banning men from participating in women’s sports, framing it as a victory for protecting women’s athletic integrity against gender activists and ideologues.
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Detailed Discussion: Matt praises the executive order as ending the "war on women's sports," suggesting it may signify the conclusion of debates over gender classifications in athletics. He speculates on the left's potential reactions, pondering whether they will abandon their stance or attempt to overturn the order in future administrations. Matt also criticizes the left for their purported cynicism regarding transgender issues, asserting that many on the left never genuinely believed in the trans rights movement but leveraged it for political gain.
Implications: Matt posits that this executive order could mark a significant cultural shift, reducing the influence of transgender activists in sports. He also raises concerns about the potential for backlash from a core group of transgender activists who may resist this change vehemently.
Overview:
Matt addresses the NFL's decision to remove the "End Racism" slogan from the Super Bowl end zones, interpreting it as a troubling step away from moral guidance in sports.
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Detailed Discussion: Matt sarcastically laments the NFL's removal of the "End Racism" message, suggesting that without such slogans, society lacks clear moral directives to combat racism. He humorously exaggerates the impact by claiming personal distress and societal collapse in the absence of these messages. Matt critiques the new messages as vague and insufficient in addressing racism directly, mockingly suggesting that their removal might embolden racist sentiments.
Implications: Matt implies that the absence of direct anti-racism statements in high-profile events like the Super Bowl signals a moral and cultural regression. He warns of potential increases in racist incidents due to the lack of explicit societal commitments to combating racism.
Overview:
Continuing his critique of media corruption, Matt exposes how various federal agencies have been funding media outlets, thereby influencing public discourse and benefiting left-wing narratives.
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Detailed Discussion: Matt highlights how Politico and other media organizations have justified their expensive Pro services by claiming to provide superior, fact-based journalism. He counters these claims by presenting examples where Politico’s reporting appears biased and serves to further governmental agendas, such as framing Hunter Biden’s laptop as Russian disinformation to protect the Biden campaign. Matt argues that these media outlets are effectively acting as extensions of the government, disseminating propaganda while cloaked as independent journalism.
Implications: This funding arrangement undermines journalistic integrity, allowing the government to manipulate media narratives without transparency. Matt suggests that this revelation marks the beginning of the end for such media outlets, as government funding practices are now being scrutinized and halted.
Overview:
Matt discusses the DOGE team's efforts to audit and cancel questionable federal expenditures, aiming to save taxpayer money by eliminating fraudulent and wasteful spending.
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Detailed Discussion: Matt praises the DOGE team for their relentless auditing of federal expenditures, revealing rampant fraud across multiple agencies. He emphasizes the egregious nature of Medicare fraud, where insurers exploit the system by adding false diagnoses to claim payments for non-existent treatments. Matt suggests that these systemic issues have been perpetuated by biased media coverage, which failed to report on the misuse of taxpayer funds due to receiving their own government subsidies.
Implications: The DOGE team's actions represent a significant crackdown on federal corruption, promising substantial savings for taxpayers. Matt anticipates further revelations as the team continues to audit other major agencies, potentially leading to more exposed fraud and waste.
Overview:
Matt critiques a New York Post report linking smartphone usage to increased aggression and hallucinations in teenagers, arguing that screen addiction is a pervasive societal issue.
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Detailed Discussion: Matt addresses concerns raised by a study surveying 10,500 teens, which links early and extensive smartphone use to various psychological issues. While skeptical about the accuracy of self-reported hallucinations, he acknowledges the broader problem of screen addiction impairing children's ability to think independently, fostering aggression, and diminishing cognitive capacities. Matt criticizes the societal overreliance on screens, suggesting that it erodes fundamental human abilities like introspection and creative thinking.
Implications: Matt warns of long-term societal consequences stemming from screen addiction, including diminished critical thinking skills and increased mental health issues. He advocates for reducing screen time to preserve the innate human capacity for thought and creativity.
Overview:
Matt explores the topic of ADHD, arguing that while ADHD is a real condition, it is significantly overdiagnosed and mismanaged within the healthcare system.
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Detailed Discussion: While Matt concedes that ADHD is a legitimate neurological condition, he criticizes the current diagnostic practices for being subjective and overly reliant on behavioral assessments rather than objective measures like brain imaging. He argues that this approach leads to overdiagnosis and the unnecessary prescription of medications to manage symptoms that may not be clinically significant. Matt extends his critique to broader issues in psychiatry, questioning the justification for labeling naturally varying human behaviors and personalities as disorders requiring medical intervention.
Implications: Matt’s stance suggests a need for more objective and standardized diagnostic tools in mental health to prevent misdiagnosis and the overmedication of individuals. He calls for a reevaluation of how conditions like ADHD are identified and treated within the healthcare system.
Overview:
In addition to discussing political and social issues, Matt shares his personal opinions on various cultural topics, including celebrity endorsements and his relationship with former President Trump.
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Detailed Discussion: Matt critiques the media's continual use of Snoop Dogg in advertisements, suggesting that his frequent appearances are out of step with actual audience demand. He also candidly discusses his complex relationship with Donald Trump, acknowledging that his support fluctuates based on Trump’s policies and actions. Matt suggests that his praise for Trump is conditional, based on the president’s alignment with his values and goals.
Implications: Matt’s candid reflections provide insight into his personal beliefs and the dynamic nature of political support, emphasizing the importance of policy alignment over blind allegiance.
Overview:
Matt wraps up the episode by reiterating the significance of exposing government corruption, advocating for vigilance against media bias, and addressing cultural shifts in sports and societal norms.
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Final Remarks: Matt underscores the critical nature of the revelations discussed, framing them as monumental shifts in the fight against government corruption and media manipulation. He calls for continued vigilance and skepticism towards government and media institutions to safeguard democratic values and societal integrity.
Summary:
In Episode 1531 of The Matt Walsh Show, Matt Walsh fervently addresses the intertwined issues of government corruption, media bias, and cultural shifts impacting American society. He exposes how federal funds have been illicitly funneled into media outlets, undermining journalistic integrity and skewing public discourse. Walsh also highlights significant policy changes, such as President Trump’s executive order on gender in sports and the NFL’s removal of anti-racism messaging from the Super Bowl, viewing these as pivotal moments in the ongoing cultural battles. Additionally, he critiques societal trends like smartphone addiction among teenagers and the overdiagnosis of ADHD, linking them to broader concerns about mental health and cognitive decline. Throughout the episode, Matt combines investigative commentary with personal anecdotes and cultural critiques, painting a picture of a nation grappling with deep-seated institutional flaws and moral challenges.
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This summary aims to encapsulate the critical discussions and viewpoints presented in Episode 1531 of The Matt Walsh Show, providing a comprehensive overview for those who have not listened to the episode.