Tim Miller
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I think probably what he's eyeing is competence.
Can I run like... I think in his head, you think, Florida did great under me, and this was a disaster under Trump, and maybe I can run under that rubric.
But the fact that somebody like that, not a Tom Massey, not a libertarian, not somebody who's retired, not whatever, like an active Republican in good standing who...
ostensibly maybe cares about his political future.
And obviously he's term limited out as governor, but he could run for Senate, could run for president again.
For him to even be kind of dipping the toe in the water of criticizing the administration's handling of the economy is pretty noteworthy.
Predictions are hard in politics.
I was saying this when I was asked about this last weekend.
And I was like, look, we can mark this down and come back to it in Labor Day.
And you can clip it and be like, Tim, you are overly catastrophizing.
I think that the economic consequences are spiraling out of control.
And I think that people are way too...
you know, cavalier about it right now and imagining that Trump is just going to, can just stop the war and that everything basically goes back to normal and that we have some disruptions and that, you know, by the fall or whatever, like we're back to some pre-war kind of baseline.
If you just, you know, kind of look around the world and,
Just this morning, I'm poking around the internet for the podcast, and it's like a politician in Italy is talking about how they're having trouble sleeping at night thinking about the consequences.
And I figure somewhere in the United Kingdom, they're already having, like on one of the Isle of Wight or something, they're already having oil shortages.
Sam sent the story in India where some agree on the butter chicken.