American History Tellers - Listen Now: Dan Taberski’s Manifesto
Episode Date: July 13, 2026Just in time for America’s 250th birthday, follow Dan Taberski (Hysterical, 9/12, Missing Richard Simmons) as he sets off on his most complicated quest yet: to reclaim the manifesto and wri...te his own. Dan attempts to rescue the manifesto as a form from the sweaty clutches of cynical politicians and mass shooters and return it to its rightful place: with the artists, the warriors, the visionaries, and the mildly crazy regular folks with something to say, the passion to say it, and the courage to do something about it. From Audible Originals and Please & Thanks Productions, this 6-part series explores the power of the manifesto and asks: Can we get inspired again… and can we do it without a bullet? Listen to Dan Taberski's Manifesto wherever you get your podcasts. Or binge all episodes of Manifesto ad-free right now on Audible. Start your Audible subscription in the Audible App or on Apple Podcasts.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, Dan Tiberski here. You might know me from podcasts like Hysterical or Missing Richard Simmons,
and now my latest adventure, Dan Tiberski's Manifesto. This project is my attempt to take the
manifesto back from mass shooters and nihilists and return it to its rightful place with the artists
and the warriors, the visionaries, the regular folks with just the right amount of crazy,
who've got something to say and the guts to say it. I compare notes with radicals, secessionists,
internet trolls out for a laugh and punk singers screaming their guts out, all trying to turn their anger into the world that they want to see.
And along the way, I write my own manifesto about manifestos.
But the question that rises up pretty quickly, just how cozy can we get with our rage before it takes on a life of its own?
From Ottawa Originals and Please and Thanks Productions, this six-part series explores the power and precariousness of the manifesto and asks, can we get inspired again?
And can we do it without a bullet?
I'm about to play a clip from Manifesto.
You can listen to Manifesto wherever you get your podcasts.
Audible subscribers can binge all episodes of Manifesto ad-free right now.
Start your audible subscription on the Audible app or on Apple Podcasts.
February, 2013, Venice, California.
It's my last few months in Los Angeles before I move back east.
I'm in my late 30s, living by the beach, learning to surf the crumbly waves on my life.
longboard. My skin smells like the ocean all the time. I feel amazing. I look amazing. I look
amazing. But I'm not taking you back in my time machine because of how good I looked, which was
very. It's because of what happened next in Southern California that cut through that dreamy
scene and swapped it out with harsh reality. Police and Irvine California are investigating the
double murder of a young couple in the parking lot of their apartment complex.
Reports of a homicide in neighboring Orange County.
27-year-old Keith Lawrence and his fiancé, 28-year-old Monica Kwan, were found shot to death in Lawrence's car late Sunday night.
Two young people, a couple recently engaged.
The guy was a public safety officer at USC, and she was an assistant basketball coach at a local university.
Murdered while parked in their white Kia Optima.
Investigators do not yet have a suspect description or a motive.
And immediately, the details of the question.
begin to add up to something bigger than a one-time thing.
Like, when their bodies are found by the police,
the victim's necklace is still on her neck.
Her new engagement ring is still firmly on her finger,
which means this isn't a robbery.
Also, investigators find evidence of 14 shots having been fired,
to a lot of bullets for just two people cornered in their car.
But the number of neighbors who actually heard those 14 shots?
Zero.
So maybe there was a silencer on the gun,
which would mean the killer probably isn't new to this, that maybe they're a professional.
Irvine detectives have been working day and night since this tragedy.
The Irvine Police Chief takes to the podium to tell the people of Southern California
that they are going to have to buckle up for a ride.
Today, we have identified Christopher Dorner as a suspect in this double homicide.
Because the suspect, Christopher Dorner, is no ordinary suspect.
Darner was an LAPD officer through 2009 and a reservist for the United States.
States Navy.
Dorner is a former LAPD cop, and he's still out there.
And there's reason to believe that he's going to kill again, that maybe he already
has.
And we know this because Christopher Dorner left something behind.
A particular interest at this point in the investigation is a multi-page manifesto in
which the suspect has implicated himself in the slings.
And this manifesto on Facebook is 11 pages long.
Trace, this manifesto from this suspect who's targeting
cops. It's stunning. It is stunning, Shep, and it says... He's been very well trained, you know,
LAPD, some of the best trained officers in the country, and I tell you, this manifesto, it scares
a hell out of me. I'm Dan Tibersky. From Audible Originals and Please and Thanks Productions,
this is Manifesto. Episode 1, 2, America. Subject, last resort. I am in the market for a
manifesto. I have been for a while now, to be honest. The world is on fire.
I'll spare you the details, we've all got our own faves. And I mean, really, what fresh words
could be left to describe what fresh hell were presented with day after day. But even more
concerning for me, even more surprising, has been my own reaction to it, and how difficult it's
been to get a handle on how angry it has all made me. I'm not an angry person. I'm a relatively
happy guy, but I find myself seething underneath all the time.
My patience has become strained.
My temper too short.
My ability to hear anyone has...
It happens at, of all places, a supermarket,
where the whole economic order is reduced down to cans on a shelf,
where you can buy two of crap you don't need for the price of one.
And this feeling of discontent that I've had in shopping at supermarkets,
you know, for years and years before that
and being dissatisfied with the whole feeling of walking in there
and having the choices that they're giving me
and the way that I...
It just felt like something that I don't want to do,
but I kept on doing it.
He goes to grab a shopping cart,
only it's one of those setups
where you've got to insert a coin to get the cart,
and you only get the coin back
if he returned the shopping cart,
as if none of us can be trusted.
Basically, they asked me to sort of use the shopping cart,
put the coin in, and take the coin back
and put it back to where it belongs.
Then all of a sudden there was that one moment
when I sat and he said,
fuck it, I'm not going to do this anymore.
And I'm not going to stop other people
from doing it as well.
So he takes a coin,
and he jams it into the slot,
so it won't come out.
So now no one's playing this stupid shopping card game, are they?
And it felt so good.
It felt like a moment of liberation.
That.
That space right there.
Where emotion becomes action,
when you're inspired to just do something already,
that is the stuff of manifestos.
Individuals, groups, entire swathes of society
use it as the funnel to focus their erupting range.
Number seven, we want an ambious.
immediate ends of police brutality and murder of black people.
This activist Bobby Seal, reading the Black Panther Manifesto in 1968.
They called it the 10-point program.
All black men held in county states, federal jails, and prisons to be released because they
have not had a fire trial because they've been tried by all white juries, and that's just
like being tried in Germany being a Jew.
Manifestos aren't just pretty poems.
They are, in a sense, a threat.
A hard-packed snowball of grievance and timing and nerve.
And real impact, a sparking of real honest-to-god change, is the longest of long shots.
But when it happens, when a manifesto catches fire, it can change our world.
It can rewrite our future.
But there's a hitch.
Binge all episodes of Dan Tibertsky's manifesto ad-free right now on Audible.
Start your Audible subscription in the Audible app or on Apple Podcasts.
