Dec 20, 2024
Elderly Congressman CUSSES OUT Photographer
79-year-old Congressman David Scott cussed out a photographer for taking his photo while he was in public.
- 10 minutes
Instead of being angry at Republicans
for demolishing yet another
government funding plan.
Yesterday,
Democratic Representative David Scott
decided to go after the press instead.
And if you don't know who David Scott is,
you're not alone.
Now hear from Ken Klippenstein.
[00:00:16]
Here's a picture of 79 year old
Congressman, Representative David Scott,
yelling at a photographer who gave you
the right to take my picture blank.
This picture was taken in a public place.
Now, keep in mind
they were again outside in public.
[00:00:32]
And this is Scott's 12th term.
So you think he'd be used
to this process by now?
But there's more.
The staffer who was assisting Scott
then returned to the area where the
journalists were gathered and confronted
Politico photographer Frances Chung,
[00:00:48]
asking which outlet he was with
and saying, I'm going to ask you
to not come and take a picture of us
as we're trying to get into the Capitol.
When Chung replied that he hadn't gotten
in the way, the aide pushed back,
raising their voice and repeatedly
saying no, adding, I'm going
[00:01:04]
to ask you very nicely not to do that.
We will be reaching out to your editor.
Whoever it is.
We have to reach out to Jake.
- They're calling the manager.
- Yeah?
Yeah. Okay.
It was. It was her name.
Karen? Okay.
So. All right, look, this story is
so interesting on a couple of fronts.
[00:01:23]
So there's a whole heap of senile people
in Congress, but mainstream media
never covers it because.
Oh, no access.
And we have to worship the powerful, etc..
And, I mean, guys, you've seen it
with your own eyes, right?
Joe Biden, his brain was melting on camera
and they're like, no, it's not.
[00:01:41]
No it's not.
He's young and dynamic behind the scenes,
behind the scenes.
Right.
So I'm sure this brother is also young
and dynamic behind the scenes.
Doesn't even use
the wheelchair behind the scenes.
Just having fun for the photo op. Okay.
So and then we saw Dianne Feinstein.
I'm sorry, I don't mean to offend,
but like a corpse being wheeled around
[00:01:59]
by Nancy Pelosi's daughter and they're
saying, no, no, she's totally fine.
Yeah.
They're like, she couldn't say a sentence.
Like she was like way past Joe Biden.
Like, no, no, she's fine, she's fine.
I don't know what you're talking about.
And I've told you guys this before,
why do they like the older politicians?
[00:02:16]
Because the return on investment.
You never heard of this guy, right?
He's the head
of the agriculture committee.
But you've never seen him before,
is my guess.
Why?
Because they get elected by the donors
and then they go into a cave.
They never do any press.
They never do anything important.
[00:02:32]
Interesting. They never fight for you.
That's why you never see them. Right?
And that way,
they can survive forever and forever.
They might freeze this guy eventually
and be like, no, he's fine.
Do not ask any questions. Right.
Is he still working for the donors? Yes.
Good, good.
But there's a second part of it, too,
which is what you're hearing
[00:02:49]
from his, handler there.
I'm going to call your editor and him
saying, like, who do you think you are
to take a picture of me, brother?
You're a public servant.
You're a congressperson.
You are literally called
a representative, right?
[00:03:06]
But he thinks, no,
I don't want my picture taken.
So you will not take it. Okay.
And then it's not just him, though.
His staffers who are not senile.
How dare you?
No. Only the donors have access to him.
Now the humans will see him.
This is an outrage.
[00:03:22]
Right.
And that is their actual expectation.
And by the way, when they call the editor
nine out of ten times, that works.
That's why she makes that threat, right?
Because if I call your editor,
your editor knows to kiss my ass and make
sure you don't get any actual stories
out there that might inform people.
[00:03:40]
There's more. Jackson, what do you think?
Yeah, I think the really good point
that you made about how, particularly
people who, you know, you never heard of,
but they've been in this seat for maybe
like 20 years or something like that.
That's even more prevalent at the
local level because Americans in general,
[00:03:57]
you know, pay most attention to politics
when somebody's running for president.
We pay even less attention
to local politics, unfortunately,
because that's where the most
direct change can take place
for your community and your neighborhoods.
But these people will get elected,
and they'll be like, this dude's been
[00:04:13]
in this bench for 35 years.
And local government is just as corrupt
as the federal government.
So corporate America
is pulling strings all over the place.
And, you know, the less face time you get,
the less known you are,
the less likely you're going to be held
accountable by the public at all.
[00:04:29]
Because Americans and this is, definitely
on us and on us on our education system,
we don't really know
how this country works as a whole.
So if you can go under the radar,
then that's really good for you.
That's probably why
he didn't want his picture taken.
Like, no, I don't want nobody
knowing who I am,
[00:04:44]
because this is like when they wrote.
Dianne Feinstein out when she was
like that old woman from SpongeBob.
Like what?
What's next? Selling chocolates?
I'll never forget that. But yeah.
No, all these people are.
Oh, we got Chuck Grassley.
He's almost 100 years old.
[00:05:01]
Nancy Pelosi is like, what?
She's 84 or something like that.
Yep. Nancy.
Yeah. 84. Like so many of these
people are 81, 82, 84, 78.
And like you pointed out, you know,
they they have these relationships.
They've been having these relationships
with these people for decades.
[00:05:18]
So it's just easier
than bringing somebody younger in.
That's why AOC didn't make it
to the to the position because, you know,
make it easier for the donor class.
But yeah, no, it's, I think one
of the biggest silver linings that we have
as progressives are really just anybody
who wants a more effective government
[00:05:36]
is these people are old,
you know what I'm saying?
Like, their time is just is
just come to an end naturally.
So we all need to encourage our friends
and family and just good people
that we know to run for office,
because that's really what's going to make
the difference at the end of the day.
[00:05:51]
Let me say real quick, until about a year
ago, these three had been running
the Democratic Party in the House for,
I think almost the entire time
I've been covering news,
which is like a quarter of a century.
Pelosi, who's 84, Clyburn, who's 84,
and Steny Hoyer, who's 85.
[00:06:09]
Absurd change we can believe in.
But so to Jackson's point,
these people are old.
To reiterate, Scott is 79. He was expected
to retire earlier this year,
but instead he decided to launch
a reelection bid back in February.
Scott was also the Democratic leader
for the House Agriculture Committee,
[00:06:27]
but was replaced earlier this week
after the Democratic caucus voted
to make Representative Angie Craig
the new ranking member.
And it's clear to see why. Take a look.
Just in this past year, as of
[00:06:44]
May 24th, and also in in
2023 alone, you have an outstanding record
and not only your record,
but the record of President Biden.
[00:07:05]
Okay, now compare that to a younger,
more vigorous version of his past self.
- Take a look.
- Let's give the truth in this matter.
It was under Democratic leadership
that we said no.
Yes, we have a credit problem,
a credit freeze of the credit markets
[00:07:21]
up in on Wall Street.
And we must respond. No, I will not.
You had your 15 minutes.
I only have two minutes.
Now, according to a Politico
Politico report earlier this year,
when Scott was seeking reelection,
even in private meetings,
Scott frequently reads from a script
and at times has trouble carrying out
[00:07:39]
substantive conversations in real time
about much of the food
and agriculture policy that he oversees,
according to more than a dozen lawmakers,
congressional staff,
lobbyists and agriculture advocates
who have spoken with Scott in
recent months and were granted anonymity
to speak candidly about their concerns.
[00:07:56]
One Democratic lawmaker even stated,
David Scott is exhibit A for term limits.
He was a respected, talented member
who has become diminished
and it's painful for people to watch.
And I think there is an issue here
where their age and their declining mental
[00:08:13]
capacity has a inhibits their ability
to fulfill the obligations of their job.
But I do want to point out
that friend of the show, Ken Klippenstein,
has dubbed this cadre of aging members
of Congress the Mothball Mafia.
And I just that has been banging around my
head the past day since I read that.
[00:08:31]
Kenny Cliff's okay cause in trouble,
as always.
Look, if these folks are senile,
which they clearly are.
Who's actually running their offices?
I mean, that's the thing
we used to ask about Feinstein.
Now, by the way, as we've got drones
circling around for months above us
[00:08:46]
and no one gives us an answer.
We've got a mess in Congress.
They go to ask the president.
Nobody knows who's in charge
of the white House now.
When Feinstein was being wheeled around,
nobody knew
who was in charge of her office.
And we all had to speculate.
Is it Pelosi's daughter?
Is it a chief of staff?
Is it a donor, etc.?
[00:09:03]
But let me tell you who's generally
in charge, because Mo Brooks,
a Republican congressman from Alabama,
already clarified it.
It's one of my favorite stories, and I
put it in my book, Justice is Coming.
He said in order to become
the head of a committee,
you have to raise about $1 million
and give it to the other members of your
[00:09:21]
party in that committee, and that's
how you get the committee chairmanship.
And and he said, do you think an average
Joe or Jane Doe in Alabama has $1 million?
Dollars?
No. The only people who have $1 million
are people who are regulated
[00:09:38]
by that committee.
So almost every committee chairman
gets $1 million from the people he's
supposed to be regulating to make sure
that they do not get regulated,
and that's how they get their position.
So if you want to know
who's actually in charge instead of Scott,
[00:09:54]
as usual, it's the donors.
Exactly. Definitely the donors.
But yeah, no, it's as you always point
out, the biggest issue is just the
the oversaturation of money in politics.
Because without taking that out, I don't
really I mean, what difference are term
[00:10:11]
limits really going to make, you know.
I mean, you're still going
to have you're still going to have,
money flowing like crazy.
They're just going to find
another way to get it in there.
So that that continues to be the central
issue with our politics in this country.
Yeah, 100%.
[00:10:26]
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