Premium Only Content
This video is only available to Rumble Premium subscribers. Subscribe to
enjoy exclusive content and ad-free viewing.

Just Asking Questions
ReasonTV
- 5 / 42
1
What happens if Trump 'seals the border'? | Julia Gelatt

ReasonTV
Demographer Julia Gelatt of the Migration Policy Institute joins us to discuss the likely effects of President Trump's executive orders on immigration.
Subscribe
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@reasonJustAskingQuestions/featured
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-asking-questions/id1719355507
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5SpySKAH3LuVyxXk0MF7tl
Text and links to sources available here: https://reason.com/podcasts/just-asking-questions/
What Happens If Trump "seals the border"?
Among Trump's day one executive orders is one just called Securing Our Borders, which promises to build the wall, detain and deport immigrants who violate federal or state law, prosecute illegal border crossers, and obtain "complete operational control" of the border. He also declared a state of emergency and ordered the military to "seal the border" and repel an "invasion." Perhaps most controversial of all, another order claims to end birthright citizenship.
The crackdown is already in full swing, with NBC News reporting a single day record 1,179 immigration arrests this past Sunday. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem posted pictures of herself overseeing a series of arrests in New York on Tuesday.
Today's guest is going to help us understand the myths and realities of the immigration system at this juncture and offer some suggestions about what pragmatic steps could be taken to reform an immigration system that people on all sides have come to believe just isn't working.
Julia Gelatt is associate director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program at the Migration Policy Institute, where her research focus is on the legalities of the immigration system, demographic trends, and the interactions between local, state and federal immigration policy.
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
01:56 How did we get here?
03:50 The impact of social media on migration
05:41 What will the short-term effect of Trump's executive orders look like?
10:47 What is life like for someone trying to enter the U.S. through Mexico?
13:16 What is/was the CBP One app?
14:28 Steelmanning the Trumpian case against immigration
25:48 The most common jobs an immigrant takes.
29:16 J.D. Vance's spat with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
36:39 How much money does the government spend to resettle a refugee?
37:23 The failures of New York
44:32 The reality of government assistance
48:31 Immigration, the job market, and fertility rates
56:56 The problems with the current visa system
01:00:43 Bridge visas
01:07:54 Brain Drain?
01:11:01 The future of birthright citizenship
01:16:15 What is a question that you think that more people should be asking?
3
comments
2
How will Trump 2.0 transform America? | Mike Pesca

ReasonTV
Mike Pesca reacts to Trump's inauguration and slate of executive orders on the latest ep of Just Asking Questions.
Subscribe
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@reasonJustAskingQuestions/featured
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-asking-questions/id1719355507
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5SpySKAH3LuVyxXk0MF7tl
Text and links to sources available here: https://reason.com/podcasts/just-asking-questions/
How will the second Donald Trump presidential term transform America? Just asking questions.
It's officially the Trump 2.0 era. One New York Times columnist called his inaugural address "American Carnage 2," while Trump promised a new American "golden age" in his speech.
So how excited, hopeful, or anxious should we be as we enter these next four years?
Journalist Mike Pesca, host of the popular daily news podcast The Gist, joined Reason Senior Producer Zach Weissmueller and Associate Editor Liz Wolfe to reflect on Trump's inaugural address. They also discussed Elon Musk's appearance at the inauguration and Trump's slate of Day 1 executive orders.
1.02K
views
3
Why do we refuse to learn from history? | Tyler Cowen

ReasonTV
Why are we forgetting history’s lessons?
We’re told in school that we study history so as not to repeat its mistakes. But what if those lessons aren’t sticking? Today’s guest regularly invokes what he calls The Great Forgetting. And the striking thing about this collective amnesia is that it doesn’t apply only to distant, ancient history, but hard lessons learned only a few decades ago: Lessons about inflation, price controls, and crime.
Tyler Cowen is the Holbert L. Harris Professor of Economics at George Mason University and Director of the Mercatus Center and host of the great podcast Conversations with Tyler. He and his colleague Alex Tabbarok founded the popular and influential economics blog Marginal Revolution and recently launched their own joint show, the Marginal Revolution Podcast, which recently released a limited series on the unlearned economic and cultural lessons of the 1970s.
2
comments
4
Should we have a 'Second Amendment for AI’? | Guillaume Verdon | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 54

ReasonTV
Based Beff Jezos, co-founder of Extropic, discusses AI safety, decentralization, and going analog.
Is our technology actually improving? | Byrne Hobart | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 55

ReasonTV
Finance and tech writer Byrne Hobart discusses how bubbles as a good thing, overcoming stagnation, and the religiosity of space exploration.
6
How have trans issues scrambled our politics? | Brianna Wu & TafTaj | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 53

ReasonTV
Brianna Wu and TafTaj discuss the role of transgender issues in the 2024 election, 'centrist' trans politics, and their own personal stories.
7
Did bitcoin win the election? | Nic Carter | Just Asking Questions, ep. 52

ReasonTV
Crypto podcaster, writer, and infrastructure investor Nic Carter discusses the role digital assets played in Trump's election, the persecution of Polymarket, and the "enormous spiritual chasm between the right and the left."
1.1K
views
8
What does RFK Jr. get right and wrong? | Vinay Prasad | Just Asking Questions, ep. 51

ReasonTV
We are going live with @vprasadmdmph on Tuesday 11/26 at 1pm EST to discuss RFK Jr., post-C0V!D accountability, the former head of the NIH (Dr. "I represent science" Fauci), and more.
1.36K
views
13
comments
9
What is Trump's "mandate"? | Yuval Levin | Just Asking Questions, ep. 50

ReasonTV
AEI's Yuval Levin discusses Trump's mandate (or lack thereof), building coalitions, and how the classic divide between Edmund Burke and Thomas Paine remains relevant.
1.21K
views
1
comment
10
Will Democrats ever recover from 2024? | Lee Fang | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 49

ReasonTV
Independent journalist Lee Fang discusses why the Democrats lost so badly and whether or not the party has the ability to course correct anytime soon.
8
comments
11
Why did Trump win? | Patrick Ruffini | Just Asking Questions, ep. 48

ReasonTV
Author and Republican Party strategist Patrick Ruffini joins us LIVE to discuss Trump's re-election and how the GOP is changing.
1.46K
views
5
comments
12
Who is the lesser evil? | Dave Smith, David Stockman, and Jacob Grier | Just Asking Questions

ReasonTV
Is this the most important election ever? And who should win? Just asking questions.
1.12K
views
6
comments
13
Is The Great Reset underway? | Thierry Malleret | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 46

ReasonTV
Klaus Schwab's co-author Thierry Malleret discusses stakeholder capitalism, libertarianism, and his new book satirizing the World Economic Forum.
Subscribe
YouTube: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-asking-questions/id1719355507
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5SpySKAH3LuVyxXk0MF7tl
Text and links to sources available here: https://reason.com/podcasts/just-asking-questions/
1.05K
views
25
comments
14
How will immigrants reshape America? | Michael Brendan Dougherty | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 44

ReasonTV
National Review's Michael Brendan Dougherty discusses the differences between conservatives and libertarians on the issue of immigration.
1.14K
views
15
What's the untold story behind 'Stop the Steal'? | Ford Fischer | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 43

ReasonTV
Documentarian Ford Fischer discusses his experience covering the "Stop the Steal" movement, January 6, and what it all means for the future of journalism and democracy.
16
What’s Wrong with the Secret Service? | Richard Staropoli | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 42

ReasonTV
An ex-Secret Service agent explains what he thinks left Donald Trump vulnerable to two close-call assassination attempts within two months.
1.41K
views
1
comment
17
What are schools really teaching? | Erika Sanzi | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 41

ReasonTV
Director of Outreach for Parents Defending Education, Erika Sanzi, discusses woke indoctrination in education.
1.52K
views
7
comments
18
Why did Brazil ban X? | Glenn Greenwald | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 40

ReasonTV
Glenn Greenwald discusses Brazil's ban of X, the arrest of Telegram founder Pavel Durov, and the global crackdown on speech.
1.53K
views
5
comments
19
How bad is the national debt? | Bob Murphy | Just Asking Questions

ReasonTV
Economist Bob Murphy explains the technical details of government debt and why Modern Monetary Theory is so dangerously wrong.
9.48K
views
12
comments
20
What’s actually wrong with the economy? | Kyla Scanlon | Just Asking Questions

ReasonTV
Economist and author Kyla Scanlon discusses inflation, economic narratives, and the housing market. Episode 38
1.46K
views
21
How do Democrats define 'freedom'? | Jane Coaston | Just Asking Questions

ReasonTV
Jane Coaston, a contributing opinion writer at the New York Times with self-described libertarian tendencies, discusses the DNC and the current state of the Democratic Party.
How do Democrats define “freedom”?
It’s Democratic National Convention week, so we wanted to talk about what’s been unfolding there so far: the rhetoric, the thematic choices, and what it all reveals about the Democrats’ 2024 agenda. And how should we state power skeptics and liberty appreciators view that agenda? We’ve invited on Jane Coaston to discuss all that with us this week. She’s a contributing opinion writer at the New York Times, former politics reporter at Vox, and exhibits self-described “libertarian tendencies.”
27.1K
views
27
comments
22
What happened in Venezuela's election? | César Báez & Daniel Di Martino | Just Asking Questions

ReasonTV
Two Venezuelan immigrants explain the current political unrest in the country.
1.67K
views
6
comments
23
How likely is a Kamala Harris presidency? | Nate Silver | Just Asking Questions

ReasonTV
How likely is a Kamala Harris presidency? Just asking questions.
1.15K
views
24
Will MAGA become libertarian, nationalist, or both? | Vivek Ramaswamy | Just Asking Questions, Ep 34

ReasonTV
The former presidential candidate discusses the ideological tensions within the America First movement.
2.23K
views
22
comments
25
Why did Biden drop out? | Alex Thompson | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 33

ReasonTV
Axios reporter Alex Thompson discusses Joe Biden's exit and the rise of Kamala Harris.
1.86K
views
2
comments
26
What's Trump's agenda? | Mary Katharine Ham | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 32

ReasonTV
Fox News commentator Mary Katharine Ham discusses Trump's new policy agenda.
24.8K
views
23
comments
27
What if Biden quits? | Dave Weigel | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 31

ReasonTV
Political reporter Dave Weigel joins the show to discuss Biden's decline and the possibility of replacing him.
29.7K
views
22
comments
28
How is masculinity changing? | Ruth Whippman | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 30

ReasonTV
Ruth Whippman discusses her new book, BoyMom: Reimagining Boyhood in the Age of Impossible Masculinity.
2.22K
views
13
comments
29
Trent Horn: Can a Catholic be a socialist?

ReasonTV
Catholic Answers apologist Trent Horn explores the nexus of Catholic social teaching and libertarianism.
1.82K
views
5
comments
30
Ian Vasquez: What Has Javier Milei Accomplished in Argentina?

ReasonTV
How's it going in Javier Milei's Argentina?
Milei, Argentina's self-described libertarian president, notched his first legislative victory last week. Argentina's Senate passed a major omnibus bill, also known as the "Bases Law", that's been debated since February.
It would further deregulate the labor market, privatize national industries, cut taxes for foreign companies investing in Argentina, and hand emergency powers to Milei.
Because Milei's party controls seven out of 72 Senate seats, the bill only passed with a lot of compromise and a tie-breaking vote by the vice president, and it could get pared down even more by the lower chamber before reaching the president's desk. Nevertheless, the proposed changes were dramatic enough to inspire large, raucous, and destructive protests outside of the National Congress building during the debate.
Reason's Zach Weissmueller was in Argentina last week during that debate shooting a forthcoming documentary. While there, he attended a conference jointly hosted by the Cato Institute and Libertad y Progreso, a libertarian think tank. Milei gave a keynote speech there, following a warm-up act by Elon Musk.
25.1K
views
17
comments
31
Diana Fleischman: Are designer babies the future?

ReasonTV
Evolutionary psychologist Diana Fleischman discusses IVF, artificial genetic selection, and her unique take on the Ethan Hawke-Uma Thurman movie, 'Gattaca.'
1.58K
views
3
comments
32
Mike Solana: Can San Francisco Be Saved?

ReasonTV
Pirate Wires, Editor in Chief, Mike Solana discusses the lessons of San Francisco's politics, his vision for the future, and his critiques of libertarianism.
2.1K
views
2
comments
33
Chase Oliver: What Does the Libertarian Presidential Candidate Really Believe?

ReasonTV
Who, exactly, is Chase Oliver? And what does he really stand for?
Oliver is the Libertarian Party's 2024 presidential nominee, selected after six rounds of voting at a contentious party convention in Washington, D.C., this weekend, which featured speeches from Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Vivek Ramaswamy, and former President Donald Trump, who suggested himself as the nominee to a chorus of boos. Oliver was not the preferred candidate of the Mises Caucus, who remains in control of the Libertarian Party, and several of their higher profile members, such as Dave Smith, have said they will not vote for him, with several accusing him of being too woke, too pro-immigration, and too soft on COVID restrictions. We'll ask him to address all of that today.
Oliver, a 38-year-old sales executive, rose to prominence in the party as the 2022 Libertarian Senate candidate in a highly competitive race in Georgia, where he pulled 2 percent of the vote and forced it into a runoff, which ultimately resulted in the Democratic candidate winning, tipping the balance of the Senate in their favor.
2.17K
views
26
comments
34
Ted Nordhaus: How bad is climate change?

ReasonTV
Breakthrough Institute co-founder Ted Nordhaus on climate science and climate change anxiety.
Subscribe
YouTube: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-asking-questions/id1719355507
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5SpySKAH3LuVyxXk0MF7tl
Text and links to sources available here: https://reason.com/podcast/2024/05/23/ted-nordhaus-how-bad-is-climate-change/
How bad is climate change?
People are freaked out by climate change, especially young people. Scientists for Nature conducted a survey of 10,000 16- to 25-year-olds in 2021 and found that 59 percent of them were extremely worried or very worried about climate change, and large majorities reported that climate change made them feel sad, anxious, and/or afraid. On Earth Day this year, President Joe Biden shared a picture on X (formerly Twitter) of himself standing next to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.) with the caption, "Young Americans know that the climate crisis is the existential threat of our time. They deserve leaders who believe them."
Today's guest says it's time to stop catastrophizing. Ted Nordhaus is the co-founder and executive director of the environmental nonprofit The Breakthrough Institute. He recently published an essay in The New Atlantis titled "Did Exxon Make it Rain Today?" which argues that while climate change is a real phenomenon affected by human activity, "we're actually safer than ever before." He says a deliberate campaign of fearmongering and exaggeration about the effects of climate change has misled the public and damaged the credibility and effectiveness of the environmentalist movement.
1.93K
views
13
comments
35
Phil Magness: Who Really Pays The Most Taxes?

ReasonTV
Economist and author Phil Magness debunks a recent 'New York Times' piece and shoddy academic work about the rich and their taxes.
Subscribe
YouTube: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-asking-questions/id1719355507
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5SpySKAH3LuVyxXk0MF7tl
Text and links to sources available here: https://reason.com/podcast/2024/05/16/phil-magness-who-really-pays-the-most-taxes
How much do billionaires really pay in taxes?
62.8K
views
48
comments
36
Nico Perrino: When does protesting become a crime?

ReasonTV
Executive VP of FIRE Nico Perrino discusses the history and legality of campus protests
Subscribe
YouTube: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-asking-questions/id1719355507
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5SpySKAH3LuVyxXk0MF7tl
Text and links to sources available here: https://reason.com/podcast/2024/05/09/nico-perrino-when-does-protesting-become-a-crime/
What should colleges do about pro-Palestinian encampments?
College students across America are camping out to demand their universities divest all investments with Israeli-linked companies that they claim profit from the occupation and oppression of Palestine. It's gone on for weeks, and even administrators at schools known as bastions of progressive activism are finally getting fed up. Harvard's president is threatening "involuntary leave" for protesters. Columbia announced on Monday that it canceled its main commencement ceremony for safety reasons. The University of Southern California has, too.
UCLA called in the cops to clear its encampment, and police have arrested more than 2,100 protesters across all U.S. campuses since April, according to the Associated Press.
Congress has continued to interrogate Ivy League presidents, and a bill to explicitly define antisemitism for civil rights law enforcement purposes just passed the House with overwhelming support last week.
Joining us today to talk about the protests, the backlash, and what it all means for free speech on campus and the wider world is Nico Perrino, executive vice president of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE), and host of the free speech podcast So to Speak.
Watch the full conversation on Reason's YouTube channel or the Just Asking Questions podcast feed on Apple, Spotify, or your preferred podcatcher.
Sources referenced in this conversation:
Full Text of the Antisemitism Awareness Act
International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance's definition of antisemitism.
Columbia students define "divest"
Harvard President Garber Breaks Silence on Encampment, Threatens 'Involuntary Leave' for Protesters
Columbia cancels commencement amid campus protests
Map: Where College Protesters Have Been Arrested or Detained
Polling 1,200 college students on Encampments
What Americans think about recent pro-Palestinian campus protests | YouGov
Americans' Views of Both Israel, Palestinian Authority Down
Majority in US Say Israel's Reasons for Fighting Hamas Are Valid | Pew Research Center
Letter from judges saying they won't hire Columbia grads as clerks
Timestamps:
00:00:00 Introduction
00:01:33 Free Speech on Campus: A Conversation with Nico Perrino
00:02:13 The Historical Context of Campus Protests and Free Speech Debates
00:07:28 The Legal and Social Implications of Campus Encampments
00:31:38 The Role of Civil Disobedience in Campus Activism
00:38:31 Evaluating the Effectiveness of Campus Protests Through Polling Data
00:43:07 Congressional Involvement in Campus Free Speech Issues
00:50:48 The Anti-Semitism Awareness Act of 2023: A New Legal Battleground
00:54:56 The Complexities of Free Speech and Political Expression on Campus
00:59:17 Navigating the Tensions of Privacy and Free Speech
01:03:42 The Role of Public Shaming and Cancel Culture in Free Speech Debates
01:20:03 Nico wants you to ask yourself this question about censorship
01:23:58 Just Ask Us Questions: A Libertarian's Evolving Stance on Immigration
78.5K
views
83
comments
37
Jesse Singal: Should Kids Medically Transition?

ReasonTV
Should kids medically transition between genders?
The number of kids diagnosed with gender dysphoria has surged in recent years. In America, diagnoses have almost tripled from about 15,000 to more than 42,000 from 2017 to 2021. In the United Kingdom, the number of minors referred to the national Gender Identity Development Service grew from 51 in 2009 to 1,766 by 2016, leading to yearslong waitlists for care within the government-run health system.
This surge caused England's National Health Service to commission an extensive study of youth gender treatment. That study is known as the Cass Review, and its results dropped on April 10. The review's author, former head of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Hilary Cass, concluded that modern youth gender dysphoria interventions are informed by "remarkably weak evidence" drawing on studies "exaggerated by people on all sides of the debate to support their viewpoint" and that "we have no good evidence on the long-term outcomes of interventions to manage gender-related distress." The science, it turns out, is not settled—or anywhere close to it.
NHS England opted to stop routine prescriptions of puberty blockers following the review's publication, as have NHS Scotland and the Welsh government. Major American medical groups such as the American Psychiatric Association, American Medical Association, and American Academy of Pediatrics, all of which endorse prescribing puberty blockers for gender-dysphoric kids, have yet to officially respond.
American media coverage of the Cass Review, which could throw the entire youth gender treatment paradigm in this country into question, has been remarkably muted. But today's guest is never muted. Jesse Singal has been covering this topic—and taken a lot of heat for it—for years in the pages of publications such as The Atlantic, The Dispatch, and on his Substack, Singal-Minded.
Watch the full conversation on Reason's YouTube channel or the Just Asking Questions podcast feed on Apple, Spotify, or your preferred podcatcher.
46.5K
views
24
comments
38
Elica Le Bon: War with Iran?

ReasonTV
Elica Le Bon, an attorney and Iranian-American activist, talks about Iran's recent strike on Israel
60.8K
views
56
comments
39
Dave Smith vs. Chris Freiman | What's the ideal immigration policy? | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 16

ReasonTV
Podcaster Dave Smith and philosopher Chris Freiman debate open borders on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
13.2K
views
11
comments
40
Who's right about George Floyd? | Coleman Hughes vs. Radley Balko | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 14

ReasonTV
Radley Balko debates Coleman Hughes about his recent column arguing that Derek Chauvin may have been wrongly convicted of George Floyd's murder on this latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Subscribe
YouTube: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-asking-questions/id1719355507
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5SpySKAH3LuVyxXk0MF7tl
Text and links to sources available here: https://reason.com/podcast/2024/03/14/coleman-hughes-vs-radley-balko-whos-right-about-george-floyd
0:00- Summary of Coleman Hughes' and Radley Balko's disagreement about George Floyd's death
2:09- Balko asks Hughes to correct his article
9:27- Hughes' response to Balko
19:27- What is maximum restraint technique (MRT)?
27:20- Derek Chauvin ignored warnings from his colleagues and the surrounding crowd
32:42- Why did Chauvin keep kneeling on Floyd after he went limp?
37:18- Was “The Fall of Minneapolis” a trusthworthy documentary?
47:02- Did Floyd die of positional asphyxia?
1:10:50- Would Hughes change anything if he had to rewrite the article?
1:21:14- The aftermath of George Floyd's death
1:36:00- Is there systemic racism in policing?
1:43:13- How do we hold police officers accountable?
1:51:24- Did Derek Chauvin get a fair trial?
63.5K
views
73
comments
41
Can this rich transhumanist beat death? | Bryan Johnson | Just Asking Questions

ReasonTV
Bryan Johnson, venture capitalist and founder of Blueprint, discusses his $2 million a year effort to reverse aging on Just Asking Questions.
Subscribe
YouTube: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-asking-questions/id1719355507
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5SpySKAH3LuVyxXk0MF7tl
Text and links to sources available here: https://reason.com/podcast/2024/02/27/bryan-johnson-can-this-rich-transhumanist-beat-death
0:00- A day in the life of a transhumanist trying not to die
3:18- How important is our sleep cycle?
8:30- Humanity's imminent "evolutionary transition"
14:02- How close are we to finding the real "Fountain of Youth"?
16:30 - Do genetics trump lifestyle?
22:30- Self-experimentation and scientific progress
24:50- Why Bryan Johnson measures his nighttime boners
35:01- Liz reacts to Bryan Johnson's daily meal plan
48:00 - Coping with the "existential crisis" of AI
1:00:00- In defense of blood boys
---
Bryan Johnson made his fortune when he sold his company Braintree to PayPal for $800 million, netting about $300 million for himself. He spends about $2 million a year creating a system to reverse his "biological age." He's 46 years old, chronologically, but claims he's de-aged himself following a program he's branded "the Blueprint protocol."
"I wanted to pose the question in this technological age: Can an algorithm, paired with science, in fact, take better care of me than I can myself?" Johnson tells Reason's Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
They talked with Johnson about his daily routine, the results he's published including measurement of his nighttime erections, the transhumanist philosophy he outlines in his free e-book Don't Die, the role that artificial intelligence is likely to play in prolonging human life and health spans, and the value and limitations of self-experimentation in an era of pharmaceutical stagnation.
Watch the full conversation on Reason's YouTube channel or on the Just Asking Questions podcast feed on Apple, Spotify, or your preferred podcatcher.
22K
views
13
comments
42
Should America police the world? | Curt Mills | Just Asking Questions

ReasonTV
The Senate passed a $95 billion foreign aid package as the Biden administration fights Houthis in Yemen without Congressional approval. Curt Mills, executive director of The American Conservative, talks about the state of U.S. foreign policy on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
0:00- Will Russia agree to a ceasefire in 2024?
7:52- What happens if the U.S. stops sending aid to Ukraine?
9:30- What is the connection between border security and foreign aid?
19:36- Is there a new wave of non-interventionists?
27:21- Is Biden still the best candidate that Democrats have for 2024?
39:20- Does Biden have a chip on his shoulder?
41:22- What is Biden doing in Yemen?
53:29- Why has Congress given up its war powers?
Subscribe
YouTube: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-asking-questions/id1719355507
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5SpySKAH3LuVyxXk0MF7tl
Text and links to sources available here: https://reason.com/podcast/2024/02/14/curt-mills-should-america-police-the-world
---
"The greatest risk of a Republican administration is a war with Iran, and the greatest risk of a Democratic administration is a war with Russia," says Curt Mills, executive director of The American Conservative, a magazine for the types of conservatives who are skeptical of foreign military intervention.
Mills joined Reason's Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions to talk about a $95.3 billion aid package, including $60 billion for Ukraine, that passed the Senate this week, which Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.) called a "middle finger to America" during his filibuster of the bill. In this episode, they discuss the bill's passage, Paul's filibuster, Russian President Vladimir Putin's recent interview with Tucker Carlson, the Biden administration's airstrikes against Yemen, and whether or not the surge of foreign policy noninterventionism within the GOP is likely to last past 2024.
Watch the full conversation on Reason's YouTube channel or on the Just Asking Questions podcast feed on Apple, Spotify, or your preferred podcatcher.
3
comments
Is our technology actually improving? | Byrne Hobart | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 55
7 months ago
237
Finance and tech writer Byrne Hobart discusses how bubbles as a good thing, overcoming stagnation, and the religiosity of space exploration.
Loading comments...
-
47:52
ReasonTV
7 days agoDid MAGA Kill the Tea Party?
6091 -
2:09:32
Side Scrollers Podcast
19 hours agoStreamer DIES Live On Air + Your Food is Poison + Xbox Announces $900 Handheld | Side Scrollers Live
19.6K11 -
15:32
GritsGG
15 hours agoFull Auto ABR Sniper Support! Most Winning Quad Win Streaking!
7.82K2 -
7:42
The Pascal Show
14 hours ago $0.41 earnedBREAKING! Police Provide UPDATE In Emmanuel Haro's Case! Is Jake's Lawyer Lying To Us?!
9.21K -
2:29:46
FreshandFit
7 hours agoAfter Hours w/ Girls
108K73 -
5:28
Zach Humphries
13 hours ago $0.90 earnedNEAR PROTCOL AND STELLAR TEAM UP!
15.4K2 -
1:09:57
Brandon Gentile
1 day ago10,000 Hour BITCOIN Expert Reveals Why $13.5M Is Just The Start
20.5K3 -
2:03:55
Badlands Media
7 hours agoDevolution Power Hour Ep. 382: DOJ Coverups, Clapper’s Team Sport & Trump’s Countermoves
133K22 -
2:06:30
Inverted World Live
11 hours agoDon't Approach the Zombie Rabbits | Ep. 95
53.9K24 -
3:26:45
Drew Hernandez
7 hours agoISRAEL PLANNING POSSIBLE DRAFT IN USA & TRUMP'S VIEW ON ETERNAL LIFE ANALYZED PT 2
41.6K50