Chris Rufo
đ€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And so in many ways, the unions see this as a form of corruption that simply expands the pie.
And then they get a cut of that.
They forward that cut, part of that cut to the Democrat politicians in the legislature, to the governor's reelection campaigns.
And all of this money, oftentimes at arm's length, not directly, but indirectly,
it really pays the bills and greases this corruption wheel.
And the Democrats know that there's no political opposition, there's no media opposition, there's no activist opposition.
They have virtually total control, like a Mexican one-party state system over California, that they can operate a massive fraud scheme with impunity, everybody gets paid, and all they have to do is just keep that lid on the pot, keep the corruption at a simmer, and hope that it doesn't boil over.
I think maybe yes, but I'd like to hear from Ben.
Yeah.
Well, yes.
Tell me why you say no.
I think maybe yes, but I'd like to hear from Ben.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, I think certainly that's probably part of it.
And what we've seen over the last five years, really accelerating the last one or two years, is that the tech industry has shifted or at least split.
And there are certain industries, as Ben mentioned,
of course, SpaceX, crypto, prediction markets, you know, in other parts of the tech industry where it seems to be kind of right coded.
Palantir is another company.
And so, yeah, would she want to undermine the power of these cash generating machines that seem to support her political enemies?
Yes.