Breaking Government with Michael Lewis
April 30
2019
Summary:
Chris Hayes interviews Michael Lewis about his book The Fifth Risk, using the Trump transition and early administration to explore what federal agencies and civil servants actually do and why their work is largely invisible until it breaks. They frame government as a system for managing low-probability, high-impact risks—from nuclear security and weather forecasting to consumer protection—and discuss how neglect, ideological sabotage, and conflicted appointees can quietly raise those dangers while the public mostly experiences bureaucracy as frustrating “red tape.” The conversation also argues that the absence of immediate catastrophe can normalize incompetence, even as long-horizon threats like climate change demand precisely the kind of expert, mission-driven governance being undermined.
01:00
Michael Lewis
I just had surgery on my hip when he was elected.
01:03
I was stuck in bed, and there was being given these opioids, and I was in this horrible state of mind.
01:09
And I was kind of thrashing around thinking, aside from my hip, why do I feel the way I do?
01:15
And it was because this sense that Trump was a risk-loving person and an ignoramus.
01:21
He was being given this enterprise, and I started thinking about all the different ways he might kill me.
01:29
Chris Hayes
Hello and welcome to Why Is This Happening with me, your host, Chris Hayes.
01:34
Well, I was just sitting here a second ago talking to Tiffany Champion about what exactly we should do here for the intro.
01:42
And I don't think we need a lot of introduction for today's guest, which you presumably know because you've read the thing on your little podcast app that says what it is, so there's not like a big drumroll.
01:50
But we have Michael Lewis today.
01:52
Michael Lewis.
01:52
Michael Lewis, the man, the myth, the legend.
01:54
Michael Lewis, probably one of the most well-known, best-selling, and greatest nonfiction writers of our time.
02:02
He's the author of...
02:03
million books that you have may or may not read or you've seen the Hollywood movie version thereof.
02:09
He wrote Liar's Poker, which is his first big book about working on Wall Street when he's sort of fresh out of college.
02:15
He wrote The Big Short, which has also turned into an incredible movie.
02:18
He wrote The Blind Side or Blind Side.
02:19
What's the baseball one?
02:22
Moneyball.
02:22
He wrote Moneyball.
02:24
Moneyball.
02:26
Moneyball is an amazing book about Billy Bean.
02:28
The Oakland Athletics also turned into a major motion picture.
02:31
And he's got a new book out that is the subject of part of our conversation or most of our conversation, which is about a topic that is in some ways, I think, a little un-Michael Lewis-like in that he has largely looked at the worlds of finance and sports and
02:47
and places where people are making these kind of calculations about marginal utility and how to kind of game the system in some way, which I think is a recurring theme of his work.
02:57
And this book, which is a great book and leads to, I think, a great conversation, as you'll hear, is about people who are kind of doing the opposite of that in some ways, which are just bureaucrats.
03:06
It's a book about bureaucracy, bureaucrats and civil servants.
03:08
And at one level, you think, a book about bureaucrats, bureaucracy and civil servants doesn't sound like the sexiest thing in the world.
03:15
But what Michael does a really good job of transmitting in the book, and I think in the conversation you're about to hear, is something that we talk about a fair amount on the show, actually.
03:24
It's something we talked about when we talked to Abdul El-Sayed about Medicare for All, when we talked to Aaron Gordon about the subway system, that making the stuff of government work, like big public systems, healthcare system, a subway system—
03:38
the United States Department of Energy.
03:40
Making that stuff work is hard, requires real dedication, expertise, institutional health, planning, vision, talent, energy, resources.
03:51
And then the dividing line in a lot of ways between societies that function and ones that don't is whether you can get that big public stuff right.
03:58
And when you think about Donald Trump and the threat that Donald Trump represents to the American way of life or the American project in some ways,
04:06
That, I think, is a discounted and under-recognized part of what is so problematic, right?
04:11
We think about his rhetoric.
04:12
We think about the lies.
04:13
We think about the gaslighting.
04:14
We think about the bigotry and the racism.
04:17
We think about the scapegoating.
04:19
We think about the demagoguery.
04:20
All of that stuff, which really has a kind of poisonous effect in our national discourse and our national character and the nature of our politics—
04:28
We think about the sort of destruction of norms and the way that he attacks the Justice Department or the independence of the Fed and all this stuff.
04:35
But the basic gut level work of running the federal government is something that gets a lot less attention but might be the most devastating thing that he's doing poorly.
04:46
And because that stuff is so invisible, because it's so remote and because the work, the daily work of a project as large as the American federal government is so hard to get your head around, I think it's really difficult to think about what exactly is happening to the vital common wheel that we all share together in the era of Donald Trump.
05:06
And that makes up the subject of this book.
05:08
It's a reported piece about in a very granular sense, like what does it look like to be a civil servant bureaucrat in a random agency under Donald Trump?
05:17
The answer is not awesome.
05:19
But it's more broadly a profound meditation on what the stuff is of good government.
05:24
What does it look like?
05:25
What does it look like to serve the public, to go to work every day as a scientist in the Department of Energy or someone who's managing a nutrition program in the U.S. Department of Agriculture?
05:32
Driven by your mission, trying to make things work for the American citizens as much as possible.
05:37
And what has happened when you get someone at the top who just doesn't give a flying F at all?
05:45
In fact, just either doesn't care or wants to rip it down or can't be bothered to turn away from Fox and Friends for a few minutes to even know what the hell the government he runs is doing.
05:56
The answers are both humorous and horrifying in sort of equal measure.
06:01
And Michael Lewis is an amazing, amazing raconteur just generally.
06:05
Every time that I get to talk to Michael, I'm always sort of delighted.
06:09
He is a writer's writer and he is a beloved and admired writer, but he is also just a great, great conversationalist and a great storyteller.
06:17
And I should note, he has a podcast called Against the Rules, which is fantastic.
06:21
So if you like this conversation, you can listen to that.
06:23
But now you're in for a treat.
06:25
Michael Lewis.
06:31
Why are you doing a podcast?
06:33
You're like America's best-selling nonfiction author.
06:36
Michael Lewis
I always, between books, would do something else.
06:41
Right.
06:41
You just didn't know it.
06:43
And mostly what I would do between books is write screenplays, either TV pilots or film scripts.
06:48
Oh, really?
06:49
They all got bought.
06:50
I mean, I got paid for it, and it's paid for our family's health care for 20 years.
06:55
But none of them have gotten made.
06:57
Right.
06:58
And I always did this kind of palate cleansers, and I did it also because I just thought writers can get themselves in this mindset where they feel they have to write another book.
07:06
Crosstalk
Totally.
07:06
Michael Lewis
And the publishers write on you afterwards, and they're ready to get you going again.
07:10
And I just always feel like the book's going to be better if I start all over again, start completely fresh as if I've never written a book before, and give myself at least the option of not writing books.
07:22
In this case, I did it by doing a podcast.
07:25
Chris Hayes
That's smart.
07:26
I am for the first time in my adult life working on a fictional TV pilot and have found it so great and fulfilling, particularly as a break from the news cycle and the news.
07:41
Michael Lewis
But you're not getting a break from the news cycle and the news.
07:43
You're doing that too.
07:45
Chris Hayes
Right.
07:45
But when I'm focusing on that, I'm focusing on that.
07:48
I'm not focusing on whatever dumbass thing the president tweeted.
07:54
Michael Lewis
Yeah, but you still don't give yourself a chance to completely tune out.
07:58
Chris Hayes
No.
07:58
God, no.
07:59
No.
08:00
What I'm trying to say is I want to switch jobs with you, Michael Lewis.
08:04
but I'm not a good enough writer to.
08:06
By the way, I think it's very funny that you wrote this book, The Fifth Risk, on bureaucracy because it reminded me of my thinking in reading it.
08:12
We'll talk about that.
08:13
We're going to talk about sort of government more broadly.
08:14
But my thinking in reading it was the late, great David Foster Wallace's final book called The Pale King, which was sort of cobbled together by his editor, which is about the IRS and kind of about the IRS and boredom.
08:28
And in some ways it was like,
08:30
One of the greatest writers of our time attempting to take the most challenging subject and see if he can make it gripping.
08:36
And I feel like there's a little bit of that with you in this book, which is like, well, I'm Michael Lewis.
08:41
I'm going to write about like the bowels of a federal bureaucracy and make it a page turner, which you succeeded in doing.
08:47
Michael Lewis
So there's a little truth to that.
08:49
Chris Hayes
I know you were showing off is my point.
08:51
Michael Lewis
Well, but except I never it would have been much more impressive if I'd done it before Donald Trump became president.
08:57
Right.
08:58
Right.
08:58
And if I'd done this during the Obama administration, then you could stand up and cheer because because Trump just electrified this material.
09:05
He's made it so interesting that.
09:08
For the first time, I think it's true, for the first time in my writing career, Moneyball might have been a slight exception.
09:13
Even though I'm done with the book, I'm not really done with the material.
09:17
The material is still so good, I may come back to it.
09:22
Because he's just, you know...
09:23
The federal government is of no interest whatsoever unless the person running it is bent on destroying it.
09:29
Right.
09:30
Or bent on not managing it.
09:32
All of a sudden, when it faces this existential risk, it becomes interesting.
09:36
It's like your parents aren't interesting until they get unhealthy.
09:40
Jesus, that's dark.
09:42
Well, but, you know, when you're a kid, when you're a kid, you don't.
09:45
Right.
09:45
That's right.
09:45
You're the furniture.
09:47
Chris Hayes
That's right.
09:47
Michael Lewis
You take them for granted.
09:48
Right.
09:48
Because you take them for granted.
09:49
Chris Hayes
Right.
09:49
The point is that like that that is a really profound metaphor.
09:52
Right.
09:52
Because the parents are there.
09:53
And particularly when you're a kid.
09:55
Right.
09:55
They have the duty.
09:56
They're there to sort of provide safety.
09:58
They're there to sort of create the conditions for your life.
10:01
exploration development and flourishing and to the extent that's happening it they're yeah they're like the furniture they're the frame they're the sort of they're the platform upon which it happens but people who obviously are in homes that are extremely dysfunctional violent addled by addiction things like that or who go from a home that is not that and then becomes it because of some crisis
10:23
All of a sudden you realize just how central, right, that that basic premise is in the same way with government, that like when it's functioning, it's there as a kind of frame within which your life functions.
10:35
And when it falls apart, it suddenly becomes the thing of the center.
10:38
Michael Lewis
This is all true.
10:40
And at the same time, the moment the parents become good literary material is when they become bad parents, you know, when they become dysfunctional.
10:47
So that's what's happened, that all of a sudden the parent is dysfunctional and he's made this material interesting.
10:53
And I can't get away from it.
10:55
I keep spotting things in the newspaper or hearing things.
10:58
that have got me real, kind of being real back in.
11:01
And it's funny, also what always happens with the books is that when the hardback's done, Norton calls my, our publisher, calls me up and says, you got to write something new for the paperback.
11:15
And I always say, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
11:17
Come on, what a chore.
11:18
And I'm not going to do it.
11:19
I've already said what I have to say.
11:21
And every now and then there's a little epilogue to write, usually about whatever kerfuffle that the book caused.
11:27
In this case, I'm spoiled for choice.
11:30
In this case, I actually want to do it.
11:32
I actually want to write another piece of this thing because...
11:35
because the material just keeps coming.
11:37
So anyway... Well, so the book is about...
11:40
Chris Hayes
Fundamentally, the book is about what the government does, the federal government particularly, but I think in a broader existential sense about what government does.
11:47
And I wanted to start with, like, you talk a lot... You keep returning in the book to the learning curve in which people from the outside, whether they're from the business world or they're coming into a new administration, view the bureaucracy as basically this, like...
12:04
drab lump of idiots who don't know what they're doing and then come to appreciate it.
12:10
And I'm curious what to talk about your own arc in what you thought about the federal government, the Department of Energy and the various parts of civil service and what you came away thinking.
12:23
Michael Lewis
So I mean, it's true to say that up to the moment that Trump's elected,
12:27
I'd spend about as much time thinking about the federal government as I spent thinking about my parents when I was 12 years old.
12:33
I mean, I just didn't think about it that much.
12:35
I guess if you'd asked me what I thought about people who worked in the government, I'd have thought it was a sign of a sleepy place and a place where people who were risk-averse, and they're probably doing something useful, but not that interesting.
12:48
What I found, and it wasn't an arc, it was that, you know, the minute I started in on this project, you got to remember where I started.
12:55
I started with the energy department.
12:57
And I started with the energy department.
12:58
I was almost picking these things randomly.
13:00
But the thing that attracted, caught my eye in the first place was that Rick Perry had been...
13:05
named Secretary of Energy.
13:07
And I did remember Rick Perry, when he was a presidential candidate, getting up on stage and saying he was going to eliminate these three departments to shrink the federal government.
13:16
And he couldn't remember the name of the Energy Department, even though that was the one he was going to cut.
13:21
And I just thought of all the people on the planet to put in charge of the energy department.
13:26
He's got to be he's the he's he's got to be the worst.
13:29
He's he's he's demonstrated to the American people that he knows nothing about it.
13:33
And then he himself admitted after Trump nominated him that he knew nothing about it.
13:38
And he was so sorry he said what he said because now he thought it was worth keeping.
13:42
So that was my hook.
13:43
I thought, all right.
13:45
We now know someone's going to be running this place who has no business running this place.
13:48
What is the place he's running?
13:50
What is the energy department?
13:52
And it is generally true that the names of the various government departments don't tell you very much about what they do.
13:59
And when I found out the energy department was actually the Department of Nuclear Weapons, you know, where they were tended, where they were tested.
14:04
where the mess they created was cleaned up, where people resided who were hunting down loose nuclear materials.
14:11
Well, then it became really clear that this was an important place.
14:15
But the people, you know, the first person I really sat down with there was the guy who just left, John McWilliams, who was the chief risk officer several years during the Obama administration.
14:27
He laid out for me two things.
14:29
One was,
14:31
this little place that I had paid no attention to was managing existential risks.
14:36
But secondly, that he, who had spent his career, you know, making lots of money in the private sector, first at Goldman Sachs, then as a private equity person, you know, that he'd made it in the world.
14:47
When he collides with the energy department,
14:50
After about six months, he thinks these are the best people I've ever worked with.
14:53
These are the smartest, most motivated.
14:55
And that just shocked me.
14:57
And over and over again, I found that.
15:00
I mean, there's a big chunk of the government that is, that's a science project.
15:06
And the Energy Department is a big chunk of that chunk.
15:09
So then I, you know, I wandered around the Energy Department.
15:11
I talked to people who worked in the Energy Department.
15:13
Everybody loved the Energy Department and devoted their lives to the Energy Department.
15:16
And I thought, how come I didn't know any of this?
15:18
And the reason I didn't know any of this is that, like, the government is the one institution in America that doesn't promote itself, not really allowed to promote itself.
15:25
It's the opposite of Trump.
15:27
Like, Trump does, his whole life, he does very little.
15:30
And his bragging...
15:32
He's puffing himself up about it.
15:34
And the government is doing all these things that are keeping us alive and never says a word about it.
15:41
Chris Hayes
Well, I've had that – it's funny.
15:43
I've had that same experience in various interactions with various civil servants at various levels of the government, particularly the federal government.
15:50
Just, you know, for whatever reason, I remember when I was younger and working on a project with the census, you know, that had to do with census data.
15:59
And I would call up the census folks and just get someone on the hold who would just talk to me.
16:04
I was just some dude in the Bronx at a nonprofit trying to put together a website that could use their data well.
16:11
And they would just talk to me for 45 minutes to help me with this.
16:14
And just pleasant, mission-driven, extremely knowledgeable people.
16:19
person on the other line who just really was committed on that day to making sure that I could get access to the census data in the best way.
16:26
Michael Lewis
So I would say if I was going to list the several traits that the people I met in the government tended to have—
16:35
One was that, that they were very mission driven.
16:37
They were not money people.
16:39
If they were money people, they wouldn't be in the federal government.
16:41
Most everybody I talked to and I talked to dozens and dozens of people could have been making more money in the private sector.
16:47
So they were attracted to the mission.
16:49
Second, they are risk averse.
16:52
Mm hmm.
16:52
Generally, they don't like publicity.
16:55
All publicity is just it's all it's all the way life their life is lived.
17:02
Everything's downside.
17:03
Right.
17:03
Like only bad things can happen.
17:05
Chris Hayes
That's right.
17:05
Michael Lewis
You're not going to nobody's going to celebrate your achievement.
17:08
All they're going to do is ridicule you for some mistake you made.
17:12
And all attention is just like to be avoided.
17:15
Right.
17:15
There are the people who are walking around the streets of Washington with umbrellas when there's a 20% chance of rain.
17:21
They're just always protecting against the downside.
17:25
And the third thing that was interesting was just how many of them were first-generation Americans or second-generation.
17:33
They were who had come from places, whose families had come from places where there was a really dysfunctional government.
17:41
It's a bit like...
17:42
Kids who were raised in a really dysfunctional family can become parents who are highly functional because they know what it means to be in a dysfunctional family.
17:51
There was a big, thick strain of new Americans in the government doing things that they can be paid a lot more to do outside of the government.
18:00
So I would say those were all sort of, I kept running across that.
18:06
Chris Hayes
You just talked about risk aversion.
18:07
And one of the more, I think, sort of novel, profound frameworks, insights of the book is about the government and risk.
18:15
The title of the book is The Fifth Risk.
18:17
And what really struck me is you talk about the federal government as kind of a risk aggregator and risk manager.
18:25
And I never think I don't think I've thought of the government that way.
18:29
I thought of it in a bunch of different ways.
18:31
But tell me about that, that conception of what the government does is fundamentally interfacing with risks that we cannot deal with outside of it.
18:42
Michael Lewis
So I take that angle because of Donald Trump, because my source of interest in this was his election.
18:49
I can remember I just had surgery on my hip when he was elected.
18:53
I was stuck in bed and there was being given these opioids and I was in this horrible state of mind.
18:59
And I was kind of thrashing around thinking, aside from my hip, why do I feel the way I do?
19:04
And it was because this sense that Trump was a risk-loving person and an ignoramus.
19:11
He was being given this enterprise.
19:12
And I started thinking about all the different ways he might kill me if he was president.
19:18
And then I thought, I'm just kind of, actually, this is going to take you to how I got to the conception of the government as a risk-controlling enterprise or a risk-managing enterprise.
19:27
And then I thought, well, why?
19:28
What if we had a way to measure all the deaths that Donald Trump was responsible for as president?
19:35
We could create something like a death clock and put it in Times Square.
19:38
We would just scroll, you know, every time someone died because they didn't have a health insurance that they would have had without him or every time some foreign adventure went wrong or if the suicide rate goes up or whatever it is.
19:49
And I actually poked around with this for a while with data scientists figuring out if this could be done in any intellectually respectable way and then decided it couldn't.
19:57
But my mind was floating.
19:59
It was in this space.
20:00
What's the risks of having this person run this thing?
20:03
And then when I started interviewing people in the government, it became clear this was a perfectly legitimate way to view the government.
20:09
At its very basic level, the government's job is to keep us safe.
20:13
It does lots of other things.
20:14
You can view the government in lots of other ways.
20:16
You can view it as a service provider.
20:18
You can view it as an employer.
20:21
But at its very basic level, its job is to keep us safe.
20:24
And when you wander around it, you start to appreciate how many things there are to keep us safe from.
20:31
And the things that pop to mind when you're thinking of that are very vivid things, vivid risks, nuclear terrorist attacks or...
20:40
pandemics or natural disasters, all of which the government is responsible for defending us from.
20:48
But if you poke around some more and think about things a bit more broadly, there are all these other risks that are equally existential, like the risk of inequality getting so bad that the society crumbles.
21:00
There's a revolution.
21:02
Or the risk that we don't invest in science sufficiently so that our agricultural science sufficiently so that we don't have a food supply in 30 years.
21:09
Right.
21:09
So on and so forth.
21:12
All of this thing, I'm kicking around these thoughts.
21:14
At the same time, the book I'd written before The Fifth Risk was all about the way human beings have trouble evaluating risk.
21:22
And it was about two psychologists, Amos Tversky and Danny Kahneman, and their work on this subject.
21:28
But one of the insights that drops out of Kahneman and Tversky's work is
21:32
is that people don't assess risk well.
21:36
But in addition, they're not really sensitive to shifts in extreme risks.
21:42
So if you take something that is a one in a million chance of happening, and you shift it to a one in 100,000 chance of happening, people don't register that as, oh, it's 10 times more likely.
21:53
And you could think of the government as this manager of a basket of one in a million risks, but they got a million of them.
21:59
And you can think of Trump in his neglect, mismanagement, ignorance, et cetera, as a machine for ratcheting up the likelihood of a lot of unlikely bad things happening.
22:11
Chris Hayes
You know, it's funny you say that because when you said this to me, when I was sort of reading the book and thinking about risk in this way, something snapped into focus for me in a way that hadn't before, which is about why people don't like regulation and why they get mad at the government.
22:26
And it's because of the asymmetry of the perception of risk.
22:30
So here's an example.
22:31
I was I was working out with a trainer in the park and we had like put a band around a tree limb to do some like TRX, you know, pulls.
22:38
Michael Lewis
OK, let me just stop you for a second.
22:40
You, Chris Hayes.
22:42
Television personality are in what park with band and a trainer?
22:46
Where can I watch this?
22:47
Chris Hayes
I was in Prospect Park and it was a lovely day out.
22:49
Michael Lewis
All right.
22:50
All right.
22:51
Chris Hayes
And I wanted to work out by my house.
22:54
And so we put a TRX band around a limb of a tree and it was sturdy and no way it would have broken.
22:59
And a park bureaucrat came by, park worker, who, again, mission driven, take seriously their job, didn't have to do this.
23:06
Right.
23:06
They could have just kept going, stopped and was like, you can't do that.
23:10
You got to take that off the tree.
23:11
Now, in the moment, I'm thinking to myself, you know, screw you, dude.
23:15
That's crazy.
23:16
A.
23:16
B.
23:17
The risk of this tree limb falling is like one in a thousand.
23:20
Like, I just know it's sturdy enough.
23:22
But the thing is, from the government's perspective, there are hundreds of thousands of limbs in the park system in New York City.
23:29
And if you let people hang stuff off trees, you will break a lot of them.
23:33
From their perspective, they're on the other side of the big number.
23:37
Right.
23:37
So the asymmetric perception that risk is I run the whole parks department of New York City.
23:42
I recognize that if enough people put stuff on tree limbs, they will snap off a lot of tree limbs.
23:47
And me as the individual, I'm thinking, well, it's a one in a thousand chance.
23:50
What's your problem?
23:51
And that's basically all regulation.
23:52
Every time you've got to jump through a hoop or deal with a regulation, you're thinking yourself like, come on, dude, like it'll be fine.
23:58
But it's not going to be fine.
24:00
Right.
24:00
Michael Lewis
Government's perspective.
24:02
And no one's helping you see the world through the eyes of the regulator.
24:05
Exactly.
24:06
No one sees the world through the eyes of the regulator.
24:09
Literally no one but that.
24:10
It's like no one sees the world through the eyes of a referee.
24:14
It's the same thing.
24:16
Everybody's on the referee.
24:18
Both sides think the referee is against them.
24:22
And nobody imagines themselves into the head of the referee.
24:24
But without the referee, the game can't be played.
24:27
Chris Hayes
That's exactly right.
24:28
So you've got this, you know, you've got this sort of baked in asymmetry that I think is part of what is cultivated.
24:33
Right.
24:33
When people talk about the red tape and the bureaucrats and the government, it's like this obstacle is that they're managing these risks that we just are bad at.
24:42
It doesn't mean that they're getting it right, but just there's a there's a there's a sort of just inherent asymmetry and gap between our individual understanding of the risks and their understanding of the risks as they go about managing them.
24:57
Michael Lewis
I think that's absolutely right.
24:59
That's one source of friction.
25:01
The other source of friction is that
25:04
even when a normal person could understand why a regulator wouldn't let them do X or Y, they still want to do X or Y, like pour their pollution into the Sacramento River or whatever it is.
25:19
They're irritated because they can't do whatever they want, even if it's actually harming other people.
25:24
So for every you, there's some numbskull out there working out on a tree branch that's too thin to be worked out on.
25:33
Who doesn't mind snapping the tree.
25:36
That's right.
25:36
Right.
25:37
Chris Hayes
There's nefarious actors who just don't care about whatever the external cost is.
25:42
And it's the job of the government to sort of keep them in line and patrol it.
25:46
Michael Lewis
And it would be interesting to know if those people or your kind was more upset with the government.
25:51
I bet those people are at least are as much a source of the of the anti-government fervor.
25:56
Chris Hayes
Oh, totally.
25:57
I just think that the reason that the anti-government fervor can get its talons in people is because they have these interactions.
26:04
Michael Lewis
I think it's right.
26:05
Chris Hayes
You know what I mean?
26:06
Where they're going through and they're thinking like, oh, man, like eye roll at, you know, what you have to do.
26:11
And then, you know, again, the Chicago fire, it's like, you know, try to deal with the buildings department in New York City.
26:16
It is a massive pain in the ass.
26:18
But you know what the other option is?
26:21
The Chicago fire.
26:22
And it's like, no, really, that's what you get.
26:26
It's like one or the other.
26:27
You choose them.
26:27
Like you choose a bunch of red tape and a pain in the ass or you burn down your whole city.
26:32
And when the fire happens, it's like, man, why didn't anyone think of this?
26:36
Michael Lewis
I think New York City has, in the last decade or so, overhauled its building inspection unit.
26:44
They've kind of moneyballed fire inspection, where they've gotten really smart at using fewer resources.
26:50
And there are many other examples of this, of the government actually being really clever at what it does without anybody having any sense that it's gotten better or even thinking.
27:00
Because you're right, all anybody sees is someone telling them no.
27:03
Right.
27:03
Chris Hayes
There's a built in tension here between what the government does and how the public perceives it.
27:07
But I want to talk about what happens specifically when you throw Donald Trump into the mix.
27:13
Let's get into that right after this.
28:46
So you've got this situation where the government has this job and you've got these people that are the civil servants, right?
28:52
The sort of permanent government.
28:53
And then you've got the leadership that comes on.
28:56
And what happens when you've got these people that are mission driven and talented and industrious and take seriously their work?
29:02
You know, they're human.
29:03
They make mistakes, but generally pretty on the ball.
29:07
And you've got you've got Donald Trump and his like clown car drive up to the building and spill out.
29:16
what happens?
29:18
Michael Lewis
The clown car is pretty good.
29:20
It's a clown car filled with substitute teachers.
29:24
It's, uh, it's, uh, so, so what happens is,
29:29
First, you're giving the clown too much credit because in this case, he didn't even drive his car up to the building that it took in many cases.
29:37
They were supposed to be there the day after the election getting these briefings about what what people did inside the Energy Department of the Department of Agriculture.
29:45
They just didn't show up, didn't show up to the point that.
29:49
Last August, when I was finishing the book, I was still getting briefings on unbelievably important subjects that no one had ever heard.
29:58
We can't tell the president, but we can tell Michael Lewis.
30:04
Yeah, because no one had asked.
30:07
No, people I go see to hear the briefings would say things like, I'm so grateful you're here because I wanted to give this to someone.
30:15
You know, I wanted to tell someone what I knew.
30:19
So the clown car didn't actually get to the building.
30:21
But to the extent people wandered into the buildings, they wander in.
30:26
It's haphazard.
30:28
The story is very messy.
30:31
There are a few people in the Trump administration who really were where they should be.
30:34
And
30:35
Things are OK.
30:37
But the larger, the bigger story, the more common story was Trump knew nothing.
30:43
I mean, that's the important.
30:44
The starting point was that Trump wasn't some diabolically clever Anne Randian who was going to dismantle the government piece by piece in a systematic and intelligent way and leave us with a libertarian America.
30:59
He just couldn't be bothered and thought, oh, it's all dumb.
31:01
And he told Chris Christie, who was supposed to be running his transition team and who he fired right after the election.
31:08
He told Christie, don't bother building the transition team because you and I can leave the victory party two hours early and learn everything we need to know to run the federal government.
31:16
This two million person enterprise.
31:19
And he is as everybody.
31:22
So I interviewed people close to Trump and nobody said anything but he's a barbarian.
31:26
He's a barbarian and he's an idiot about this stuff.
31:28
He just doesn't know anything.
31:30
And he doesn't have much interest in learning about it.
31:32
So that's what's at the top.
31:34
And when that's at the top, all of a sudden you've got this very mission-driven enterprise with someone who's got no interest in the mission.
31:43
What rushes in?
31:44
Who's going to show up to work for that administration?
31:47
Right.
31:47
And what they have in common, the people who do show up, is they have some narrow financial interest in whatever the enterprise is.
31:54
So it's people who are there to make money either from the enterprise or to make money by preventing the enterprise doing what it's supposed to be doing.
32:02
And so you have people who are actively obstructing the enterprise.
32:06
And so the civils, how do the civil servants respond?
32:09
they're funny because they really are rule followers and they really are order followers.
32:15
Our government is not like, our democracy is not like any other democracy on earth.
32:19
Most other democracies have this permanent civil service that actually runs the thing.
32:24
We are this odd duck that has 4,000 political appointees who aren't just decoration.
32:30
They're meant to be running the government.
32:32
And when those people aren't there,
32:34
it is a bit like the teacher didn't show up for the classroom.
32:38
And yes, the permanent civil service can kind of, in places they motor on doing just what they were doing before, which is funny because effectively what they're doing is carrying out Obama administration era orders because no other orders have been given.
32:51
Or they're faced with someone like Mick Mulvaney at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau who basically says, stop what you're doing.
32:59
Chris Hayes
Throw it in reverse, basically.
33:01
Michael Lewis
Throw everything in the garbage can, get rid of the lawsuits, leave the banks alone, let them do whatever they want to do to the consumers.
33:08
Or the EPA, same sort of thing happened there.
33:11
So it's different case by case.
33:13
The intriguing ones are the complicated financial ones, where the person who showed up and said to Donald Trump, I want the job of being secretary of X or director of Y. Trump says, sure, you gave to me, you're my supporter.
33:28
Sure.
33:28
Chris Hayes
You just saddle up next to him at the omelet bar.
33:31
You know, and while he's ordering his omniscience, how about Secretary of Labor, Don?
33:38
Michael Lewis
Yeah.
33:38
Well, you know, the one the one that's right, the one that's of the moment is there is a character named Barry Myers, who's in any moment now is going to be put up to a vote.
33:50
His nomination is being put to a vote on the Senate floor.
33:53
I can't believe it's coming to a vote, but it's coming to a vote.
33:56
And Barry Myers asked to be head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which I'd never heard of when I got into this project.
34:07
But I've since come to think of as one of the fascinating things the government does.
34:11
It's where all the climate data is.
34:13
The National Weather Service is inside it.
34:16
And Barry Myers is the CEO of a private weather company called or was the CEO of a private weather company called AccuWeather.
34:23
which most people probably know of.
34:26
And he has, you know, the Weather Service is this phenomenally valuable enterprise.
34:35
Thanks to the Weather Service and the data it's collected and the intellectual work it's done, your weather forecasts are many times better than they used to be.
34:44
Your likelihood of not hearing about a storm or a hurricane or a tornado is much lower than it used to be.
34:50
It saves lives.
34:51
It saves property.
34:52
It saves lives.
34:52
It's filled with all these people who were traumatized and they're used by some weather accident and have decided they wanted to vote their lives to make sure no other people were traumatized by weather accidents.
35:01
It's a lovely, interesting place.
35:05
And the way progress happens there is they collect billions of dollars of data a year, make it freely available to the public so private weather geeks can hack away at it,
35:18
and find patterns and get better and better and better at understanding the weather.
35:23
And Barry Myers, for the last 20-something years, has been on a mission to prevent the National Weather Service from, A, communicating directly with the American people, because he says that when they do, it undermines AccuWeather's ability to make profits from giving the American people the weather.
35:41
Chris Hayes
He's literally the guy that founded the enterprise that sells the thing that the government provides for free.
35:49
It's just direct competition.
35:51
It's like, hey, we've got this.
35:54
Everyone can use our API.
35:55
You can build an app.
35:57
You can get it.
35:58
Here's the public information about the storms and everything.
36:01
He's like, what if we privatize that?
36:04
And what if I got rid of my one competitor?
36:07
Right.
36:08
Michael Lewis
But it's more complicated because he can't do it on his own.
36:10
He still needs the taxpayer to give him billions of dollars of data a year in order to provide weather forecasts.
36:17
So in addition to severing the communications channel between the National Weather Service and the American people, he would like to make sure the Weather Service's data is selectively provided to a handful of private companies.
36:32
He is, you know, you talk to people who are even in the, never to mind the weather service, in the private weather sector, people like Weather Channel, that kind of place.
36:40
They say he's an outlier even in our community because we all understand the value and importance of the government.
36:47
And we wouldn't have our businesses without it.
36:50
the idea that you're going to have to essentially pay if you don't want to die when the tornado, because nobody's going to tell you when the tornado's coming or the hurricane's coming.
37:00
It's insane.
37:02
And he's like the wrong guy.
37:04
Chris Hayes
I love like, you have like your phone has an alert and then like, it's like, it's like warning, huge storm coming your way and then you like click through on your phone and then there's like a paywall.
37:12
That's right.
37:13
And then it's like the Apple wall.
37:14
It's like, okay, here's my face ID.
37:15
Okay, what, what, $7.99?
37:16
Okay, fine, fine.
37:17
When's it hitting?
37:18
Oh, Jesus, an hour.
37:19
Okay, Jesus.
37:21
Michael Lewis
Yes, and you can have the platinum plan, right?
37:23
Chris Hayes
Yeah, you can get it two hours ahead of time.
37:26
Michael Lewis
Or where, you know, an AccuWeather van will come up and evacuate you.
37:29
And you can AccuWeather emergency management services.
37:34
And this is the logic to who ends up in the Trump administration.
37:37
Nobody who's actually qualified for the job and is there for the mission of the job is of any particular interest to Donald Trump.
37:46
Yeah.
37:46
The person who who is who's going to bang through Trump's door to get that job is someone for whom it's worth a lot of money.
37:52
Chris Hayes
Well, there's basically two categories.
37:54
Right.
37:54
And I think, you know, you talk about this in the book and it's one thing that's interesting is the book, you know, is written sort of based on that first year.
37:59
And obviously things have happened since then, I think, have borne out a lot of the basic theses that show up in the book.
38:04
But, you know, as someone who covers this every day.
38:07
There's sort of two options, right?
38:09
There's malign attention, right?
38:12
So that's Mick Mulvaney.
38:14
Mick Mulvaney is like an ideological warrior who wants to dismantle the CFPB and actually kind of knows a thing or two about it and goes in there.
38:21
Or a kind of neutral neglect, which is— That's Rick Perry.
38:26
Rick Perry at DOE or Ben Carson at HUD.
38:28
And I remember when Ben Carson was up at HUD, I know a lot of people in the housing world.
38:32
My father was a housing organizer, and I know a lot of people in housing.
38:35
And these are people who have worked through various presidential administrations and worked with HUD on a whole bunch of stuff.
38:41
And they were kind of breathing a sigh of relief about Ben Carson because the thought was, well—
38:47
The guy doesn't know anything about housing.
38:49
It's better than a Scott Pruitt, right?
38:50
At the time, these two guys are both being a nominee around the same time.
38:53
It's like Scott Pruitt is like wants to destroy the EPA.
38:57
Ben Carson just doesn't know anything about it.
38:59
The thought is like, well, we'll get Ben Carson.
39:00
They're like, hopefully he'll just let the
39:03
lower-level staff kind of run the place, which has largely been more or less what has happened.
39:07
It has, I think, been a less dismantled operation than other places.
39:12
And so it's really weird.
39:14
Like, the best you can hope for is essentially...
39:17
The Rick Perry, Ben Carson model as opposed to the Scott Pruitt, Mick Mulvaney one.
39:22
Michael Lewis
So there's actually I think I'll turn your two categories into three.
39:25
I think there's absolutely there's a Rick Perry, Ben Carson model, which is the kind of they don't know enough.
39:30
Not only do they not know enough to be dangerous, they don't particularly care.
39:34
They don't care.
39:34
Chris Hayes
They just don't care.
39:35
Michael Lewis
They're there for the position.
39:36
They're there so they can get their picture taken and so they can kind of feel important and all the rest.
39:40
They don't have any particular attachment.
39:42
to the purpose of the enterprise.
39:44
But then the category of malign actors.
39:49
Scott Pruitt's different from Barry Myers.
39:50
Scott Pruitt didn't actually know all that much about the EPA.
39:54
And it saved the EPA.
39:56
In fact, friends who worked at the EPA said, thank God he doesn't know more.
40:00
Barry Myers is the third character.
40:03
He really knows how the National Weather Service works.
40:06
He's been in their kitchen for 20 years, and he knows how to disable it in ways that you and I will never see.
40:13
And that's the character who's the most dangerous.
40:15
Chris Hayes
So here's my thesis about the Trump administration.
40:19
We are lucky there are not more Barry Myers.
40:22
But basically, I think that this administration has been terrible in many ways.
40:28
And I think one of the things that we can't perceive is that they've taken a lot of one in a million risks and turned them into one in 100,000 or one in 10,000 risks.
40:35
We can't perceive that.
40:36
But in the main, the way that I say it is, we are so lucky he doesn't have a Dick Cheney, which is to say there's really no one in that enterprise who has the knowledge, connections, the wiles, the cunning to do the level of damage that
40:57
Dick Cheney was able to do.
40:59
And again, that was post 9-11, all these reasons.
41:01
But it has been the absence of that that has been one silver lining saving grace is just and it comes from the top, which is that he just does.
41:10
He all he wants to do is sit and watch Fox News and yell at the screen.
41:14
Michael Lewis
And be paid attention to.
41:16
Chris Hayes
He just wants people to pay attention.
41:17
He doesn't actually want anything out of the government.
41:19
Dick Cheney was the opposite.
41:20
Cheney wanted no one to pay attention and was driving over to the CIA to meet with mid-level analysts to browbeat them into producing the intelligence he wanted.
41:28
Michael Lewis
Right.
41:29
I mean, the closest thing he probably he has to Dick Cheney is Jared Kushner, who doesn't know anything.
41:34
Right.
41:34
I mean, a very special boy.
41:37
No, no.
41:39
But it's it's it's funny.
41:41
You know, the people these were people when I when I first got into the story, there were people who had been in the Obama White House who watched the the the Trump people come in to replace them.
41:52
And.
41:53
It wasn't a malice about it.
41:56
Jared Kushner said things like, where's everybody going when they were up and leaving?
42:02
He thought that basically it was like a corporate takeover and Obama and maybe a couple other people left, but basically the entire infrastructure of the White House would just stay.
42:11
They didn't understand it at that level.
42:13
Wow.
42:14
And so you're right.
42:15
There's only so much damage they can do.
42:16
But as a result, there's only so much good they can do, too.
42:19
I mean, there are things that probably I've heard tell of really worthy initiatives that Jared Kushner would like to undertake.
42:28
But, you know, how he would ever get anything done, I do not know.
42:32
And Trump himself, you know, if you just twist the dial a little and if he doesn't come in at such a hostile angle, you could easily see Donald Trump
42:44
trying to take credit for everything the government did for actually for the first time promoting the government as long as it was the trump government totally and that that could have had some positive effects but it didn't happen well and and he now sees that he sees the government he sees this all this deep state crap that he's now bought into i think
43:04
Chris Hayes
Right.
43:05
He views it fundamentally as a kind of hostile force that he has to contend with.
43:09
Michael Lewis
He created that hostility, though.
43:12
Chris Hayes
Right.
43:13
Michael Lewis
They were ready to serve.
43:16
They were ready to serve.
43:17
That's the thing.
43:17
That's the great untold story is just how ready to take orders the entire civil service was.
43:23
Just tell us what it is you want us to do.
43:25
There was none of this, oh, we're going to trick them into continuing to do whatever it is we want to do.
43:30
That wasn't what was going on.
43:32
That's not who these people are.
43:33
Chris Hayes
I mean, he goes, do you remember?
43:35
He goes the first day, the first day he goes to the CIA and he stands up in front of the wall with the stars of their dead and talks about his electoral victory.
43:48
Michael Lewis
How big it was.
43:49
Chris Hayes
Yeah.
43:50
Michael Lewis
And then he goes over to the photographers in the White House and has them Photoshop people into the mall.
43:55
Chris Hayes
He called up the Parks Department because they tweeted the picture.
43:58
I mean, yeah.
44:01
Michael Lewis
Just total war footing.
44:03
Yes.
44:05
Anyway, the material, it is—you know, you started this by saying—
44:09
how it was showing off trying to make this stuff interesting i don't actually i i by the end of the thing i felt the opposite that let's put you could play a game drop me anywhere in the federal government and i would come back to you with a story that everybody would agree was interesting and it's thanks to donald trump but here's not possible three years ago all right but here's my question for you this is the big question i have
44:31
Chris Hayes
There's been one horrible crisis and disaster, which is Puerto Rico, where 3,000 people died.
44:38
I think, you know, indisputably, and we do not have any public accounting of that.
44:42
There has never been a special select committee.
44:43
There has been no comprehensive fact finding about why that happened.
44:46
But I think indisputably, government mismanagement was a huge part of that, why that death toll was so high.
44:52
And we should get an accounting of it.
44:54
That very incredibly outrageous to my mind and horrific and tragic event aside, right, which did not happen on the mainland, there have not been other cataclysms.
45:08
Michael Lewis
You don't count the kids in cages at the border as a cataclysm?
45:12
Chris Hayes
No, I do.
45:13
But that was, again, so I was going to say, so the two moments that are the worst of Donald Trump governance to me are Puerto Rico and the kids in cages and family separation, right?
45:27
Michael Lewis
That said, I... Can I stop you again?
45:30
Please keep going, yes.
45:31
How about that airplane crash that may have been the result of the FAA not properly monitoring Boeing's software?
45:37
That's a good point.
45:38
All right.
45:39
So these are your your point with the bar.
45:42
You're still we're still we're still within the scheme of your broader point.
45:46
This is all happening to people outside the United States.
45:49
Chris Hayes
Well, that's part of it.
45:49
Michael Lewis
Right.
45:50
Chris Hayes
I mean, I guess part of it is to me, the comparison is to me as, you know, someone who is who is 22 and in 2001 and the Bush administration, it was like.
46:00
9-11, worst terrorist attack, mass murder in American history, followed by probably the worst foreign policy enterprise since Vietnam.
46:08
And then this does not count.
46:10
Enron, which collapses on their watch.
46:12
Then Katrina, in which a thousand Americans drown while we all watch.
46:15
And then the largest financial crisis since.
46:18
I mean, it was just one freaking disaster after another.
46:21
What I'm trying to make is this.
46:22
I weirdly think.
46:24
that against the grain of the thesis of your book, a problematic result of Trump is that people don't think you need to have that much experience to be president of the United States.
46:34
Michael Lewis
Well, because nothing horrible has happened yet.
46:37
Chris Hayes
Exactly.
46:38
And I think it's a classic example of the one in a million tail risk becoming a one in a thousand tail risk and the snake eye still hasn't come up.
46:45
And I think there's a kind of really dangerous, insidious acclimation to that.
46:53
Michael Lewis
It's absolutely true that from the minute he was elected, the atmosphere changed.
46:58
There was nobody who didn't think they could be president, right?
47:03
You and I now both think that we could do the job better than he could do it.
47:06
If you'd asked me before Donald Trump was elected, Michael, would you have any business...
47:12
running for president and being president, I'd say no.
47:14
I'd be terrible at it.
47:15
But now that he's there, I think, meh, absolutely.
47:19
Give me a call if you need me.
47:21
I'll do it.
47:22
And I think there are probably lots of people whose minds were changed just by the mere fact he was elected.
47:29
And so you're right.
47:30
Every day that goes by that we're all still alive, it hardens that position.
47:35
It reduces people's sort of sense of how useful it is to know things.
47:40
Right.
47:41
That's my fear.
47:42
Yeah, I think that's right.
47:44
I think that's totally right.
47:45
And you kind of see it in how many people are running for president.
47:47
Chris Hayes
That's exactly right.
47:48
Yes, right.
47:49
Everybody is.
47:50
Michael Lewis
Do you know anybody not running for president?
47:52
Chris Hayes
Everybody's running for president.
47:53
I mean, you just announced on my podcast.
47:54
We just made some news.
47:56
That's right.
47:58
Michael Lewis
I'm accepting donations for an exploratory committee.
48:01
Chris Hayes
Well, and I would be remiss if I didn't conclude on this point, which is that the biggest tail risk in the history of human civilization on the planet is now barreling down on us in climate.
48:11
I mean, that's what makes it all so particularly ironic in a tragic sense, is that the risk, the big risk is here and we've got the worst equipped individual to deal with it.
48:25
Michael Lewis
But the price of not dealing with it won't register for a while.
48:31
Yeah.
48:31
The full price.
48:32
The full price.
48:33
That's right.
48:34
So that's the kind of problem that he has absolutely no interest in attacking because he'll get no credit for solving it.
48:47
The credit will go, you know, the benefits will all flow to people, you know.
48:52
Human beings forever.
48:54
Whereas he gets, you know, for him, his life could be the same whether he deals with it or not, right?
49:00
He'll have A.C. and he'll be comfortable.
49:03
Chris Hayes
And he'll be in his, you know, it'll be his golden pharaoh-like tomb wherever they decide to put that with a big Trump sign on it.
49:10
Michael Lewis
But I think your insight is actually an insight.
49:15
That's true.
49:15
That all of a sudden we've, he so debased the office that we think anybody can basically occupy it.
49:22
Yeah.
49:22
Chris Hayes
Well, Michael Lewis, who's running for president, you can go to michaellewisforprez.org.
49:27
No, I'm making that up.
49:29
Michael Lewis, who is, you know, maybe the best nonfiction writer we have, one of the best nonfiction writers we have.
49:35
He's a legend, and I don't say that way.
49:37
With any tongue in cheek, his latest book, which is about the government, the federal government in the Trump era, which is called The Fifth Risk.
49:43
He's got a great new podcast, which I've really been enjoying.
49:45
As you can tell from this conversation, he has a real he's got some audio charisma.
49:50
It's called Against the Rules.
49:51
It's about fairness with Michael Lewis.
49:53
He also wrote Moneyball, The Big Short, Flash Boys, The Undoing Project and a million other things.
49:58
Michael, what a great, great pleasure to have you on.
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Thank you very much.
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Michael Lewis
Thanks a lot, Chris.
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Chris Hayes
Once again, my great thanks to Michael Lewis, whose new podcast is Against the Rules with Michael Lewis, and whose book that we discuss, The Fifth Risk, you can get wherever you get your books.
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Also, if you like this podcast, as I mentioned up at the top, there's a few others you might find interesting.
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Aaron Gordon and I, our discussion of the New York City subway system, Abdul El-Sayed and I discuss Medicare for All, and Eric Kleinenberg and I discuss his book, Palaces for the People, which is about what he calls social infrastructure, all of which I think relates to this general idea of
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the sort of challenges and rewards of the project of building big, functional public goods, which is, you know, what Michael's talking about in the conversation.
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We'd love to hear your feedback.
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You could always tweet us at hashtag withpod, email withpod at gmail.com.
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We got some great feedback about my conversation with Ryan Thumb about the situation in China with the Uyghurs, a situation that is
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pretty horrifying.
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I appreciated people sort of expressing the fact that they appreciated that we did that topic, that they hadn't heard a lot about it, that it really kind of stuck with them.
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Ryan and I in that conversation discussed some of the things that maybe can be done.
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A huge part of the first step of doing anything is just having people know that it's happening because attention and public focus will have an effect on the Chinese government.
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So share that podcast as much as you can or talk to people about the fact that it is happening.
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There are resources online.
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The New York Times has been doing some great reporting.
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You could also check that out.
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Why Is This Happening is presented by MSNBC and NBC News, produced by the All In team and features music by Eddie Cooper.
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You can see more of our work, including links to things we mentioned here, by going to NBCNews.com slash Why Is This Happening.