Eastwood reveals thousands of German-Americans returned to fight for Nazi Germany during World War II
"I didn't realize there were German Americans living in America. Like lived had a life here. And when the war kicked off, there was a lot of them that went back to Germany and fought for Germany. Can you imagine that? Like thousands."
About this episode
Joe Rogan speaks with actor and producer Scott Eastwood, son of Clint Eastwood, in a wide-ranging conversation covering American food quality, political division, masculinity, Hollywood culture, and World War II history. The episode's most newsworthy moments center on Eastwood's claim that government elites deliberately foster political division to prevent unified citizen action, and Rogan's extended criticism of ultra-processed American foods that he blames for the widespread phenomenon of Americans feeling healthier when eating in Europe. The pair discuss the chemicals, preservatives, and processing methods banned in Europe but standard in American food production. Eastwood promotes his WWII film Lucky Strike, revealing that thousands of German-Americans returned to fight for Nazi Germany during the war, and describes meeting 107-year-old WWII veteran Colonel Herbert Stern who liberated a concentration camp. Rogan delivers a direct warning to young listeners about marijuana and alcohol's permanent effects on developing brains, calling it 'not good for you' despite legalization trends. Eastwood criticizes unnamed Hollywood figures for financial misconduct and lack of accountability, describing an actor who refused to repay investors after abandoning a film mid-production. The conversation touches on toxic masculinity discourse, with Rogan arguing the term conflates criminal behavior with positive masculine traits like protection and provision. They discuss psychedelic experiences, Eastwood's dyslexia, working with directors like Guy Ritchie, the Charlie Kirk shooting conspiracy theories, and the precariousness of civilization. Eastwood emphasizes his father Clint's blue-collar work ethic and resistance to Hollywood excess, crediting it for keeping him grounded. The episode blends cultural commentary, health advice, Hollywood insider stories, and political skepticism.
Key takeaways
- Scott Eastwood claims political elites deliberately create division to prevent citizens from uniting against establishment power and recognizing shared grievances across party lines
- Joe Rogan attributes Americans feeling healthier in Europe to ultra-processed foods, chemicals, glyphosate, and banned additives in American food supply compared to stricter European standards
- Eastwood reveals thousands of German-Americans living in the United States returned to Nazi Germany to fight during World War II, with many becoming spies
- Rogan warns young people that regular marijuana and alcohol use during adolescence permanently damages brain development and cognitive ability despite legalization and social acceptance
- Eastwood describes unnamed Hollywood actor who abandoned film project mid-production and refused to reimburse investors, highlighting industry accountability failures
- Rogan argues term 'toxic masculinity' wrongly conflates criminal behavior with positive masculine traits like strength, discipline, protection, and provision for families
- Eastwood discusses meeting 107-year-old WWII veteran Colonel Herbert Stern who liberated concentration camp with 3,000 Jewish women at Battle of the Bulge