cover of episode We Read Josh Hawley's Book So You Don't Have To

We Read Josh Hawley's Book So You Don't Have To

2024/7/15
logo of podcast Strict Scrutiny

Strict Scrutiny

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
C
Chris Hayes
J
Jonathan Van Ness
K
Kate Shaw
L
Leah Lippman
M
Melissa Murray
Topics
Chris Hayes认为美国最高法院的权力过于集中,削弱了对特朗普的法律约束力,这使得特朗普可以为所欲为。他认为最高法院自成为六比三的保守派超级多数以来,其运作方式发生了显著变化。 Kate Shaw则认为Josh Hawley的行为令人作呕,并且对他的政治行为进行监督至关重要。她指出Hawley的行为旨在推动威权主义,并强调了解他的行为和目标的重要性。

Deep Dive

Chapters

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Hi, I'm Stacey Abrams, host of the brand new Crooked podcast, Assembly Required with Stacey Abrams. Each week, we'll work together to better understand one of those big issues that seems insurmountable. Whether it's the Electoral College, America's loneliness epidemic, or the future of Hollywood post-strikes, I'll challenge you to dig in and ask, how do we get here? What obstacles lie ahead? And what can we do to get good done? Are you in?

Episodes of Assembly Required with Stacey Abrams are available starting August 15th. Head to your favorite audio platform and subscribe now so you never miss an episode.

Hey, everyone, it's Chris Hayes. This week on my podcast, Why Is This Happening? A crossover with the Strict Scrutiny podcast. My wife, Kate Shaw, her co-hosts, Melissa Murray and Leah Lippman, joined to discuss the Supreme Court's big decisions this term. The point of the Constitution and the separation of powers is that you don't want any one of these branches to consolidate power in a way that allows them to dwarf any of the others. You have to look at how different this court has been since it became a six to three conservative supermajority.

The court has just, it seems to me, given a permission structure for Trump to do everything in his wildest imagination he might want to do, but might have been somewhat constrained by the prospect of legal accountability from doing. All of that is now gone. That's this week on Why Is This Happening. Search for Why Is This Happening wherever you're listening right now and follow. Mr. Chief Justice, may it please the court.

It's an old joke, but when a man argues against two beautiful ladies like this, they're going to have the last word. She spoke, not elegantly, but with unmistakable clarity. She said, I ask no favor for my sex. All I ask of our brethren is that they take their feet off our necks.

Hello, and welcome back to Strict Scrutiny, your podcast about the Supreme Court and the legal culture that surrounds it. We are your hosts. I'm Kate Shaw. I'm Leah Littman. And I'm Melissa Murray. And listeners, prepare yourselves, because this is a very, very special episode. We have such a treat in store for you. I almost cannot contain myself. I am

I have no words. So Leah, go. Tell them what the treat is. So we had such a wonderful time with amicus of the pod, Jonathan Van Ness. We knew we needed to have them back on. And we think we found the perfect occasion to do so. A plus occasion. A plus occasion. A plus occasion.

Well, if we're grading the occasion, I might give it an F, but I'm hoping it will generate an A-plus experience for our listeners. So regular listeners of the show know that we stay up on the goings-on of the sprinter who moonlights as a senator, Josh Hawley, who in between some long runs and light jogs manages to find time to conduct rather unhinged questionings

of various judicial nominees on the Senate Judiciary Committee and some light insurrection encouragement to boot. So listeners, if you are not familiar with Josh Hawley, we might run a few clips so you get an idea of who this person is. So here's a clip of Josh Hawley at the Katonji Brown Jackson confirmation. You had an 18-year-old.

who possessed and distributed hundreds of images of 8-year-olds and 9-year-olds and 10-year-olds, and you gave him, frankly, a slap on the wrist of three months. Do you regret it? I don't remember whether it was distribution or possession in the law. It was both. Do you regret it? In the law, there are different crimes that people commit in this area. Judge, you gave him three months. My question is, do you regret it or not? Senator, what...

I regret is that in a hearing about my qualifications to be a justice on the Supreme Court, we've spent a lot of time focusing on this small subset of my sentences. And I've tried to explain many times. You regret that we're focusing on your cases? I don't understand. No, no, no. I'm talking about the fact that you're talking about seven... Child pornography cases?

Very serious cases. I'm glad we agree on that. Some of which involve conduct that I sentence people to 25, 30 years. Three months in this case, Judge. Do you regret it? You haven't answered my question yet. Do you regret this sentence? Senator, I would have to look at the circumstances. Senator, I've answered this question many times from many senators who've asked me, so I'll stand on what I've already said.

So you have nothing to add about why these crimes, why these images, in your view, do not signal an especially heinous or egregious child pornography offense. That's Hawkins. You say, and Cooper, I understand the government's argument, but I don't find them persuasive, the fact that there were pre-prevescent children, from the standpoint of characterizing this as an especially egregious child pornography offense. That's page 58.

Senator, I've answered this question. I've explained how the guidelines work, and I'll stand on my answer. But the guidelines are not mandatory. I wish they were, but they're not. The Supreme Court made that determination. I'm trying to understand why you think it's rational not to sentence...

criminals based on the number of images they have. You say that this is a policy disagreement that you have with the guidelines. This gets to the core of your judicial philosophy. Yes, that's Josh Hawley introducing pornography into a Senate confirmation. All very, very normal. Equally normal has been Josh Hawley's

Islamophobic-esque line of questioning at the hearing for Third Circuit nominee Adil Manji. Adil Manji has still not been confirmed by the Senate and has actually lost the support of Democratic senators because of this line of questioning that has tried to link Adil Manji to terrorism.

That's not the greatest hit, though, on the Josh Hawley parade of horribles. At number one with a bullet is Josh Hawley, who has maintained that Naomi Rao of the D.C. Circuit is simply not socially conservative enough to be on Trump's SCOTUS shortlist. Query who would fit the bill for one Josh Hawley, if not Naomi Rao. It truly boggles the mind. So all to say,

We occasionally, habitually mock Josh Hawley and call out his actually disgustingly gross behavior. And we don't do this because it sparks joy for us. We do it because Josh Hawley is actually among the authoritarianism forward Gilead curious entrepreneurs in the federal government. So knowing what he is up to and what he is working toward is vitally important.

And because it is so important, we, the three of us, as an act of service and of love for our listeners, not for Josh Hawley, held our collective noses and read his book slash polemic, which is titled, I'm going to try to say it with a straight face, Manhood, colon, Manhood.

The Masculine Virtues America Needs. So we read the book and we reviewed it for the Michigan Law Review's upcoming book review issue. So it'll be available for your reading or hate reading pleasure shortly. And more broadly, you know, we've talked on the show about how various political officials with the cooperation of the courts are engaged in an effort to restore traditional sex roles and clawback advances that women and LGBTQ people have made. And this book,

really lays all of that, the entire agenda out, right? It says the quiet part out loud. And so we thought it was important to give both readers and listeners a glimpse of the worldview that animates Hawley's book, that he is openly trumpeting because he thinks it is a path to political power. And we wanted to suggest that this worldview is very similar to the worldview driving the conservative majority on SCOTUS.

Or we should say Brodus. Or Scrotus, as the case may be. And as we noted at the top, we are joined by Jonathan Van Ness, JVN, who will help break down Josh Hawley's conceptions of manhood and masculinity, read them for filth, and as importantly, help us have a good time doing so. So welcome to the show, Jonathan. You guys, I'm so happy to be back.

I miss you all the time. You are my Roman Empire podcast, except for I listen to you and think of you all the time. I think you're doing such important work. And wow, that...

book is all right i mean my i just started twitching involuntarily interestingly on my right side which according to eastern medicine is my son's side which is your masculine side so my right side my son's side is literally rebelling at this very thought of this book but i'm really proud of you guys for reading it and let's get into the horrors and also melissa your ability to assign a

pop culture references to such dark, conservative activism is equally as amazing and inspiring as it also is scary because it almost makes it sound like

I'm like, Gilead Curious, yas. But then I'm like, wait, no. Focus. This is serious. No, you don't want to be Gilead Curious. You don't want to be Gilead Curious. No. No. No. But again, the gist of the book is a little Gilead Curious. So I'll just give you a brief description, listeners, because we read this, so you don't have to.

Basically, the gist of the book is that American men are really taking it on the chin, which is to say that men are the victims of a society with its woke laws and policies that are trying to rectify the historic discrimination that women and girls have suffered in this society. And to be very

very clear, Josh Hawley isn't wrong about some of this. There's considerable social science and empirical evidence that backs up his claim, at least when we're talking about boys and men who are not in the highest income brackets and socioeconomic status. So there is just a lot of research about men falling behind in terms of higher education, especially among the middle and working class, not so much among the upper classes who tend to be the leaders of society. But in any event,

Scholars and policymakers have all talked about the range of factors that contribute to the gender gap in higher education, the gender gap in employment, and the gender gap in

And they have real, actual, factual, empirical support for what is driving this. Josh Hawley wants to talk about this, but again, he doesn't really want to talk about it with any rigor. So by contrast, Josh Hawley's description of this problem is that it is animated almost entirely by what Hawley calls Epicureanism, which is a code word for liberalism or progressivism. And he says, quote,

Men have been told this nonsense for decades now by the press and the politicians. The nonsense is apparently equality and equal rights for women. In these circumstances, under the influence of this creed, the creed is the Equal Protection Clause, is it any wonder that so many men now feel adrift, bereft, and yes, ashamed to be men? Question mark. That's on page nine.

Under that label of Epicureanism or liberalism, Josh Hawley lumps a lot of different things. So there is the left's denigration of men, the left's insistence on self-care, also screen time, including video games, porn consumption, which, as I said earlier, Josh Hawley is very preoccupied with.

Declining marriage rates are another symptom of epicureanism. Delaying or abstaining from parenthood, ladies, another sign of epicureanism. And of course, the zero tolerance policy found in many schools alongside the childhood diagnoses of ADD and ADHD. All of this is the work of the liberal left and all of it is a concerted campaign to stick it to men.

And as Melissa was just alluding to, there are scholars and policymakers who have basically said there is a kernel of truth to what Hawley is saying, which is that American men are falling behind in all kinds of ways. But Hawley, of course, wants to lay the blame at the feet of women and progressives. And what folks who've actually studied this phenomenon have come up with is, you know, there are lots of different potential causes and interventions that might be appropriate to actually address the plight of Americans.

American boys and men. But what Hawley thinks is that what we need to do is read the Bible and read it in a highly selective way, which I suppose is not surprising given the proclivities of the current conservative Supreme Court justices for highly selective reading of all kinds of texts.

Here, let me just read a couple of quotes from Holly's invocation of the Bible. So,

narrator voice. Melissa, what's omitted from that version of the narrative that Holly offers? Before Abraham begat a postmenopausal baby on Sarah, he first had a whole ass kid with a servant girl named Hagar. And we might question Hagar's ability as a said servant girl to consent. But again, totally selective. The Clarence Thomas School of Bible Reading.

Well, that passage has been read out of the Bible, much like they have read out the Establishment Clause from the Constitution and other provisions as well. This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. It's the end of the Supreme Court term, which means it's time for a self-care refresher. What are your self-care non-negotiables? Maybe you never skip leg day or therapy day. When your schedule is packed with kids' activities, big work projects, and more, it's easy to let your priorities slip.

Even when we know what makes us happy, it's hard to make time for it. But when you feel like you have no time for yourself, non-negotiables like therapy are more important than ever. And as we know from this season of The Bear, non-negotiables are a BFD.

If you're thinking of starting therapy, give BetterHelp a try. It's entirely online, designed to be convenient, flexible, and suited to your schedule. No travel time. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist and switch therapists anytime for no additional charge so you can find someone who works for you. Never skip therapy day with BetterHelp.

Visit betterhelp.com slash strict today to get 10% off your first month. That's betterhelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash strict.

Strict scrutiny is brought to you by Skims. Okay, so not to be a broken record, but I broke my elbow and it stinks. One of the things I really needed are comfortable clothes that I can also get myself into. And for that, I've been loving the Skims soft lounge line. Sleeping in an elbow brace is not fun, but I at least have my super comfortable and breathable Skims soft lounge jammies to help make me comfortable, including after a grueling session of PT. I'm

One of the biggest reasons to love skims is because of how comfortable their fabrics are, and the soft lounge collection really takes comfort to that next level. Aside from comfort, clothing that is versatile is just as important. And while this collection is technically loungewear, it looks so good you can wear it basically everywhere. And there are specific items designed for going outwear. You may not automatically think of dresses when you think of loungewear, but the soft lounge long slip dress changes the game. The soft lounge fabric is exceptional. You'll wish your whole closet was made of this stuff. If

If it's always hard for you to find clothes that you like in the warmer months, the soft lounge tank and fold over pant pair perfectly together and will answer your lounge wear prayers. Finding a great pair of pajamas is no easy feat. Most fabrics are either too heavy or too stiff, but the soft lounge sleep set changes that.

If you haven't gotten on the matching pajama set train, this is your sign. Who knew something so simple could make you feel like you have your whole life together? My favorite soft lounge pieces so far are the soft lounge sleep set. The fabric is amazing. It's dense and therefore feels luxurious, but it's also super soft and isn't too heavy. It's both cozy and cool. And that's what stuck out to me first. And I've liked it so much. These have become night to day PJs for me. I kind of never get out of them.

Shop the Skims Soft Lounge Collection at Skims.com, now available in sizes extra extra small to 4X. If you haven't yet, be sure to let them know we sent you. After you place your order, select podcast in the survey and select strict scrutiny in the drop down menu that follows.

Holly invokes the Bible in part because he thinks that the solution to all of our problems is that American men need to live their lives according to five biblical archetypes, which we are going to talk about now. So I'm actually going to lump two of the archetypes together because Holly kind of does so as well. And that is the archetype of the father and the archetype of the husband. First, can we ask JVN, what do you think about this? Like,

All the things that are befalling American society and American men in particular. Is it because of self-care? Is it because of self-care? It's because someone put a mask on and took care of themselves, took a nap. I thought what was so interesting when I was reading all of my highlighted portions from the book is how...

So many conservative policies are at the heart of what he thinks the problems are, like the crisis of fatherlessness. Like if you look at family separation, which is like really mass incarceration and the way that we have like, and when you think about mass incarceration, it does affect people who have less income, majorly BIPOC people. I mean, but there's just a lot of overlap that he refuses to see the nuance on. And I just keep thinking like,

The real enemy of conservatism is nuance. Like, even when he's talking about, like, you know, they can't even say what a woman is or they can't even say what a man is, which are so much transphobia, like, all throughout this. Like, the refusal to see the difference between, like, biology and then, like, the expression of gender, like, biological sex and gender. There's a refusal to see that, a refusal to understand that. And just, like, this...

When you look at what he's talking about and where it comes... Do you guys know about Sabrina Strings? Dr. Sabrina Strings. She's major. She's like one of my faves. No, enlighten us. She just wrote this book on the death of romance. I had her on Getting Curious. And it kind of is talking about this from the females POV, but on romance. But because anything is everything, so much of what women are dealing with is all of the stuff that Josh Hawley...

These policies are making things so much harder for women and it's making it harder for romance and connection and families of any type. But it's just so interesting the ways that everyone are going about trying to approach us in such different ways and such scary ways. Yeah. We're also scared of each other, but we should be scared of him because Jesus. Yeah.

We should be scared of him, but it's such a great point that many of the contributing factors that he identifies for the decline of men are in fact attributable to conservative Republican supported policies. So he noted delaying or abstaining from parenthood. Well, who the fuck opposes parental leave and family leave newsflash, right? It's not the Democrats or the zero tolerance policies found in many schools or

Who is all about, right, like calling the police and having these, you know, disciplinary policies that are overwhelmingly affecting children of color? Again, like it's not primarily Democrats and progressives. And not just leave, right, but funding for postpartum care and, you know, actual Medicaid expansion and other state programs that provide support.

People who have just given birth and babies and kids access to basic fucking subsistence. Like all of the most conservative states in terms of their governance are the worst in terms of those policies. Like people plan their families and abstain or defer parenthood so they can afford it. Yeah. Yeah.

And also like thinking about Sonia Passy, who's like the founder of Free From, which is this organization that is like experts on intimate partner violence. Because so much of this really goes to intimate partner violence. And we don't even call it intimate partner violence. But the policies that Republicans refuse to like enforce when it comes to like

So.

So to this kind of vision for America that Hawley entreats men to follow is to live according to these biblical archetypes. As I was noting, one is the father and one is the husband. And Hawley just proclaims, and this is a quote, the mission of manhood is bound up with manhood.

And at the same time, right, he says, you know, marriage is where, quote, a man learns to open his life to another and bind his fate to hers. Right. End quote. So defining marriage as between a man and a woman. And the idea, again, that all of these problems would be fixed if marriage.

men just have children is wild because it seems to depict and just expect that women are going to be these vessels for men's redemption. Like they just need to bear children so men can be good. It's, it's,

It's almost like women should not wear sexy clothing so men won't rape them or sexually assault them. Same energy. Yeah. Very similar. You guys, it's so hard. Like, when I read the quotes, like, I notice my, like, toes curling and my, like, fingers curling. And it's, like, almost – I'm, like, ah! It's, like, it's almost hard. It's, like –

It's so hard. What was it like to read this book? Because I read this book and I was just like, Jesus. I mean, just like the selective reading of the Bible, the fact of these archetypes. I mean, this is a man with a family. And we hear very little about his wife, who is a Supreme Court advocate trying to keep medication abortion access off the table for people around the country. And he has a daughter. We never even hear about the daughter.

Like, women are completely erased from this book. I mean, it is about manhood. I guess that's par for the course. Well, like, I noticed in some of my advocacy work in Texas that, like, a lot of people who worked in...

And the Democratic Party would observe from their colleagues on the right that they would say off the record that they didn't even believe any of this, but they knew that if they could speak about, link their religiousness to policy as much as possible, that that would help them. But behind closed doors, they don't believe any of this. But his book is so convincing that he drinks the Kool-Aid that I'm like, maybe he really...

does actually believe. I can't tell with him because he's really committed to the... And he's not Gilead curious. He's like full, hardcore. He puts the G in Gilead or whatever. It's hard to tell whether this is complete opportunism, like he's doing this instrumentally because he thinks it'll be politically palatable to a certain group of people that he imagines will continue...

bolstering him and pushing him forward and advancing him in the political spectrum. But I will say...

To the extent he is drinking the Kool-Aid, other people are drinking the Kool-Aid too because as Leah suggests, there is a lot of this sort of archetype lace logic and language in many of the cases the Supreme Court is spitting out under this new conservative six to three supermajority. So the emphasis on husbands and fathers and a man's mission to be a father,

works right in line with Dobbs, with, you know, and women must be mothers, and 303 Creative, the case that basically said that gay civil rights have to yield to free speech, Masterpiece Cake Shop, Fulton versus City of Philadelphia, all of these cases where we're, you know, sort of talking about heterosexual marriage and the opportunity for those who are religious believers to

to abstain from a vision of marriage that might be more expansive than heterosexual marriage. So I mean, all of that is very much in keeping with the court's jurisprudence. And I wanted to call attention to two other archetypes that Holly spends a lot of time on. One of them is the archetype of the quote unquote priest. And Holly is very clearly nodding to evangelical Christianity. He's explaining in the book that men

And it's

It's a lot easier, I think, to be a priest bringing God to the world if you get a government subsidy to do that. And perhaps that helps explain the court's jurisprudence in cases like Kennedy versus Premerton School District, where the court authorizes the praying coach, Coach Kennedy, to...

conduct his prayers in front of enormous audience on a publicly owned high school football field. Or maybe it's more in keeping with Carson versus Macon, where the court allows a no aid policy to be invalidated so that religious schools can get public funding. Yeah. And I mean, to JVN's point about has he,

really sort of like bought this all? Has he drank the Kool-Aid or sort of what exactly is motivating him here? It is, I think that, you know, however terrible it is, and it's truly an atrocious book, I do think in some weird way it does, it is an authentic expression of his real convictions and not pure political posturing. And I say this, I could be wrong, maybe it's both. But if he wanted to suggest that, you know, kind of

liberals, feminists, LGBTQ people, secularists, like these are the villains. And actually return to kind of traditional sexual mores and religiosity is the prescription. He could have cast religiosity and sort of like faithfulness in kind of broader, more ecumenical terms. It's so narrowly focused on a single Christian and evangelical Christian vision of what it means to be godly and to live in a family and a marriage. And

And it doesn't even pretend to be any more expansive in sort of who it is interested in reaching than that. And I think that maybe that is just the only valid, recognizable model of American patriotic manhood that Hawley is willing to concede. And even I think for a lot of conservatives, that is an unbelievably narrow conception of sort of like what it means to be a person, an American and a man. But that's what Hawley thinks is valid and legitimate. Right.

He also seems to think that Hollywood and just the entertainment industry is so much further left than it really is. I mean, I do think that obviously things do lean a little left, but the amount of misogyny, transphobia, and just kind of profanity

pro-man POV bias that is in Hollywood that people have to swim against every day. It's not like a little. It's huge. And you are very rewarded for... I mean, Joe Rogan has one of the most highly visible and profitable podcasts around. Chappelle is one of the most highly paid comedians on Netflix. And

People who have conservative values and who say things that are widely considered to be transphobic and who clearly make trans people's lives harder day in and day out are very financially rewarded. So this idea that things are just so left in Hollywood is also just not at all true. There is actually a very wide...

a range of political views in Hollywood. And so just, I think anytime people try to separate it so much into like us versus them, like in the way that he does it here, when you just lack critical thinking and nuance, like, because porn's been around, this is also what Sabrina, Dr. Sabrina Strings talks about in her book, but like, she really kind of lays it at the feet of like, you know, like at the start of it, it was like Playboy because like,

The idea of romance, the way that he's talking about this, is that you're really supposed to have your partner's best interests at heart and stuff and not be a misogynist piece of shit. And that was the time when people were like, oh, well, you only treat women like this if she's chaste enough and honorable enough. And if she shows too much of this or that, then she's not...

she's not it and she's like kind of not worth it but that didn't become like widely culturally acceptable until like after World War II it was like in the 50s with like the rise of Playboy and that's when she kind of thinks like culturally there was this like bigger shift but this didn't just now stop working like and there was this really funny thing I saw on or someone sent to me like that had been a thing on X it was a picture of what's that actor's name from Sex and the City he was like Trey you know like

He had the erectile dysfunction. Oh, Kyle MacLachlan. Kyle MacLachlan, yeah. Yes. And it was, like, the death of woke is, like, men aren't men anymore. But then it was, like, this picture of him from, like, 1982 with his, like, shirt off with this, like, skimpy little, like, kind of, like, early 80s outfit when he was, like, playing something in, like, the early 80s. Just to say that, like, men have been expressing, like, a lot of different, like, fashion and, like, ideas about breaking, like, gender norms that we would consider, like, conservatively, like,

not the thing for a really long time. Like this didn't just start and like when Target started like having a pride section, you know?

Yeah, I don't know exactly when Holly would say, like, we sort of took a wrong turn. Probably when Barack Obama was elected, if I had to sort of pinpoint it. Maybe also when women gained the right to vote. So it could be either very recent, like either... Either 2008 or 1920. Unclear. But there's, you know, a flattening and a simplification. I think part of the simplification, too, is that...

Which men are really behind here? I mean, like, he's not down and out and beleaguered. The guys he's palling around with aren't down and out and beleaguered. They wield enormous power. They've gone to college. I mean, this is a guy who's, like, talking about the educational outcomes of men, and he's got three degrees from three elite institutions. I mean, it boggles the mind. I mean, like, you said, JVN, like,

the antithesis of what they're doing is nuance. And that's exactly right. This isn't nuance at all. Like part of what he's saying is true for a certain subset that he and his ilk will not minister to because they have such antipathy for redistribution, whether it's economic or educational. So,

This book is not about the true down and out and beleaguered men who are falling behind. It's about him and his cronies. And they're not falling behind. They're actually on top. That's what she said. Leah, that's what Leah was saying. It's like the policies, right? Because like Republicans are the ones who have like shipped all the jobs like to like country, like, you know, off of the U.S. Like they're the ones who have like

like weaken like the middle class or at least like the way that I understand it. Like they don't pay people a living wage. They don't give family leave. They don't make it so that anyone can really achieve upward economic mobility easier. So like they're really their policies. And also like look at health care. Look at like gun control. Like people who are like working class and like don't have as much money. Like they're the ones who pay the price for these policies that Republicans keep enforcing. That is just so true.

So maybe to pivot back to the sort of structure of the book a little bit. So as we were talking about, the book is divided into these kind of archetypes that Holly kind of explores. Leah already mentioned the father and the husband archetypes, and Melissa was talking about the priest archetypes. So then there are two more. One is the builder, and one, save the best for last, is the king. So let's start with builder. You know, he suggests that, you know, there's this –

affliction of dependence that is part of his diagnosis of the problem with contemporary American manhood. And he says the antidote to dependence is building. And just as we think there are important connections between some of the claims Hawley is making about the husband and the father and the priest and Supreme Court cases, I think that's also true about the builder and Supreme Court cases. So you have the Supreme Court in recent cases really trying, it seems, to sort of

value and valorize the kind of rugged individual who wants to build and make something as against this leviathan of the federal government trying to take something from him because it's, of course, a him. So there's a case from two terms ago called Sackett about an individual, a couple that basically like wants to dump a lot of gravel on their land and it's going to pollute some wetlands. And you know what? Wetlands are important to keeping water clean for all of us. And the Supreme Court basically says it's fine. Like we can't really it would be intolerable to prevent them from doing that.

And actually a case just this term called DeVilliers versus Texas, which is, you know, just a case about whether a claim can proceed but is also about this sort of Texas rancher who's being disadvantaged by the state of Texas. And so it is just the court loves nothing more than kind of holding up this image of the rugged, manly individual against the federal government and obviously siding with the, you know, manly individual. Okay, but...

I think we should talk about King as well, because the last section of the book is about exhorting men to lead. I mean, he is saying this with a straight face. He says, quote,

It is good for a man to exercise authority. Good for him and good for those around him. So I don't know if like toes and fingers started curling, but like that, he is like patriarchy. That's so chilling. That is a scary line of many, many scary lines in the scary book. And then, but despite the importance of men leading, the left today warns shrilly that male leadership can only ever amount to domination. That's like the whole, like, we're just saying like,

Beating up your partners and trying to force everyone to have the exact same religious ideals as you is not great. That's not saying that masculinity is bad. And your inability to make a distinction between those two things is scary. Even though you have a big Adam's apple. Which is, you know, we like a big Adam's apple. But we don't love, you know, anything else really about you. Yeah.

Maybe it's like linking what you were saying earlier

about the King archetype to one of the earlier archetypes we were talking about, which is father and husband. You know, again, the conceit of this book is that American men are downtrodden. But when you're thinking about, say, some of the court's recent cases, like the Emtala case, which did effectively create one class of people who are required to lose bodily organs in service of Idaho's preferred vision about how society should be structured, namely that

Women and pregnant people should be forced to bear children again, even when they are at risk of serious health consequences and loss. And that is going to be so because of the Republican justices on the Supreme court, because that is their vision for, you know,

the country and how they think it should be ordered. And it is just really striking. Again, we were previously talking about whether this is like an authentic vision of Hawley or some posturing, but I don't think the Republican justices on the court are posturing. I think this is

an authentic vision for them about how society and laws should work. That again, like women and pregnant people can be pressed into service and made to do these things at immense personal familial sacrifice, you know, because that's just their worldview. Yeah.

I mean, the next part when he says that American men need to wake up because God made them kings, not subjects. Like, and you need to be a king of your domain the way that your, like, fathers and grandfathers were. What? Like, Mr. Howlett, this is...

It's not great, you guys. I think actually American people need to wake up because we are literally marching into it. Yeah. That's one of the places where I think that kind of Holly's aspirations for this book, I think, are pretty clear, which is that he wants to be the new Andrew Tate, right? With the criminal misogyny sheared off, but the basic vision of the proper role of men as, you know, the top of a profoundly and straight cisgendered men at the top of profoundly hierarchical system in which they are

Owning this mantle of king and everyone below them is a subordinate subject. Like that's really explicit. We sort of think his vision is that he wants to be, I don't know, like a kinder, gentler version of Andrew Tate and appeal to millions of American men. A less muscled version too. Yeah.

Less cut. You know, I think – I'm sure Holly works out. I feel like we've observed this before. Not like that. No, no, no, no. But he also clearly neglects leg day. He does not work out. He's got, like, very skinny legs and enormous shoulders. And I think you need a better balance in your workout. What do you think, JVN? If you were his trainer, what would you advise him to do to balance his physique better? You guys, I'm not the person to ask about this. If you've ever come to my comedy show, I have a lot of deep-rooted shame about this. I am, like –

I don't know if I can say it to you guys after the morning that we've already had. It's been a rough morning. It's like hard for me to stay on topic with this book because he's a nightmare to read. But now I'm reading like all my highlighted passages and I'm like, this is also like TBH, my first like book review podcast. And my ADHD is like, was really refusing to play ball until now. But now I'm like really dialed in. I'm back to the book. I am. And maybe we need to edit this out because I am ashamed to say it.

I'm physically attracted to him. I'll just fucking name it, okay? I'm physically attracted to him, but I hate his policies, okay? I hate his fucking policies. I hate his fucking policies, okay? I do. But we talked about it last time. I'm also physically attracted to Mitt Romney. There's this principal vibe. There's this shoulder pad thing. When you have, like, a big Adam's apple and shoulder pads, it just makes me...

I don't know. I don't like it. And obviously, I think that the world has recently seen that I'm a complex person and I'm very layered. Okay? He's... No, there...

But Howley's got that fucking Adam's apple, honey. He's got, no, I know. He's an insufferable erectionist and he's a white nationalist and he's a Christian nationalist. Not Mitt Romney. It's a problem. I'm working on it in therapy. Okay. No, I'm talking about Josh Howley. Okay. I have this, I'm, you guys, I'm recovering from sexual compulsivity. I've talked about it in my book. Okay. I have this uncanny ability to divorce someone's personality from their physical body. I

I do. And even though I'm non-binary, you know, they're always talking about biology, which I also talk about in my show. Like, biologically, I'm hardwired, attracted to men with big Adam's apples, biologically, okay? And my body can separate their hideous policy from their being, and I'm ashamed of it, okay? But shame thrives in secrets, and so we just have to name it. That's what the truth is. But I fucking disagree with him, and I want him to lose his fucking place in office, but

But can I just say something really quick about, there was this quote in here that I just, it really struck me about, oh, well, the thing about like the center of God's creation, that's all really scary. Let's get from, it's like man for others is the title of chapter five. And he's talking about how the,

Right.

This mixed message puts young men especially in a bind. They are supposed to fashion an identity entirely of their own choosing in order to be authentic, but leave out the features that have defined for millennia. Good luck with that. No wonder young men feel bewildered. The classic identity of masculinity was never what it is now. It only became that recently. Like, it was a whole invention in the last, like, 40 to 60 years. Like,

And if you look, if you know anything about queer history, you would know that every culture has had all these different expressions of genders, even in the West. And he keeps talking about how like the Bible has like guided us through like the Roman Empire and antiquity all the way through now. Honey, the Roman Empire and antiquity was not what it is now. Like it was a hot freaking mess where men had like all sorts of wives and they were doing all sorts of things with all sorts of people. And it was like not cool for kids. And so...

certainly not like this idea of like a good space for everyone. So the way that he just has like a selective idea of it, like it's clear that he's not a historian, nor is any of the justices. Well, clearly not Roberts anyway, who like didn't know that like abortion is actually deeply rooted in this country's history. And like Benjamin Franklin had an abortion recipe in his like little diary. But the other thing was like,

this country and the Constitution was, like, for land-owning white men. So that is a problem because everyone else has had to fight for the recognition here. And so when that's really what we're saying is bad, not masculinity, just that, like, the Constitution was founded on the idea that only, like, white property-owning men could vote. And we're saying that, like, that ideal that it was built on and the wealth that was amassed under that and Chattel...

and the removal of, like, Native Americans from their lands, and the funds that were made off of that that refused to be redistributed, that's the problem. And then, like, men beating up people and, like, gun violence. These are the problems. Not like traditional masculinity. We love Tom Selleck. We love a Big Adam's apple. We love wide shoulders, honey. But we just don't love these fucking policies, you know? Yeah.

Like, so I just don't understand what the goddamn problem is. I mean, understanding what Josh Hawley's problem is might be on the scope of this podcast and way above my pay grade. But what I think you were saying gets at something really profound and relates to something I think Melissa had alluded to as profound.

clear subtext of the book, which is it is about the narrow group of elite white conservative men who have been accustomed to having all of the power and calling all of the shots. And the book is uncomfortable with the idea of sharing political power and authority, right? Allowing anyone else to be in a position of authority to actually be decision maker, to be Supreme Court justice, to be congressional representative, and

And that is, again, like the group of people that Hawley seems to actually be concerned with, given that he's not engaging with any of the anti-redistributive policies that would actually benefit people in lower income brackets and instead depicts that as some kind of evil dependence policy.

that his view for America would just remove. And so the vision that he's clinging to, like the reason why pointing out the fact that America has an exclusionary past is threatening to him is because like he wants the exclusionary past to be the exclusionary future. And that is, I think, part of what he is resisting. He also quotes Andrew. I'm still back on the Mitt Romney thing. Oh, yeah.

But wait, he keeps talking about Andrew Tate. Didn't Donald Trump have dinner with Andrew Tate? I'm sorry, I'm like, I'm just... Let me Google that. Did Donald... Didn't he? He had dinner with, like, that white supremacist guy. What's his name? I think he did. I don't know that Tate did. I don't know. Nick Fuentes or whatever? Yeah, Fuentes. Yeah, I don't see anything... I don't think Tate can come to the U.S. Isn't he, like, Roman Polanski? Yeah, I don't think...

But I just, like, you're right, but, like, in the day. But I wonder, but, like, how is it the left's fault? Like, I wonder how Holly makes Andrew Tate the enemy and the left the enemy. Because really, like, Andrew Tate is, like, he, like, that is, like, something from the right. Like, the left didn't do that. Like, how does, I don't understand how, like, it's, like, everyone is the problem except for...

Should we explain who Andrew Tate is and then maybe some connections between him and Holly? Yeah, I think maybe not everyone is deep in men's rights. Oh yeah, I just got scared to read the passage because it's so dark. Someone else want to take a stab at describing who is slash what is Andrew Tate? Andrew Tate is someone who I was never physically attracted to. I'll do it. Someone who I can say for the record I've never been physically attracted to. I'm relieved of you. Yeah, I can use his words. So Josh Holly says...

This is the part I didn't want to read. It's like, you know, just abuse people, women. And then he counseled that if a man intervenes

in a relationship has sex with someone else, it's not cheating, it's exercise. Meanwhile, if accused of cheating himself, it's... It's leg day! But then he's talking about just, like, literally pulling a machete out to someone's freaking... Like, to a woman's neck. Like, this is, like, what he was just, like, talking about. And also, Holly talks about this... I mean, it should have, like, a trigger warning. If I posted something just talking about something, like, he just talks about it like it's Tuesday. You know, raping this and doing that with Andrew Tate. Like, there's no...

Like, respect for, like, the violence that he's talking about so casually, like, all throughout this. It's so gross. Yeah. Yeah, and Tate, we should say— I'm losing my attraction to him by the second, you guys. Glad we could help. Good, good.

But yeah, but Tate, in addition to... Holly, not Tate. Yes, no, there was never a Tate attraction. No, we got that, and that is excellent, and I'm sure that's not changing over the course of this conversation. Oh yeah, but so then he got arrested because he had like Romanian Domino's pizza boxes in this video that he made, and then he got arrested by Interpol because of these like Romanian Domino boxes or something, and the internet turned his ass in, but he'd been like, I think he was like

He was, like, trafficking people and, like, literally, like, been accused of, like, all sorts of really, like, rapey... Yeah, he's under indictment for sexual assault, human trafficking. All sorts of bad... All of that. No, that's right. And Holly does...

kind of nominally distance himself from certain, again, of the most violent and violently misogynistic aspects of Tate's worldview and public persona. And we should say even before he was a social media personality, right? Like I think he was a kickboxer. But it's very clear that the distance that Hawley imagines or at least posits that separates him from Andrew Tate is nowhere near as vast as Hawley seems to want to convince his readers it is.

Yeah, and maybe just to take two examples of that. So, you know, we mentioned that Holly is entreating men to be fathers and husbands. You know, Andrew Tate just like tweets out or puts out on X, you know, sex is for making children. And so like their worldview, it is quite similar. There's more to it than that, Leah. Say the rest. Okay, so the other part of Andrew Tate's tweet is also anti-LGBTQ, which we also identified

And anti-women. And anti-women. Also, in some ways, it's anti-men. It's anti-everybody. Anti-pleasure. So the second part of Andrew Tate's tweet that says sex is for making children says, any man who has sex with women because it, quote, feels good is gay. So again, anti-women, anti-pleasure, anti-men, anti-LGBTQ. He just packs it all in in one sentence. And

That doesn't even... I don't even... That doesn't make sense. I don't understand. Like, a man who has sex with women because it feels good is gay? Isn't that, like, opposite? Fellas, is it gay to like sex? It isn't gay to have sex with women if that were true. That is a real self-own. It is a real self-own. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And, you know, Mitt Romney would never...

You can laugh at that, Kate. Oh my God. Mitt Romney really would. And I do feel like he's a little bit more...

You know, at least Mitt voted to remove Trump from office. That's what I always tell myself when my timbers get shivered when I see him stride onto my TV screen. You're not the only one. There are a lot of people. So I know someone who is like a big muckety muck in the repro community. And she says she would climb Mitt Romney like a tree.

Like, you were not the first person to say that to me. That's why I was taken aback by it. Because I thought it was a very singular appetite. Apparently not. That resonates.

No, yeah, that resonates. I thought that we talked about this last time. See, I've talked about this so many times, I can't remember who I've said this to. But yeah, for me, it all started in Salt Lake City. Yeah, I don't think we've had this particular conversation. No, we did talk about John Roberts, but not, I don't think, yeah. You called Neil Gorsuch a silver fox, but... You did call Neil Gorsuch a silver fox.

Yeah, I did make us throw up in our mouths a little. I actually I do take that back. I think I did that for a reaction. You guys I do. I can legitimately say Mitt Romney. Yes, you don't know. Right? Yeah, not Neil. I mean that. Yeah, that face is like not it for me at all. I don't know what I was thinking. You guys.

I think I was in Texas during that episode. You would not take a run at Neil Gorsuch. No, I was going through it that day, I think. I fully, I take it off the record. But Mitt, I stand by that and I refuse to budge on that one. Strict Scrutiny is brought to you by Shopify.

What's something that works so well that it's basically magic? Air conditioning? Noise-canceling headphones? Meeting-free Fridays? What about selling with Shopify? Shopify is a global commerce platform that helps you sell at every stage of your business. And trust me, I would know. That's how I launched our merchandising back when we were an independent podcast.

From the launch your online shop stage to the first real life store stage, all the way to the did we just hit a million order stage, Shopify is there to help you grow. Whether you're selling scented soap or offering outdoor outfits, or let's say designing your own t-shirts based on whatever hijinks are happening at the court, Shopify helps you sell everywhere. From their all-in-one e-commerce platform to their in-person POS system, wherever and whatever you're selling, Shopify's got you covered.

Shopify helps you turn browsers into buyers with the internet's best converting checkout and sell more with less effort thanks to Shopify Magic, your AI-powered all-star. Plus, Shopify's award-winning help is there to support your success every step of the way.

Because businesses that grow, grow with Shopify. And Shopify is so easy, even a law professor can do it. This really was a platform that we used when I was running our merchandising line. I used Shopify to help me do that. It's super easy and user-friendly. I could get designs up immediately and Shopify was so easy for me to see how our store was doing. Honestly, I even had fun doing it.

Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at shopify.com slash scrutiny, all lowercase. Go to shopify.com slash scrutiny. Now to grow your business, no matter what stage you're in, shopify.com slash scrutiny. Strict Scrutiny is brought to you by IXL Learning.

Do you want to set up your child for success, you know, so that they can tell the difference between smog and laughing gas? Maybe you want to save money on private tutoring, or it's out of your budget, or maybe it's a big school year for your child starting a new level of school, or you've moved, or they're starting a new school, or whatever the case is. IXL Learning is an online learning program for kids covering math, language arts, science, and social studies. IXL is designed to help them really understand and master topics in a fun way.

Powered by advanced algorithms, iXcel gives the right help to each kid, no matter the age or personality. There's one site for all the kids in your home, pre-K to 12th grade. Kids can use it at home on the computer or on the go through the app on your phone or tablet. No more grading those worksheets. iXcel grades everything itself. And no more trying to figure out how to explain math questions or grammar rules yourself. iXcel has built-in explanation videos.

One in four students in the U.S. are learning with IXL. IXL is used in 95 of the top 100 school districts in the United States. My nephew is learning how to read. I've tried teaching him with friendship bracelets, but let's be honest, IXL would definitely be more helpful so that he could actually read said friendship bracelets. He does like the Heiress Tour movie after all. Make

Make an impact on your child's learning. Get IXL now and strict scrutiny listeners can get an exclusive 20% off IXL membership when they sign up today at ixl.com slash strict. Visit ixl.com slash strict to get the most effective learning program out there at the best price.

Can I connect something we were saying about Andrew Tate to Neil Gorsuch, though, even though you have disavowed your previous statements about him? So as we were saying, Josh Hawley kind of attempts to put some distance between Andrew Tate's more violent expressions of misogyny and Josh Hawley's other expressions of misogyny, even though their worldviews are in some respects quite similar. And I'm

I think this kind of relates to our efforts to draw connections between this book and what the Supreme Court is doing. Because when you think about, again, I know I referenced the Impala case before. It's just top of mind. When you think about what the court is doing, again, essentially requiring women to—

bear these life-altering consequences, health-altering consequences, that is a kind of violence. It is just done under the language of the law and with these kind of questions that the justices are bandying about, about how about a conditional spending program or how about preemption? But when the rubber hits the road, the

Again, operative arrangement that they have endorsed is that states can prohibit care that is necessary to save someone's major bodily functions and major bodily organs. And it's, again, you want to talk about violence? That to me is an example of it. She's right, though. 100%.

I mean, the way that he keeps talking about... No Adam's apple, but I can make some points. No, 100%. And really good ones, by the way. The way that he talks so much about Epicureans, that he talks about it more and more and how that's... It's interesting because my friend Alok, who I'm just obsessed with,

They have this theory where like part of why the conservatives get so angry when they see like non-binary queer people expressing themselves in public is because like when you let yourself express yourself and you don't repress, there's this like anger and jealousy at the sight of this.

And he's literally talking about that you need to like deny yourself what makes you happy, deny yourself who you are to conform to this idea. And the reason that our society is failing is because people aren't doing that. They're just expressing themselves too much. And that's a lot of where I think his anger comes from in this niche of like evangelical where they're like, we're suppressing ourselves. We're doing what we were told to do by, you know, God and by this book or our interpretation of it.

so other people should too. I think that's really interesting because he really is saying that with, like, not even saying it without saying it. He's, like, literally saying that. So, one thing I wanted to get your take on, JVN, is recently, Josh Hawley allowed his wife to argue before the Supreme Court. And she...

I'm only being half. I don't know what the dynamics are. Like, I mean, we got very little mention of her and very little mention of his daughter in the book. It's almost as though women don't exist, but we know she exists because she appeared before the lectern at the Supreme court on behalf of the Alliance defending freedom to argue against the availability of Mifepristone, one of the drugs in the two drug medication abortion protocol. Um,

Is it inconsistent with manhood to have your wife out in the world working and talking to five male members of the Supreme Court? Is that manhood? Is he enlightened? Like, what is this? I don't understand. Is this feminism? I don't know. What do you think, JVN? I mean, it's just giving if it weren't so scary, you would laugh. You know, it's just so, yeah, it's just so scary.

He clearly hasn't fully rejected nihilism, darling. Or something. That's like chapter eight, rejecting nihilism. But it is interesting because I see this in J.D. Vance too. This is sort of a thing with people like J.D. Vance too. J.D. Vance is always sort of espousing these kind of manhood adjacent themes about traditional families and how important traditional family is. And he's definitely against paid family leave and all of that. Yet,

He has a wife who he met at Yale Law School who's incredibly accomplished, who clerked for the Supreme Court and is a working lawyer. So I mean, some of this sort of feels a little bit like traditional family, traditional values, breadwinner husband, dependent wife for you, but not for me.

I get to have, like, sort of, you know, a different kind of life. Actually, no. It's actually really interesting because it's very Gilead in, like, that main character. It's, like, it's okay because she's working to further the values of, like, Christian nationalism. So it's, like, your wife can work as long as she's working to enforce these structures and these ideas. And I think that men in power have often seen the way that, like, their partners can help to further their influence and spread their influence, which...

I mean, you even saw that with like, we love, oh my God, my gay brain. We love, who are the ladies who like fought for the right to vote in the 20s?

The suffragettes. The suffragists. The suffragists. I wanted to be like segregationist and I was like, that's not it. But in some ways they were because they did not fucking include Black women. But they also did not include women of color. That's true. You're right. But that's another way that you saw the way that power works and the way that it has to work in its kind of own time. And I think that both...

you know, the left and the right has this show itself. The gendered aspect of white patriarchy. I don't know that J.D. Vance's wife is involved in conservative causes. She sort of stays out of the frame. But I think it's a real good point that often the gender politics, the racial politics. Yeah, it's yeah, it is all wrapped up. And there is a way in which

Women can facilitate patriarchy even as it ostensibly works against them or definitely works against them. Because it's the whole idea that Stacey Abrams talks about like fighting over crumbs, you know, instead of like, why don't you have the whole cake? It's like if it's in that is like the Jenny Thomas thing, too, because we saw so much how she was like deeply ingrained in trying to like be all up in there and like, you know, her relationship to power, right?

Also, too, just like the book review of it all, the titles of or the chapter titles are really like intense. Like, isn't the last one like who's going to run the country? Like, that's really what he's scared of. Like, other people have too much power and too much voice. Like, that's really what he's scared of. And this is like a call to action because he's like... No, that's a great point. He's such a rude ass. I can't believe I ever said he had a good Adam's apple.

Yeah, it is. I think that's right. Yeah, it is this kind of profound threat that sort of the advances made by women and people of color and LGBTQ folks represent to Hawley and to Zilk, as Melissa was saying earlier. Like, that's the kind of fundamental anxiety at the heart of the book that motivates it. And I also think that, you know, Hawley and we were talking about his wife, Erin, you know, I think he is holding himself out as...

He wants to be the standard bearer of the Republican Party in the next generation, right? Like we right now have this gerontocracy and there is going to be a gap at some point in which there will need to be a new leadership class. I'm sure he wants to run for president. And he either way like wants to be an important defining figure in the political life of the country. And his views are terrifying. And so that's why we thought it was worth like, you know,

that may be masochistic undertaking of reading this book and reading it carefully and trying to sort of pull the threads on the actual claims and worldview at the heart of it because this is someone who is not only in dialogue with the laws it's developing on the Supreme Court today, but I think is poised to be a major national political figure. And this is the world that he envisions and would like to bring about. And it's really important to be clear-eyed in our view of that.

One more little tiny thing. I feel I hope I didn't talk too much and ruin this episode. I'm so glad that you guys have me back and I love you guys so much. But I lived in Kansas City when Josh Hawley got elected in 2018 because I was shooting Queer Eye at the time. And my dad and stepmom currently live in Missouri. And I talk and fight with my dad a lot about politics.

But the point of what I was going to say is that the brand of the culture that Josh Hawley is selling is deeply palatable for a huge swath of our country. And, you know, I've been really curious on my pod about spirituality and the way that, like, spirituality and, more importantly, religion interfaces with our politics and, like, motivates people to do things. Yeah.

And this is a really important time. So what you guys have done here is really important. And it's really important that we understand no matter how masochistic and scary it is, what is going on on the other side, because they are not only deeply in conversation with like the future of the country, but they are really influencing what's happening and people are really buying what they're selling. So thanks for continuing to do all your guys' great work.

Well, likewise. Thanks so much for joining us today. I don't know if I'm ever going to look at Mitt Romney the same way again. I don't think I can. But JVN, thank you for reading this book. We know it was a big lift. It was a big ask. We read it too. We read it too, and that's all I'm going to say. And we really appreciate all of your insights. I

Again, the book is out. You don't have to buy it. We read it for you. Just listen to this or read our forthcoming review of the book in the Michigan Law Review. The review is called Of Might and Men by me, Kate Shaw, and Leah Lippman with our research assistant, Jonathan Van Duz. We should give you a little credit. Yeah.

You guys did so good. We're going to drop you in the dagger now. Well, until next time, Jonathan, I'm sure we are going to come calling on you again to join us once more since these clowns give us a never-ending stream of material to be working with. It's always so great to have you. Thank you so much for joining us, Jonathan. Thanks for having me, you guys.

I just realized after you said that, Melissa, this is his idea of profiles and courage. Like, this is his, like, love letter to America. I'm...

Oh, my God. Oh, Profiles in Courage, the JFK book that he wrote before becoming president, that his dad got published. Well, that's a terrifying thought. Scary, you guys. We need... Yeah, you're right. Yeah. Wow, that is a deep cut, JVN. I had to save it for the end, you know? I pulled a Vanessa Williams. Save the best for last. So good. Yep.

Wait, you know what? Also, we just need to talk about really quick PSS, just really quick, and then I'm going to literally be late for filming. Before we started this, I don't know if I hit the recording. I'm in Vegas shooting Queer Eye now, and I'm in a...

a little closet in our Airbnb that's covered in blankets. So that's what's giving this, you know, view. And I was like, oh my gosh, I look really shiny. I need to like just powder the face really quick. And then Kate was like, can we say it, Kate? Sure. Can we tell our full healing story for the people? Because it's also the antidote to this fucking book. It is, yeah. Your husband was filming where you were filming yesterday and he left his powder. And so you're like, oh my God, I need my powder. And I just think,

Yeah.

you know, more confident under circles. Yeah. So they, you need to actually teach them how to do it. And we all need to spread the word that it is completely fine to powder your nose and conceal those dark circles under your eyes. In fact, we'd like it. And we should all embrace that. And, you know. Yeah. You guys should feel the pressure to do it too. This is a good positive note to end on. And also you just feel so much cuter. Normalize and even skin tone. Normalize and even skin tone. Thanks for having me, you guys. Thank you so much for joining us.

So the Supreme Court seems to think having Trump as a monarch sounds great. And to that we say, no fucking way. Or as Justice Sotomayor put it, with fear for our democracy, I dissent.

So show that you're mad as hell about the highest court's recent decisions taking away power from government agencies and giving the president permission to authorize a coup. Yes, really. With a quote taken from Justice Sotomayor's dissent to the court's terrifying presidential immunity decision, this t-shirt shows where you stand, loud and clear. It's really a great conversation shirt that provides a way to talk to everyone about what is going on with the Supreme Court. Get your own dissent tee at crooked.com slash store now.

Strict Scrutiny is a Crooked Media production hosted and executive produced by me, Leah Lippman, Melissa Murray, and Kate Shaw, produced and edited by Melody Rowell.

Michael Goldsmith is our associate producer. Our interns this summer are Hannah Seroff and Tess O'Donoghue. Audio support from Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis. Music by Eddie Cooper. Production support from Madeline Herringer and Ari Schwartz. Matt DeGroat is our head of production. And thanks to our digital team, Phoebe Bradford and Joe Matosky. Subscribe to Strict Scrutiny on YouTube to catch full episodes. Find us at youtube.com slash at strictscrutinypodcast.

If you haven't already, be sure to subscribe to Strict Scrutiny in your favorite podcast apps so you never miss an episode. And if you want to help other people find the show, please rate and review us. It really helps. Why are two old, unpopular men running for the world's most demanding job? Again, since 1992, every American president bar one has been a white man born in the 1940s.

That run looks likely to span 36 years. This cohort was born with aces in their pockets. Their parents defeated Nazism and won the Cold War. They hit the jobs market at an unmatched period of wealth creation. They have benefited from giant leaps in technology and in racial and gender equality. And yet, their last act in politics sees the two main parties accusing each other of wrecking American democracy. As the boomers near the end of their political journey, John Perdue sets out to make sense of their inheritance and their legacy.

Search Boom! from The Economist wherever you listen to your podcasts and unlock all episodes by subscribing to Economist Podcast Plus. Come on, jump! I don't know if I'll make it! Hurry! The floor is lava!

Oops. Hey, life happens, which is why your favorite styles from Ashley are available in life-resistant high-performance fabric with removable machine-washable fabric slipcovers that make it easy to clean spills, dirt, and imaginary lava. For more mess and less stress, shop Ashley's high-performance furniture in-store or online at ashley.com. Ashley, for the love of home.

Look at your cup holder. It's empty. And you're feeling thirsty. Head to a nearby convenience store and fill it with a Pepsi Zero Sugar Mountain Dew or Starry. Grab a delicious, refreshing Pepsi for the road.