The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #1599 - Tulsi Gabbard

Joe Rogan and Tulsi Gabbard on tulsi Gabbard Dissects Division, Big Tech Power, And Real Leadership.

Tulsi GabbardguestJoe Roganhost
Jun 27, 20243h 4m
Growing political polarization and 'semi–non-violent civil war' dynamics in the U.S.Role of corporate media, social media algorithms, and Big Tech monopolies in amplifying divisionSection 230, online censorship, deplatforming (e.g., Parler), and First Amendment standardsCorruption and tribalism in Congress, PAC money, and party-driven decision makingElection integrity concerns, paper ballot backups, hacking vulnerabilities, and narratives of fraudCOVID-19 policies: lockdowns, vaccine prioritization, inconsistent messaging, and public trustHealth, wellness, veterans’ issues, and Tulsi Gabbard’s post-Congress plans for an independent podcast

In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Narrator and Tulsi Gabbard, Joe Rogan Experience #1599 - Tulsi Gabbard explores tulsi Gabbard Dissects Division, Big Tech Power, And Real Leadership Joe Rogan and Tulsi Gabbard discuss the escalating political and cultural polarization in the United States, arguing that both major parties, corporate media, and Big Tech financially benefit from division and outrage. Gabbard details how social media algorithms, Section 230 protections, and concentrated tech monopolies distort information, incentivize censorship, and weaken public trust in institutions and elections. They also explore COVID policy failures, inconsistent public‑health messaging, and the neglect of basic wellness and civil liberties, along with systemic problems in Congress such as pay‑to‑play politics and performative partisanship. Gabbard closes by outlining her plans to launch an independent podcast platform to promote long‑form, nuanced conversations and model respectful, solutions‑oriented dialogue.

Tulsi Gabbard Dissects Division, Big Tech Power, And Real Leadership

Joe Rogan and Tulsi Gabbard discuss the escalating political and cultural polarization in the United States, arguing that both major parties, corporate media, and Big Tech financially benefit from division and outrage. Gabbard details how social media algorithms, Section 230 protections, and concentrated tech monopolies distort information, incentivize censorship, and weaken public trust in institutions and elections. They also explore COVID policy failures, inconsistent public‑health messaging, and the neglect of basic wellness and civil liberties, along with systemic problems in Congress such as pay‑to‑play politics and performative partisanship. Gabbard closes by outlining her plans to launch an independent podcast platform to promote long‑form, nuanced conversations and model respectful, solutions‑oriented dialogue.

Key Takeaways

Recognize and resist systems that profit from outrage and division.

Gabbard and Rogan argue that politicians, legacy media, and social platforms deliberately amplify conflict because it drives ratings, fundraising, and engagement; individuals can push back by choosing more balanced information sources and not rewarding outrage content with their attention.

Reform Section 230 to anchor content moderation to First Amendment standards.

Gabbard proposes amending Section 230 to remove vague language like 'otherwise objectionable' and require that platforms only remove content not protected by the First Amendment (e. ...

Insist on structural safeguards for election integrity before crises occur.

She advocates mandatory voter‑verified paper backups for all electronic voting systems, noting that Congress ignored bipartisan legislation she introduced that could have preempted some of today’s distrust and contested‑election narratives.

Hold leaders accountable for hypocrisy and politicized public‑health decisions.

Examples like selective lockdown enforcement, politicians violating their own restrictions, and inconsistent guidance on masks and vaccines erode trust; Gabbard urges citizens to demand science-based, transparent policies instead of partisan or optics-driven ones.

Prioritize vaccine allocation based on risk of death and hospitalization, not politics.

She criticizes frameworks that favored broad 'essential worker' categories over the elderly, arguing data clearly show the highest mortality and hospitalization rates among people 65+ and that prioritizing them could sharply reduce deaths and ICU strain.

Rebuild a culture of civil, in‑person dialogue across political lines.

Gabbard cites her own town halls and bipartisan relationships in Congress as evidence that when people are face‑to‑face and feel heard, hostility drops and common ground emerges—even among Trump, Bernie, libertarian, and independent voters.

Support independent, long‑form media to counter caricatures and soundbites.

Frustrated by mainstream misrepresentation (e. ...

Notable Quotes

We live in this world of no nuance. We live in this world of clickbait and social media algorithms that really fuel hate in the most spectacular way our civilization has ever seen.

Joe Rogan

It’s gonna take more than just one phenomenal leader to unify the country; it’s gonna take a whole host of leaders at every level that we as voters choose to actually serve the people.

Tulsi Gabbard

This is the dangerous consequence of where this partisan divisiveness takes us: if people feel they don’t have a voice through speech and they don’t have a voice through their vote, what’s left except violence?

Tulsi Gabbard

How is this even possible? It’s possible because so often people will vote for a candidate because they have a really cool ad on TV, rather than asking: what kind of judgment will you exercise over my life?

Tulsi Gabbard

Most of us, if you look at our core beliefs, we want the same things—friendship, love, community, opportunity, and freedom. The economic and policy disagreements are the small ones; they’re not the big problems most people encounter in everyday life.

Joe Rogan

Questions Answered in This Episode

How can ordinary citizens practically reduce their reliance on outrage-driven media and social feeds without becoming uninformed?

Joe Rogan and Tulsi Gabbard discuss the escalating political and cultural polarization in the United States, arguing that both major parties, corporate media, and Big Tech financially benefit from division and outrage. ...

What specific reforms to Section 230 and antitrust law would effectively curb Big Tech’s power while preserving innovation and free expression?

Given the entrenched fundraising system in Washington, how realistic is it to elect leaders who refuse corporate PAC money and still compete nationally?

What is the most credible, nonpartisan path to improving election security and public confidence before the next major election cycle?

How could public health institutions better integrate wellness, nutrition, and transparent risk communication so that future pandemics don’t become so politicized?

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