Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 131
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Hey everybody, Robert Evans here,
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Hi everyone. Welcome to the podcast. It's me, James, and I'm joined today by Mo, who
is an attorney, educator and abolitionist. They've been on the show before. We've very
much enjoyed the contributions. We're here today to talk about the recent Supreme Court,
not decision, right? But the Supreme Court declining to hear a case. It's been reported
a little bit, perhaps. I think the importance of it may have been overstated
and Mo is going to help us understand that. How are you doing today, Mo?
I'm doing all right. How are you doing?
I'm doing well. It's a nice day. Went for a run this morning, saw some flowers, picked
some fennel. That was nice.
That's very nice.
Yeah. Wild fennel. If you live in Southern California,
now's the time. Just a little tip from me. Don't get it at the height that dogs pee. You want to
go above that. It's a pro tip. You can't say that we don't fill this podcast with little Easter eggs.
So talking of little Easter eggs, let's get into the things that are buried within this.
What happened was the Supreme Court declined to hear a case, is that right?
That's right.
So the case that the Supreme Court declined to hear is McKesson v Doe.
This is a case that they have declined to hear eight times.
And it keeps going back up and down from,
I think the middle district of Louisiana
to the fifth circuit, all the way up to the Supreme Court.
And it's a case that involves the first amendment.
And the way that it has been reported, I think,
or at least the way that it has been received,
particularly by communities of people
who do engage in a lot of First Amendment protected activity,
has been with a certain amount of panic
that the Supreme Court saying, we're not going to hear this
case, we're going to kick it back down to the to the Fifth Circuit, we're going to kick it back down
to the District Court, is you know a harbinger of terrible things to come for the right to protest
and for the kinds of liability that you might be exposed to if
you are engaging in protest.
And there is some truth to that.
It is, I would say, often dangerous to engage in acts of dissent.
But I think that there's some real misapprehension
of what's going on with this particular case.
And so I thought it was worth having a conversation with you
to try to clarify a little bit about what's going on here,
what the risks are associated specifically with this case,
and what the risks actually are on the ground with respect to
protest and also to talk to you about some of the resources that are available to protect
yourself.
Wonderful.
Yeah.
So I guess to give you a little roadmap, I think I'll start by talking to you about like
what is actually the law on the ground at this point with respect to the First Amendment
and rights to protest.
Yes.
Have those rights actually been meaningfully altered by this case or by the Supreme Court
declining to hear this case? Has it actually become more dangerous to protest? Are there
things that we should be worried about? What are they? And then what kinds of resources there are?
I guess the first thing I'm going to do
is give you a very brief primer on the First Amendment.
So the First Amendment guarantees,
as I like to say, the very First Amendment guarantees
our rights to speech and assembly.
The government can place limits on the time, place,
and manner of your protest.
But the government is not authorized
to criminalize speech based on subject matter or viewpoint.
And it can't impose what's called a prior restraint
on speech, which can include making it so risky to speak
that people engage in self-censorship.
But the First Amendment doesn't immunize you
from prosecution or civil liability
for otherwise unlawful conduct.
So that's why true threats of violence
are not protected by the First Amendment, right? And it doesn't protect you from being arrested for behavior
just because that behavior is politically motivated,
which is why breaking Starbucks windows and graffiti
and assassination are not protected by the First Amendment.
Right.
On the other hand, the fact that there are one or more people
at a demonstration who are acting unlawfully
does not strip the larger demonstration of First
Amendment protection.
Right.
And that principle comes from a case called NAACP versus clayborn hardware and clayborn
it was decided in 1982 and it was a case where the NAACP was sued civilly on the basis that
they had organized a protest where some people in the crowd had caused some
damage. I see. This is a very, very similar case to the underlying case in this situation
DeRay McKesson has been sued civilly. Meaning he's being sued for money damages. He is not being criminally
prosecuted. Right. That's an important distinction. So you
know what, let's back up a little bit.
So yeah, can you explain who is DeRay McKesson? Why is DeRay
McKesson bouncing up and down between Louisiana
and the Supreme Court?
Yes. Okay. So I'm going to back up even farther than that. The reason that we are here today
that I am here with you talking about this case is that the way that this case is being
reported on or received is that people are going, oh, God, it's now illegal to protest
and we're all going to go to prison for protesting.
Like, okay, I mean, first of all,
police using mass arrest of protesters
to chill in silent speech
is already a time-honored American tradition.
Yes.
But that isn't what this case is about. This is a civil case, which means that somebody is being
sued for money damages. And the person who's being sued is DeRay McKesson. DeRay McKesson was at one
point, for anyone who can remember a decade ago, was very high profile, very visible in the
Black Lives Matter movement in Ferguson and in Baltimore, and
then later in Louisiana. And he was somebody who was very
visible in the media, he made a lot of public statements. He
made a lot of public statements on behalf of Black Lives Matter,
which, you know, I'm going to get into is not a membership organization. But he made a bunch
of statements as though he were the representative of a movement, which he referred to as Black Lives Matter. He organized a lot of protests. I think at one point, I have a
memory that he ran for office. So he was he was a very visible
movement organizer. Right. He organized a protest in I
believe 2017. In the wake of the police murder of Alden Sterling, at which a police officer was hit
in the head with a hard object, a rock or a piece of concrete.
And he was like, the police officer was injured, like pretty seriously. Yeah. And he then sued DeRay Mckesson for money damages on the theory that because he had
organized the protest, he had control of the protest and he had some responsibility for the fact that this other person had thrown
a rock at him.
This theory requires a real failure to understand social movements and distributed networks
because what it presumes, and I think we've talked about this before on this show is the inability of the police and the courts
to understand that not every social movement operates with a clear hierarchy like the police,
right? Or the military, because their social movement groups do imitate the military.
They do imitate that hierarchy.
They totally reproduce this sort of chain of command theory.
So if you look at the Klan, right, they are organized via, they are incorporated, they
have a membership, there is a clear hierarchy, who is in charge, who is giving orders, who
is following orders, who is following orders.
Right?
That is not the case.
Yeah, it's the same Proud Boys, Patriot Front, like they're incapable of organizing without
authority.
And conceiving of anyone doing so, it would seem.
Right.
And so I think I've told you before, I've actually had to drop footnotes in federal
court filings to explain that Antifa is not a membership organization.
Yeah, this is a discussion that I have been privy to as a historian of the same organization. Yeah.
Originally it was ironically, right? The KPD was. When we referring it to that,
we're not talking about 1933 Germany. No. So, you. So when someone says, and this becomes relevant here,
because initially when this suit was filed,
it was two different lawsuits.
And it was a group of police officers
who had been shot in different places in the country,
suing not only Deora McHeson,
but Black Lives Matter.
And I think in fact, one of the defendants who was named in one of the initial suits
was hashtag Black Lives Matter.
So I don't know how you serve a hashtag.
Yeah.
Fascinating.
Totally fascinating.
I mean, the legal theory underlying these cases was pretty bonkers.
And then various other individuals who were part of different Black Lives Matter groups,
right?
Okay.
The initial suit that went after all these people and hashtags for the shootings were really just legally
insufficient, right? The allegations that were made were Black Lives Matter, whatever
that is, made statements about how policing is unjust and police shouldn't be surprised
if there's, you know, if they encounter resistance. And then these other people kind of showed up and shot at cops.
And the theory is that by sort of making these statements,
Black Lives Matter encouraged or incited
and was responsible for these shootings.
This is not a valid legal theory.
I mean, it just is not.
And that case was dismissed just entirely.
And then the second case that was brought was this one where the guy who was hit in
the head with a rock, and it's the same allegations, the same theory of liability.
And everybody got dismissed out of that case.
All of the defendants got dismissed out of that case except for DeRay McKesson.
And part of the reason that everyone else was dismissed out of that case or that the
suit was dismissed with respect to those named defendants is that Black Lives Matter was
an unincorporated association.
And an unincorporated association can't be sued.
And this has been relevant in other cases.
I'm not trying to give anyone legal advice, but I want people to think about the fact.
I think there's a real impulse sometimes in social movement organizing that like we need to make everything a nonprofit
Yeah, yeah, they can or we need to have a bank account even and the fact is when you create an
organization, even if it's an unincorporated association
That where the entity has what you would say is its personality is distinct from that of its members
Right, right. Yes, it's a distinct it can be sued has what you would say is its personality is distinct from that of its members.
Right. Right.
Yeah, it's a distinct.
It can be sued. You become susceptible to a lawsuit.
Right.
So for example, when Energy Transfer Partners tried to sue, there's currently a suit against
Greenpeace.
The Standing Rock.
Yes, the Standing Rock suit.
Yeah.
And we'll talk about that later, right? It's a slap suit. It's a suit that endeavors to stifle speech that's in the public interest.
When that suit first started, they tried to sue Earth First, but Earth First is not an
entity.
Right.
Yeah, yeah.
You can't serve Earth First.
There's no one to serve.
There's nobody there. It's not, you know, it's like
Antifa. It'd be like trying to sue Batman fans.
Right. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. And Swifties.
Exactly.
We'd love to see it.
Right. There are maybe people who identify in that way, but there is not a coherent group.
Right. And there's certainly not a coherent group. Right.
And there's certainly not a group that can take responsibility for the behavior of its
members.
Right.
Talking of taking responsibility, Mo, we unfortunately have to take responsibility for the fact that
we now have to pivot to ads.
Okay.
If you say so.
I do.
I'm so sorry.
Not my favorite part of my job.
All right, we're back. We've pivoted to ads. So yeah, we were talking about the difference
between an incorporated organization, which can be sued. Can you maybe just, even if we step it back a little bit further and explain the difference between civil and criminal liability, just in case people haven't got that?
by the state, by the government for violating a criminal law. And when you are criminally charged, what is on the table is that you might go to jail
or you might go to prison.
You can also be civilly sued.
And what's happening there is if someone says, okay, you've, you know, you wrecked my car
or your dog bit me or you punched me in the face and I lost a tooth, then you can be
civilly sued by that person for money damages. Right. To compensate you for the loss.
Got it. Right.
To compensate you for the loss.
So in this case, Mr. McKesson is being civilly sued, not arrested, not prosecuted, not subject.
Like there is no possibility that if he loses this case, he'll go to jail.
Yeah.
So this civil case happens in Louisiana, right? Yeah. So this civil case happens in Louisiana, right? Yeah. Let's talk about how it bounces
around the fifth circuit.
So I started to tell you that there were sort of these two cases. The first one is entirely
dismissed. The second one, they say, all right, Black Lives Matter is not an association that
can be sued. These other individuals that you've named here as defendants
were not present, made no statements about it. Well, first they dismissed the whole thing,
actually. Then the cop appealed to the circuit and the circuit said, yeah, mostly you're right,
district court. All of these people can't be sued. But Mr. McKesson, we do think, could be liable under a theory
of negligence because he organized the protest and was present.
This officer sues McKesson and a bunch of other people. And the officer says that Mr.
McKesson is liable because he organized his protest and knew or should have known that it could potentially turn violent.
And so he says under Louisiana law, he can sue on a theory of negligence, which doesn't require
any kind of intent or certain knowledge. It's just being, you know, negligent.
Initially, the court, the federal district court dismisses those claims, all of them, based on NAACP
v. Claiborne, which I talked about earlier, which says if you're at a protest and one
person gets violent, the rest of the protest does not lose its First Amendment protected
character just because other people are violent.
Then the cop appeals and the Fifth Circuit in part
affirms their rulings about all of the other people
who were sued, but reinstates the negligence claim
against Mr. McKesson.
Right.
He then, it does, it never, by the way,
has proceeded to trial.
This case is still in a very preliminary phase
Oh, wow, okay
It has been going on since 2017 and it's been bouncing up and down the courts
but the question is
Can he even be sued?
Under this theory so we haven't gotten he hasn't been found guilty. We haven't had a
presentation of evidence. There's all kinds of stuff that has not yet happened in this case.
Right. The question is very, very narrow. It's can a person be sued under a theory of negligence when they organize a protest and somebody
else at that protest causes some kind of harm?
Right.
So the Fifth Circuit says, go back district court and hear this claim of negligence.
McKesson then brings it to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court
reverses the Fifth Circuit and says it overturns their decision and says,
you actually can't force the district court to proceed with this trial because you didn't
check in with the Louisiana State Court to get their feedback about whether Louisiana State Law actually
allows for this kind of negligence claim.
Okay, so like they miss procedurally they fucked up.
Yes.
Then the Fifth Circuit says, okay, fine, Louisiana Supreme Court, what do you think?
And the court says, yeah, we think you can proceed
on this negligence claim. And then the Fifth Circuit affirms its previous ruling and says,
Okay, now, district court hear it again. And you can hear this negligence claim as to Mr.
McKesson. They tried to distinguish it from Claiborne. I don't think they did a good job.
One of the there was a three judge panel that ruled on this.
So it was a two, one ruling.
Two of the judges tried to distinguish it from Claiborne.
One of the judges says, no, you know, Claiborne is controlling.
You can only hold somebody liable for their own behavior. Right.
And one of the things he says is that if you make protest organizers liable for someone else's
violent behavior, all a counter protester has to do is show up and start throwing rocks in order get the whole protest to impute liability to the person who organized the protest.
And that goes both ways, right?
So I am sort of surprised that they, given that there are social movements that are probably more aligned with the values and beliefs
of these federal judges in the Fifth Circuit. So the Fifth Circuit at this point says,
no, go back to the district court and have the trial on the theory of negligence.
Right.
Then the Supreme Court decided a case called Countermann v. Colorado.
Countermann v. Colorado is not a First Amendment political speech case. It's a case about somebody
making threats. But that case relies very heavily on Claiborne. So in that case, we have what's called a true threats analysis,
and they're trying to determine whether a person who's making threats needs to actually know that
the threats they're making are going to be perceived as real threats. And what they decided was they do need to know to some degree that these statements
could be taken as true threats. But they talk a lot. Kagan authored this opinion, and she talks
a lot about how careful we have to be even with speech that is traditionally not protected like true threats because it's very important not to chill protected speech.
And what she says is that the court has always been really wary of chilling protected speech.
And so sometimes it makes extra space for speech that isn't protected in order to make really sure it doesn't chill protected speech.
So she says, the court must consider
the prospect of chilling non-threatening expression
given the ordinary citizen's predictable tendency
to steer wide of the unlawful zone.
The speaker's fear of mistaking whether a statement is
a threat, his fear of the legal system getting
that judgment wrong, his fear in any event of incurring legal costs, all those may lead him to swallow words that are in fact not true threats.
standard that has enough what they say is breathing room to make sure that even if it means that some unprotected speech
gets through, we have enough space for all of the protected
speech to still exist and for nobody to feel uncertain about
whether or not their speech is protected.
Yeah, sure. They don't want to gradually like have a creeping
sort of boundary.
Yeah. So what she says is, if we're going to ban any kind of speech, it has to be known
and knowable to the speaker. And there has to be sort of a requirement that the speaker
is actually aware that this is not protected speech. And so in this case,
in counterman with the guy who's making the bizarre threats, what they decide is,
you only need to be reckless about the speech. You don't have to be doing it intentionally to threaten someone.
But if you're saying things that you, even if you don't mean it to be a threat, if you
could reasonably anticipate that it will be received as a threat, that's sufficient.
Okay.
And then she says this, our incitement decisions, right? So Supreme Court decisions regarding incitement
to violence demand more. But the reason for that demand is not present here where we're
talking about threats. When incitement is at issue, we have spoken in terms of specific
intent presumably equivalent to purpose or knowledge.
In doing so, we recognized that incitement to disorder is commonly a hair spread the
way from political advocacy and particularly from strong protests against the government
and prevailing order.
Such protests gave rise to all the cases in which the court demanded a showing of intent,
and the court decided those cases against a resonant historical backdrop, the court's
failure in an earlier era to protect mere advocacy of force or law breaking from legal
sanction.
A strong intent requirement was and remains one way to guarantee history was not repeated.
It was a way to ensure the efforts to prosecute incitement would not bleed over either directly
or through a chilling effect to dissenting political speech at the First Amendment's
core.
Okay. So we have this case that's decided days after the Fifth Circuit makes its decision
that directly speaks to this decision. Right? It reaffirms Claiborne. It reaffirms that
political speech is protected. It reaffirms that you cannot
have a negligence standard. You have to have a standard. You can't just say, well, somebody
knew or should have known that organizing a protest might lead to violence.
Right. They have to specific.
You say, they have to be like, we're going to go out and we're going to do violence at
this protest at this time, right? they have to be actually advocating for violence
in order to be held responsible for violence.
So how does this not just lead to his case being dismissed?
So then at the same time as that's happening,
Mr. McKesson has asked the court again to weigh in
on whether this case can proceed
under a negligence theory, right?
Meaning, can he be prosecuted because it's possible that a protest will turn violent?
And the court says, we're not going to hear this case.
And somewhat unusually, Justice Sonia Sotomayor issues a statement along with the denial of
hearing the case.
And she says, this court may deny what's called certiorari, right, hearing the case.
The court may deny certiorari for many reasons, including that the law is not in need of further
clarification.
Right.
Its denial today expresses no view about the merits of McKesson's claim.
Although the Fifth Circuit did not have the benefit of this court's recent decision in counterman when it issued its opinion,
the lower courts now do.
I expect them to give full and fair consideration to arguments regarding
counterman's impact in any future proceedings. Right. So I don't think that it's some like
terrible thing that the court said, Oh, no, we're not going to hear this case. I don't
think they're saying in any way, Oh, we're not going to hear this case because we think
it ought to proceed further and go to trial down in Louisiana.
I think what they're saying is we already decided this issue. The law remains the same.
Claiborne is still the controlling case here.
Right. Yeah, it seems very clear that what they're saying is like we've already made
clear what we stand on this.
That's right. And so the last thing that's on the docket in Mr. McKesson's case is basically
a submission that reiterates what Justice Sotomayor said. I'll just read you a little
from this. It says Sotomayor's statement explains that the court's decision expresses no view about the merits of the claim because the
law is not in need of further clarification. So it suggests that the existing clear law comes
from countermen. And the statement makes even clearer that the First Amendment does not permit
liability on the negligence theory advanced by the cop in this case.
It doesn't say the cop in this case.
So it makes very clear, you know, they have submitted, Mr. McKesson's counsel has submitted
this statement to the judge.
And I think there is every possibility that this case is just going to to die at this point.
Um, you know, remember the district court already dismissed it all together at once,
and it has only been carrying it forward because they were ordered to by the Fifth Circuit.
Yeah. Yes, it would just go back to the district.
Yeah, so it would just go back to the district. Yeah, exactly.
So in fact, there has been a lot of anxiety about, oh, the Supreme Court is signaling
that the law has changed and that the Fifth Circuit can just criminalize protest.
In fact, what I think has happened here is that the Supreme Court affirmed that the Fifth Circuit may not expose people to
civil liability for organizing a protest. That does not mean that the courts down there
are not going to try to keep going forward with this. But I think if they did, and if
Mr. McKesson was, like A, if they even allowed it to continue,
it might just go right back up to the Supreme Court. And the Supreme Court might at that point
hear it because they've already said, no, we expect you to follow the law that we just
re-articulated in this other case. Right? But again, remember that we haven't had a trial yet.
He hasn't been found guilty.
He hasn't, right?
Like the question is, can we even proceed in this case?
Let's take a second ad break here
and then we'll come back and discuss.
This may have been over-exaggerated in terms of its importance of state repression and
protest, but that doesn't mean that state repression and protest is not happening, right?
It is.
So can you explain to us the mechanisms through which that happens and the considerations
and resources available to people who may wish to exercise their first amendment rights. Yes, absolutely. So has it become more
dangerous to protest? I mean, I guess, but not because of this case, right?
Right. Yeah. I mean, in general, it has, right? The cops get bigger guns and more guns and
tear gas things every year and then they love to use them. Yeah.
Along with the legal consequences.
Yes. And are there things that we should be worried about? Yes. But I don't think
that this particular case on its own is the harbinger of the end of the First Amendment, it's one symptom of the larger underlying
effort by the state and corporate capital and all of the forces of retrogression and
repression to quell dissent. But it's just one of many, right? And we've seen so many examples of this, and they are by no
means new or novel, right? They're just trying out new legal theories, and this was one of them, and
I don't think it's going to go anywhere. But I think we need to remember there's always sort of
multiple fronts on which we're fighting this battle, right? There's the legal front.
Right.
And then there's the sort of on the ground
law enforcement front.
One of the reasons that Mr. McKesson was targeted here
is because he did make,
and this is not to say this is his fault,
it absolutely is not.
But one of the things that made him
more susceptible to targeting is that he did make a ton of public statements and he was
extremely visible in a way that aligned with the government's and the right wing's understanding
of social structures, right? Because if they understand that social movements
are being directed from the top, which is not typically the case, but if that's, if
that's what it looks like to them, and there is a person that they can identify who they can even a little bit make out of even the most tenuous case is in charge.
Yeah.
Then, you know, that's the person they're going to go after.
Yeah, yeah.
So to the extent that we're doing organizing that where it is distributed, it is autonomous, you know, it is spontaneous, and we aren't working
with in structures that are hierarchical, and we're not working in structures that are incorporated
and have bank accounts and public meetings, and membership structures. You know, we're already very insulated from this kind of thing anyway. The dangers are
what the dangers have always been, which are mass arrest because the police neither know
nor care what the law is and they don't care about Claiborne and they don't care that the
fact that you did not personally throw a rock doesn't constitute probable cause to arrest you. Right? Like I am always more concerned about things on
the ground like mass arrests and police involved injuries than I am about, frankly, about even
long-term legal consequences because so often, and I guess I say this because I have the privilege of practicing in New York where there is a very strong history of public protest and
everyone sort of understands what that is and no one feels all that threatened by it.
Which doesn't mean that there aren't a lot of police involved injuries and it doesn't
mean that there aren't a lot of traumatic arrests, but it does mean that typically there are not devastating legal
consequences of that. Now, that's not the case in places like Georgia, right? Where they're
doing their own sort of boundary testing down there to see what kinds of criminal liability and what
kinds of theories of criminal law they can use to sort of bootstrap absolutely garden
variety protest behavior into really serious felony charges. Right? So that's the kind
of stuff that I would say, yeah, we should be worried about it.
It is dangerous to protest.
There's widespread surveillance.
There's widespread public-private collaboration.
There's widespread agency cooperation.
There's all kinds of non-state actors, political actors, random sort of individuals and small groups
that are doing are engaged in all kinds of surveillance. There's counter groups, right?
We have, like you mentioned before, the Proud Boys, we have all kinds of, well, look, Canary
Mission is a really good example, right? We have all kinds of actors, groups, individuals,
corporations, government entities that have an interest in suppressing dissent, and they
engage in all kinds of conduct ranging from intense surveillance to dox know, even more violent behavior, you know, targeted harassment, not just by
law enforcement, but by individuals, by neighbors, by media outlets, right?
And those are the kinds of things that, that may get dangerous to protest, I guess.
But since when do we let that stop us?
Right.
You know, I mean, the solution to these kinds of dangers
is to be thoughtful, to remember that discretion
is the better part of valor, right?
Meaning you don't need to be bragging about whatever
you're doing on Twitter.
You don't need to always be the public face of the movement.
Because even if you're not speaking directly to cops in an interrogation
Anything you say publicly can and very much will be used against you
Yeah, we're seeing a lot of employment and educational consequences, right?
People are current what's happening right now as we speak at Columbia University. People are losing their student housing. They're getting suspended from school
They're getting arrested. They're getting, you know, these student disciplinary proceedings.
There's all kinds of risks to being a public dissident.
But the solution to that kind of repression is not self-censorship, it's courage.
There are other ways that we secure change, but showing up in the streets is always how
you make history.
And you have to be smart, but you up in the streets is always how you make history.
You have to be smart, but you also have to be brave. As we reach another election year,
almost certainly there will be protest, whatever happens in the election, that will lead to people who are perhaps not so familiar with horizontal organizing, with like anti-authoritarian or non-authoritarian
organizing, all these things, entering a protest movement. And people will inevitably have
to learn like one way or the other, you know, like these basic things which they can do
to make it as safe as possible to protest. And it would be great if they can learn them
from a podcast, not from them or their friends getting hurt.
Here's what I would say to,
if it is at all possible,
find a lawyer who is willing to consult with you
before you go out and do your action,
just so that you can be prepared, right?
For purposes of informed consent.
Because I cannot tell you, you know, lawyers are not allowed to advise their clients to break the law,
but it's very much our job to tell you what the possible or likely consequences are of certain courses of action,
and you are probably better off knowing what that is before you do the thing than after you do the thing.
Yeah, that's a good idea.
I will tell you that personally, I would rather spend many hours talking people through the
various outcomes of different ideas than spending 10 minutes talking to them after they're already
in a cell.
Right.
There are ways of protesting that are entirely lawful that
can still help you to accomplish your political goals.
And if you are going to go out and do something
that you think is likely to involve arrest,
I at least want you to know that it is likely to involve arrest.
Right. Yeah, you don't want to find out that it is likely to involve arrest.
Yeah, you don't want to find out when you're being arrested.
Exactly.
And what your specific risks might be.
And to have somebody lined up to take care of you, to represent you if that becomes necessary.
I really don't mean to say, oh, don't worry about McKesson v Doe.
It's no big deal. It's no big deal.
It is a big deal.
It's a big deal because this whole judicial system and legal apparatus is working overtime
to find every possible way to discourage protest, but it is not unique in that regard.
I guess that's really what I'm trying to say.
There are all kinds of ways in which we are at risk by being dissidents.
I just don't think that this one is particularly special or particularly alarming.
And again, what I just referred to as the law of the land, is not the same thing as law enforcement practice.
Right. Yeah.
So I would really want to make sure that everyone remembers, A, the law is not the same thing as justice,
and neither is the law the same thing or even necessarily related to what police are doing on the ground during a protest.
Right. Yeah. Those are very different things. Where can people, I guess, people who are
organizing, people who are organizing autonomous, spontaneous, horizontal movements, are there
good resources for them to find? Because they might be in, they might, what's legal in my state?
What's, you know, what do I have to avoid?
That kind of thing.
Yes.
Where would they find those?
One resource if you are contacted by federal law enforcement is you can call the National
Lawyers Guild Federal Anti-Repression Hotline at 212-679-2811. A really good resource is the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Surveillance
Self Defense, which is at S as in Surveillance, S as in Self, D as in Defense, dot E as in
Electronic, F as in Frontier, F as in Foundation, F as in foundation.org.
The National Lawyers Guild has various Know Your Rights guides
that are available at NLG.org.
We also have chapters all over the country.
And if you look in our referral directory you can find
where those contacts for people all over the country. I think if you want a
Know Your Rights training you can reach out to the NLG and there are a lot of
other a lot of other organizations that do Know Your Rights trainings. I know in New York,
we have a really amazing organization called CUNY Clear. And I would highly recommend you
follow them on Instagram, because they often have a lot of resources that they're posting.
Protect Your People, a digital toolkit for organizations and employers. And it's it was developed to combat anti LGBTQ plus
harassment. But I think the principles remain the same no matter what it is that you're looking at.
And I'll put the link to that. Again, it's called Protect Your People and it's hosted by the Harvard
Law LGBTQ clinic. But I'll stick the link here in the chat for
you, James, so that you can share it in the show notes.
James Bollock To finish up, you've mentioned the National
Lawyers Guild and some other resources. Is there anywhere else where people can find
you or where you think that they should be following along? Like we said, we're going
into an election year, stuff's probably becoming
more relevant again. And then there's a genocide happening right now that people are facing
severe personal consequences for protesting. Yeah, I mean, I don't, I don't want anyone to
follow me on social media. Excellent. If that's what you're asking. I will always every single time plug landback.org. And if people... Yes,
I can see that you have a land back flag behind you.
Thank you. Yeah, listen, it's one of the only good flag.
Yeah. There's a black one next to it.
Okay. Also a solid choice for flags, if we got to do flags. Oh, also, please, for the love of God, don't talk to
cops.
Bean Dad, the dress. 30 to 50 feral hogs. If you knew what any of those were, you spend too much time online.
And hey, I do too.
16th Minute of Fame is a new weekly podcast hosted by me, Jamie Loftus, where every week
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the Official Podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. episode every Thursday. Like a recent episode with Melissa Joan Hart. LL Cool J gave me some great advice. He had all those gold chains and I was like,
wow, look at all these diamonds.
And he said something to the effect of,
don't waste your money on something like this.
Buy a house.
Like he gave me like solid investment advice
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Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine
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It's it could happen here, a podcast where I didn't come up with the intro. So you're getting this one. I'm your host, being a Wong.
This is this is the podcast where actually this is the part of the podcast where
after things have fallen apart, you put them back together again.
And yeah, the thing that's being put back together here, you know, I really,
I really should plan this intro more, but this is this is what happened.
This is what happens when we get night recordings.
But yeah, the thing the thing we're putting together today is a union
at a really interesting kind of
very interesting kind of coffee shop.
So with me to talk about this is Alex, Rocky and Madeline from Blue Bottle Independent
Union.
And yeah, thank you all for joining me.
Yeah, thank you so much for having us.
Yeah, I'm excited to talk with you all.
So I guess the first thing that I want to start with is
can you talk a bit about what Blue Bottle is?
Because this is a really weird story that I think kind of reveals
a lot about the way I don't know the it is sort of lofty terms
like the direction that capital has been moving in the past like 10 years.
Absolutely. Yeah. So Blue Bottle is a specialty coffee chain founded by James Freeman in Oakland,
California, like 2002. Like most specialty shops starts off as like this small little
cart where you know, one guy is doing all the parts of production roasting serving the coffee and all that. And then throughout the early Aughts 2010s, they do lots of rounds of venture capital
financing with Fidelity and other firms until 2017 when Nestle purchased a 68% majority
ownership in Blue Bottle at, I I think a $700 million evaluation.
Jesus.
And since then, no, no, no.
It was a $700 million evaluation.
They paid $400 million.
Gotcha.
Yeah, isn't this great?
And since then they've expanded from, you know,
the tiny little location in California
to 70 stores in the US and then over 100 globally, including in China, Japan, Hong Kong, South
Korea.
And am I forgetting anywhere else?
I think that's I think that's it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's it's a fun time to be a coffee worker, I guess.
Yeah. It's interesting to me the extent to which this it has.
I mean, OK, so like 100 shops is like a lot of shops,
but it's not 700 million dollars of shops.
Like, it really seems like this company has like it really has like tech valuation,
which is alarming.
Yeah. And I mean, it's not uncommon for specialty right now, which is also concerning.
As far as I understand, Intelligencia and La Cologne are also owned in part by venture
capital firms.
And this is really confusing, especially because for anybody that knows anything about the
economics of coffee shops, the margins are terrible.
Yeah.
And really, as far as I can tell, the only value that Blue Bottle offers to Nestle is
brand and the ability to eventually grow to the point where at some point in the future
they'll be able to make a little bit of money off of it all.
Which is a deeply weird business strategy. Yeah. And so I guess I wanted to start here
because it's feels like a very different organizing terrain than a lot of like, you know, than
a lot of the shops that we've been that we talked to on this show, because it's like
the value of this company is only kind of tangentially, you know, all like on a sort of macro level the value of the company is like, kind of tenuously connected to your labor. But on the other hand, like at the individual shop level, you're still dealing with all of the same sort of like, you know, like hyper exploitation, trying to like ring every cent out of stuff. So I guess, I wanted to start by kind of asking like, how did that, the
weirdness of what Blue Bottle is influenced like how this campaign started?
To be pretty frank about our campaign, like there was a crop of organizers before Gonzo
and myself, who I would say at this point are kind of the longest running organizers
on this campaign. There was a crop before us. So we joined, we did not start the campaign
here at Blue Bottle.
But I think, I mean, it was difficult
in the very beginning, like, you know, Blue Bottle,
it pays now, like, I think starting wage for barista
is like 18 an hour.
You know, we just got to pay them up in April.
So it's like, I, you like, I do make more than minimum
wage. It can be a tough sell for people to be like, oh, but it's like marginally better.
Like, oh, I'm working at this fancy coffee shop. Don't they treat us a little better?
But when you look at also the coffee industry has a hole on a global scale, incredibly exploitative industry that like we are both, we play into as people like in the US
who make incredibly expensive specialty coffee,
but also like as workers who are exploited ourselves,
like this is something that I think we have to think about
often as like how, I don't know,
how can our union affect this industry as a whole?
How can we affect, you know,
Nestle as this conglomerate as a whole?
But also, how can I afford my rent next month?
And so having those kinds of discussions with workers, like putting our day-to-day labor
into this kind of larger context, both of the company and of the industry.
I mean, I think this campaign, we didn't start out independent.
We had a little bit of
shopping around almost of different unions.
I think we were also largely
inspired here in Boston specifically.
It is kind of a hotbed for coffee organizing.
A lot of shops around here are organized.
There have been some incredibly militant shops out here.
I think Gondel and I first got introduced to
the Blue Baba campaign
from the Starbucks 874 picket line and they were out there for like two months. And I think that
those kinds of things have really influenced this campaign and really influenced our organizing
as we go into this really kind of corporate, bougie coffee shop that is hard to reconcile with like,
hey, I am also an exploited laborer.
I am forced to make coffee all day
for customers who are frankly quite rude.
And having to have those conversations with your coworkers
of like, hey, we deserve better.
That might be marginally better than some other place.
We still deserve better and we can fight for so much more.
So I feel like I went on for a little bit there,
but I hope that that answers that question.
One thing to kind of add onto that is
when organizing in the stores,
part of the fact that we're owned by Nestle
makes it actually much easier
because people
aren't easily fooled.
We understand that Nestle is putting a lot of money into this company with the hope of
future returns in the short or medium term.
And also people implicitly understand that the current model that the cafes operate on
is kind of reckless. Like, because we're
owned basically as a venture capital scheme, this means that, y'know, we're constantly
trying to cut costs that shouldn't be cut. Like, even today, uh, Madeline and I ran out
of decaf coffee beans because they hadn't placed an order for them.
Oh my god.
Yeah.
And, y'know, we've run out of milks fairly frequently, we've run out of things like cups
and lids, and very basic things that you need to run a coffee shop.
As far as I can tell, only because they need to keep operating costs comically low, so
that way they can appease
their Nestle overlords.
Which is pretty funny because the math doesn't make any sense on that, right?
Because it's like, okay, you need to find a way to make like $400 million.
Your solution to this is we're going to delay ordering more coffee beans.
Like is there anyone who like, no, you don't need like this isn't even an accountant situation.
This is a like, is there anyone here who understands what an order of magnitude is?
What are we doing here?
Wait till you hear about the saffron latte.
Oh, God, what a disaster.
Oh, yeah.
So they don't have enough money to pay us a living wage.
But from January until April of this year, we were serving a saffron vanilla latte with,
and I kid you not, real saffron,
both in a syrup and also in a powdered,
yeah, no, no kidding.
It tasted like Play-Doh.
I kinda like that, but not everybody does apparently.
Shocker.
You know, this is the first time,
this is the first time I've ever said this
in my entire life, but I sincerely hope
that they were buying the fucking cheap fake stuff.
Because like, they were actually real saffron.
Oh god.
Well, to be fair, to be fair, a lot of the stuff people think is real saffron probably
is fake.
So maybe the scammers were getting something out of this, but dear god.
That doesn't make them look good.
But yeah, no, real, somebody who's good with the economy
helped me out here.
You know, $3,000 a week for saffron and $18 an hour for baristas.
God, that's gonna like haunt me in my dreams.
Someone ordering an ass.
How much did that cost? Jesus Christ. Oh no.
But not enough money to pay us a living wage.
No, I, that's, I don't know. That is, that is, that is genuinely disgusting. Like how.
You know, when you think about it, we can like buy a little over two of them
every hour we work so like
That's all we need
Yeah
Yeah, that's also got to be like a kind of radicalizing moment of my god
Yeah, and it's your our time is worth so little to these people
Yeah. And our time is worth so little to these people. This is actually one of the biggest conversations I would have with my coworkers that I had
to stop having. So it'd make them incredibly upset was I would break down the math with
them. I'd be like, you can make a latte in about a minute, two minutes. Like, and those
lattes are $7. You make 17 an hour, make three lattes, and that's more than your hourly wage.
And you're making what? 100 of those an hour in a rush like people would get really upset when you're confronted with like the
oh wow the money coming in and then the money that I'm receiving it'll drive you crazy.
Yeah and I think I don't know that's one of these things where I think in a lot of industries
it's kind of that kind of value thing is abstracted because like, I don't know, like you're like,
I just talked about it like an accountant earlier, right? Like you're an accountant,
you have no idea how much of, well, I guess maybe an accountant would know exactly the
amount of value.
Like, okay, I don't know, you work in like, you, you, you, you, you work in a factory
that produces an auto part, right? Like one thing that goes into an assembly of an auto parts like you have.
Like there's no good way for you to like actually understand
the sort of value things that you can get kind of close.
But I think it's less visceral than just, yeah, this is an item of food
that I'm watching all of these people like consume that I'm making.
And it's like, yeah, sure.
Obviously, there's like, you know, like back down the value chain.
There's also probably like Nestle doing like slave labor, like child slave labor to get
chocolate or something.
Right.
But I don't know, there's this, there's something really kind of just viscerally horrifying
about like I produced $800 of coffee and they're paying me $18.
Yeah.
So speaking of $800 of coffee, this show, I $18 Yeah, so speaking of $800 of coffee this show
I don't think we've ever gotten a coffee ad which is sort of remarkable you'd think at some point. I
Don't know. I don't really funny
You know if on the ad that we're about to go to it's you know, like the black rifle coffee company or some shit
Oh god, wait
No, what I think I think one of the I think one of the insane
it might have been the other one.
So there's like Black Rifle Coffee, which is the right wing coffee thing.
But then they they condemned Kyle Rittenhouse murdering all those people.
And so then there became a second even more anti-woke coffee shop
that was even shittier.
I think those people might legitimately have tried to sell an ad to our show.
At one point we were like, no, what the fuck?
That's crazy.
What?
There's, we had so many insane ads.
We had the, famously the Washington highway patrol put one on here.
So, all right.
Let's, let's hope you have a reasonable ad instead of that.
And we are back.
Luckily, this is podcasting or not regulated like radio,
so I could just fucking say shit. It's great.
We love we love we love to be we love to be in podcasting. So yeah, this, this brings us in no particular, by no particular
rhyme or reason, this brings us to another thing I wanted to sort of talk about, which
is about the decision to go independent and about independent unions versus sort of the
traditional business unions that have been trying to run a lot of these campaigns. So yeah, I guess wherever you want to start in that whole sort of thicket of issues.
Yeah, the decision to go independent was maybe eight months into our campaign. We did pivot to go independent.
We were, you know, kind of, we had not affiliated with anyone, we, some weird stuff had happened with some previous business unions.
And so we're kind of in a shopping around phase.
And I like good friend of the union and someone who has helped us incredibly throughout the
campaign said, Hey, can I pitch you guys on going independent?
Like, and at that time, I mean, I can't speak for the other folks,
like I did not know anything about independent unions.
This campaign has also been an incredible
learning process for me.
And so, we talked about a little bit of like,
hey, unions, everything that a union does, workers can do.
And really like trying to like instill this,
we can do it ourselves.
Because I think that for me, the dream of independent unionism is having autonomy and
control of our lives, both in the workplace and in our unions, as workers.
And so, this idea of, oh yeah, the union just takes care of it. Oh, you pay dues and the
staffer does all these things for you.
But when we filed our petition, I filled that out. It's not that hard. There are so many things
where it's like, oh yeah, the union will take care of it or oh, this is what dues pay for.
Like, oh, we can have a lawyer look at it. At no part of this process was there really anything
that workers could not have done. Did we seek legal advice? Absolutely. Did we have people help us out
who maybe knew more than I did?
Yes.
But that isn't to say that we were not learning
the entire time.
So to me, that's like the big ethos of independent unionism
of like learning it, doing it, teaching others.
I think it has been an incredible opportunity.
I think also like we really are committed
to like rank and file democracy.
And so having workers have a say in all major decisions,
especially now that we have had our election,
we're moving into bargaining hopefully soon,
being able to have workers submit proposals,
have workers look and do open bargaining,
have them look at the contract at every step of the way
and things like this.
Having people participate in their unions.
I mean, I think that we are in a time of like
the revitalization of the labor movement
and I don't want workers to get left behind in that.
Like I think that we are the labor.
And so being able to like control our unions
and lead them in the ways that we want to
as democratically as we can,
to me it's been what
it's all about. Did that mean that it was an easy campaign? No, it was a lot of work. It was a lot
of work that maybe a paid staffer would have done, but we did it ourselves. And it took longer. And
it took a lot of education as well of explaining to my coworkers of like, hey, we want to form a
union. And it's not just this thing that kind of happens to you. Like actually you have to make it happen now
if you want to do it.
So I think that for us, the choice to go independent
has like only reaped benefits so far.
It's been this wonderful thing.
I think that we are all much better for it
and much closer like as coworkers.
I think that people are more excited about their union,
but it certainly, you know, it took a lot of work. It took a lot. But it certainly took a lot of work,
it took a lot of time, it took a lot of
trust from our coworkers as well.
Yeah. One of the most formative experiences that has stuck with me,
and I think I might have mentioned this in the interview before the interview,
was when we were shopping around with business unions,
Rocky and I had sat down with somebody from a fairly large one,
and we're trying to ask all of these questions about,
would we be able to have rank and file control of our own campaign?
Would we be able to legitimately examine
unconventional tactics for launching or sustaining our campaign.
What is the actual process for requesting finances from the larger affiliate if we needed
it? And more or less, what we were told by the staffer was that none of this would be
in the hands of rank and file and it would either be determined by what this particular
staffer thought was
best or, you know, they would have to get approval from, you know, whoever was above
them. Which despite the fact that this person was within the reform caucus of their union,
did not strike them as being anti-democratic at all.
Yeah.
Yeah. And at that point, I mean, you know, we'd been talking to our coworkers for months
at that point, you know, hanging out with them, becoming, building community. And it
didn't seem like there was really anything that, you know, a larger business union would
have had to offer to begin with. In fact, in my own experience, the idea of affiliation has more or less come across as
an implicit threat of how else are you going to take on Nestle without all of the money
and resources that we have but won't let you use anyways?
Yeah, which is like not a thing.
I don't know.
If you've gotten to the point where your union is threatening you and this is something that like happens more than you'd think.
Like, you know, listeners of this show may or may not have listened to some
previous episodes talking to some of the reformed nurses slates that we've, we've
had on the show where that's happened.
But if your union is threatening you, something has gone very badly wrong.
And you're probably, you're in a, has gone very badly wrong and you're probably,
you're in a position where you're probably going to be having to fight yourself out of
a deep hole.
And one way you can avoid getting in there in the first place is by not digging the hole
and building something yourself.
Yeah, exactly.
And I mean, you know, one of the things that we heard a lot about at Labor Notes two weeks ago at this
point was people within larger unions talking about how to fight off staffers or bureaucrats.
And I'm personally very glad that we are not in that fight ourselves because we have
Nestle to take care of now.
Yeah. Yeah, the sort of two-way fight between you, your boss, and then also your union staffers
is not a thing that usually goes well for you.
It's a bad situation to be in.
I would recommend avoiding it.
Yeah.
Yeah, so I guess the next thing that I'm sort of interested in is, you know, so you talked
a bit about how sort of being an independent union like made the union closer.
How else did that influence how the campaign went and how is like how has it been going
in the past?
Like, I know you won your election.
If I'm remembering that right?
Yeah, it was it was an election with sorry it has been this has been the most chaotic
two weeks I've had in several years.
So I mean, it's just like Lenin said, there are years where you fuck around and weeks
where you find out.
Sorry, I'm gonna get so much shit for that comment now.
Anyways.
CoolZoom Media has not endorsed Lenin.
He has made two good lines.
I promise I only said it for the joke.
Yeah, our campaign started April 3rd. Two good lines. I promise I only said it for the joke.
Yeah, our campaign started April 3rd.
There are six stores in the Greater Boston area with roughly 67, 65 workers across all of them.
On April 3rd, 50 workers from five of those stores handed cards, like union authorization cards to management, announcing our campaign, our union, and asking for voluntary recognition by noon on April
8th.
Management accepted the cards, but then did not recognize the union voluntarily by noon
April 8th.
And instead they put up a flyer in the back of house of all the cafes saying that they
would respect the outcome of an election.
At which point, yeah, they didn't even publicly acknowledge us.
So at that point, across five of the six stores, we had a walkout on the eighth.
And then that same day, went downtown to file for an election with the NLRB, which despite
the fact that we called them a week in advance
to be like, is it OK if a lot of people show up
kind of spontaneously to file for an election?
And despite the fact that the person in the office said,
yeah, it's fine, so long as it's less than 100
and you don't have a soundstage or anything you gotta set up,
and if you do, get a permit.
Once we walked up to the office,
at least four DHS cop cars
like swum in front of us. They would only let Rocky go into the office to file for our
election while being escorted by a DHS agent the entire time.
You know, sometimes you get just these, this is something that's been happening. So like,
I have no idea when this happens is going to go out. This is being recorded in the middle of the protest. Like
literally today, 70 year old professors are getting dragged out of like protests by cops.
But like, this is one of these moments where, when, when, when things actually happen, you get
these really visceral demonstrations of like what the society you actually live in is. And I don't
think there's like a more perfect demonstration of the National
Labor Relations Board sometimes will help you, but also is very clearly a bureaucratic
mechanism of a police state. Then the cops show up and only one of you can go talk to
the NLRP person escorted by police. That is wild. Yeah, it was also the same day as the solar eclipse.
Oh my God.
It was a very magic day.
It was a very magic day.
Yeah.
Nothing was more enchanting than the fact that we got to watch the eclipse
when we otherwise would have had to have been at work.
That rules.
Yeah.
Yeah, I guess I guess that's another way to get to get turn out for a walk out.
It's like, hey, look, we're going to go walk.
And also, you could go see the eclipse instead of serving rich people coffee.
And it worked.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah. But all that is to say is I think being independent
lets us do fun and creative things. Yeah.
Yeah. Thank you for remembering what the actual question was.
We died all together.
Yeah.
Like, I think we're allowed to be a little silly with it.
And we're allowed to have fun and we're allowed to come up with ideas that maybe other haters
would shoot down.
But when me and my co-creators say, yeah, that would be cool and fun, we just get to
do it.
And I think that there's joy and creativity in all of it.
Yeah.
Yeah, so I guess, you know, do you have anything else that you want to make sure we get to before we sort of wrap things up? Yeah. So I mean, as much as we we talked about a lot of the benefits of independent unionism
one of the downsides is
That we have no money and if people would be so gracious as to give us some of their money
You can go to link
tr. E E slash blue bottle union
So link tree slash blue bottle union where there will be a link to ourundMe. I'll also say that since we don't have staffers,
our overhead is incredibly low.
And this once again allows us to, you know,
actually do cool and fun things.
Like we were able to pay everybody that did the walkout
because we were able to raise enough money
in between from April 3rd to 8th, which was incredible.
I have like some personal stuff when it comes to like filing independent
and talking with a lot of people that I know,
I feel like it actually helped the fact
that we were independent because, you know,
there was none of that background, oh, unions.
There's this big influence when it comes to unions and big scary unions taking all your
money through union dues and yada yada.
With filing independent, we can just be like, actually, we don't have to worry about anything
like that.
We set union dues democratically and like,
and so it's just been like really helpful
for when we were getting organized and everything,
just relaying that idea to coworkers, to family,
friends and everyone just kind of like helps them be like,
oh, that makes sense.
Yeah, I mean, the old like, you know, anti-union talking point of like, you
know, there being an outside organization really falls flat with an independent
union because it literally is just you and all of your friends.
And then on top of that, it also means that management hasn't known how to
respond to us because in the week leading up to our election, which we won 38 to 4 this past Friday, May 3rd.
Yeah. They put out like three or four different flyers.
One talking about business unions that have signed management's rights clauses.
In the most fucking like, I'm not owned, I'm not owned.
I'm still gonna get my management rights clause.
Um, like ever.
And then also another flyer about union dues
and examples of business unions that, you know,
to anybody that doesn't know anything
about unionism would seem high.
Yeah, they also in a letter that they sent out
to all of us the night before our election talked,
complained about us seeking external assistance.
And all of this just completely falls flat.
Because, you know, it's literally...
We've done this mostly by, like, having potlucks together
to talk about all of our issues at work,
or like movie nights or some shit.
And it's much tougher to convince people to vote against the person
that they're on the floor with eight hours a day.
Yeah, the overall, like, way that these papers were received
has been, like, met with kind of, like,
a lot of skull emojis in group chats.
And, like, just kind of, like, generally making fun of the whole thing.
And I think that, like, that's been really good for morale as well.
Because like, you know, it's just not getting to us.
It's goofy and like just doesn't work.
So.
And also the way that they've been handing these flyers out, I don't know about like other cafes,
but at mine specifically, it's been kind of awkward. Like, ha ha, cover my eyes. Here's this flyer
that I have to hand you kind of thing. And it's just like, okay. Yeah.
Yeah, it really seems like it's something, you know, OK, I'm not I'm not I'm not I'm
not going to do my my tangent about the infiltration of political parties here. But yeah, I mean,
really political cults within the greater Boston area continuously subvert and undermine
union elections and not just elections, but campaigns as well. I won't name examples
because these same cults are also incredibly vindictive and they will
try to dox me, but this is also the implicit threat that, you know, like if, you know, they can't turn
a union into their own stupid vanguard, then they will try and push through something that rank and
file don't want and try and undermine or tank the campaign. Yeah. And that's, that's something I
think like to take a, okay, so to take a little step back. So yeah, one Yeah. And that's that's something I think like to take a toke. To take a little step back.
So, yeah, one of the things that's very common in union
in sort of like local union spaces is there will be like
there'll be like a local of a union or like maybe some of his own union
that's just run by a cult.
And these sort of like these sort of like,
I don't know, sometimes for Stalin, sometimes Trotsky, sometimes like it
depends, the ideology changes to some extent. But because because of like, you know, the because you can
run, like a staff union with like five people, right? This is this is a pretty good way for them
to sort of like, like, you know, gain something that looks like political power, and like,
it's a way for them to bring other people who don't know what's going on into, like the influence of the organization.
And they this can get really bad and really dangerous, at least the stuff you're talking
about where, yeah, they start trying to sabotage campaigns because they're not, you know,
like these groups aren't actually in this for, you know, like they're not they're not
in this for class struggles, but whatever they will say about it, they're in this for, you know, like they're not, they're not in this for class struggles, but whatever they will say about it,
they're in this specifically to expand the influence of their
own party. And, you know, when you try to like, actually do
your own thing. This stuff happens.
Yeah, 100%. It's also really telling that despite the fact
that, you know, some of these groups
are like known for undermining campaigns in this way or for harassing staffers that, you
know, don't play ball with them or whatever, that they continue to do the entryist thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't have any good ideas for how to subvert that.
But I'm sure dear listeners will send me many of them.
Yeah, I think also at some point we're going to do them like
we're going to do the micro sect episode so we can make a sect episode
to the to like introduce people to the basics of like, hey,
here are like the range of tiny political parties in the U.S.
that are actually cults that show up at protests all
the time.
So yeah, maybe that will help too, because I think a lot of it is people just, you know,
you run into like the world workers party and like, you don't know that this party is
a weird cult, right?
They're just sort of talking about workers stuff.
Yeah, so I think education will help with it too, but the bureaucratic
maneuvering stuff is like the only thing they're good at because they're all these like weird
micro party formations. So I don't know. Yeah, 100%. I only way that I think might help
is, you know, horizontalizing the structure somewhat, but then you still run into like
the issue of social
capital within that structure. So if somebody is savvy enough, they can still indoctrinate
people into a silly cult.
Yeah. I mean, I don't know. That's just something that you're going to have to... I mean, we
should also mention too, these things, these groups, they work with larger unions too sometimes. So one of the most famous examples of this is Pride at Work, which is a really big AFL-CIO
thing, but it's also jointly run with the Party for Socialism and Liberation, which
is another one of these cults because of a bunch of long-running actions, even though
a bunch of their really senior staffers are unbelievably transphobic and there's a whole
thing there. But yeah, this is something that is not just a problem with independent unions
and not just a problem with sort of like random locals. It can and does get into actual like
national unions. On the other hand, one way to avoid this is to in fact organize your
own union and don't let them in.
This is actually something that we've thought consciously about organize your own union and don't let them in.
This is actually something that we've thought consciously about with our own union is that on the,
we sent out a community support form
for people that wanted to show up the day
that we announced our campaign.
And on the form specifically, we made people tick a box
saying that they wouldn't endorse or try to flyer for
or otherwise promote any group
that they might have affiliation with, including political parties or, you know, otherwise
organizations that are not, you know, our specific union. And so far that's worked.
Oh, yeah.
I would also say like in our constitution bylaws, I don't know if that if it's in the current ones, we're revising them soon anyways, but it's a conversation that we've had before, also like people in like e-board positions.
What kind of affiliations can they have to outside political parties? Like where are we drawing the line on that?
Like that's something that I think we also considered very early on as well for people in the union. Yeah, and I think there's another aspect there too, which is like the another thing that
can happen to your union is that it gets eaten by the Democratic Party machine.
And that's happened to I mean, like this is this is a lot of how like these giant business
unions became business unions as they became basically these like lobbying firms on behalf
of like whatever random like local Democratic machine is running.
Like this happens in Chicago like all the time.
You get these like just like the most important machine like candidates you've ever seen come
out of the Democratic Party who are like guys who are like so comically corrupt that like,
you know, you're like walking down the street and like bundles of cash are falling out of
the suitcases and they're getting endorsed by like the Teamsters.
And it's like, well, you okay, I wonder I wonder what happened there
Legally legally legally conjecture, but you know
Who's to say really yeah
It just so happens that they have these large briefcases full of cash nobody can really say where the cash materialized
Yeah, but amazingly I was actually to go on a different rant about political
parties. So I'm going to circle back to there to close this out, which is one of the nice
things about independent unions is that, you know, it's something that all three of you
were sort of getting at, which is that like, employers have been fighting these sort of
large corporate unions, large business unions for like a hundred
years now, right? They know how they operate. They know how their campaigns work. They know
what levers to push against them. On the other hand, they have not been fighting you specifically,
random listener of this show. And you specifically random listener of this show and your coworkers
can do things to surprise them and can do things in ways that they don't understand. And you know, you have, we have a moment like right now, like in like five years,
they'll probably have worked out a bunch of stuff about how to break independent unions.
But right now, like literally right now, we have a, we have a massive strategic advantage because
their playbook wasn't written to deal with people who are running these sort of like,
because their playbook wasn't written to deal with people who are running these sort of like very low to the ground, very agile, very nimble, very sort of like, you know, these
spontaneous and creative campaigns. And you can use that to beat the crap out of your
boss and get more money from them. So this is the B.A. endorsement of doing fun things
with unions that your bosses don't expect.
Hell yeah.
Yeah. So I think unless there's anything else, where else can people find you?
We'll have a link to your link tree in the description.
Is there anywhere else like social media stuff where people can find the union?
Yeah, our social media for Twitter and Instagram is BBI Union.
And on TikTok, I believe it is BBIU16.
Cool, we will have that in the description too. Yeah, and thank you all so much for coming on and
yeah, make Nestle bleed for us. Yeah, thanks so much for having us. We can't say how much we
appreciate it. Yeah, thank you.
Of course.
And yeah, this has been It Can Happen here.
You can find us in the usual places.
And yeah, you too can also go start your own union and make your bosses suffer. Bean Dad, the dress. 30 to 50 feral hogs.
If you knew what any of those were, you spend too much time online.
And hey, I do too.
16th Minute of Fame is a new weekly podcast hosted by me, Jamie Loftus, where every week
I take a closer look at an internet character of the day.
Who were they?
What made them so notorious?
Why did the internet choose them? And what does a person do when they're suddenly confronted with
more attention than the human psyche can handle? I'll be talking to internet historians, experts,
and yes, the main characters themselves to get a fuller picture. Because I think that even outside
individual experiences, a character of the day tells us something about how the internet worked at that time
and how the attention economy developed
into the freaky three-headed dragon it is today.
Together, we probably won't be able to properly log out,
but we can take a walk down scary internet memory lane
and see one day a little more clearly.
Listen to 16th Minute of Fame on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A new season of Bridgerton is here. And with it, a new season of Bridgerton the Official Podcast.
I'm your host, Gabrielle Collins, and this season, we are bringing fans even deeper into the Ton.
Colin Bridgerton has returned from his travels abroad.
Is betrothal written in the stars for the eligible bachelor?
Meanwhile, the Ton is reverberating with speculation of who holds Lady Whistledown's pen.
We're discussing it all.
I sit down with Nicola Coughlin, Luke Newton, Shonda Rhimes, and more to offer an
exclusive peek behind the scenes of each episode of the new season. Watch season 3 of the Shondaland
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Subscribe to catch a new episode every Thursday.
Hey fam, I'm Simone Boyce.
I'm Danielle Robay.
And we're the hosts of The Bright Side, the daily podcast from Hello Sunshine that is
guaranteed to light up your day.
Every weekday we bring you conversations with the culture makers who inspire us.
Oh, like a recent episode with Melissa Joan Hart.
LL Cool J gave me some great advice. He had all those gold chains and I was like, wow,
look at all these diamonds. And he said something to the effect of don't waste your money on
something like this. Buy a house. Like he gave me like solid investment advice where
I was like, save my money. Got it. Listen to the bright side from Hello Sunshine on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here.
I'm Robert Evans and this is a podcast about things falling apart.
This week, the thing falling apart was my bedroom.
Allow me to explain.
Three years or so ago, I was finally able to buy a house
or at least, you know, get a mortgage.
This allowed me to achieve a very stupid lifelong dream,
which was to finally own a waterbed.
I know you're wondering what all of this has to do
with solar power, and I swear there will be an answer
to that question.
I also want to make it clear up front that this is not an ad.
Some of the equipment I tested was provided for free as review units, some of it was purchased
with my own money, and some with company money.
I'll try to make it pretty clear at each point, but I promise it doesn't matter, are
we my opinions on any specific product.
No one paid us in any way for their inclusion in this episode.
Anyway, back to
my stupid waterbed.
The first thing to know about waterbeds is that they are surprisingly cheap. They cost
about as much as an equivalent sized mattress knew. So, not cheap, but the one I bought
cost the same as any delivery mattress sold for, and cheaper than some of them. The reason
that most people can't afford a waterbed is in the actual cost of the bed
itself.
It's that landlords are terrified of the things and so you can't get one if you don't own
your own home.
In case you're curious, my desire to own a waterbed is entirely the result of the fact
that, as a small child, my aunt and uncle fell upon hard times and had to live with
us for a while.
Then, for another while, they lived elsewhere, but their stuff stayed with us. That stuff included a waterbed, and for a few glorious
months it was MY waterbed. I have craved the insane high of waterbed ownership ever since.
For three perfect years, then, I slept in wavy comfort until, about two days before
I wrote this episode, my bed sprang a pinhole leak. I don't know how. You
might guess a cat, but the actual bladder that contains the water is inside and underneath a
very thick padded frame that cat claws can't really puncture. I should also note that the
bladder sits inside a vinyl sort of soft cage so that when it's spraying a leak it got some of
my sheets wet, but it did not cause damage to my home. Anyway, because waterbeds are the kind of product that only an insane man-child would
dare to own, fixing a hole in one is not the same as performing maintenance on your regular
mattress because the kinds of beds that reasonable people own don't spring leaks.
To patch the leak then, I had to purchase a patch kit, but you can't apply a patch
kit to what is effectively a soft bladder filled with roughly a metric ton of water.
I did do the bare minimum of research here, and king-sized water beds weigh around 2,000
pounds.
Now that's not all water weight, but it is basically all water weight.
I bring this up because I'm proud of myself for guessing right.
So to apply the patch, we had to first drain the bed, which necessitated attaching a hose
to one of the spigots through which we had originally filled the bed.
Because of the layout of my home and the ground outside of the window where we intended to
pour the water, we couldn't get the hose started without assistance.
The kind of assistance that you would say, need to suck gasoline free of a stranger's
truck, were you hard up for fuel money.
Thankfully, my roommate had a wet vac, which we were able to hook up to the hose.
But how to power the wet vac?
Well, we could have run an extra long extension cord, but mine were all in use for various
insane projects around the farm, and instead I opted to wheel out the solar generator that
I had filled with the beneficence of the SunGod RAW just a couple of days earlier. The generator was one of two similar products I tested for this episode, a Jackery SG2000+,
which had been sent to me by the good people at Jackery.
In previous weeks, I'd tested it by powering my deep freeze and a refrigerator, and in
case you're wondering, with the panels outside in the sun, I got a little over a day before
things ran dry on my refrigerator.
If I'd had the panels in a better position, I could have had longer.
And the deep freeze, it would have been able to power essentially indefinitely because
deep freezes are actually insanely efficient machines.
I also used it to run a heat gun for my friend's art project, which is about as intense a test
of output as you can run a battery through short of powering your home, and it handles
that.
In terms of specs, this battery is part of a more modular system that you could wire
in to power your home or off-grid setup.
You can actually attach this to your breaker.
It has a maximum output of 6,000 watts in parallel connection and 120 to 240 expandable
voltage.
For a rough idea of what that means, it can power most household electronics and even
power tools for a while.
You'd get about one and a half hours of running a home AC unit and more like two, two and
a half, you know, with a portable unit or a window unit.
You could charge this thing to full in two hours with good sunlight if you had six 200
watt panels attached in perfect sunlight, which is another $3,000 or so in panels.
But that's not an insignificant thing to be able to do.
Mind you, that would mean just running your AC most of the day and nothing else.
Neither of these are cheap products.
In Jackery's case, the battery itself runs about $2000.
I understand that's out of reach, perhaps wildly so for a lot of people.
We will be talking about cheaper options at the end, but it is an unavoidable fact
that unless you are a skilled electrician and scavenger, setting up substantial solar systems
costs money. Period. Jackery actually represents one of the more affordable options for a plug and
play home backup system that is also portable, i.e. can be taken camping or hauled away with your shit
during an evacuation. I should note that you can connect the Jackery SG2000 Plus directly to your breaker and also
connect the battery to other similar Jackery battery generators to get additional capacity
and output from it.
I tested another solar generator system for this episode, the Geniverse HomePower O2,
which was provided to me by Geniverse.
Both the Geniverse and Jackery systems are similar enough that they can use each other's
solar panels and operate in basically the same manner.
Jackery's product is cheaper.
Other reviews I have read suggest the Geniverse system might be more robust, lasting longer
over time.
It is certainly heavier and thus has a higher capacity, around 2400 watt hours as opposed
to a little over 2000
for the Jackery system.
Both of these can be the basis of an off-grid or full backup power system for your home,
and we'll be talking about home off-grid power in future episodes.
I want to make clear up front that what I am advising you on today is the quality and
utility of different solar generator battery products for emergency power.
So let's talk about what emergency means.
The primary emergency you might encounter that a battery solar setup would help with
is a power outage at your home.
In that case, you have a couple of immediate and real needs.
I will list these from most basic and easy cheapest to fill to most expensive and difficult
to meet.
Number one would be to keep your devices and stuff like flashlights that are chargeable
topped off so you can keep in contact with your community and stay aware of breaking
news on whatever emergency you happen to be in.
Being able to entertain yourself with books and movies does, in my view, count as one
purpose for these systems in an emergency, because morale ain't nothing.
Number two is being able to run emergency cooling devices, starting with fans and terminating
in stuff like window AC units or even portable camping AC units.
Number three is being able to keep a fridge going, so your food doesn't spoil.
If you're prepping for disaster, you should have storable food, anything from freeze dried
stuff to beans and rice, etc.
But losing all of your shit in an outage is expensive and annoying, and it's nice to be able to avoid. The most achievable of these systems for a person
of normal income is number one. And if you have disposable income at all, you can afford some sort
of emergency solar setup to keep your phone or laptop and rechargeable lights going. There are a
wide variety of battery packs that have solar panels built into them.
I have tried a lot of these over the years, and I have never once been happy with the
quality, either of their ability to charge in the sun or to last over time.
The system that I currently take with me on trips is made by a company called Goal Zero,
who produce a variety of solar battery and charger products.
I purchased for myself a Nomad 13 solar panel set, which folds into something that approximates
the size of a trapper keeper set you had as a kid in school.
I've had this for years.
I take it with me on every flight as my carry-on.
I have it and two batteries, which are different incarnations of Goal Zero's Sherpa 100 on
me wherever I go.
The Sherpa 100 has a little three- prong outlet you can charge basically any laptop
on it.
You could even do like emergency power for a computer, I think with it.
This and one battery would allow me to keep my phone going for emergency purposes indefinitely.
Two batteries ensures I'm able to travel with roughly three or four working days of power
for my laptop and phone wherever I go.
And that's without me actually trying to recharge them using the panels.
You can find various years of this battery model on Amazon or at other retailers from
$200 on up.
The latest model retails for $300 off Gold Zero's website.
These batteries are TSA approved, as are the panels.
I have never had an issue flying with them.
Obviously, in different countries, your experience may vary, but I've taken
these things to most parts of the world.
And again, I haven't had an issue.
They have varying sizes, but the Nomad 100, which is a hundred
watt hours runs about 300 bucks.
So you're looking at five or $600 for this traveling setup, which is also
great to keep in your home and just have less a bit, you know, if you find
used versions on eBay or wherever, which is often possible.
That's not an insignificant cost, but if you're building an emergency kit over time, most
people are capable of bearing that cost again over time.
You could just start with the battery, which is the most initially useful part of the kit,
and then you could get a panel set six months or whatever a year later.
And this brings me to what I'm talking about.
Quantifiably, when I discuss a disaster and
what you actually need when we're talking about emergency power in a disaster.
It is uncommon for the average US consumer to lose power for more than an hour or two
at a time.
In 2018, most consumers lost less than two hours of power per year without quote major
events.
With major events, that number leapt to six hours per
person per year on average. In 2017, it was closer to eight. As we deal with more climate change,
more natural disasters, all of these things are going to become inevitably more common.
These are also all averages of huge numbers of people in huge areas of terrain. I will guess
that the percentage of people
listening to this who have, as adults, lost power for a day or more at a time is very
close to 100%.
Now, given the averages, you might consider just perching battery power units without
solar panels.
Because in most instances, what you're trying to do is ensure that if your phone is dead
and there's a bad storm and you run out of power by the time you get home, a two or three hour outage doesn't leave you unable to contact your people
or emergency services. I have a fuckload of different portable batteries because I try to
keep enough in my work bag wherever I go to function in my job for most of a week without
power when I go on trips. This kind of preparation has stood me in good stead in places like Syria,
Iraq, and the desperate wilds of Seattle that one time.
But if you're not going to such terrifying hellscapes, you can probably get a suitable
battery that's reasonably tough for under $100.
And we will continue talking about batteries and talking about next kind of home solutions
and eventually cheap solutions.
But you know, what's not cheap is the products and services that support
this podcast.
Affordable, but not cheap.
Anyway, here's these ads.
We're back and we're talking about portable batteries, right?
And my only note here is that if you're buying portable batteries, you know, stuff not necessarily
to run on solar, just to have some extra juice with you wherever you'd go to keep it home
in an emergency, these fluctuate wildly in quality.
And when it comes to disaster kit to something that you need to work in an emergency, it
can be worth going with a brand that is a known quantity with a long record and a lot
of testing done on their products, rather
than whatever the Amazon algorithm spits out when you Google battery.
The advantage of a small portable folding setup like the one I have from Goal Zero is
that you can take it with you and have it on demand if shit happens when you're traveling
or if you have to evacuate and it's idiot proof.
A good option if you just want something in your home to keep your devices topped off
is what I'd call a large, small battery generator.
These are a couple of steps below products like the Jackery 2000 or the Geniverse that
I tried, but above the handheld little batteries that many of you have already.
The two examples of this product category that I have and have tested are the Yeti 400
from Goal Zero and the Anker ANKER Solix C800.
The Yeti 400 is the product I purchased with my own money, and it's what I've taken with
me for years into the mountains when I go shooting or hunting, usually with a set of
folding panels.
This ensures that if my card dies and I've been dumb enough to let my jumper box that
I keep with me die, I have a backup that I can use to charge my jumper box.
I also have a convenient way to top off my phone
or my e-reader or my sat phone,
both for normal use and in an emergency.
It handles extreme cold and extreme heat well,
and that's not always something you can take for granted
with batteries.
Again, kind of top of the list is that I am an idiot.
I don't know much about electricity,
and these products are pretty idiot-proof.
When it comes to my Yeti 400 or the C800 from Anker, I keep them both plugged into the wall
at all times so that I can grab either for an emergency.
Now the Solix C800 that I have was sent to me as a review unit by Solix, and by necessity,
I have not been able to subject it to the years of rigorous real-life testing that my
Goal Zero Yeti 400 has endured.
I will note that it is well reviewed, and from the exploration I have done on it, which
does not include years of testing but does include a decent amount of reading and some
testing, I think it's better constructed and more conveniently laid out than the Goal Zero.
And it also gets you about twice the storage, nearly 800 watt hours, as opposed to a bit
over 400.
Both products cost the same price, around $600, although older generations are often
available cheaper online, new and used.
Either is enough to keep a family of fours phones charged for a two or three day outage
without severe rationing.
You might not want to have someone like gaming on an Alienware laptop or whatever with either, but you can charge your laptops and the like off of them.
If you want to like watch a movie at the end of the night, you're all huddled together there in
the dark, that's not going to be something you have to stress out about too much. Again,
the Anker Solix is going to give you a lot more juice to play around with,
but either should be enough for an average outage if you just keep them plugged in.
You can also use them to power a fan during the day.
They will not run small AC units.
These are worth considering as an intermediate option for the more casual prepper.
What you're looking for here is not a full off-grid replacement, but something that can
provide you with options for more than just basic gadget power.
With these big small batteries, you can run a fan or fans, maybe not long enough for comfort, but in bursts throughout the day to get you through the hottest part of
the day during a blackout during what we call a wet bulb event. This would be the life-saving
health emergency that a basic solar setup would be most useful in saving you from. For
context in case people aren't up to date, a wet bulb event is a weather situation in
which the temperature reaches a critical level, above 88 degrees Fahrenheit, and does not
drop below that point for an extended period of time. If people lack access to effective
cooling during heating events like this, they will die.
We saw one of these hit a couple of years ago where I live, in Portland, Oregon, which
has been long famed for its mild temperatures, and thus most homes lack central air. During a three-day heatwave, temperatures rose to record highs and did
not drop low enough at night to allow people any recovery time. More than a hundred of
them died. This kind of thing is possible anywhere. If you have central air standard
where you live, the grid can always go down, as we've seen happen in Texas over and over
again. For someone with money, your best bet might be pairing a portable air conditioner like
the Mydea Duo, which ranges from $500 to $600 on Amazon, with something like the Jackery
SG2000 Plus, which with panels and a good sunlight would allow you to run it during
the day at least in a single room.
As an aside, this is actually a case in which someone with a window unit is at more of an advantage than someone with central air. You can connect
your Jackery directly to the breaker, but without expansion batteries, it's not going to run a whole
home long. So you'd want to unplug everything and turn off the lights, running your AC in short
bursts and maintaining discipline with your doors and windows. Ideally putting up foil or at least
cardboard over the windows to maximize efficiency. If you're just being able to run a fan because you've got a smaller unit,
you're probably looking at something like, you know, getting towels and rags, what putting them
over people's chests and faces and kind of getting directly under the fan for the periods of time
that you can afford to run it. Again, we are not talking about the most ideal comfort situations
here. We are talking survival. The limitations I found for are generally twofold.
One is that even with good sunlight,
folding panels like the ones Jackery and Genever shipped me
don't always hit their advertised wattage.
This is because you've got to deal with a lot of other factors.
The movement of the sun throughout the day,
where shadows fall on your home or property,
your access to the roof, how clean the panels are,
and under normal use conditions, it is surprisingly easy to get stuff on them.
On a sunny spring day in Oregon, I found my 200 watt Jackery panels tended to get 120
to 150 watts during the most optimal parts of the day.
I was able to plug the Jackery panels into the Geniverse generator and vice versa, and
I found that Jackery's panels generally performed 10-15%
better during real-life conditions.
I looked it up, and on paper, the Geniverse has a solar cell efficiency, or EFF rating,
of about 23.4%.
Jackery beats them by 1% with an EFF rating of 24.3.
That is not enough of a difference to matter too much.
Although I should note that what I saw in real-life use was a notable difference. You may experience something different with these panels, with any panels that you
get. I can't claim to have tested anything but the ones that they shipped me. The Jackery
Explorer 200 Plus is capable of taking 1400 watts of input max, which would be seven sets
of panels. Although from what the manual says, it can take up to six solar saga 80 panels,
which are their saga 80 panels under
normal conditions.
You can expand all this with added explorer 2000s running in tandem and up to 12 solar
saga 80s on a single generator, but doing that requires some wonky shit with cables
and at that point, we're talking about a system beyond what most people are likely to want
or need.
When it comes to durability, I suspect that both the Jackery and Geniverse are probably
close in functioning.
Online reviews give both systems good user reliability ratings.
In real world conditions, I had the opportunity to do something that you never want to do
in real life with the device you've paid for, which was work one of these systems to
death.
I chose the Geniverse, and the torture test I used basically involved keeping it outside,
charging and providing power at a fairly low trickle for 12 days of intermittent rain and wind in the Pacific
Northwest late winter.
We got about two inches of rain during this time and that was enough to eventually kill
the generator.
But it took close to two weeks of downright irresponsible treatment.
We are talking the kind of neglect you would not subject a product like this to without
no other option.
In subsequent tests with the Jackery, I have been able to keep it operating outdoors in
bad weather without damage through taking minimal measures to shield the generator.
The least I did was stick a plastic Home Depot crate lid above it, literally sat it down
on top of the unit to stop water from just hitting the ports on the sides and back directly.
The most elaborate protective setup outdoors was a simple tarp cover and making sure it
was elevated above the ground.
When it comes to which of these systems would be best for you, the primary difference between
the Geniverse and the Jackery is that the Geniverse is higher capacity.
2419 watt hours as opposed to a little over 2042 for the Jackery.
This means that without input, you can run a normal fridge off the Geniverse for about
6 hours. In GoodSun, you can recharge it fully in eight hours with two Geniverse solar-powered
two panels. The Jackery system will recharge in a similar timeframe under optimal conditions,
and give you a bit less usable power. It has the benefit of being almost 20 pounds lighter,
and significantly friendlier in design. For reasons that elude explanation, the Geniverse lacks a telescoping handle or wheels to help you maneuver it into or out of position.
This sucks because it's heavy, and if it's not wired into your breaker, and you're using this
for an emergency, you might need to move it around so that you can have the panels in different
positions to take advantage of the sun. This also makes the Geniverse less useful
than the Jackery in normal daily life tasks.
I started this episode with a rather ridiculous story about my waterbed, but I've actually found
quite a few tasks at which having a wheelable battery capable of this kind of output is handy.
Basically any power tool that you are likely to own will run off of either of these systems,
but only the Jackery is friendly enough to want to move around outdoors to take advantage of this fact.
And this kind of gets us to the crux of a question some of you have been asking this
whole episode.
How practical are any of these solutions?
My answer is complicated, but I think fair.
If you can't or aren't going to expend the energy to become competent with solar power
to the extent that someone living off-grid would generally want to be, these are exceptional solutions, so long as you can afford them.
In both cases, you're looking at around $3,000 for a setup that could power anything in your
home and would handle all necessary tasks for longer than the length of an average blackout.
The Jackery and Geniverse systems are also future-capable.
You can expand both with added batteries over time and add in more panel capacity, up to a point that makes them quite attractive if
you can afford them.
My personal recommendation would be for the Jackery over the Geniverse for most people
for a couple of reasons. Please note that I received review units from both companies
and money from neither, so I have no vested interest in picking one over the other.
One reason that I chose the Jackery Explorer 2000 is that it is a bit cheaper—1900 for the base system and 479 for each set of 200W folding panels. Compare that to the Geniverse Home Power
2 Pro, which starts at $2299 and $3400 for the generator with two 200 watt panels. The Jackery is also meaningfully
easier to use in recreational situations, so it is a system that the average person
will get more use out of. You can take it camping easily, you can use it for overlanding,
and you can have it ready for an emergency. I will note that if you have a system like
this, you will surprise yourself with how often it comes in handy for simple tasks.
What I like about both systems is, again, they're future compatible. You can start with the base
system and then add a couple of panels, and as you save more money, you can add an additional
battery packs and panels to give you both more capacity and more input with the goal of eventually
storing a day or a couple of days of power and being able to run your home minimally during
extended emergencies.
The shortcoming that you'll find with either system is that if you have a normal home,
it will cost as much as an ice used car to have a setup that could run your house for
extended periods of time, let alone indefinitely. A typical home AC unit can burn something like
14,000 kilowatt hours per day, and that's just half of what an average home draws.
Heating amounts to a comparable draw, So while these systems can be expanded significantly
with additional batteries,
if you're dealing with an outage that extends
past several days, you will encounter severe limitations.
This brings me to the most impressive
but least accessible piece of gear
that I tested for these episodes.
The Anker Solix F3800 portable power station.
This holds about 3,840 watt hours of electricity and can output
6000 watts if necessary. You can charge your electric car or run a welding rig off of this
thing. It can be expanded with additional battery storage and if you had 30 or 40 grand to spend,
you could wire this thing up to power your house for close to a week without sunlight.
The F3800 itself costs $4000000, and you can run two of them
in tandem with 12 battery packs each to power your home for about two weeks for just the cost of,
at this point, a rather nice car. That is wildly out of reach for most people. But if you can afford
it, the Angra is a really cool system. There's been a tremendous amount of thought put into
everything from how the device is constructed and laid out to how you carry it.
I particularly appreciate the fact that you can wheel it like a big suitcase or lay it
on its side, where it has additional pop-out handles to enable you to carry it in multiple
different ways.
All of Anker's products feel premium, and the metal handles that I said pop out are
like metal, they're very solid, everything has a clean interface and what I would describe
as an exceedingly livable industrial design.
If you happen to be one of the people who can consider putting down $4,000 for an emergency
battery, the Solix F3800 will see you through 99% of the power loss situations you are likely
to encounter and require minimal knowledge to set up and get working.
It is easy to attach to your home breaker, and Anker's instructions for doing so are simple to follow. For folks who can afford the cost then, and that cost is
not inconsiderable, it is a great mix of might save your life and will definitely come in
handy. I should also note that the Jackery system has a better pedigree than the Geniverse
system in the industry, probably similar to Anker. They've got a long track record and
are well regarded,
not as an inexpensive solution but as a reliable one with a good warranty and a lot of history
to back them up. All of these systems are, in my experience, reliable and easy to use.
All of them are, and I have to hit on this a few times because it matters, expensive.
That presents a problem if you're someone who sees the value in these as potential emergency
devices but will realistically never be able to throw down $3,000 for them. It would be
irresponsible of me to give you some specific technical advice because I lack that knowledge,
but I have some experience here. And we're going to get to that after this next set of ads.
We're back and we're talking about what you can do, at least a little bit of what
you can do.
Again, the furthest thing in the world from an expert here, but I wanted to at least provide
some starting points from folks who are never going to be able to afford these more formal,
easier to use, idiot-proof kind of situations.
Because while I'm not an expert on this, I have lived off-grid a bit, and I have known
people who have done so in a wide variety of weird situations.
At one point, my partner operated a solar-powered shack that they lived out of with batteries
so comparatively primitive that she had to regularly refill them with water.
That kind of maintenance is going to be second nature to people who know their shit with
solar, and those people have a lot more options than the layman.
Probably the most impressive and cash-neutral setup I saw was in a place called East Jesus
in far southern California.
This was a totally off-grid power setup that kept around 12-18 people alive year-round
and often in tense temperatures, powering AC units and trailers and RVs, fridges, fans,
lights, and the entertainment equipment they used, the Wikes.
Their setup was all scavenged or bought cheap at auction.
The batteries they used, which took up an entire shipping container-sized space, were
purchased cheap from a telecom company in the area, which retired its deep cycle batteries
once they hit 80% of their original functioning capacity.
Panels were likewise scavenged or bought cheap and used. Since they had a lot of space but little money, wiring a shitload of panels of varying efficiency together
was a solution they could afford, both in terms of the money that it cost and in terms of the
space that was required. Most people lack the technical knowledge to set something like this up.
I sure do. And even more of them lack the space. But it is an example of the sort of solutions that
people with little to no cash can cook up if they're clever and knowledgeable about the fundamental technology.
It would be extremely irresponsible if I did not add here that solar setups are the sort of thing
where it behooves you to be exceedingly fucking careful. The chief benefit of the system's Goal
Zero, Onkr, Geniverse, and Jackery make is that they are all as close to idiot proof as they can be.
Part of the cost comes from the fact that they use expensive but extremely stable lithium
iron phosphate batteries.
These have long lifespans.
Jackery rates theirs at 10 years, and a cycle life of up to 2000 cycles.
They have a good standby time too.
Jackery rates theirs at up to 50% charge after 2 years in storage.
A lot of the cheaper or scavenged options you find are lithium polymer batteries.
These are rather infamous for igniting and burning down people's homes.
There are solutions you can find online, and if you're interested in cheaper homebrew
solar setups out there, one place I'd suggest starting is DIYSolarForum.com.
The people there will have suggestions for minimizing risk.
Since LiPo is one of the most dangerous
battery chemistry types out there,
some people build what are called battery bunkers.
One former I've seen this tape
is basically a cube of bricks around and below the batteries
with a ceramic flat sheet above them.
Some people will suggest lacing sandbags above the bunkers
so that if the battery goes into thermal runway,
it will melt the sandbag and pour sand into the battery to stop the fire.
Again, I am not giving advice here, just providing you with an example of the kinds of concerns
that you do have to think about when considering building setups like this for your own.
It is unfortunate that the most financially accessible way to do this is by taking the
research into your own hands and relying on the experience of hobbyists and lifestyle
explorers who have been there before, but disasters aren't fair, and neither
is life.
Another exploratory option I'd suggest is Googling questions like how to run smallroom
AC off solar, or how to run 12-volt fridge indefinitely, comma, solar, and then add Reddit
as a search term.
You'll find threads of people in off-grid, solar, or overlanding subreddits who have
explored these problems for themselves, and their journeys can at least act as a basis
for your own.
I'd like to thank, at the end of this, the reps at Jackery, Geniverse, and Anker who
sent products for me to review.
It was incredibly nice of them all, and from an aesthetic point of view they all make great
gear that is a genuine pleasure to use.
GoldZero didn't send me anything, but I've paid for their stuff for years and I've never
had anything fail in the field.
So I figure I owe them a shout out here too.
And it's going to do it for us at It Could Happen Here for the Day.
So you know, check in tomorrow or you know, Monday, depending on when you hear this, whenever
it drops and yeah, goodbye. Bean Dad, The Dress, 30 to 50 Feral Hogs.
If you knew what any of those were, you spend too much time online.
And hey, I do too.
16th Minute of Fame is a new weekly podcast hosted by
me, Jamie Loftus, where every week I take a closer look at an internet character of
the day. Who were they? What made them so notorious? Why did the internet choose them?
And what does a person do when they're suddenly confronted with more attention than the human
psyche can handle? I'll be talking to internet historians, experts, and yes, the main characters
themselves to get a fuller picture. Because I think that even outside individual experiences,
a character of the day tells us something about how the internet worked at that time,
and how the attention economy developed into the freaky three-headed dragon it is today.
Together, we probably won't be able to properly log out, but we can take a walk down scary
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A new season of Bridgerton is here. And with it, a new season of Bridgerton is here and with it a new season of Bridgerton the official podcast.
I'm your host Gabrielle Collins and this season we are bringing fans even deeper into the ton.
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We're discussing it all.
I sit down with Nicola Coughlin, Luke Newton, Shonda Rhimes, and more to offer an exclusive
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So tune in and subscribe to She Pivots.
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Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
GARRETT DAVIS Welcome to It Could Happen Here.
I'm Garrison Davis.
And once again, it has been happening here
as protest encampments have sprung up in at least 80 college campuses all across
the country as Israel continues its genocide of the Palestinian people and is now currently
bombing multiple sides of Ra'afa.
Last month, students at American universities began protesting their university's ties
to Israel and weapons manufacturers, calling for divestment as well as urging their institutions
to join in calls for ceasefire.
After a militarized police raid at the Humboldt protest utilizing a prison SWAT team, police
departments around the country began cracking down more harshly on the protest encampments.
The day after the Humboldt one, NYPD raided Columbia University and fired a gun inside
Hamilton Hall while trying to use their handgun as a flashlight. The Portland Police Bureau quickly followed suit and cracked down at the encampment at
Portland State University and have since barricaded that library.
As of time of recording, around 2,500 arrests have taken place at college protests
all around the country. Police have displayed incredible violence, sending people to the
hospital with broken ankles and concussions. In many cities, there's been heavy use of pepper spray, pepper balls, as well as tasers. The protests have also
faced violence from a mix of far-right agitators, Zionist counter protesters, and racist frats
that have targeted the protest encampments with physical violence, especially at UCLA.
We here at It Could Happen Here are lucky enough to have correspondents kind of based all around
the country. So I'm joined today by Mia Wong, James Stout, and Molly Conger to discuss our
experiences as people who have been present at some of these encampments all across the
country. I'm going to start by talking about Emory University here in Atlanta, Georgia.
This is a weird one, and I think I'll actually go into more depth in a future episode, but this episode is going to kind of focus on discussions and we're going to kind of compare our experiences.
So, oddly enough, I think Emory was the first one to actually face significant police repression.
Tents went up on the Emory Quad on April 15th.
And that morning there was a heavy police response from Emory PD, APD and Georgia State
Patrol. They fired tasers, there was rubber bullets, pepper balls and over two dozen arrests.
Students and others began to rally later that afternoon to retake the quad. A few hundred
people did so and a small occupation began inside the Candler School of Theology building. M.R.P.D. was pinned up against this building.
GSP arrived as reinforcements and people started to flee.
As you know, you see GSP kind of stormed this area,
but people were able to calm some of those other students down and regroup
and actually hold that position for a little while longer.
Police began attacking students.
A small clash began. There was pepper balls.
People continued to kind of hold that ground in front of the building.
There was students also inside.
As people try to, you know, render aid to those who have been pepper balled
and while maintaining this position in front of the building,
more and more police arrive like a ridiculous number.
And the crowd eventually starts to slowly disperse as police just flood
campus.
Police from all around the greater Atlanta area just flood this very small section of
Decatur, which is a small suburb to the northeast of Atlanta, or to the east of Atlanta, I guess.
Emory president Greg Femmes said the Thursday protest was concocted by outside entities,
which is why Emory PD, APD, and GSP violently disrupted the protest because it was caused by outside agitators, a line that New York Mayor Eric Adams would then reiterate to justify the massive crackdown at Columbia. march around campus. And then this little kind of committee of Emory faculty and staff called it the
Emory Open Expression Committee began to negotiate with the protest. And they quote unquote, allowed
the protest to march around campus. And the small subset of the group began to occupy the Cox Hall
Food Court. And police were ordered to stay out of sight this whole day and a
few of the days after unless the open expression committee specifically called them in.
And what was able to happen is that this open expression committee was able to wield the
threat of police as a deterrent from people taking kind of more militant action or to
actually set up things that would hold down an encampment.
Like if tents were set up, this would result in this open expression committee to call in the police. So this was a very, very successfully wielded threat.
So as the night goes on, the open expression committee does threaten to call police on
the Cox food hall protest, which scares a whole bunch of these, you know, young teens,
early twenties out of out of the building. A smaller group of around 100 people remain
on the quad till midnight police arrive and then everyone disperses. The next day kind of follows a similar pattern.
Open expression and some student organizers over the course the next few days actually
start directing police to detain and criminally trespass people wearing kaffias on suspicion
of them having been engaged in like doing graffiti.
And really just it just allows police to target specific people that the open expression committee kind of just don't want on campus, based on either how they dress
how they're kind of walking, acting, behaving, that sort of thing. And this pattern followed
basically up until the present, people will try to take buildings do smaller protests,
police would either be called or there'd be threats that they would be called, it would
kind of calm the crowd down, everyone would disperse. If tents got set up, that was seen as like a major sign of escalation,
which would result in police being called. And it's kind of the small back and forth.
And eventually, this just kind of led to the situation Emory slowly dissolving, slowly
fizzling out as the people who were wanting to do stuff kind of got pushed more to the
side got pushed out, more and more people began getting criminally trespassed.
And the group of students at Emory just did not want to risk a further engagement with police after the first day.
And that's kind of led to things slowly dissolving.
And that's basically what the situation currently, things have mostly kind of tapered off, school is ending. I'm sure this will be a similar similar thing across the country as the school season is ending.
And these protests and cannons will slowly also just dissolve away as police repression
continues. Let's see, who should we move on to the next little report? James, James stout
from your you went to UC San Diego?
That's right, I did both as a graduate student
and then again as an adjunct professor
and then again as a journalist last week,
which is what we're gonna talk about this time.
So UC San Diego had, it was interesting,
the encampment began on the 1st of May,
but SJP had posted this thing about their big rally was gonna be on the 3rd of May, but SJP had posted this thing about their big rally was going to be on the 3rd
of May, on the Friday, right? SJP is... Students for Justice in Palestine. It's one of the groups
that's organized a lot of these protests across. It depends, you know, where you're at. You might
have the Council on American Islamic Relations. You might have the Muslim Student Association.
You might have both. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Jewish voice for peace. Yeah, yeah, very often they're collaborating,
which is great. We love to see collaboration. So what they did
was they posted that they were going to have a big rally on
Friday. And that that as it turned out was like a fake out
and they actually started their encampment on Wednesday. So they
distracted admin with that Instagram post, which is pretty
clever, pretty funny. And they began this encampment on
Wednesday on the library walk, which is kind of right in the middle of UCSD.
If people have seen, you know, people will be familiar with the UCSD Geisel library from the
film Attack of the Killer Tomatoes, which played an important role in. Yep. I can see the look
of recognition on my colleagues faces. But yeah, that's the only thing that's ever cool that's happened at UCSD. So they set up this encampment. It wasn't huge, but it was certainly a serious
presence, right? And they didn't barricade it or sort of make it defensible. That was
a conscious choice, right? And they did set up a security system whereby they had student security people
controlling who entered and I guess left the encampment. If you really wanted to,
you could... the cops got in, right? Like it was a waist-high vinyl fence. But in theory,
these people were controlling who went in and who went out. And sometimes these people were like asking people to sign up on a sheet.
I think, I hope they stopped doing that,
because obviously that you're sort of helping the cops
make their prosecution case there.
Over the next five days, the encampment was extremely peaceful, right?
There was a focus among this group on not giving any provocation
to police or to admin to any reason
to evict them. So they had some lectures, some speeches, they had some live music, they did some
dancing, all stuff that's like a no way provocation or violent. On the 5th of May, a large counter
protest was organized. Mostly it brought kind of like get off my lawn boomer types. But then also
like some right wing streamers, Oreo Express, or I guess the surviving half of Oreo Express,
Josh Fulfa was there. I think the guy who was first responders, media, Josue or Joe Felix was
also there. These are right wingwing streamers, sadly, like
if you live where I live, you have to be familiar with, right, they do a lot of
border harassment too. They were obviously trying to film and identify students, I
guess. This was on the evening of the 5th. That evening, the Chancellor,
Costler, sent around an email basically saying that what the students were doing
was prohibited, that tents were not included in freedom of speech,
and asking them to disband peacefully.
The next morning, at about five or six in the morning, literally hundreds of cops from several agencies, right?
The UCPD does not have the footprint that we saw.
There was California Highway Patrol, San Diego Sheriff's Department,
and UCPD all in full right gear lined up opposite the encampment. They say that they asked students
to leave and that those who didn't were arrested. And when they're arrested obviously violence was
used by the police as always is. The encampment was destroyed. Everything that was there was
tossed into a dumpster. Some stuff was then recovered. I guess there's now a lost and found for people to recover
there. Things like laptops, right? Like expensive personal items that were swept up. At that
point, people were arrested and then detained in the Price Center at UCSD. The Price Center,
if you've not been on campus, is like a large shopping mall that also has
some lecture facilities, but like it's where the Panda Express is on campus.
It's not-
They're trapped in with the Panda Express, which is a dangerous situation.
Yeah, yeah.
And the Panda Express is not operational, sadly.
More is a shame.
But like it's where they have their dining hall and it's like the center of like corporate
operations on campus.
It's a very bleak place.
So they're trapped in the Price Center.
The students around campus, those who are not in the encampment, then rallied to protect
these students and tried to block the police from loading them on buses and then block
the buses from leaving.
And that's when we saw the sheriff's department using massive amounts of violence, right?
Our sheriff's department still carry just like big wooden sticks. They're not like the black nightsticks, you know, with
like the right angled grip. It's just a giant stick. It's just a big wooden baton. Yeah,
it's the aesthetic of our sheriff's department's riot gear is consciously or unconsciously
something that I associate with the civil rights era and the repression of the civil rights movement.
Perhaps that's a choice.
I don't know.
But that was when the sheriff's department started to become violent.
That's when they brutalized and arrested both journalists and students.
In total, 65 people were arrested.
Protestants then moved down to the two jails.
We have a different facility.
There's a men's jail and a women's jail
and they tend to, they tend to incarcerate trans people with the gender they're assigned at birth.
I've heard about lots of things that happened in those jails that were pretty bad, but I haven't
been able to confirm them enough that I think I'd be comfortable airing them. So people are released,
lots of them are charged with several misdemeanors, trespassing, encroachment,
being at the scene of a riot, resisting arrest, things like that, right?
Two members of faculty were also arrested, 40 people were students,
and at the last time I checked they hadn't confirmed the status of the other 20-ish people.
So that happened on the 6th.
Yesterday, which was of course the the eighth, there was a big march
about 1000 students, it looked like kind of both calling for the UC to divest and calling
for the UC to drop charges and drop academic sanctions. So right now, all the people who
are arrested are facing interim suspension. They're facing eviction from their student
housing, which San Diego, as we've spoken
about a bazillion times, has an incredibly expensive housing market and it's almost impossible
to access affordable housing here.
And in some cases, they're facing serious academic sanctions that could affect the rest
of their academic careers.
Student workers who are arrested are also now not being allowed to work on campus.
So 183 faculty signed a letter asking the university to
not do that. That came out last night. And that's kind of where we're at in terms of what's happened
to these people. I think it's probably worth noting that the UC Riverside settles, right,
that they negotiated a settlement. That's in... to Riverside is north and slightly east of here, east of Los Angeles County. UC
Riverside is is I don't know in terms of student numbers, how big it is, but they
they settled, I think on the Wednesday, so it'll be made a main day the Friday
May the third, I was at the UCSD encampment that day, and I heard them
announce it. And They were beside settlement.
I'm just going to say it didn't achieve some of the more radical goals of the student organizing movement,
no to be divestment, no to be an academic boycott.
They did get the university to publish its investments, which are linked to Israel at least,
which is a step, I guess, and they got a task force.
The university is going to be very willing
to grant you task forces and panels
and things which can turn your radical aims
into a bureaucratic mess, right?
And they got the university to look into removing
Sabra hummus from its menus as well.
Which like, yeah.
The biggest concession was the hummus,
which isn't great.
Wait, that wasn't a joke? I thought you were joking.
No, no, I'm not joking.
No, no, no, no.
Sabra hummus was called out by name.
They didn't...
Snack divestment.
I'm not saying they were...
Yeah, no, no, they're not divesting from Sabra hummus, Molly.
They're looking into doing that in conjunction with their acquisitions procedure.
Yeah, so it's huge dub.
I don't want to undermine what these people have done. It's scary when the cops come to get you. in conjunction with their acquisitions procedure. Yeah, so it's huge dub.
I don't want to undermine what these people have done.
It's scary when the cops come to get you.
Totally.
I understand.
But these are concessions the university is going to give you.
You might get a SNAC task force and you might get their already publicly available investments
listed in one place on their website.
UCSD, the administration claims that the students were unwilling to negotiate.
I wasn't able to ascertain what system they had. I was trying to ask if they had delegates or representatives who were going to be those being different things, who were going to negotiate.
I wasn't able to get a clear answer on that. They did very clearly publish their demands,
right, and the university doesn't seem to have proceeded to any of them. So that more
or less is where we're at in San Diego. There are ongoing panels and press conferences.
I'm going to attend one. So it's going to be one by faculty tomorrow on the 9th. The
faculty have also been organizing, right, in a group called Faculty for Justice in Palestine.
And they've been organizing.
I think it was very impressive that they, like,
accepted student leadership and didn't try and, like, you know,
come in and take a vanguard role or tell everybody what to do.
But they're mostly to facilitate the student protest
and protect it.
So they're having a press conference tomorrow.
So things are definitely ongoing here.
But that's kind of where we're at as of today,
which is the ninth of May.
We will be back in here about the happenings in Chicago and I believe Richmond.
Charlottesville.
After this ad break.
Yeah, for Sabra.
I hope probably not.
Chocolate hummus.
The chocolate hummus is a travesty.
Crime against humanity, yeah.
Alright, we are back.
I have a big bowl of non-Savra chocolate hummus actually, so...
Fuck all of you.
Yeah, in the break Garrison got out there chickpeas in a blender.
It was a really beautiful thing.
Let's hear from Mia about what's been happening in Chicago,
where there's been multiple, multiple of these protests, occupations.
Yeah, so there's been four occupations so far in Chicago.
That it's it's possible.
I don't know. I'm actually kind of surprised.
Like the University of Illinois hasn't like
there have been a few campuses that I thought would go up that haven't.
Yeah. So we're going to talk about three of them
because the other one I didn't get to.
Well, well, well, well, well explain why I wasn't at the school,
the Art Institute one, because that's a shit show.
Sixty eight arrests.
Yeah. Disaster.
We will get to that.
So the first one I was at was at Northwestern.
And I think the other thing that's important about these encampments is that
they're really, really geographically spread out across the city.
So Northwestern is not in Chicago.
It is in is it a like is in a suburb called Evanston is a very rich suburb.
OK, the other thing we should probably get across is these.
The Chicago encampments all started kind of late into this process.
They're not there's reasons for this that I can't get into,
but they're all kind of late comers on April 25th.
Northwestern one starts and it's a really chill occupation
for the most part.
So there's like a police raid on night one.
But then the kids just come back and put all the tents up again.
And then after that, like the Evanston police department is a joke.
Right. Like they're not.
I mean, they've probably done terrible things, but like they're not.
They're not like the police departments in the rest of the city who are like
the guys who teach the CIA how to torture people. Right. Yeah.
And so, yeah, I wanted to talk a bit about kind of the vibes of it,
because it's a very like early occupation kind of vibe. Right. It's I mean, like I walk in there, because it was it's a very like early occupation kind of vibe, right?
It's I mean, like I walk in there.
There's it's a bunch of kids like sitting on tents doing homework.
Yeah. People are sleeping.
There's like people are like eating meals.
Everyone's really happy.
Very similar to people just hanging out in the quad at Emory.
And I'm sure many other places around the country. Yeah.
Yeah, I think I think in everything that that should be mentioned is, you know,
so like obviously these are these are pro these are camps in Saudi with Palestine, right? So you're
you're expecting an internationalist bent this one, like I walked in there and there is a woman
on the stage in the encampment while I say stage and there's a woman using their sound equipment,
which made you quieter. But was talking about the Zapatistas.
And this is the thing you see over and over and over again, right?
It's like, yeah, these are about the chemists that I'm at are,
you know, obviously they're about Palestine, but there's this real
it was very kind of just a deep internationalism there
that's very tangible and powerful.
I mean, like, you know, I was walking through the camp and I was like,
you know, there are kids like reading on the on the lawn.
And I'm like, I'm like pointing out like,
oh, hey, this is that's the copy of the rest of the earth that I have from college.
Like, you know, it's all stuff like that.
It was all very chill.
It like rained on us.
So we spent much time like waterproofing tents.
I think the interesting things about this is that there's a there's a really
kind of wild mix of people there.
It's it's this it's this thing you only really get in social movements
that are like going somewhere where, you know, I mean,
I was running into people from groups like old school, like
like I ran to someone from Students for a Democratic Society.
Like I didn't even know that groups still existed.
Like I thought I did not know that existed either.
Well, so there was there was a second round of them in the 2000s.
I thought they died after that.
But apparently not. You know, so you have these was a second round of them in the 2000s. I thought they died after that, but apparently not.
You know, so you have these mix of people from groups that everyone thought was dead.
Right. Like, you know, there's a lot of sort of very experienced
like student organizers.
There's also a lot of grad students, which is a dynamic.
I don't think it's talked about very much because it's not it's not just like 18 year olds.
There are a lot of people in these camps who have been doing this for a very long time.
And, you know, so you have those people, but you also have people who just
mean, like I talked to people who this was literally their first protest.
Right. It's like the first thing that ever, that ever come out to.
And, you know, there was this very kind of there's this very sort of camaraderie
vibe. What there wasn't was a functional democracy.
And that's that's a very that's the other thing about this encampment
that was very different than the UChicago one, which I'll be getting to in a second.
It's like they there was this sort of.
There was this group that was negotiating with
with the administration, and no one could really tell what they were doing.
Like every once in a while, a representative would come back from them
and you'd hear something.
But in the meantime, everyone is sort of running around
based on rumors, trying to figure out what these people are negotiating.
And it turns out what they're negotiating is an end to the protests.
And basically, the students like, OK, so there's a complicated set of demands.
What actually happens is that all of the entire occupation is taken down after a week.
It's completely gone now. There's nothing there.
What they get from it was the university is
reestablishing an advisory committee on investment responsibilities.
They got like question
that this was supposed to answer questions about holding some stakeholders,
which maybe disclosure may not be.
And they got some stuff that like is real from
for like visiting like Palestinian faculty.
But basically, they didn't get any of the goals of the encampment. Right.
There's no divestment.
There is, you know, a committee that can make recommendations about the investment.
And we'll see if that even happens, because that's supposed to be spun up
back in the fall.
So, you know, they take down the encampment, they get nothing.
They get no leverage and nothing is how you know,
and all of the sort of student negotiators and these negotiators tend to, you know.
OK, so there are also like political splits in the camp, right?
It's kind of hard to get a sense of them just from looking at it. But, you know, if you talk to enough people, you can sort of get get the sense of like
what the splits are right. And Northwestern was sort of split between like the the sort of liberal
negotiation student negotiators who are from a lot like some of the the sort of more liberal
student organizations and the people who want to like,
you know, the sort of like back to this radicals and the maximums radicals get out maneuver because there's just not enough of them.
And so they take the encampment down and the people who were doing the negotiations
had this whole line by we're building power.
This is just the beginning. There's nothing.
There's been nothing else. They're screwed.
They lost everything.
Their negotiating power is gone. They got nothing.
So in the wake of this,
the University of Chicago encampment starts up on the University of Chicago,
complete other side of the city.
Like Northwestern is in like the like the fucking bougiest,
like richest, whitest of the like of like the north side of Chicago,
which is like where the rich white people are.
So they're not even in Chicago, right?
They're they're they're literally like they are.
They are a they're a supper.
The University of Chicago, on the other hand, is smack dab in the middle
of the south side of Chicago.
There is the university bubble.
And then around the university, this is like the heart like the heart of Black
Chicago, right?
Very, very different vibe.
The other thing that's important about this is so the University of Chicago
occupation starts in the context of the massive raids columbia the rate in humble and very importantly the reason you see a.
mass fascist attack on the barricades where, you know, you have people getting beat up in metal pipes. They're shooting, they're shooting like fourth of July ass fireworks,
like directly into, into the people on the barricades. They are trying to kill the
protesters. They beat, they beat a bunch of student journalists, like half to death.
And so University of Chicago camp, when I get there is right in the middle of transforming from
a kind of like Northwestern style. Everyone's getting along like singing Kumbaya camp to like a, a, an
actual fighting camp because I get there and like that day I get there
at like nine, right?
Three hours from when I get there, there were scheduled to be a giant rally of
like right wing frats that is going to go come and attack the encampment.
So the vibe is extremely different.
It is a fighting camp.
Everyone is preparing to fight for their lives.
Everyone knows what happened at UCLA.
And also, everyone knows what happened at Northwestern.
And people are fucking pissed.
People are unbelievably angry that their view
is the Northwestern camp sold everyone out. Sure.
And so, you know, I mean, and the other thing about UChicago that was different from Northwestern
is that UChicago had, has functional general assemblies.
So there are like functional democratic meetings where everyone in the camp goes,
okay, we're going to like figure out what we're going to do.
And these meetings are, people are not happy with,
you know, like they're not happy with what happened at Northwestern.
They're also like really pissed off at the third occupation, which was, well,
I mean, I guess I think the poll happened in the middle of there.
But the third occupation was the occupation at the School of the Art Institute.
The School of the Art Institute is literally right in the heart of downtown Chicago.
Like it is across like it is like across the street from Millennium Park.
It is like across the street from like the Art Institute of Chicago.
It is in like the corporate center of Chicago. Sure.
So they they they do they do when occupation, right?
And inside of like like I think I think they got seven hours
in before SWAT teams showed up, they arrested 60 people.
It is a brutal raid.
They're like the cops are beating people with metal bars.
Like it is it is it is fucking terrible.
It is it is a bunch of SWAT teams beating up art students.
Very switch and harsh to make sure it doesn't become like a continued thing.
Yeah, yeah, because because and this is the thing about
it, but both UChicago and DePaul to less to an extent, too.
But you, Chicago and Northwestern are on basically like opposite extremes of the city, right?
They're not they're not in the middle of the city of the downtown area that like the political elite care about.
It's on the north side and the South Side. Yeah, yeah.
The school, the artists, you like this is literally the middle of Chicago.
And so they like it's very clear orders are coming down from above that this encampment can't be allowed to stay. And so they get the shit beaten out
of them. But this is important for a few reasons. One, it kind of like, it kind of heightens
the fear of police oppression. But the thing that it does is important is that this goes
fucking just like completely backfires on Brandon Johnson and you know, sort of the
mayor of the political administration, because this is, you know, so sort of the the the mayor of the political administration, because
this is, you know, it turns out people are very, very angry
that a bunch of SWAT teams just beat up a bunch of art students with metal bars.
Right. And the consequence of this is that Brandon Johnson, like, refuses to
or at least openly, what he's saying is that he won't use
the Chicago Police Department at at at the on the University of Chicago campus.
The University of Chicago has its own police force.
That's about 150 officers.
It's sort of vaunted as like the largest police force in like the largest private,
one of the largest private police forces in the world.
You know, they also shot a fucking kid while I was at school there.
So, you know, I have a like, deep hatred of them.
But what kind of ends up happening is, so there's that big, the day I'm there,
there's this big, like, confrontation between protesters and counter protesters.
And, you know, the kids form a shield wall.
You said from protesters and counter protesters.
Yeah, yeah. So, like, the frats show up.
There's, like, a huge right-wing media circus.
But the kids have a shield wall, and the shield wall fucking holds.
And the counter protesters can't break it.
They eventually back off.
They're separated by the cops.
And from there, things get weird.
The encampment gets cleared by a raid that probably could have been stopped.
You know, it has, they have one of these 5 a.m. raids.
You can't stop the police.
Well, OK, so the thing I say about this, though, this is this isn't CPT.
This is you, CPT.
They have like 40 total, like the number of people
they can amass at one time is about 40.
So like this or this was the only occupation that like maybe
like plausibly could have actually beaten off the beating off the police attack,
because, you know, if they only have 40 people and you have 600, like
that, that that that's about the point at which it's like plausible.
It's unusual for cops to engage if they don't have the numerical advantage.
That's odd. Yeah. Yeah.
But what happens is that the basically the protesters through through through
like there's a very convoluted process of this, but the protesters
decide not to defend the camp.
So when it gets raided and they'll in like no one is getting arrested,
but they destroy the entire camp. And OK, I guess there's one thing that I probably should have fit this in better
somewhere else but something that's very interesting about both of these encampments and this has been
true of both of the encampments that I've seen is who is like the racial and gender composition of
who's there because these are you know and you can see this like when you when the when the counter protesters are facing off against the protesters, the
counter protesters, they're like exclusively white, like most of them are white frat bros,
white cis dudes, usually. Yeah, yeah. And then in the camps, it is basically like. It is like not it's non white people of all genders and like
non-cis dude people of all races.
Yeah, I mean, very, very, very, very prominently.
And this this is something that I think
is a sign of how the sort of like American political alignment has changed
and the kind of kinds of political alliances that are kind of so normal
now that
we don't even really think about them. But if you step back for a second and look at
what's actually happening, this is this is the this is the actual political composition
of these protests. It's queer people and non white people. And obviously, like people like
me who are both. And I think that's an important thing, because, you know, it's a dynamic of
these camps that doesn't get talked about enough.
But is is the core thing that's happening like political?
Yeah, I agree.
That was the same.
That was the same demographic balance at Emory.
Let's take another break and we'll come back and hear from Molly
and then kind of have a bit more of an open discussion to close things out,
comparing the similarities and differences from our experiences
at these these four different protest encamp, or different cities, I guess.
🎵
🎵
All right, we are back. Molly, you saw some pretty bad police violence at the camp in Charlottesville, I believe, right?
Yes, the encampment at the University of Virginia was cleared on May 4th by Virginia State Police.
It was not a pretty sight. So the students at the University of Virginia set up an encampment on April 30th, on the afternoon
of the 30th.
They had announced ahead of time that there would be programming during the day on May
Day.
So this sudden set up the day prior was, I think, a surprise to the university.
When the students first put their stuff down, they put up some tents.
The police chief of the university police force, Timothy Longo, showed up immediately
and said, no tents. Tents of the red line, take the tents down.
So that first night they took the tents down.
And so for three nights, they slept outside unsheltered
because it was clear from the university
that the tents are gonna be the problem.
That's the only issue that we have is the tents.
You can be here, you just can't put up the tents
and you can't use amplified sound.
You can't be too noisy.
The place where they'd set up was this patch of grass that's...
So if you're familiar with the University of Virginia, there's the lawn.
It's called the lawn.
It's not the only grass, but it's the special grass.
It's the grass between the lawn rooms and the rotunda.
It's like a long narrow...
They weren't on the lawn.
I think that would have been a much bigger problem for the university just because of the optics of it and because students
live in the lawn rooms. So they were actually on the other side of the rotunda in this shady
grassy area between the rotunda and the chapel. So within kind of spitting distance of that
statue of Thomas Jefferson that the Nazis famously surrounded in 2017. So that same
sort of area of the university. So for three
nights they were out there unsheltered. It was pretty quiet. It was a few dozen students
most of the time. Classes had just ended, so they were preparing for finals. They were
writing papers. I think some afternoons they had TAs come out and help people with their
papers, help them study. It was chill. They were just kind of out there vibing. And then on the evening of the third, they held a vigil for the dead in Palestine.
There was great turnout for that. A lot of people came out, students, families, you know,
there were babies there, dogs, like it was a safe place, right? It was a place where
people felt safe letting their toddlers kick a ball around. Like it was not a violent or
embattled environment.
There were babies there.
And they held the vigil and after the vigil, they had Shabbat dinner.
But as the sun was going down, it was starting to rain.
So they put up a pop-up tent to cover the Shabbat dinner, the food that had been set
out.
And it was at that point that they began setting up the camping tents.
And they'd been told all along by the police chief,
you can't put tents up, you can't put tents up.
It's against the rules.
That's when we're going to have to intervene
if you put the tents up.
But every UVA school policy is available on the school's
website.
They have a policy database where
you can search by keyword.
You can see every official school policy.
And the official school policy is that tents are allowed. It's on the website. You can have every official school policy and the official school policy is that
tents are allowed. It's on the website. You can have a tent.
And so now this, you know, the university is saying that this discrepancy as well,
you know, that actually isn't a policy. It was a sort of, it's guidance on the policy,
but it is in the policy database on the policy website where they keep the policies and it
says guideline on it and a guideline, it's a synonym for a policy.
So I think the lesson to take away here, I'm not going to Monday morning quarterback the
student organizers, I was not privy to internal discussions, I don't think that's my role.
I think the takeaway here though is that they're always going to move the goalposts.
The only protest the administration will ever approve of
is one that happened at least 30 years ago, right?
You have to be decades removed from progress to see it as positive.
They never like progress while it's happening.
They never like protest while it is happening.
There's nothing you can do that will be allowed, right?
Because the entire time, those first three days,
when the police were keeping their distance, they were always there.
There was always a sort of like needling back and forth.
Well, you know, can you just can you adjust this?
Can you change this kind of behavior?
Like, you know, you're not breaking the rules yet, but just, you know,
we're watching. Be careful. This constant needling.
And so in the end, on the fourth, when the Virginia State Police showed up,
you know, up until that point, the idea was,
well, the provocation was the tense. The problem was the tense. The police had to become because
of the tense, you know, that the policy on the school's website changed Saturday morning.
Like we have the, you know, the cash on the website, you can see when the PDF was altered.
It was that morning. So it's like, is it about the tense? Did you change
this policy as pretext for the police raid? Because now in the aftermath, since they were
caught out changing that policy immediately before the police raided the camp, they're
saying, well, no, actually, actually, it wasn't about the tense. That's not really what this
is about. This it's because they're saying now that, you know, for men in essentially
black block, right? So for men in black, carrying backpacks with helmets were seen in the area.
They're known to law enforcement. And yeah, I'll be honest with you.
I did not see these individuals, but at the same time, who, who care?
Who care? Who cares? It's public property, right? This is a public university.
You know, this outside agitator narrative, you know,
we had to beat and pepper spray these students because of these mysterious men. But at the same time, you know, this outside agitator narrative, you know, we had to beat and pepper spray these students because of these mysterious men.
But at the same time, you know, the entire time that the students were in the encampment,
they had faculty liaisons from Faculty for Justice in Palestine.
And the faculty liaison were not, you know, negotiating because students were clear that
there was no negotiation, right?
That, you know, they're not negotiating on their demands, but that all communication
between admin and the police into the encampment came through these faculty liaisons. And they
were in constant open communication. And the faculty liaisons are saying, well, if there
was someone dangerous here, if the police had identified an actual danger in this space,
they never communicated that to us, right? That before this raid happened, no one ever
said to the faculty liaison, someone here is dangerous. There's a known criminal here. There's, you know,
this is why this has to... That was never communicated. So I'm not sure these, you know,
four mysterious individuals exist. I don't know. I think that is a manufactured, you know, sort of
after the fact pretext. But in any case, on Saturday morning, the anniversary of the Kent State massacre,
state police showed up. A lot of them all at once.
There was, you know, the local police set up a perimeter around the encampment. And again,
so it had been raining all night. It was soaking wet. Like, I showed up Saturday morning to take
some wet blankets home to wash them because things seemed fine. Things were very calm. Again, there had been babies there the
day before. It was very calm. And so I thought, well, I'll wash their wet blankets and socks
and bring them back and then we can, you know, they can regroup and move forward. And while
I was at home washing wet socks, I heard that the raid was starting. And again, so, you
know, because it had been raining and it was a pretty small protest
to begin with, people are doing their finals, there were maybe a few dozen people there,
like a few dozen at most.
But once the riot cops showed up, people start pouring out of the libraries, hundreds and
hundreds of students come to see what all the noise is about, right?
They come to see what the disturbance is about.
The university used the emergency alert system that texts students, it sends texts and emails for emergencies,
you know, things like a fire or a tornado or a mass shooting, right? A lot of these
students have recent memory of a very serious shooting here that they got these texts for.
These texts are for real emergencies. But they used the emergency alert system to tell
students to avoid the area. So of course course they poured into the area to see what was happening. And so they set
up a perimeter on the camp so the people inside could not get out and the people who came
to see what was happening could not get in. And the Lyon riot cops marched into the camp
and just bludgeoned and pepper sprayed at like point blank range, pepper spraying them
directly into their mouth, nose and eyes.
I think one student was wearing goggles
and they removed her goggles so they could spray her
directly in the eyes while she was already prone on the ground.
One woman was having a seizure,
but they didn't stop arresting her to let her seize in peace.
And they were just sort of dragging her limp body away.
It was very nasty.
And then once they made their, I believe, 26 arrests, they turned on the crowd that
had gathered to watch and they started pushing this massive crowd of students out into the
street.
They didn't close the street.
Like there was a dean on scene who was watching this happen and sort of making frantic phone
calls to try and close the street that the students were being pushed into because it
was an open street with traffic.
And then the frat boys showed up, right?
So you know, students are coming out to see some of them are joining the protest, some
of them are just curious.
And all of a sudden, now there's an entire hillside covered in frat boys.
Some of them have Israeli flags, some of them have American flags.
And there were times as the you know, the police were, you know, I'm very short, about
five feet tall.
So there were times as the police were pushing towards us,
I can't actually see that because the person in front of me
is taller than me.
And I would know the police were starting to advance again
because the frat boys would cheer.
They would start cheering.
And at one point I'm standing next to this older professor,
I don't wanna call anybody elderly, right?
But this was a sort of a grandmotherly professor
who'd been pepper sprayed and was shoulder to shoulder
with students.
And she looked over at those frat boys and she said,
I don't know how we're supposed to teach them.
Yeah.
Like, I mean, I expect a cop to be a cop.
I've been pushed around by a cop before, I'll survive.
But I've never seen a cheering section for
police violence before. And like,
I have a few times and it's one of the most disturbing feelings I've ever had is when
you have police attacking people. And there's a group of like, 20 to 50 to 100 people on
the other side of the police cheering them on. It's it's it's one of the most like, like
death worshiping moments in my life that I've like felt like it's.
It's very ugly.
It's very, very ugly.
Yeah. It reminds me of how like in it's not the same, but like
like in the Napoleonic era for certain battles, it became a thing to go
and spectate and people would sit on hills and watch the like formations move and literally have a picnic
Right and have this
They did it in Turkey in the Battle of Kobani to like people they called it media hill
Until the Turkish police teargassed the BBC guys who were there
Do you know how did you know a
Round numbers for arrests or anything like that?
I believe there were 26 arrests, the majority of them students. One was a professor,
one was a reporter, but a lot of students and grad students. And again, like, I think it's
important to talk about this idea of the outside agitator, right? Because I don't want to get
bogged down and like, Oh, you know, a third of the arrests were not affiliated with the university.
Absolutely.
That doesn't mean anything, right? Like Like Charlottesville is a college town.
Charlottesville is UVA.
UVA is Charlottesville.
It is the largest employer in the region.
It is sort of the iconic focal point of the region.
It's a public school.
People attend sporting events there.
They attend concerts.
They're like our largest local concert venue
is a UVA property.
You know, I did attend UVA and I sometimes speak at classes at UVA.
So like I have some sort of tangential affiliation with the university,
but I don't have to justify my presence there, right?
I mean, that's like saying you can't protest Elbit or Boeing unless you purchase bomb systems or work there.
Right? Right. Yeah. It's ridiculous.
What this enormous institution does with its billions of my tax dollars actually and work there, right?
What this enormous institution does with its billions of my tax dollars
actually is my business.
And if you're going to beat teenagers in my backyard, that is my business.
The university is part as the community shows up
for the university, they change that.
Let's maybe have like a brief discussion about some of this.
I think one thing I was definitely hearing from you, Molly,
is like the presence of tents is seen as like a massive
like sign of like escalation.
Like this is, for some reason, that's where they decided to draw the line.
It's like when tents are going up, that's what needs to be cracked down on.
Which makes no sense because like I said, they've been sleeping there for three days.
Sure.
They're not wanting to be wet.
It's very symbolic.
Yeah.
It's very symbolic.
Like I think if especially if you look at like the images from the Columbia Quad, like
it's a very symbolic thing of like tents is like we are we are like staking territory,
like literally.
Putting down stakes. Yeah. I think like that that has been a massive thing. symbolic thing of like, tense is like we are we are like staking territory, like, literally,
putting down stakes. Yeah, I think that that has been a massive thing. I think it's interesting,
the universities that have and haven't had barricades set up, like there was there was no barricades at Emory, there was no really attempt to put barricades up. And you have like, you know,
pretty pretty big barricades in Portland, of course. And then like humble to being really
the one that was like, no, like you can like hold down a space for like a while if you have like
lots of barricades. We see that we see that in LA and yeah, I know the difference between
the barricades going up and the barricades not and how that that does kind of slows
that does slow a police raid that a slow some police response. And I think one of
that one of that one of the damage dynamics we have there is
like, at least here at Emory, right, we had the first day
people faced a pretty sizable amount of police violence, you
know, there was like, 2028 arrests, a lot of people were
assaulted by police. And for many people, this was their
first protest, a lot of these people were too young to participate in 2020, which is kind of odd looking back on it. But yeah,
a lot of these people were quite young. And this is their first experience of police brutality
in person.
And what a first protest though. I'm trying to think back to like, usually your first
protest doesn't end like this. Sorry, my dogs are going crazy right now, but I, you know, I was, I was thinking about this.
I was, it's just,
I think it's a radicalizing and traumatizing first protest experience for a lot of young people.
I was, I was talking to a young student when I give too much information about her,
but she was quite young, right? It was, you know,
one of her first protest experiences. And she said,
when the cop approached her with something in his hand,
she didn't know what it was.
And she couldn't understand what he was doing or what he wanted from her.
And it wasn't until he raised the object above his head
that she had this realization that he can hit me.
Yeah, not only can he hit me, but he is going to hit me.
That like to have that realization in real time that you are not safe in your body,
that the state will carry out violence against you,
to not have known that before and to find it out as it is happening,
I think is truly horrifying.
Yeah, so we have all these people who have experienced this now for the first time,
and when they return to the campus the next day,
they don't want to go through that traumatic event again.
Like they don't want to.
And so after we saw this in a few cities, but we saw this even in Columbia.
But like after the first police response,
how people behave afterwards on campus can be quite different
because they really don't want that.
And now admin is able to kind of use the threat of police as a very effective deterrent. Being like, hey, if you
keep things kind of chill, no tense, nothing crazy, but if you just hang out on the quad, that's it,
like that's fine. But if you do anything else, we're going to call in those guys again,
and they're going to fuck you up even worse. And like that is very effective in scaring people
away from doing anything. And I think a big thing to navigate here is like how how can you get students to feel like empowered once again to like actually be able to do stuff?
There was this there's this one moment at Emory where some like some other like like more like you know more militant II.
I don't know their exact affiliation to the university.
I don't care.
But since there's some more it's like militant, the more anarchist
people, because it's Atlanta, or like, kind of like, like shaming some of the
students for not like doing more stuff, like, they got on the microphone, and
we're like shaming them be like, Hey, this, this isn't a protest, you're just
you're just hanging out. And like, I, I get it. But also, like, what is that
going to accomplish? I think, I think shaming people for being scared of police is not effective.
You need to help them to feel empowered.
And that's a very different thing to navigate.
And you can't expect their first protest action to be all out militant, nor should you want
it to be.
Sure.
I think one of the things to remember is that what does success look like?
Most of these university encampments aren't going to win divestment.
They all have really similar demands and they include divestment of university funds.
And most of them aren't going to get that.
But I think you can still envision success as these are young people.
They are learning to organize together. They're learning to create that space together.
They are coming together to talk about this issue. And I think that can be success. I don't think
you have to bleed to have succeeded.
No, totally. Absolutely. I think just this being a learning experience for people. And
now you have a lot of both professors and students whose view of police will forever
be different, which, you know, in the long run, it's probably I would view that as a
it's like a quote unquote good thing, even though it is, you know, in the long run, it's probably, I would view that as a, it's like a quote-unquote good thing, even though it is, you know, it's short-term trauma and possibly long-term trauma.
But like, you have a much more accurate view of how the world works now, especially for a lot of these, like, Ivy League kids who've never, never thought of police as a threat before.
Police is always like a helper.
Right. A lot of these are like, you know, good kids, quote-unquote. helper.
barricades. No, they were they were lying in their tents when the cops showed up.
I mean, right. The lesson is that nothing you can do is acceptable. So you might as well do what you want.
Yeah. And like, keep your eyes.
The other thing I wanted to mention was like, victory looks like a number of
different things in these protests.
But like, you should focus on whatever that is.
And like something I saw among faculty colleagues sometimes like was just like should we get arrested like sure
Should should we choose to get arrested like and like no, no, you should not choose to get arrested like
You know, we always avoid it if you can. Yeah avoid it. It is not an end
It's not a good teacher goal to get arrested on purpose. Yeah, I
Mean this isn't DC where you get you, a ticket and they let you go home.
Yeah, no, this will fuck up as well.
I mean, look, if you're tenured faculty, it will fuck up your life a lot less than
people in other social and economic circumstances, right?
But even in the most privileged possible circumstance, like it fucking sucks.
Yeah, you might be denied access to your medication.
You might be confined in a cell with people who do not identify with the same gender as you.
Right. The cops are going to be fucking mean to you. That's what they do. They do violence to protect capital.
That's why we have a lot of people are getting permanent nerve damage from being left in flexi cuffs
Like even if even if your charges get dropped like you could suffer forever from this
Yeah, and there's you have no you know, it doesn't matter how good your dad's lawyer is or whatever you do. They're the cops
They're gonna get away with it
but yeah, like when I think about the young people, I was talking to people and like,
when I think about 2020 when I was talking to young people, I'm older and I'm 37, like I think
about my own like, you know, growing up as a little kid, like there was the like, the anti-sweat shop
movement, which morphed into the G8 movement, which morphed into the Zapatista Solidarity,
which morphed into the Free Palestine movement,
the movement against the British National Party.
And we got to like step up
until we were fighting Nazis, right?
Because folks, young people who are protesting now,
who didn't participate in 2020,
didn't get like, this was just like a baptism of fire.
Like the people in 2020 got to go out in 2016
for Donald Trump, right in 2017, and wear the little pink hats and walk around in the pink hats,
you know, and they got introduced to the cops and the fact that they are just going to fuck you up
because they want to slowly. But these people didn't, and I don't think we should blame them
for being like, and none of us are to be clear, but like folks, I've seen it too much on the
internet, like don't do that shit. Like teach people to be stronger than the state.
Don't shame them for not already being there.
That's something that happened.
Like I literally watched this like happen at at the Chicago
camp was people like getting ready to have to fight off
like these frat bros and.
You know, like that experience, you know, and this is something
I think is interesting about these protests, too, was like from UCLA, like UCLA was like a pre explicit attempt to try to use these like right wing, like paramilitary people to knock out an account.
And they couldn't do it like they heard a lot of people write like 200 people, I think, went to the hospital or like, literally by medics after it. Right. They heard a lot of people. It was really scary, but they couldn't break.
They couldn't break the barricades.
And that happened in Chicago, too.
It was like they couldn't like it was in Chicago.
Like those those like they're on.
But at nine o'clock in the morning on the day of that encampment,
there were no fucking barricades.
It was just a bunch of tents on a lawn. Right.
And in like three hours, they set up a thing that, you know, still,
I mean, they weren't still weren't really barricades, but like,
you got to watch these kids and, you know, the people who were there like.
You know, like realize that
a group of them can stand and fight and hold these people.
And they and they did it.
They fucking stood there.
They stood their ground. They held them.
They fought. And at the end of the day, the fucking trap roads ran away.
And it wasn't really until... And I think it's been a really interesting element of this is that
these paramilitary groups have been just staggeringly unable to actually beat a
bunch of protesters in this sort of military sense of who holds the field at the end of the fight, they can't do it. And only the
cops have been able to.
And the other thing about that is like, you had, you have a, a more legitimate way to
fight off these like non-state actors, right? Whenever you, they're, because of the nature
of the state's monopoly on legitimate violence, fighting off the police can be a lot more tricky than fighting off these like.
Frat boy groups.
Yeah, like that is that is a very different dynamic.
That was a process that like unfolded.
There was like a lot of people who were like, yeah, we don't want to escalate.
And it was like, well, OK, so like several hundred people are going to show up.
We also have to use UCLA like it has to write like, you know,
I mean like like you can't just keep doing your sort of like we're not
going to engage with counter protesters thing when there's 200 of these
people who are going to try to beat the shit out of you.
Right.
There's I mean, there's choosing not to engage with someone who just wants
attention and then there is self-defense.
I think those are two different things.
Definitely some like you don't, you know, you don't give someone their
viral video that they can put on YouTube
or whatever, but if someone's going to beat you with a stick.
Yeah.
And it's like, like I'm not saying either of them are like right or wrong.
It's just that like, yeah, like you can't, you, you can't use the same tactics and being
forced to defend yourself, like had this real sort of like impact on people.
And like, I don't know.
It's like, like I got to see people just like, I don't know, it's like, like, I got to see
people just like understanding what you can do with the physical mass of a group of people.
And I don't know, it was it was like, it was it was a really emotional experience for like
a lot of the people there. And it was really cool.
So yeah, I think we it would be wrong just to like, criticize these these students specifically for dropping the ball in various
ways. I think the thing that we can completely criticize and point to is a is a is a massive
failure is everyone who has not been participating, how they have been viewing what's going on.
And this this this will be the last thing I talk about, especially even even just like
the media side and just general discussion like Like there's been such a such a singular focus on the campus
encampment like itself instead of like why the protests are happening in the first place,
what's going on in Gaza and just instead just focusing on like, yeah, the actual the actual
thing on campus, but net but but not caring about why these protests are even happening,
willfully ignoring why it's happening, framing all, literally all of the campus protests as inherently anti-Semitic,
as if that is the main driver, and ignoring the many instances where people who have expressed anti-Semitic things
have been removed and pushed out of campus, which has happened in many places. But it's just it's just so lazy to totally reject the reasoning
for why these protests are happening. The framing of trespassing as a form of violence, calling
these encampments violent, as if as if being on campus is violent. And meanwhile, never once
mentioning the actual violence on
display, which is almost solely at the hands of police and these other far right groups.
Friend of the pod, Cody Johnston had a very, very good tweet, quote,
these people who I despise and never agree with should protest the way I prefer, unquote.
Right. Don't, don't debate tactics with people who don't share your goals.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And again, like these people who have like an ideological opposition to every single
thing these protesters stand for.
There were Bush admin people doing this.
Like guys who were in the actual Bush administration.
Just a wild fucking mental gymnastics to be like, it is illegal for you to have your tents
here that is trespassed, therefore we can violently displace you.
Also I stand with Israel. Like exactly.
It's fucking happening in your head.
To remind people of too is, you know, you know, the same like, well,
technically they broke the rules. Okay. Well, technically,
if you're going 20 over the speed limit, the cop can book you into jail.
Would it be a bizarre escalation of force for him to do that?
Do they normally do it? No, they don't.
Right?
So just because just because the police can intervene in certain ways, doesn't mean it
makes sense for them to do so.
Technically, you're not supposed to bomb 40,000 civilians.
Right.
So I think that's really the way.
All of these weapons are illegal under the under under the Lehi act.
And it doesn't matter for shit.
Right.
Because the rules, you know, the police are only only powerful to punish you.
The fact that there's more moral outrage across the country for students protesting a genocide
than there is for 40,000 civilians being murdered is just looking at a deep hole at the at the conscience of this country.
Yeah. Although the thing I will say about that is if you look at the polling numbers on this,
like, yeah, there's like like 47 ish percent support for like banning
like protesters on campus.
However, when you actually look at the numbers, like especially if you look at the numbers
of my college, you look at the numbers of people in general who now
like who now support like ceasing like ceasing sending arms to
Israel. It's been interesting. So like they have been working.
Totally. It's just that the people who control this country is a different demographic than
all the young people who are protesting on campus, right? Which is what we're looking
at. And I think it's also important to remind you that almost every single campus protest
historically has been completely vindicated over time
because they're obviously correct. And if you deny that, who are you fooling?
Anyway, I think this episode's already pretty long, but I was happy to hear a collection of our four different accounts from four different places.
I do want to say really quick before we wrap this up to everyone who says these students are too young to know what they are protesting. They couldn't possibly understand what they are talking about. Fred Hampton was 21.
People forget how young MLK was when he started doing stuff.
And they're young enough for fucking Israel to kill them, right?
Absolutely.
There are no universities in Gaza anymore. Like, it's just ridiculous. They're also young
enough to join the IDF or any other military and go and kill people.
It's a ridiculous argument.
Like, you don't have to be able to-
Just go out there and talk to these students.
They know exactly what they're protesting.
They know exactly what they're talking about.
A lot of them are actually fairly well versed on the minutia of what divestment means and
what that looks like and what the fiduciary duties are.
Like, they're not stupid.
They know what they're talking about.
All these dumb college-educated youngsters.
All these idiots at Columbia.
Anyway.
Some of these fucking nerds at UChicago.
It's like...
We don't talk about Palestine enough in classes.
Like, I teach a lot of world history classes.
It's certainly not on the little boxes you have to take.
And some people came to the encampments to learn.
And that's fucking great, too.
And some people taught people.
And that's great, too.
Like, it's a place where a lot of learning happened,
and people became more informed over time.
But you don't need to have a PhD or master's in an area
to understand that bombing children is bad
and want it to stop.
We had a world war about this.
Like, genocides are bad.
So this will be a topic we continue to cover on the show
over the course of the summer.
We'll be having, I'm planning a deep dive about what happened at Emory. Margaret has an upcoming episode about how
people who were engaged in campus protests can stay involved over the summer. And of course,
we will continue to talk about what's been happening in Gaza. Thanks for listening.
Solidary to everyone who's out there. Flush your eyes with water.
Flush your eyes with water. Flush your eyes with water. Yeah, OK. No milk. Finally learned.
The Dress
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And hey, I do too. 16th Minute of Fame is a new weekly podcast hosted by me, Jamie Loftus,
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Hello, and welcome back to It Could Happen Here.
I am once again your occasional host, Molly Conger.
Joining me today for a very special episode are my friends and yours, Shereen and Mia.
So Shereen, Mia, we're here today to honor and reflect upon a very somber and important
holiday.
It is May 15th as we are recording this today,
and today is actually recognized the world over as Nakba Day,
a day to remember the first Nakba,
the founding of the State of Israel
and the forced displacement of the Palestinian people.
And this year, as a new Nakba continues,
as the genocide is being committed
against the Palestinian people,
it's more important than ever to remember
that these atrocities did not start last year.
But that isn't the Memorial Day I invited you here to talk about.
Here in the United States, the holiday officially on the books today is not Nakba Day.
It is National Peace Officers Memorial Day.
In 1962, President Kennedy signed a proclamation establishing May 15th as National Peace Officers
Memorial Day and the week it falls within as National Police Week. It's an entire week to honor and commemorate the brave boys in blue who've lost their
lives in the line of duty. And I can't think of a better way to spend this afternoon with
both of you than to talk about how this holiday is celebrated and to share some of these incredible
stories of courage and sacrifice.
So one of the most frequently cited sources during Police Week and year-round when you're
talking about the mortality rate of police officers is a website called the Officer Down
Memorial Page.
Highly encourage you to visit it, make an account, browse the pages.
The website is run by a non-profit organization by the same name and has had tax-exempt status
since 2000.
According to their IRS Form 990s, the tax form that
tax-exempt nonprofits have to file annually, they're pulling in around $750,000 a year,
a third of which goes directly toward executive compensation.
And why shouldn't someone make a quarter of a million dollars annually to do such important
work? Public records show the website's founder, Chris Cosgriff, is a police officer himself
in Fairfax County, Virginia.
Available salary data from 2018 shows him making a policeman's salary of about $69,000.
According to his LinkedIn page, Cosgriff still works for the Fairfax County Police Department
as a recruiting supervisor.
The Officer Down Memorial Page tax documents show he paid himself a paltry $24,500 in 2023
as the executive director of the nonprofit, though they list key employee compensation
at an expense of $250,000 that year, with no indication of who is being paid that remaining
$225,000 or what that person's position is.
When the organization received a $30,000 PPP loan in 2020,
they indicated on their loan documents
that there were five employees at the organization.
I'm not an accountant,
so I won't hazard any kind of guesses here,
but I am having trouble making sense of that 2020 Form 990,
which lists five company officers by name,
and only Cosgriff is drawing a salary.
He paid himself $50,000 that year.
So that same document from 2020 shows that the organization had expenses of
$200,000 for compensation of officers, but it doesn't say where that remaining
$150,000 went. Hmm. I wonder.
Curious. Maybe they have a secret employee that they're not counting.
His son, his wife, his other wife.
The website indicates that donations to the nonprofit go towards maintaining the website,
making posts on their Facebook, maintaining the site's companion mobile app, and historic
research claiming that their staff, again those five people, have uncovered records
of over 2,000 fallen officers that otherwise would have been forgotten to time.
The site has memorial pages for officers who died as far back as 1776.
So it's as old as America.
That's not real.
It's not.
We didn't actually really have what is considered modern policing back then.
So they're really kind of stretching definitions.
Are they including like people that went after slaves?
Like, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
Yeah, they are.
Pax collectors.
Yes.
All of you.
Like we're stretching this a lot.
Yikes.
I don't know if you want to go that far back, but I mean, do you?
Donations also help fund their No Parole for Cop Killers program, which tracks the cases of the people they call convicted cop killers,
and flood local parole boards with letters advocating against release.
The donation page claims to have sent out over 10,000 such letters
in the last six months alone.
They also have a merch page where you can buy a lovely trio
of thin blue line Christmas ornaments in a gift box
for the low reasonable price of $60.
Geez. Out of all the things I thought you were going to say, I did not think you were going to
say Christmas ornaments. Oh yeah. Beautiful. Beautiful memorial ornaments. You can get them
customized. Wow. The site lists information about American law enforcement officers,
prison employees, and police dogs who have lost their lives in the line of duty.
Kind of.
See, while the website is the source cited in every local news puff piece when May 15th
rolls around every year, putting their version of the numbers in the headlines, the organization's
stats don't match those in the FBI's annual report on the subject, an official annual
report called the Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted, or Leoca, report. The data used by the FBI is collected as part of the Uniform Crime
Reporting System. If you take just a minute to look at the Officer Down Memorial page's annual
data, the reason for this mismatch is immediately clear. They're padding their numbers by including
deaths by natural causes, on-duty deaths due to accidents or incidents unrelated to the officer's duties, and they're including law enforcement adjacent personnel that the
FBI does not consider to be law enforcement deaths in their reporting.
The FBI's Leoca report has really clear criteria for inclusion. To be considered a law enforcement
line of duty death, the deceased must have been a duly sworn law enforcement officer
acting in their official capacity at the time of their death. So they have to be a real cop, somebody who carries a badge
and a gun and has full arrest powers. And the FBI specifically excludes death by natural
causes like heart attacks or COVID, deaths that occurred on duty, but quote, attributed
to their own personal situation, such as domestic violence, neighbor conflict, etc. Which like, they have to list that by name.
If you die doing a domestic violence in uniform, that doesn't count. How often is that happening?
Yeah, I hope people who killed them are getting parole. Like, good God.
Right, like if your wife kills you while you're beating her, but you're on the clock,
the FBI says no dice. They also specifically note that
they do not include corrections officers, Bureau of Prisons officers, bailiffs, judges, probation
and parole officers, or US attorneys and assistant US attorneys. So just cops, not the people who
sort of work in the industry around them but are not cops. Not people that basically are cops,
like actual cops. Actual cops I mean? Actual cops.
Yeah.
And the FBI is really aware, clearly, that the numbers on the ODMP get cited more often
than their own because the FBI's crime data explorer page offers this weasely little caveat.
Quote, the FBI's Leoka program is one of a number of entities that report information
concerning line of duty deaths and or assaults of law enforcement officers in the United
States. Each organization has its own purpose and may use different methods to collect and report
information or focus on somewhat different aspects of these important topics. Therefore,
care should be taken not to compare Leoka data to data provided by other entities such as the
Officer Down Memorial page. So they're specifically saying, we know these numbers don't match. We know
these numbers don't match because a few years ago, we gave them a few hundred
thousand dollars in grant money to make numbers that are fake.
Wow.
Incredible.
Wow.
So the ODMP is padding out their numbers with off-duty accidents, prison guards, parking
lot heart attacks, and COVID deaths.
The database includes nearly 900 COVID deaths, causing massive statistical anomalies in their
2020, 2021, and 2022 data.
They include officers who died of natural causes years after sustaining minor on-the-job
injuries, which, you know, if you're involved in a civil lawsuit after the death of a loved
one, you could maybe argue that this was sort of a downhill kind of thing.
If you're trying to get a settlement from the state, maybe you could say that the injury sustained
contributed to the death.
But that's, you can't tell me that slipping
in the parking lot and then dying six years later
is an experience unique to the dangers of law enforcement.
A district attorney who flipped his car
after hitting a log that fell off a truck on the highway
on a Friday night is not a law enforcement line
of duty death because that not only was that not a cop, it was a single car accident. And when DeSoto County
search and rescue director, Deputy William Nichols, went on a beach vacation and took his family into
the ocean despite red flag riptide hazard condition warnings, he lost his life trying to rescue his
son. And that's very sad. But drowning on vacation is not
a line of duty death. When Indiana Department of Natural Resources Sergeant Ed Bowman and
his friend drowned in the middle of a frozen lake while ice fishing. That wasn't a line
of duty death. It's just a sad accident while dudes were hanging out.
These people, they really, they really should have a bad time around water.
This seems to be a consistent thing.
The cops don't float.
There is a shocking number of drowning deaths where the cop just like, the second his feet
got wet, he just disappeared.
Don't get them wet.
It's not a gremlin situation.
You have to include swimming in the cop test, right?
I don't know.
I mean, these people barely know how to point their guns, like, expecting them to be able
to swim is...
The standards are...
That's a bit too high of a standard for them.
Wow.
I mean, to be fair, most of these deaths are single car accidents.
One guy died after t-boning a school bus.
The children were fine.
The children were fine. The children were fine.
Oh, thank God.
Okay.
Thank God.
Wow.
And so rather than a detailed statistical analysis relying on uniformly reported official
data, the ODMP relies on user submitted content.
So people are submitting things and then allegedly-
This is like Wikipedia.
Yeah.
Wikipedia for bootlickers.
No.
No, no thanks.
But when National Police Week rolls around, it's their inflated numbers and every infographic,
not the FBI's methodologically consistent data.
And if I'm being generous, you could write that off on the ease of access to the data
on ODMP.
It's very user-friendly.
It shows you a little picture and a bio of each officer.
It's very easy to use.
You can search by year, agency, cause of death, state, or an officer's name.
It's not a wall of small text with little data tables and links to zip files of more
data tables.
The FBI's report is ugly and it's uncompelling and it's sort of overwhelming to navigate
if that's not something you are interested in doing.
So don't want to be too hard on the 22-year-old news anchor scrambling to put something on the screen at 6 o'clock. The Officer Down Memorial page makes it a matter of a few easy
clicks for your local news anchor to find a handful of local interest stories to run on May 15th.
But the people who run the website know exactly what they're doing, and it's an intentional
ideological project to perpetuate the myth of the courageous, noble policeman doing America's most dangerous
and thankless job, a job that is uniquely and outlandishly perilous, standing apart
from any other profession. And that's not true. That's not true. And for this, I take
you to another government agency's annual reports, the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Oh, I love this report. This is the best one.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics has consistently reported, I'm talking for the last 30 years, consistently since the 90s, a fatal workplace injury rate for police officers of around 14 per
100,000 full-time equivalent employees. It varies year to year, but it's consistently a little under
14 per 100,000. And of course, yes, that is higher than the national average for all labor categories.
So for all workers in the US, the workplace fatality rate is about 3.7 per 100,000.
So the cops are dying at a rate of four times higher than the average worker.
And of course, it's more dangerous if your job requires driving all day.
Most of these cops die in car accidents.
Or if your job involves mishandling a firearm every day.
Of course it's more dangerous to do that than it is to do data entry or be a cashier.
I mean, obviously we do not have a high mortality rate for the average desk job.
But while it is more dangerous than being a receptionist, policing doesn't even crack
the top 10 for most dangerous professions.
Loggers are seven times more likely to die on the job.
Roofers are more than four times more likely than a cop to die due to a workplace incident.
Being a fisherman is more than three and a half times more dangerous than being a cop.
General construction work is more than three times more dangerous than police work.
Delivery drivers are more than twice as likely to die at work than a cop.
It is more dangerous to be a day laborer on a farm picking fruit or to drive a garbage truck.
Being a cop has a similar level of risk of death by workplace incident as being a groundskeeper.
So it is about as safe as being the guy that cuts the grass at the park. Yeah, and I think there's a real issue with
labor reporting for like the category of farm worker, because
whenever you see data that says like farm worker, that can either mean
someone who's actually a farm worker or it can mean like a guy who sits
in an air conditioned office every day.
And even the Bureau of Labor Statistics is not very good at actually sifting those out
because there's been a sustained effort by like farm owners to to make to make sure this
data is like as non transparent as possible.
So I am I will say I am fairly confident.
I cannot say this is a nasty fact.
I am fairly confident that farming is actually significantly more dangerous than the Bureau
of Labor Statistics says.
So like it is so much more dangerous to like pick your food than it is to be a cop.
And because I think for a lot of industries, there is a lot of incentive to under report workplace accidents.
I think policing is one of the only industries where they are incentivized to over report accidents.
Right. So the data is I mean, even for as skewed as the data may be at the point of entry,
it's still a lot safer to be a cop than it is to drive a truck.
And this is with the numbers of them like falling into a puddle, right?
Well, so I think the Bureau of Labor Statistics is probably using something closer to the FBI
numbers, which is still, you know.
closer to the FBI numbers, which is still, you know.
On the other hand, cops are the biggest babies about this in the entire world. Because they get paid leave.
If every time you had a boo-boo at work, you could just go home for a week, you'd do it too.
Yeah, but also, I mean, just like in the media, it's like these people never shut up about how dangerous their job is and it's like your job is more safe
than like most of the actual hard jobs people work like please shut up oh my god
oh and the one thing that all those jobs have in common aside from requiring you
to be braver smarter and stronger than a cop they don't typically come with
platinum level health care paid leave for minor boo
boos, state subsidized life insurance, a pension, a discount at the coffee shop, and a license
to kill.
Do you know what else has a license to kill?
Okay, I was going to say, before we get into really honoring our boys on this special day,
I think we should take a quick ad break that is hopefully not an ad for the Washington State Patrol.
Okay. And with all that background out of the way, would you care to join me in commemorating
some of the officers our nation is honoring
this National Police Week?
This is what I came here for.
So excited.
Now, before we get into the handful I picked out for us today, I want to be really clear
for the boys over at the Officer Down Memorial page because their website specifically prohibits
the use of their content for commercial purposes.
So I will say I found these names on their website,
but I don't trust their methodology enough
to take their content at face value.
So I wouldn't use it as a source anyway,
even if I were allowed to do that.
So for each of these vignettes,
I pulled original contemporaneous local reporting
on the incidents and in some cases, actual court records.
So you can't get me.
In 2010, St.
Joseph, Missouri, police officer, Dan DeCri was participating in a training
exercise during a break.
He and another officer put down the training weapons they'd been using, which
were loaded with something called SIM munition.
So simulated ammunition.
It's not real bullets.
It's a plastic non-lethal object that goes in the gun before leaving the
training facility,
which was a recently closed elementary school, to walk to a nearby convenience store to get a soda,
the officers put down their training weapons and holstered their duty weapons. So to walk down the
street to get to the 7-Eleven, they needed their real guns. So they put their real guns back on
in case they encountered any emergency situations. Yeah. In case they saw it, we'll get to a dog. So they holstered
their duty weapons. Upon returning after their break, drinks in hand, Officer DeCri asked
his colleague, Officer Jason Strong, to shoot him with a Simunition round because he wanted
to know what it would feel like.
Oh my gosh. That's just a beautiful desire. Just curious. He's just
curious, you know? Yeah. Who would it be? Who would it be curious? And so Officer Strong
drew his weapon and shot Officer Decry in the back. I guess they both forgot that they
put their real guns back on and not their training weapons.
So I don't know if you ever, you probably know this, but if it's not a real gun,
if it has fake bullets in it, if it is a training object, it has an orange tip.
I was going to ask that. I was going to ask, it can't look identical to a real gun.
They're easily visually distinguishable for an important reason. And I guess he didn't look. So he pulled
it out and shot him in the back and Officer Decry died later that day. Wow. Wow. Wow. Wow. Wow.
Later reporting on the incident indicates the department did say they were going to revise
some of their policies regarding standard procedure for checking weapons in and out
at training exercises. So, you know, you have to check your weapon in when you get your toy gun and then you check it back
out. They did not do that previously, but they revised those procedures.
And declined to comment further. The officer who killed Dan DeCri
was not charged and remained with the department. Officer DeCri's family
received a settlement of $376,000 from the city of St. Joseph.
Again, settlement money does not come
from police departments. It comes from the municipality. It comes from just the taxpayers.
It does not affect the police's budget to do this. That enrages me.
You know, to give credit to that guy, though, actually hitting your cop, hitting their target
on the first shot is pretty remarkable. That is a shooting the guy in the back on the first try is a pretty remarkable
feat of cop marksmanship. So he might be aiming for his knee, though.
That's true. We don't know he was aiming for the back.
Yeah, it's just remarkable.
I just want to know what it would feel like.
I wonder how close he was to he must have been close.
Yeah, I imagine they were sort of at conversational distance. That's insane. That is just, I cannot. Wow. Wow, wow, wow.
Our next story of a cop who should not have gotten wet. It's not actually even about a
cop. In 2007, David Poling drowned in the Ohio River. Poling, who was 32 at the time,
had previously been employed as a police
officer with the Gallipolis Police Department and at a different time as a
sheriff's deputy with the Galia County Sheriff's Office.
So by 32, he's been both a police officer and a sheriff's deputy, but he
has neither of those things anymore.
In 2007, he was working as a parole officer.
In the reporting from the time, it's not actually clear why he was present, but he was nearby
when a police officer stopped a pedestrian on the sidewalk and frisked him because he
suspected this man may have just come out of a house where he believed drug deals were
being conducted.
So he's doing a stop and frisk on a guy mined in his business.
The man was not charged with a drug offense when this was all over, so I guess they didn't find drugs. But during the encounter, the man bolted.
And polling, who again, had a cop, just a guy who's nearby, chased after him. The man
jumped into the Ohio River and polling jumped in after him. The suspect, Joseph Harris,
made it quickly to a small island in the middle of the river. But polling immediately
after hitting the water sank and disappeared. It took hours for divers to recover his body.
When you said they didn't float, that wasn't a joke.
No, he just disappeared. The second he hit the water, he was just gone.
That is just comical. I can't believe that's real.
But did he know he couldn't swim?
Did he know he couldn't float?
Like, why are you stuck down to the bottom?
It's it's so good, too, because it's like, you know, you could attribute
this to just purely like the first story of a drowning where it's like, OK,
the cop clearly went into a situation he shouldn't have been in
because he's a cop and doesn't think about, oh, wait, the waves are going
to kill me. But like, no, clearly this river was swimmable. The other guy made it.
The other guy made it. The other guy was fine. Well, the other guy was fine until they charged
him with manslaughter and he did four years in jail. Oh. But he was, but wait, this is the guy
that didn't have, wasn't charged with drugs, but was charged with manslaughter? I've got it with manslaughter because the other guy jumped in.
Wait, he for manslaughter for the cop that sunk?
Yeah. Yeah.
Wow.
But like some guy who's not even a cop is just chasing you. That's kind of on him.
Yeah.
That he was convicted of manslaughter.
That is, I hate that.
of manslaughter. That is...
I hate that.
But also, can you just imagine just this cop like Mario jumping into like a river and just
completely just like...
Like the video game sound at the bottom.
And you do have to wonder how he had worked for two different police agencies and then
didn't work for either of any more by the age of 32.
I did I did a little looking.
I couldn't find anything about that, but it's an unusual career trajectory. Yeah.
Yeah, it's like he's getting bounced down to lower leagues every time.
Like, how do you that?
You're a cop. Like, it's how do you screw that up?
But it would seem that he wasn't a cop anymore because he wasn't allowed to be a cop anymore.
Yeah.
And now, this third one is the one that I had in mind
when I first started writing this episode.
And it's really just on its surface,
kind of the perfect encapsulation of this foolish project, right?
It's got a guy getting shot in the crotch.
It's got a cop trying to kill a dog.
It's got a dirty cop.
It's got a cop staying on the force
after a string of expensive mishaps. This is just policing. But when I started looking for primary
sources about this incident, it actually just kept getting weirder. And now I'm kind of
down a new rabbit hole. I've got some requests out for more documents. Like I'm going to
figure this out. Something happened here. But before I tell you about officer Henry McAleenan Jr.
we'll take another quick ad break.
All right, I hope you used that ad break time not only to think about products and services,
but to reflect on the sacrifice of the parole officer who drowned in the Ohio River.
On August 21, 2000, Miami-Dade police officers Henry McAleenan Jr. and his partner, Itala
Elias, responded to a request from a home alarm company to check out what turned out
to be a false alarm at a residential home in southwest Miami.
Arriving on the scene, they found no sign of a break-in, nothing unusual, and no one
answered the front door.
Normally, a cop would probably just leave.
They don't really like working.
They don't really like doing their jobs.
It's hard and it's boring and they have Candy Crush to play.
Molly, it's dangerous.
It's dangerous.
It was a weekday afternoon in a nice neighborhood in Miami, but the home belonged to a retired
Miami police
detective. So they took the, you know, they did the extra mile. So after determining there
was no sign of the breaking out front, no one answered the door, they went around the
back of the house and entered the backyard where two Rottweilers quote, came running
at them. According to a South Florida Sun article that week, McAleenan pulled out his
expandable baton and began beating
the dogs. They were really just doing their job in their own backyard.
Yeah.
Yeah, like that's the normal thing that happens when you walk towards a dog is it runs towards-
You're invading its territory. You shouldn't be there.
You got to figure a guy who has a home alarm system and two Rottweilers, like that is that
dog's job.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I keep thinking about that.
That picture of Mike Bloomberg when he was running in 2020, there were like, she just
grabs the dog's face.
Oh yeah.
Where it's like, there's just something on a fundamental level.
Like we co-evolved with this animal. And like if you.
Like, cannot do the basic, this is a dog
and your response is like, I'm going to grab his face or your response is I am going to beat this dog up with a baton.
Like you have somehow fundamentally failed at like the process of being human.
And also, like if the dogs are immediately reacting to your presence in the yard and
they were not previously reacting to anything, maybe you could assume there was no break-in.
Maybe you could assume the dogs have it covered and you maybe don't break into the yard.
But our boy Henry, he's beating these dogs with a stick.
And I guess maybe he was struggling?
So his partner, Officer Elias, drew her service weapon and attempted to shoot the dogs as he is beating them.
Wow.
Now, we talked before about some problems with aiming, right?
Cops don't have great marksmanship.
When you're talking about a little complicated
physical situation, right?
They're sort of entangled, the dogs are small,
the man is big, she shot him in the dick.
So he's beating these dogs, She shot him in the dick. So he's beating
these dogs. She shoots him in the groin. It doesn't say what happened to the dogs, but
it doesn't indicate she fired her service weapon multiple times. So maybe she just shot
him and then put it up. He was airlifted to the hospital to undergo emergency groin surgery
and he did survive.
Oh!
Officer McAleenan continued to serve at the Miami-Dade Police Department for another 16
years, and he was still with the department when he passed away in 2016 at the age of
66.
His own obituary does not list a cause of death, only that his wife was at his bedside
for 36 days before he passed.
The first mention of McAleenan's passing being a line of duty death is in a National Police Week
local news piece the following year, which lists his cause of death as accidental gunfire.
A year later in 2018, a Police Week story indicates that he was quote, killed by gunfire on the
date that he died in 2016.
It's not until years later that you start to see claims that his cause of death was
due to complications from the 16-year-old wound.
So it's not clear where that claim even originated, but he did die 16 years after being shot.
And during those intervening 16 years, he was well enough to continue to serve on the force. I mean if you know if a family went with that
lie maybe they got money out of it. I don't know. I guess it's possible. I mean there was no...
What other motive is there other than I don't know. I see no indication that there was a
wrongful death lawsuit after he died.
He did file a civil lawsuit in 2004 against the homeowner, retired Miami detective Jesus
Caramez, but that was dismissed and he didn't even recover attorney's fees.
He didn't get anything out of that.
Wait, so he tried to halt up.
So he started beating two dogs with a baton and his partner shot him in the balls, tried to hit the dog,
and he tried to sue the guy whose house he broke into.
I mean-
This is incredible.
If the homeowner hadn't been a retired,
potentially dirty cop,
I found some articles in the 80s alleging that this,
so not alleging,
in the 80s, this officer Jesus Carramez,
who is deceased now,
but was suspended briefly during an investigation into a ring of Miami officers who were trafficking
cocaine. I don't know how that turned out. I mean, probably went fine. Well, yeah, he didn't get
fired because he was still in the force in 1997 when he shot a guy during a traffic stop.
because he was still in the force in 1997 when he shot a guy during a traffic stop. Wow. Jesus Christ.
But no, his lawsuit against the homeowner, the alarm company, and the woman who shot him.
Oh my God. Did not succeed. Did not succeed.
I mean, at least there's that. He loved being a cop so much getting his, or did I say crotch or
cop? He loved being a cop so much his crotch was shot off. And that didn't stop him.
That didn't stop him.
I do have a request in to the court clerk in Miami to see if I can.
So the documents are so old that they're not all uploaded on the court website, but I would
like to see the original civil complaint because maybe it goes into more detail about sort
of the severity of his injuries and the ways in which that he truly suffered from this.
Maybe that'll give us some more insight into how it killed him 16 years later. So hopefully, hopefully
the clerk in Miami gets back to me with that because I do want to know what happened to the dogs.
Nicole Sarris Oh yeah, that's all I really care about there.
Stacey Noo Now the officer who shot
McAleenan in the crotch, Etala Elias, had been on the force for about five years at the time of the
incident. In that time, she had wrecked her patrol car six times, injured her hand, slamming it in a car door,
and racked up $50,000 in workman's comp and medical expense reimbursement after falling
off a bicycle during a training
exercise.
Oh my god.
As of 2022, Itala Elias is still an officer with the Miami-Dade Police Department, earning
$108,000 a year.
Wow.
That's just, I mean, I wonder how many more car accidents she's she's been in if that was her record
in five years. Wow. That's impressive.
Like I am trying to think of another job that you could keep after crashing your car six
times on the job.
And shooting someone in the dick.
Yeah.
Cops.
Well.
Cops. Cops have the kind of job security that was previously reserved for like workers in
state-owned industries in Maoist China. Like no one else has ever had this kind of job
security before.
And so I will end our stories here because Sophie will put one of us in the pit if the
episodes keep coming out over an hour long. But there are an unbelievable number of stories
of cops getting hurt, doing shit they were not supposed
to be doing.
A cop who died because he didn't know which antibiotics
he was allergic to when he went to the hospital
because he was messing around with an injured feral cat
and got scratched.
The fuck?
A prison guard who tripped in the rec yard and hit his head.
A shocking number of accidents at the shooting range or during training exercises.
They just want to know what it felt like.
They just want to know what it felt like.
Including one very weird one where they were role playing a scenario.
So these were cops at the gaming commission, so casino cops.
But during a training exercise, they were role playing a scenario where one of the cops
was being attacked by an assailant and he was supposed to, you know, role-play it out,
right?
They're pretending.
This is pretend.
They're in a conference room.
But he got scared and drew his real gun and really shot and really killed the director
of the Mississippi gaming commission.
Holy shit!
Almost every cop death was completely preventable.
They're careless and they're reckless
and they're doing shit they should not be doing.
They're counting normal wear and tear
like knee injuries and heart attacks
as though these are noble deaths of martyrs.
And it's all part of this ideological project
of myth-making around American policing, right?
Because you have to believe that this is a uniquely dangerous and frightening job that only the bravest boys can do because
they're under so much risk. They have to react the way that they do. They have to react with
extreme violence. They have to shoot first and ask questions later because their job
is just so dangerous, right? And I think it's interesting as we draw to a close to
draw a comparison here, right? Because they react with great violence against us because
of their fear of imaginary violence that they might face. So the FBI prepares this meticulous
report every year with rigorous and mandatory data collection processes. So we have a comprehensive
set of data about not just every cop who dies,
but every cop who is assaulted on the job. The Leoka report includes on the job assaults
and injuries. So we have a very clear idea of how much violence and how many accidents
cops are exposed to, mostly in the form of single car accidents.
But we have the data. There is no equivalent data for the kinds of violence police perpetrate on others.
The FBI only started collecting information for the National Use of Force Database in 2019,
and participation in that data collection process remains optional.
That's so late. 2019? That was like three years ago. Four or five. I don't know what year it is.
That was recent. And it, four or five. I don't know what year it is. That was recent.
And it's voluntary.
It's voluntary.
So police departments do not have to tell anyone,
they do not have to tell the federal government
when they kill someone.
They don't have to report that.
So comprehensive data on police killings
is something that only exists when newsrooms
and nonprofits scrape the information together
on their own.
The Washington Post has a very thorough police shooting database, and nonprofit websites
like Mapping Police Violence do their best to document each case, but even they admit
they aren't capturing every fatal encounter with police.
So while the FBI reports literally just a few dozen officers a year fall into the feloniously
killed category in the Leoga report, so not the
car accident one, so there's a few dozen actual killings of officers a year, we can only hope to
know the names of the average of over 1200 people who are killed each year by a cop.
And that does kind of send a message about whose lives matter.
cop. And that does kind of send a message about whose lives matter. So as you celebrate National Police Week this week, I guess you'll be hearing this on Friday
if you listen to it the day it comes out, just take a moment to remember our
brave boys like Lonnie Burton, who tripped on a curb outside of the
Wayland Baptist University police station and later died of complications.
Or brave officers like trooper Jack Holland, who died because he was allergic to yellow
jackets. Or officers like Deputy Sheriff Joseph Baca, who was trying to tackle a suspect to
the ground and fell into a bee's nest. It turns out he was allergic to bees. It's beautiful.
I should have, I should have asked you both your hometown so I could get you a local boy
because one of my favorites is patrolman Billy Toot.
Billy Toot.
He was a jailer in Richmond who died when two inmates were trying to escape after they
obtained pistols
that were smuggled into the jail inside of a baked turkey. That just sounds like a cartoon.
Hell yeah.
That worked.
Good for them.
Yeah, that's great.
Well, it was in 1934. I don't think you could put guns inside of a turkey anymore.
That's fair.
I just have a whole turkey.
In a security detector or something?
Yeah.
But yes, and I hope you're all having a safe and healthy police week and that you celebrate
that by not encountering any policemen.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of
the universe.
It could happen here as a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media, visit our website zone media comm or check us out on the iHeart radio app Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts
You can find sources for it could happen here updated monthly at cool zone media comm slash sources. Thanks for listening a
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Who are they?
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How did the internet or the algorithm choose them?
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Listen to 16th Minute of Fame on the iHeart Radio app,
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As important as choosing the right destination
when traveling is choosing the right travel partner.
Gene.
Gene Fodor.
Gene, what's good?
But be careful because the worst trips result
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The CIA really need your help, Gene.
Freeze, Americano.
Gene, run!
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