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Trump's Greenland Text Is Publicly Embarrassing America
January 19 2026
Summary: The hosts react to a reported Trump message threatening a coercive grab for Greenland, treating it as a “mob boss” approach to diplomacy and comparing its logic to Putin’s claims about Ukraine. They argue the episode signals a broader collapse of U.S. reliability and the American-led order, with Europe shifting from appeasing Trump to deterring him, accelerating decoupling from Washington, and potentially driving allies toward China while raising fears of NATO fracture and global nuclear proliferation. The discussion also probes whether any meaningful Republican or elite pushback is likely, and whether the damage to alliances and democratic norms can be reversed without extraordinary domestic action.
00:00 JVL Hello, everyone. 00:00 This is JVL here with my Bulwark colleagues, Sam Stein and Andrew Egger. 00:06 And we are taping Monday morning, waking up to news that the president of the United States has sent an amazing text message to two of our partners. 00:16 I'm just going to start right away by reading the text to you guys, and then we can all react to it. 00:21 This is a text from Donald J. Trump, president of the United States, to Jonas Storr. 00:28 from Norway. 00:31 Dear Jonas, considering your country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped eight wars plus, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the United States of America. 00:48 Denmark cannot protect the land from Russia or China. 00:52 And why do they have a right of ownership anyway? 00:55 There are no written documents. 00:57 It's only that a boat landed there hundreds of years ago. 01:00 But we had boats landing there also. 01:02 I have done more for NATO than any other person since its founding. 01:08 I'm sorry, what? 01:10 And now NATO should do something for the United States. 01:14 The world is not secure unless we have complete and total control of Greenland. 01:19 Thank you, President DJT. 01:22 We will back into where this statement came from in a moment. 01:27 But until we get there, Andrew and Sam, who would like to go first at the vignata? 01:36 Andrew Egger Uh, okay. 01:37 I feel like this is one of those where you have like anxiety, where you sit down to talk about it. 01:42 Cause like any one single thing that you pull out of this statement to focus on, you're like not doing justice to all the other insane, ridiculous, stupid things in there by like making them go later. 01:53 You know what I mean? 01:53 It's like, you, you, you have to just be able to like, 01:56 Like a burst of static out of a TV is like the amount of, is what I want to be able to deliver to. 02:02 I mean, it's like every single word in that is insane. 02:05 The NATO thing, I guess start at the very top, like the country of Norway does not decide who gets the Nobel Peace Prize. 02:13 The Nobel Committee that happens to be in Oslo, like just an NGO that's sitting there in that city does that. 02:20 JVL Andrew, isn't this a confession on Trump's part? 02:23 Because he believes that the President of the United States dictates everything that happens in the United States, including what other programming is on the networks when the Army-Navy football game is being televised. 02:34 And so doesn't he believe that the government of Norway clearly decides? 02:39 Like, I'm a gangster, so everybody's a gangster. 02:41 So, of course, if the government of Norway wanted the Nobel Prize Committee to assign it to me, they would make them do it. 02:47 Andrew Egger Yeah. 02:48 Or at the very least, you know, like if they're if they're not being a gangster on my behalf here, then what good are they? 02:52 Right. 02:52 I mean, yeah, like it's it's it's great. 02:54 I mean, it's crazy. 02:54 Right. 02:55 I mean, and then you go from there to the fact that that is even on his mind or that he's willing to admit that it's on his mind as he decides about this Greenland stuff. 03:04 But I mean, obviously, the kernel of this is the total gangster approach not to the Peace Prize. 03:09 but to the sovereignty of Greenland. 03:12 Greenland has people. 03:15 Those people, some of them want to be part of Denmark, some of them don't. 03:18 They're coming to various accommodations about this. 03:21 There's a whole history that's there of how this arrangement came to be. 03:25 But Trump, as he consistently wants to do, and especially nakedly wants to do recently, 03:30 is just trying to diminish this all to like a pure power play. 03:32 It's like, well, you guys conquered Greenland first, but we might conquer it now. 03:37 So it's just, I mean, every word of it is stupid, but like we should not lose sight of like the real sinister nature of these threats, even though they are so clownish. 03:47 Sam Stein I would just say, yeah, just first I gotta do a small fact check. 03:51 It wasn't a text message, it was a letter. 03:53 We actually obtained a written copy of it 03:57 Jonas considering you're it's hard to make it up it's in crayon but there it is okay just to confirm the validity of it secondly is what I wonder what history book he was referencing about the boats arriving someone clearly told him that at some point boats arrived but we also sent boats and so I just want to know what books he's studying on this 04:19 Was it a Trump-class battleship boat that we sent there? 04:21 I'm not clear. 04:22 I would like a little bit of insight into what literature he's been researching because he's mentioned the boats a couple times now. 04:28 He seems to get fixated on these things, right? 04:31 Because there's reports prior to this from the Prime Minister of Norway who said this comes up all the time, quite literally every conversation they have. 04:39 Trump mentions the fact that he didn't get the Nobel. 04:43 And the prime minister has to remind him that it's a committee, as Andrew noted, and he has no role in it. 04:47 But no matter how many times he tells him this, Trump still brings it up. 04:52 And he can't get his head around the fact that he was. 04:55 And he was also handed a Nobel last week. 04:58 So he should be satiated, but he's not. 05:00 And I joke, but it's really like frightening stuff, obviously. 05:03 Because now, just so people are aware, we're taping this Monday morning. 05:07 He's going to Davos. 05:09 this week. 05:10 He's going to be doing speeches in Davos in front of all these European officials and leaders and corporate leaders and all that stuff. 05:16 And we are standing on the precipice right now of a truly unique and 05:22 kind of horrifying reality, which is we will get into a retaliatory chair for with major European countries. 05:30 We could potentially see NATO dissolved. 05:33 All the while, those European countries, and I'm stealing from JVL here a little bit, you could pick up, but those European countries are going to run into the arms of China. 05:41 We've already seen it with Canada, which put out this kind of glitzy, really nice video with Prime Minister Carney going over there to Beijing. 05:47 Prime Minister Carney We have to understand the differences between Canada and other countries. 05:52 and then focus our efforts to work together where we're aligned. 05:57 And it's with this approach that Canada is forging a new strategic partnership with China. 06:02 Sam Stein And so that's just going to happen. 06:03 And then on top of that, we're getting close again with Vladimir Putin, who Trump has invited this morning to serve on the peace board of Gaza. 06:13 So real realignment of the tectonic plates of global politics happening over Greenland, which no one cares. 06:20 It's like a satire. 06:22 It's ridiculous. 06:24 JVL Sam, I'm sorry, but we had no choice. 06:26 Americans had to give up their leadership of the world order because eggs were too expensive for a couple of weeks. 06:33 That's just, I mean, it just makes all the sense of the world. 06:35 These were legitimate concerns on the part of the American people. 06:38 Andrew Egger it's not that greenland isn't like strategically important when it comes to the arctic or whatever like it is but we already have all of the access that we need in that department like that excuse is completely invented because we are in nato who are supposedly right nato controls our bases there yes that's happening already one other really really quick thing i just on the nobel prize uh because it's just occurred to me i really love the conceit that uh that 07:01 what the Nobel prize is for is for placating bloodthirsty world leaders so that they will want to be more peaceful. 07:08 Like, look, you could have given me the Nobel prize and then I'd be focused on peace. 07:12 It's such mob boss bullshit. 07:14 Sam Stein He's like, because you didn't give me my little toy, I now have to be vicious. 07:17 Like I would, if my child said that, I would be like, come on kid. 07:22 Like, 07:23 grow up like this is not that's not how the real world works buddy this is our president and and at some point you just sort of i was wondering and i hope maybe the commenters can can help us out here there's got to be a term for when you wake up and you see a story that seems so absurd on its face that you kind of do a double take and you scroll to see if it's confirmed by official accounts and you're like rubbing the 07:43 crowd out of your eye like this this can't be real because that's how i felt this morning i saw i was like no i saw it in slack and i was like this is the adam kuyper fell for one like it's like there's no way there's just no way adam adam got this one right and i like clicked on i was like no it's it's true and it's confirmed so there has to be a term for that i'm not sure what the term is my wife suggested one she called it the trunk conscious i think that's not that great i love her but that's not the best term no we need some term for that no 08:12 It has to be German. 08:13 JVL All right. 08:14 Sam Stein It has to be a German word. 08:15 Put in the comments suggestions for a term like that. 08:17 JVL This Trump text seems to. 08:20 So we have now a statement this morning from the prime minister of Norway, Jonas Starr. 08:25 He says, I can confirm that this is a text message that I received yesterday afternoon from President Trump. 08:31 It came in response to a short text message from me to President Trump sent earlier on the same day on behalf of myself and the president of Finland, Alexander Stubb. 08:41 In our message to Trump, we conveyed our opposition to his announced tariff increases against Norway, Finland, and select other countries. 08:48 We pointed to the need to deescalate and proposed a telephone conversation between Trump, Stubb, and myself on the same day. 08:55 The response from Trump came shortly after the message was sent. 08:59 It was his decision to share his message with other NATO leaders. 09:03 So what Trump did was then after he sent this text, he then sent the message that he had sent to the two of them to other leaders within NATO, just so he understood what he was saying. 09:12 Andrew Egger As a letter from NSC staff, that was your confusion there a second ago, Sam. 09:16 The original thing was a text. 09:17 Sam Stein I just really wanted an excuse to share my artwork, OK? 09:20 No, it was lovely. 09:21 Bulwark Takes is sponsored by DeleteMe. 09:24 DeleteMe makes it easy, quick, and safe to remove your personal data online at a time when surveillance and data breaches are common enough to make anyone vulnerable. 09:33 It's easier than ever to find personal information about people online. 09:36 Having your address, phone number, and family members' names hanging out there on the internet can have actual consequences in the real world. 09:44 It makes everyone vulnerable. 09:45 More and more online partisans and nefarious actors will find this data and use it to target political rivals, civil servants, and even outspoken citizens just posting their opinions online. 09:57 I've got a huge online presence, and it's super important for me to keep a handle on how much of my data is out there, so I am recommending Delete Me. 10:06 The New York Times Wirecutter has named Delete Me their top pick for data removal services. 10:11 Take control of your data. 10:12 Keep your private life private by signing up for Delete Me, now at a special discount for our listeners. 10:19 Get 20% off your Delete Me plan when you go to joindeleteme.com slash takes and use promo code takes at checkout. 10:28 The only way to get 20% off is to go to joinedeliteme.com slash takes and enter code takes at the checkout. 10:35 That's joinedeliteme.com slash takes, code takes. 10:40 JVL We have the, the prime minister of Norway acting 10:44 like a normal head of state, right? 10:47 You know, private back channel communications, let's get on the phone. 10:50 We have to deescalate and Trump escalates from there. 10:55 Right. 10:55 I mean, this is, I, again, I think no way to read what's going on other than a series of continuing escalations from Trump beginning on over the weekend. 11:05 Uh, and here's my, my first question for you guys. 11:10 How is Trump's approach to Greenland different from Vladimir Putin's approach to Ukraine? 11:17 Now, he hasn't invaded yet, but Vladimir Putin for many years insisted that Ukraine wasn't a real country, that it was really part of Russia anyway, and that it was imperative for Russian security that they control Ukraine. 11:36 How is that different? 11:37 Sam Stein Well, I mean, put it in the Venezuela bucket. 11:39 I mean, this is the same exact type of stuff, right? 11:41 It's like, oh, we don't like that world leader, or we don't like the structure of that government, or we want that country and we want its reserves. 11:48 JVL We'll take it. 11:49 So am I being hyperbolic to say that this is basically Putinism, but being done in America? 11:57 Sam Stein I don't know if you're hyperbolic in saying it. 11:59 I think there's valid comparisons. 12:01 The question I have is, and this is always the case with Trump, it's like, 12:06 Let's say, what would you put the percentage chances of a week from now, some sort of negotiated settlement where the Europeans basically are like, give him everything he has entitled to already, right? 12:19 But they glitz it up and say, oh, you've not purchased. 12:24 Greenland, and you have ownership of it, and we've avoided a war, and then all the MAGA accounts are like, heart of the deal, man. 12:31 This guy's operating at a different level. 12:33 What percentage chance would you put that at? 12:35 JVL I think it's lower than it was a week ago, I would say. 12:39 A couple weeks ago, maybe not. 12:41 Maybe it was only one week ago. 12:42 Who can say? 12:43 But I think I was on the next level with Tim. 12:45 And Tim was like, I think there's a 30% chance that we invade Greenland. 12:48 And I was like, yeah, slow your roll, like 10%. 12:51 And I thought it was more likely that we would get to some sort of art of the deal. 12:59 I think the chances of that are diminishing because Trump is behaving in such a way that it is going to be very difficult for Europe to give him what he wants because they now understand they have to decouple. 13:13 They have to decouple from America. 13:15 There is no choice. 13:16 We're going to get nuclear proliferation. 13:19 Germany's going to become a nuclear power. 13:20 Poland's going to become a nuclear power. 13:22 Japan's going to become a nuclear power. 13:24 Canada probably has to get its own nuclear weapons. 13:27 I mean, this is the world we're headed towards. 13:28 And Trump seems more and more hellbent on invading. 13:32 I've come to believe, actually, they're the most, maybe not the most likely, but a high likelihood outcome here, a high likelihood. 13:41 High percentage outcome is that Trump just goes and says, yeah, this is ours now. 13:48 You know, he lands a boat on the base. 13:51 He says, this is ours. 13:52 And the Europeans pull out and it becomes a disputed territory the way like the Donbass has been. 13:58 And the Europeans don't fight on it. 13:59 but it becomes a disputed territory. 14:01 Andrew Egger And on the Putinism point specifically, obviously there are similarities, there are differences, but the thing that has been most striking to me here, I think that's important here, I wrote about this a little bit in Morning Shots today, is the way that Europe is now forced to confront Trump as though this is Putinism. 14:16 I mean, this is just what you're talking about now, JBL. 14:19 It's extremely, extremely serious development, even just since last year. 14:22 of Europe moving from a position of appeasement toward Donald Trump to a position of deterrence for Donald Trump. 14:30 And all last year, we saw them try appeasement. 14:33 I mean, they kind of came into the second Trump term with the idea that this guy was sort of a free radical, very susceptible to flattery, very biddable, 14:42 By basically anybody and that that was going to present them with a lot of problems that they were going to need to really work on him in order to keep him on side when it came to Ukraine and things like that. 14:51 And we saw them try to play that game, try to run that playbook where Trump goes over to the the NATO summit, I think, in June of last year, and they just butter him up. 15:01 so shamelessly the entire time he's there. 15:04 It's, wow, Donald Trump, look at you. 15:06 You know, we sure weren't pulling our weight before you came along, and ah, you got us. 15:10 You scared us straight. 15:11 Good job, Donald. 15:12 Shouldn't everybody be glad that the U.S. isn't pulling all this weight for NATO anymore, and we're all just happy, and this is great. 15:17 Everything's great. 15:18 And Trump, very kind of funnily, actually was swayed by that for a little while. 15:23 That playbook does have its own short-term benefits. 15:26 But the problem is, the same as appeasement is always a problem for these sort of like, 15:31 autocrat aspirational people. 15:33 It's exactly the same reason you couldn't just sort of like talk Putin out of trying to take the Donbass eventually, because like sooner or later, there's only one language these people understand. 15:43 And it is it is actually punching back. 15:45 And that's the world that we're moving toward. 15:46 If you're Europe, you tried, you did actually try to keep the old arrangement going despite everything, despite Trump all through that first year. 15:54 And this is the world that that has led to. 15:56 And I think you're right that that's not the world we're going to have going forward. 15:59 Sam Stein It is the scene from Goodfellas. 16:02 where the guy who runs that tiki bar restaurant is like, all right, I need you. 16:08 I'll be good. 16:10 Like take all, you come in, take a share of the restaurant and they just take money, take money, take stuff, take stuff. 16:15 And then when you can't pay him, when you can't give the mob boss what he wants, what does he do? 16:19 Burns it down. 16:19 I mean, this is it. 16:20 This is like, I know it's a, 16:22 It's a stupid, silly analogy metaphor that's overused. 16:27 But that's what it is. 16:28 It's mob boss behavior. 16:30 It is. 16:30 JVL So I want to talk to you guys a little bit about China. 16:33 So we have this amazing moment here where America has decided to abdicate 16:39 the American-led order. 16:41 We've just decided we're not doing it anymore. 16:44 And so we did all this stuff where we cut research and we're pushing, it's like the reverse brain drain. 16:51 We're telling people who want to be doing high-value biomedical research to go do it someplace else. 16:57 And we're trying to make it harder for people who are very smart from other countries to come here and start companies or do research themselves and enroll in grad programs. 17:09 uh and china is sitting there basically saying hey we're a bunch of authoritarians we're always going to be authoritarians but we're not crazy we basically believe in not a rules-based order exactly because you know we we are authoritarians but uh we believe in a stable-ish world order and if you are nato 17:38 China has nothing to do with you. 17:40 We're on the other side of the world, right? 17:43 Come become our trading partner. 17:46 And this is what we are going to wind up with. 17:48 I think basically we're driving Europe into the arms of China because why wouldn't they? 17:55 Sam Stein Again, am I crazy? 17:57 No, let me read you a story from this morning's Wall Street Journal, which just absolutely validates what you're saying. 18:03 China had 5% GDP in 2025. 18:05 It hit their growth hopes, but here's the best part. 18:09 Exports drove China's economic expansion in 2025 to a degree not seen in nearly three decades, while companies held back on investing and Chinese consumers were reluctant to spend. 18:19 So China's homegrown economy is actually not in great shape. 18:22 But it's exporting all this stuff around the world because no one's doing business with America anymore. 18:28 We've basically driven all these countries into China's arms. 18:32 Keep in mind, China's in a kind of soft trade war with America. 18:36 So we're not taking Chinese goods as much as we have before. 18:40 So yeah, European countries, Canada, as we just talked about, they're running to China because relative to the Americans, it seems stable, predictable. 18:51 Investable? 18:53 Andrew Egger I don't know. 18:53 Choose your word. 18:54 And the contrast is no longer there. 18:55 I mean, like the whole pitch from America all through sort of the rise of China, especially in the last few years when it's like, oh, I guess they're not really liberalizing like we thought they would. 19:05 This is actually going to become a problem and we need to do some sort of economic containment. 19:09 The pitch that America has been making to all of these places is, yeah, there's a lot of money that you can make in China, but you don't want that smoke. 19:16 You don't want to have to deal with all of the headaches of a trading partner that doesn't play fair, that doesn't shoot straight, that will bully your businesses, that will try to bully you, your country, and the things that your people can and can't say, and all of this stuff. 19:30 only works, the argument only works if there's a contrast, if that's not the way that America does things. 19:35 And right now that is the way America does things. 19:37 And not only is that the way America does things, not only has that contrast completely vanished, not only is America 19:43 operating in just as authoritarian a manner, but America has actively become a worse place to put your business just from a dollars and cents perspective because of these insane trade wars and because of all of this stuff that they just go on and on and on and on. 19:57 I mean, this is the thing that just melts my brain completely is that this is by far the biggest ratchet up of that exact phenomenon that we have seen happening right now. 20:06 And it is somehow in some lunatic part of Trump's brain being done supposedly as part of a strategy of containment toward China. 20:16 That's supposedly why we need Greenland, right? 20:18 Because otherwise China wins, right? 20:20 And in fact, we are giving China like the biggest golden parachute, soft landing out of its own previous economic problems that they could ever have dreamed of getting for no reason, just for no reason at all, other than these pathologies of Trump. 20:34 JVL Do you think Trump really believes that, Andrew? 20:37 I think Greenland is for him just the ballroom. 20:41 Yes. 20:41 No, 100%. 20:42 Andrew Egger This is my legacy. 20:43 I do not think Trump believes that. 20:46 It is the stated rationale. 20:47 We have to have this because otherwise China might get it. 20:51 Right. 20:52 JVL So let's just go all the way to pressing. 20:55 Is there any climb down from this? 20:57 Is there any way back? 20:59 Because my thesis, and I've been making this argument now for like the better part of a year, is that there's a category of things which can't be fixed. 21:08 And the reason they can't be fixed is because we could fix them on our end, but that's not the way long range strategic planning of sovereign nations works. 21:18 And if you, you know, when you have to make plans for things that are gonna happen for five years, 10 years, 30 years out, 21:27 The fact that America has shown that it can do this means that it just simply isn't reliable. 21:32 The American people who voted for this aren't reliable partners. 21:38 Go ahead, please, talk to me. 21:41 Andrew Egger I just think you would need a real radical action on the part of the American state itself. 21:49 to repudiate this, which would basically mean impeachment or the 25th Amendment. 21:53 And, you know, I'm not holding my breath. 21:55 Sam Stein So you talk about the word climb down, I think is we should probably noodle on that for a second because you can climb down in theory from invading Greenland. 22:06 I don't think any one of us is going to sit here and say it's 100% certainty he's going to invade Greenland. 22:10 So you can climb down off that. 22:12 But what does that even mean to climb down at this point? 22:17 Is the damage not done? 22:18 How do you undo what has happened? 22:23 Let's just take this Greenland thing. 22:25 Even if they cut a deal, the damage to our relations with Europe and Denmark in particular are astronomical. 22:34 I don't know if folks saw there's an NBA game in London. 22:38 So reputationally, that damage is done. 22:51 And then I think even putting spanning well beyond Greenland, I think we just we literally just talked about it. 22:56 I mean, we've realigned the world order towards China in a shockingly quick. 23:02 I mean, it's been a year and we've realigned the world order towards China. 23:07 And I don't think people quite appreciate how insane that is to happen that fast. 23:14 Um, 23:15 So I don't know if there's a climb down from that. 23:17 It would take an incredible amount of everybody, whoever follows Trump to rebuild that trust, to rebuild those relations. 23:24 Even if you do that, our system of governance, thank God, is that there's no permanent president. 23:30 So if you were another world, for now, if you were another world leader, how could you ever say, well, you know, that's cool. 23:38 I mean, we have four years of maybe some stability, but 23:42 What kind of guarantees can we have? 23:43 So I'm sort of of the mindset that you'd have to have real structural legislative reforms that are concrete in some way that I can't even conceive to make things whole again. 23:54 And I don't think we'll get there, frankly. 23:57 JVL And the big problem here, of course, is the American people, that some very large percentage, not a majority, but a substantial percentage of the American public wants this. 24:09 Now, it's not a big one, even with Greenland, like the support, the percentage of the country which wants to take Greenland, I think, is like 20 percent or something like that. 24:18 Andrew Egger I think I saw it was 17 percent, which is just really small. 24:22 JVL Right. 24:22 But so again, if Trump were to actually do his invade Greenland, I guarantee you the Republican approval of that doubles overnight. 24:31 Right. 24:32 And when you live in a world where a majority of one of the two major political parties supports this stuff, that's real, right? 24:41 This is, that is a real present. 24:43 It's not a majority, but it's enough to give you a chance of winning power every four years. 24:48 And this is, this isn't a, this is a society problem. 24:51 This is not, this is who we are. 24:53 This is what America is. 24:56 And it is a stunning to me that this happened inside of 10 years. 25:00 You guys remember Pop Quiz? 25:01 What was Marco Rubio's campaign slogan in 2016? 25:04 Andrew Egger The next American century. 25:05 The next American century. 25:08 JVL And now he is part of an administration which has, its project is dismantling the American-led world order. 25:16 Sam Stein I found it interesting that, I mean, whatever, I'm not trying to like give him any pass whatsoever here. 25:23 But I did find it interesting that Rubio was completely absent from the Sunday shows on the Greenland stuff. 25:29 And he's been absent on the Greenland stuff. 25:31 They sent out Scott Besson to talk about Greenland. 25:35 It wasn't Marco Rubio. 25:39 That doesn't mean that he gets a pass. 25:41 But you have to imagine, I hope, 25:44 and pray that someone in the state department, when they got wind of that text to the prime minister of Norway, must've been like, what the fuck is going on? 25:53 Like, this is so weird. 25:55 And yet they all have hitched their eye to this. 25:58 JVL Guys, is there going to be any elite, significant elite level pushback to this stuff? 26:05 That's our exit question. 26:07 So within the Republican party, are you going to get significant- Cruz already has come around and said he's fine with it. 26:14 Sam Stein Pence was talking about it in terms of, well, the tact is wrong, the approach is wrong, but we probably should get Greenland. 26:21 They'll find a way to comfort themselves into this. 26:23 I mean, there's like the McConnells and the Tillises. 26:27 Do they count as elite? 26:28 Probably not because they're on the way out. 26:32 JVL Yeah. 26:33 Kind of as a leap, but not significant, I don't think, right? 26:35 Andrew Egger Unless other people glom on to that. 26:36 Not like the committee chairs. 26:37 Has Roger Wicker said anything? 26:39 I haven't seen this. 26:39 Sam Stein Even that is kind of, it's going to be, no, I don't, I actually don't think so. 26:44 I think if he were to make him, yeah, where's Hugh Hewitt? 26:48 Where is Hugh Hewitt on the annexation of Greenland? 26:50 I'm sure he's got some sort of theory about why it's important. 26:53 No, I think I'm with you. 26:54 It's like, and also he, Trump knows that as soon as he pulls the trigger proverbially, 26:59 people will rally right around him and he'll get the defenders. 27:02 I mean, the whole thing, it was really instructive to see the war powers resolution debate happen around Venezuela, where you did have at least two unsuspected senators, Todd Young and Josh Hawley say, you know, we're kind of principled about this stuff. 27:16 And all it took was just a little bit of browbeating from the White House, a threat that they would lose their primary. 27:22 And they like completely cowered. 27:24 And so as weak as Trump feels to everyone in the polling shows, he still does have a remarkable ability to keep these people in line. 27:34 It's really amazing for someone who ostensibly doesn't have a political future in three years, ostensibly. 27:40 JVL Before we leave, before we leave, I would just like to point out that Marjorie Taylor Greene and Lauren Boebert showed more intestinal fortitude and commitment to principle in the face of coercion by Donald Trump and Josh Hawley. 27:58 Just something to think about. 28:01 Just something to think about. 28:02 All right, I am not gonna make you guys answer the question. 28:06 I would just pose it and then we'll get out of here. 28:08 For people who are insisting, well, it's just three years left and we got the midterms coming. 28:13 If Donald Trump is adopting Vladimir Putin's foreign policy, why do we think he is not interested in Vladimir Putin's domestic policy outlook? 28:25 Sure are going to be a lot of people in this administration who have committed crimes by three years from now. 28:30 Do we think that they're all just going to be like, yeah, sure. 28:32 Peaceful transfer of power. 28:33 It's all democracy. 28:34 We're just here taking our turn. 28:38 No. 28:39 Guys, hit like, hit subscribe, follow the channel. 28:41 There will be more insanity probably in another hour or two. 28:45 We'll try to keep you up to date with all of it at the Bulwark. 28:49 Bye-bye. 28:49 Good luck, America.