字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 - The Democratic primary campaign. When it started it was all kumbaya, let's beat Trump together. But now it's turned into a season of "Game of Thrones". Everyone backstabbing. The house of Bernie has grown in strength and size. (audience laughs) While facing a challenge from the kingdom of Buttigieg. (audience laughs) Meanwhile, the once powerful Lord Biden is slowly watching his influence slip away. And don't forget, once they're all done fighting each other, they will have to face off against the ultimate enemy, the white king. (audience laughs) But. Just like "Game of Thrones", there's one character who's been off in the wings plotting the whole time. The imp. You see, national polls now have billionaire Mike Bloomberg moving into third place. And President Trump has taken notice of this big little threat. And he's already trying to defeat him in a trial by Twitter. - A Twitter war heating up between President Trump and one of the men who wants to take his job. The president took aim at former Mayor Mike Bloomberg, saying, "Mini Mike is 5'4" mass of dead energy "who does not want to be on the debate stage "with these professional politicians. "No boxes please." Bloomberg responded, writing, "We know many "of the same people in New York. "Behind your back they laugh at you "and call you a carnival barking clown. "They know you inherited a fortune "and squandered it with stupid deals and incompetence. "I have the record and the resources "to defeat you, and I will." - Oh! (audience exclaims) Oh! (audience applauds) Oh! This is crazy. Two mega-rich dudes dissing each other in the most personal way. It would be like if a rap battle was in CNBC. (audience laughs) And the sad part, the sad part for me, is that billionaire feuds used to be so much more dignified. Back in the day, it wasn't on Twitter. They'd be like, Mr. Trump, I have commissioned a devastating opera that disparages both you and your lineage. Be like, well, Master Bloomberg, at this very moment, a team of artists is sculpting a middle finger from the world's finest Italian marble. (audience laughs) In eight to nine months you will be truly owned. (audience laughs) But right now, Donald Trump is the least of Mike Bloomberg's problems. See, the real threat to Bloomberg's campaign is his past. - [Reporter] Mike Bloomberg facing new criticism tonight amid audio that has surfaced on the controversial policy of stop-and-frisk. - [Reporter] Bloomberg is under fire tonight after a 2015 speech surfaced, where he defends his controversial stop-and-frisk policy, and explained why cops are put in minority neighborhoods. - [Mike] 95% of your murders and murderers and murder victims fit one M.O. You can just take the description, Xerox it and pass it out to all the cops. They are male, minorities, 15 to 25. We put all the cops in the minority neighborhoods. Yes, that's true. Why do we do it? Because that's where all the crime is. And the way you get the guns out of the kids' hands is to throw them up against the wall and frisk 'em. - Wow. That is not a good look. Think about it, while Bloomberg is out there trying to win there black vote in 2020, he's on tape in 2015 talking about black people like they're crime pinatas. Just throw them against the wall, see what comes out. Could be a gun, could be a Tootsie Roll, it's fun. (audience laughs) This is not a good look. Getting caught on tape encouraging police to arrest black people is definitely gonna hurt you with black voters. It's the same way you would lose white voters if a tape came out of you saying that pets aren't the same as babies. (audience laughs) Yeah. All the pumpkin spice in the world can't save you after that. White people would be mad. This is my baby. (audience laughs) Now, if it was just one bad audio clip, maybe, maybe Mike Bloomberg could get past it and move on. The problem is Mayor Mike has a long history of defending stop-and-frisk, and now even video clips are coming out. - And yet another video clip drops tonight, reporting to show Mayor Mike Bloomberg discussing hot topics with racial overtones. - They just keep saying, oh, it's a disproportionate percentage of a particular ethnic group. I think we disproportionately stop whites too much and minorities too little. - Yeah. According to Mike Bloomberg, white people were the real victims of stop-and-frisk. Imagine that. Black people and Latinos spent years, years, saying that they were being harassed by the police. And Bloomberg's response was, I hear you, we have been unfair to white people. (audience laughs) It almost feels like if Bloomberg was Abraham Lincoln, he would've ended slavery, but for the totally wrong reason. Be like, we need to end this cruel abomination. Too many white people are getting carpal tunnel in their whipping hands. (audience laughs) We've gotta help them. Now since these clips came out, Bloomberg has been facing a lot of pressure to explain himself. And something tells me he's struggling with how to respond. - [Reporter] Campaigning in Tennessee today, Michael Bloomberg expressed regret for comments from 2015 about New York City's controversial stop-and-frisk policy. - [Reporter] Mr. Mayor, why did you say what you said in that 2015 speech? - Um. (audience laughs) - I can safely say I have never seen the three typing dots in real life. (audience laughs) Look at him. (audience applauds) You never see him like this. Mike Bloomberg hasn't been this stressed since he got into that fight in the subway. (audience laughs) But my bad, I shouldn't have interrupted. I'll let him answer. - I don't think those words reflect how I led the most diverse city in the nation. I apologized for the practice and the pain that it caused. - [Reporter] But why did you say it? - It was five years ago. It's just not the way that I think and it doesn't reflect what I do every day. - Yeah, of course it doesn't reflect what you do every day, you're not the mayor anymore. Nobody thinks you're stopping and frisking black people on your personal time. I mean, mostly because you can't reach their pockets. (audience laughs) But also, it's weird that he tries to dismiss those clips by saying it was five years ago. Five years? What difference is that supposed to make for you? Look, five years ago, I was just a 72-year-old man. I didn't know any better. (audience laughs) I'm much older now, which automatically makes you less racist. (audience laughs) But clearly the comments in those clips do reflect what Bloomberg was doing as mayor. For the simple reason that it's what he did as mayor. You don't have to be a genius to figure this out. As much as Bloomberg is trying to reposition himself now that he needs the support of black voters, he encouraged his police department to treat black people like they were all criminals. And even as he keeps trying to apologize, he's never really taking responsibility for what he did. He apologizes for pieces. Oh, well, I ran a diverse place. He's not saying for what he actually did. It would be like if you caught cheating, and your apology was, babe, I'm so sorry. I'm sorry that I didn't delete those messages from my phone, I should've hid them better. It's like, no, that's not. Yeah, no, you're right, you're right. I should've smashed in a hotel instead of our bed, you're right, you're right. I've learned my lesson, yeah, yeah. Your friends are off-limits. From now on, strangers only, baby, strangers only. (audience laughs) So that's where Mike Bloomberg is now. As much as he tries to move forward and get out of this, reporters won't let the story go. They keep hassling him at events, questioning him about his motives, just trying to find any little that he's done wrong. It must be so frustrating for him. And to that I say, Mike Bloomberg, welcome to the world of stop-and-frisk. We'll be right back. You know the biggest issue, I think, I have and many other people have with Mike Bloomberg and how he's defending his stop-and-frisk record is that he doesn't seem to know what he's defending. And that for me is a problem. He goes, oh, I apologize for the policy. And people are not as angry about the policy, I think, as how the policy was targeted. Because for so many years, especially in America, black people have said, hey, the police are targeting us just because we're black. They treat us like we're all criminals, they're not just trying to go for criminals. And what would people say? Oh, you're overreacting. Cops are not just gonna throw you against a wall. You must've done something. And I can imagine for a long time for many black Americans, it must've felt like being gaslit. You know what's happening to you, you say what's happening to you, and people are like, that's crazy. And I can imagine how for many white people in America, they're like, that is crazy. You just get thrown against the wall, why? You must've been doing something. 'Cause white people are like, I've never been thrown against a wall, that would never happen to me. You just get thrown against the wall, that's it? I see cops all the time, I say, hello officer, they say, hello sir, and then I keep walking. (audience laughs) You just get thrown against a wall? That doesn't make any sense. And then a lot of black people were like, you white people are being racist 'cause you don't, and white people are like, that is insane, cops will not just throw. And I can see how people have lived in these worlds for so long. And then now you have audio of Mike Bloomberg saying. And that audio for me, if you break it down into pieces, has so many issues with it. First of all, the fact that he says, if you look at criminals and victims of crime, et cetera, you can Xerox, you can just copy and paste it and put it out there. It shows me that you didn't even care about the difference between black people. You made it seem like black is crime, when in fact, black is most affected by crime. That is the thing that you did there, right? That's the first problem I have. Secondly, the fact that people don't seem to realize the ramifications of treating people like that. Imagine if you are a black kid living in Mike Bloomberg's New York City. Every day you're getting frisked and thrown against a wall. Put over the hood of a car, every day. This is what cops are just, this is your life. Now imagine if you are a black kid who lives in this world. A cop gets you, pulls you, throws you into a wall. You got something, no. Next day it happens again. Maybe next week, maybe next month, whenever it is. At some point, what do you say? Fuck the police. And then you get people like, why don't you respect the police? Why don't they respect me? They don't protect and serve me. These people come and throw me against the wall and treat me like a criminal. And then what does that kid do one day? They see the cops, they go, screw this, I'm not staying around for this, they run away. The cops pursue, now they catch you, what are you? You're invading arrest, you're resisting arrest. Now you get arrested for resisting arrest. Then you go to jail, you can't afford bail. Now you're in prison. What does prison turn you into more likely than not? A criminal. And even if you don't become a criminal because of that, you're still in the system now. We've seen how these kids get locked up, they can't afford to come out, now they are living a life of crime without being a criminal, and then you're just like, oh, but these kids spend all their time in jail. How did they get to jail? Why were you running from the cops? 'Cause I was tired of being thrown against the motherfucking wall. (audience laughs) I'm not gonna stick around for that. I remember that in high school. I didn't wait, the bully came and I was like, oh, shit. And I was gone. (audience laughs) I wasn't gonna stand there and be like, yeah, well, good afternoon, bully. Nice to see you again. Different thing today? Yes, are we gonna talk this out? No, at some point you knew the bully was gonna do what he's gonna do so you ran before they even got to you. And then people are like, why are these kids running away? They don't respect the police. But do the police respect them? And that is something no one can deny. If you've ever been in a rich neighborhood specifically, not just a white neighborhood, but a rich neighborhood, you will see the relationship that police have with those communities. It's very different. Because they know, if they throw the wrong person, search the wrong person, frisk the wrong person, that person knows someone powerful enough to make sure that their job is in danger. And those are the dynamics that you're dealing with here. So my problem with Mike Bloomberg is he's not saying I'm sorry for targeting black people, I'm sorry for treating black people like second-class citizens, I'm sorry for gaslighting black people for so long. No, he's just like, I'm sorry that stop-and-frisk happened to affect black communities. It's like, no, it didn't happen to, you designed it to. (audience applauds) (upbeat music)
B1 中級 特雷弗對彭博社和 "止損 "與 "風險 "的延伸思考|每日秀 (Trevor's Extended Thoughts on Bloomberg & Stop-and-Frisk | The Daily Show) 2 0 林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字