Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 148
Episode Date: September 21, 2024All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. Sources can be found in the descriptions of each individual episode. The UAW Staff Purge Why Conservatives Hate Ukr...aine feat. Rudy Giuliani The Heritage Foundation's Anti-Trans Booklets An Update On The Revolution in Myanmar The Current State of Meme Politics You can now listen to all Cool Zone Media shows, 100% ad-free through the Cooler Zone Media subscription, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts. So, open your Apple Podcasts app, search for “Cooler Zone Media” and subscribe today! http://apple.co/coolerzone See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Jess Casaveto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series, Dancing
for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me for I Have Followed. Together, we'll
be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
Listen to Forgive Me for I Have Followed on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Keri Champion, and this is season four of Naked Sports.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry,
Caitlin Clark versus Angel Reese.
Every great player needs a foil.
I know I'll go down to history.
People are talking about women's basketball
just because of one single game.
Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume
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podcasts. I'm Keri Champion and this is season four of Naked Sports. Up first, I explore the
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If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing
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It could happen here.
It's the podcast where things happen and you do something about it. I'm your host, Leo Wong, and we have done, you know, okay, over the course of this, we have done
so many Union episodes that I lost count a year ago, two years ago. I don't even, I lost count at
the dawn of time of how many of these we've done. But something I think some of you probably know
this, but a lot of you don't, is that many unions have their own unions for
the people who do staff work and who do sort of another number of other things.
And sometimes unions bust their own unions and this unbelievably sucks and
to talk about an instance of this happening that is happening right now I
am talking with Alex Chan who is an organizer for the UAW who is I don't
know what technical term is I'm
going to describe it non-legally bindingly as being purged for doing organizing but yeah Alex
welcome to the show. Hi it's nice to be here I think being purged is a great way to describe it.
Yeah the the tentative title for this is the UAW Staff Purge. So it's not great.
So why don't we start off?
I've given a very, very brief sort of description of what a staff union is, but can you talk
a bit more broadly about what a staff union is, what it does, and why you all are sort
of trying to organize one?
Of course.
So in terms of staff unions, yeah, it's definitely an interesting phenomenon for people who are less familiar with the labor movement.
But when unions have a lot of staff, sometimes those staff also need a union to make sure that they're treated fairly in the workplace.
Coincidentally, this year there have been a lot of incidents that have shown why staff unions are happening in the first place. And so with my union, we are called UAW
Staff United. We are part of region 9A of the UAW. UAW is split into a lot of geographic regions,
and 9A covers New York and New England, including Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont, not New
York State. New York State is covered by Region 9. So we are a bunch of temporary organizers
and local staff that are organizing for a lot of things, among them wages, workload,
job security, healthcare, and so on and so forth.
Very normal things that you would actually see in a lot of the contracts that we help
fight for in the shops that we work for and organize and the units that we help support.
So UAW Staff United, otherwise known as Yuzu, like the fruit.
Oh, that's fun.
No, it's cute, right?
We really love the Yuzu imagery a lot.
We were formed in 2023.
First went public in the spring.
I joined the unit in the summer, but I was just kind of peripherally around and organizing
with a lot of these folks before.
They went public in the spring, got recognized slowly, and then slowly came
to the bargaining table in August. And so at this point, we have been at the bargaining
table for over a year and we still do not have a contract. Normally in most shops that
you would see organizing, that would be cause for escalation. And so that is actually part
of what we are doing here. After hitting one full year bargaining, we are still very stuck on items such as wages, job
security, all the very normal things that we can see in units that we help support and bargain for.
And so the situation that we're facing is slightly more complicated because of many other
internal things that, for example, UAW has another staff union.
It is called staff council and that covers more regions of UAW rather than nine A.
It also includes people who are our direct supervisors on paper.
Those people are called lead organizers and they do make low six figures.
And yes, they are our direct supervisor.
So they are a managerial union.
And they are what some people may call a business union, you know, works closely with management
to secure a good deal, that kind of thing.
It's never really been known to agitate in a contract.
And that is partially one reason why Yuzu was formed because we knew that some
agitation needed to happen in order to secure actually good treatment for people
in our position, our position, meaning temp and local staff.
Now I keep saying temp staff, right?
Is that the next question?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I am so good.
I'm one step ahead.
Yeah.
I want to talk about both A,
the way your contracts work and B,
what the thing you're actually doing is,
because I'm not sure,
I'm not sure people are 100% familiar
with what specifically you do
and what a sort of like staff union organizer does
and the difference between you and the people
that are sort of the organizer layer
above you is?
Yeah, absolutely.
So that has to go a little bit into how we are hired.
And that's why I kept saying temp staff and local staff.
Our unit is formed somewhat on our pay structure.
And so temp organizers are hired by the international or the region.
And local staff are hired by the locals, which is kind of a subunit of the regions and how different unions are organized.
There could be multiple units in one local.
A local may hire a staffer, but that staffer could be subsidized by the international.
And that is kind of what our unit formation is like, where
funding comes from the international.
And this layer of people does the most in new organizing.
So supporting new shops that form, new campaigns that are
organizing, new unions that are just forming and need to secure
an election or a first
contract.
Some of our colleagues go a little bit further into the stage because of their local staff
status where they're supporting contract renewals or bargaining around the second stage.
But a lot of these has to do with on the ground worker to worker, peer to peer organizing, supporting them in
many different ways, including data work, including just resources.
When you think of how the parent union might be supporting a new shop, we are kind of the
resources that are supporting the new shop that can help direct institutional knowledge, that can help direct logistical or legal information, like how or what is necessary for an election
or a petition, that kind of stuff.
And yeah, it's a lot of different tasks.
And that's why for a lot of us, our job description is, I'm doing air quotes here, a flexible
40-hour work week.
Jesus Christ. And of course, that usually means a lot more than that when campaigns ramp up.
And so, you know, there are a lot of different models on how to combat that, but I'll get
into that a bit later.
So going back to the difference between us and perhaps our direct supervisors, our direct
supervisors may be tasked with monitoring the
status of a lot of different campaigns at the same time. And we might be assigned to one or two or
three at a time to work very, very directly with the organizers and the new workers. Of course,
this looks slightly different across different locals. Our different
campaigns can be adjusted depending on the shop's needs, but our supervisors who are the leads
will be handling a lot of different campaigns at the same time and just like kind of overseeing
that progress and giving the okay for the next stage or whatsoever. So I wanted to go back a little bit to why we are called temp organizers.
Yeah, this is nuts.
I was so angry when I heard about this.
I was like, what?
So do you know what a temp organizer is?
Yeah, this is actually weird.
So I have friends who are staff organizers for other unions and it doesn't work like
this.
So yeah, I'm going to let you explain it because I-
I mean, do let me know about those in another-
Yeah.
But for temp organizers in UAW,
this is a holdover from the kind of older model
of organizing where theoretically a worker
might come off the shop floor for six months,
nine months to do union work, and then go back to the shop floor for six months, nine months to do union work and
then go back to the shop floor when that concludes so that the job would remain open for them.
So temporary, like the nature is temporary.
Someone is coming off to do union work and then, you know, sometimes it's even part-time,
right?
Sometimes it's even part-time and the worker never stops working at their original job.
But nowadays the model doesn't look like that anymore, right?
Because especially in, say, higher ed shops, people graduate out of their graduate union
jobs.
People may not have their reappointment if they are an adjunct or contract faculty.
And then a lot of our unit members, Yuzu meaning, a lot of our Yuzu members come out of a shop
that is UAW, whether
that means they're legal services or museum workers or higher ed, but it is less common
nowadays to have a job to return to. However, the motto remains the same in that the temporary
organizer job has three month renewals and a three year cap. Every three months our contract is renewed.
And if we hit three years on this job, we are no longer hired.
Theoretically, you could be hired to another job internally, but there is no pipeline.
There's no internal movement that way.
You would have to apply to the job like a regular other
job that is a more full-term job. Or you just kind of like quote-unquote like age
out the system and you're just no longer an organizer, you no longer have a job.
And so this has manifested in a lot of different ways. There are a lot of my
colleagues that have gotten tired or burnt out and have
decided to leave before their three years or leave at their three years of their own will.
There are folks that have left way earlier than their three years as well to pursue other
opportunities. Yuzu at any given time has about 40 to 50 members and that is our 9a unit again.
has about 40 to 50 members, and that is our 9A unit again. One thing that we have come to find out is that in the last five years of this temp organizer model,
only three people who have hit their three-year cap have managed to attain full-term jobs in the UAW afterward.
Geez. to attain full term jobs in the UAW afterward. Jeez.
And then there is me, who again, within the last five years is the only person to have
been not renewed before their three year term, very unceremoniously as well as in the middle
of very active campaigns.
That brings us to another piece of context. And the reason why I keep
saying five years is because in 2018, there was a first iteration of the Yuzu. There was a first
attempt to forming this staff union of Temp and local staff. Of course, it was created by different
people. But what happened then, especially under the administrative caucus when it was before the
reform leadership stepped in, is that everyone was just fired.
Jesus.
Yeah.
Everyone was just let go.
And there are people still around organizing these days in other positions or in other
workplaces that, you know, have talked to us about it.
And there are people that are working in Yuzu now that had friends or were peripheral to
that happening. So we are all very familiar with how non-renewal is a very retaliatory
practice used in UAW in the past or
we thought was in the past because we were so excited to have this reform leadership come in.
And now we are finding out that it is still a tool that is consistent. And so when we are excited that there is democratic reform, especially with one member, one vote,
which was extremely, extremely exciting to see, we also need to point out that there
are a lot of different places here that still need to change, especially in how the union
treats its own staff.
Yeah, and unfortunately, we need to go to ads. When we come back, I want to circle back around
and talk a bit more about the ways that the UAW is acting like a fairly conventional boss
trying to break a union. And we are back.
So there's something really interesting.
I mean, I say interesting, but something sort of terrible about the way that the UAW is
relying on effectively a casualized workforce, where because because you're dealing with
these constant renewals,
which are an incredible sort of pressure leverage,
because it means you don't have job security,
it honestly feels like the way Amazon works,
where they're just intentionally,
instead of trying to retain people,
they're just trying to churn through
as many organizations as possible,
because the more seniority people have,
and the more experience they have,
the harder it is to just completely underpay them.
Yeah, the key word in here is flexibility.
Yeah.
And it seems like also on an institutional level, a terrible idea, because you're training
a bunch of organizers.
And then the moment that they have a bunch of experience, you're just casting them into
the wind and then hiring a less experienced person.
That's like...
You bring up a great point. Actually, something that I want to touch on is in bargaining, we have asked for training,
and we have not been met with a satisfactory answer. People are not trained before they take on this position.
But yes, you're absolutely correct with the institutional knowledge aspect. The campaigns that I'm working on, the organizing committees are real pissed
that I have been suddenly disappeared.
And I want to highlight something that one organizer brought up is that for all the talk
of us being one big union, how we are the union, how we have a democratic say in this
process, it's very weird that someone higher up in the union can just make one of our members
disappear.
Yeah.
And that is in reference to my unceremonious departure, of course. And the
points that we as Yuzu really want to highlight and emphasize is that we really want to just
hold UAW to the values that it has espoused. Ending tiers, job security for workers, fair
wages. Like I said, in bargaining, we had asked for training and that has not gone very well.
UAW is refusing to bargain over free speech and continuity of representation, which refers to the
hypothetical scenario if Region 9A were to be absorbed somewhere else, the right for a user to
still exist, and they refuse to bargain over that. We are stuck in wages at somewhere around 3%
we are stuck in wages at somewhere around 3% per year of four years. Yeah, it's not great. And yeah, there's been a lot of chaos behind the scenes that it
is implied to be a bad thing to let the members know about the members that we
work with and organize with. But to a certain point, things boil over. And especially in the case where
I am suddenly not renewed, it is really important in our view that our members know what is
happening. That the members know what this is about because they get the news landed
on them after our social media posts come out. Because I'm told not to inform the organizers myself.
And so the organizers had to hear about it from my supervisors about a week later with no details.
My non-renewal was without cause, without justification, without reason.
They did not give me an answer to my face.
And then as Yuzu kept pushing, higher-ups kept flip-flopping on who to blame and what the
actual cause was.
And what I'm getting is a sense of surprise that people are angry about this in the first
place.
Yeah.
As if this was a normal situation that people would just get fired any other day with a
month's notice.
And they're like, we gave her a month's notice.
Which also, I feel like, what was the last time
any of these people were on a shop floor?
Like, do you know how disruptive it is?
Like, if someone had pulled, like, so we had,
when we were organizing our union,
we've had a number of great writer skilled staffers.
And it's like, if someone had just pulled our staffer out
in the middle of the drive,
like all of us would have been unbelievably pissed
and it would have done incredible amounts of damage
to the organizing because like union organizing
as you are well aware and I think as the audience
should be increasingly aware is built on personal relations.
You can't just yank someone out
and then not allow them to even know what's happening.
Like that's incredibly disruptive.
It pisses people off.
Yeah, it's been very enraging for a lot of our members.
And so I've been extremely grateful
for the support that I received, whether it be on social media or by our email campaign to management.
And what I've seen from this is that management was really taken by surprise that there was a
reaction at all. Kind of unfortunately for them, there are a lot of shops and a lot of units that I have supported and organized with and have relationships with.
And even for the shops that I don't have relationships with, Yuzu members are working in those shops.
And there is a common understanding that it'd be really weird for a staffer to be randomly pulled out during a very active campaign.
I've had a rough couple months of going at it because I think there have been some really unhealthy dynamics in the workplace
with supervision that was unjust and punishment that was unjust for my attempt to advocate for different units and attempt to advocate for organizing.
And I think that is why we have reached the conclusion that retaliation retribution must
be involved somehow.
On paper, this was a very oddly handled situation.
I was notified by email on 3.30 PM on a Friday before Labor Day weekend.
Jesus Christ. I was not informed by a meeting,.30 p.m. on a Friday before Labor Day weekend. Jesus Christ.
I was not informed by a meeting, not informed by a call.
My supervisor didn't pick up my calls until two and a half hours later.
Oh my God.
In the meantime, where they were actually informing my co-workers that I had been terminated
and then came back to me saying that they were busy.
Jesus.
Which no firing happens like that, I'm sorry.
Yeah. Jesus. Which no firing happens like that, I'm sorry. But like, there's no conceivable way
where the HR email happens
and then my supervisor is busy telling my coworkers
that I've been let go,
which we are interpreting as intimidation
because why else would this be happening?
Yeah, but even corporate best layoffs don't work like that.
Like you at least get a meeting. Like what? No't work like that. You at least get a meeting.
No, I didn't.
I didn't get a meeting until the Tuesday after to talk about transitioning my work and they
had no plan to transition my work.
So currently no one is handling the work that I was responsible for, which is-
They just screwed your units.
That's- Quite dangerous for a campaign in higher ed as the semester ramps up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh god.
Oh yeah, and of course the HR email was signed in solidarity and had no name.
I didn't want to bring up that point.
There is evidence, yes.
Oh no. It's extraordinarily funny if you actually look at it.
But yeah, just even if we didn't have the context of what has happened to me in the
workplace in the last six months, even just on paper looking at how this non-renewal was
handled, it was handled atrociously.
And so there is not much else we can draw from it other than the fact that I was someone
they wanted to get rid of expeditiously, but just didn't anticipate that people would be
mad about it.
Which is, you know, to me, a sense that people up there handling it are a little out of touch.
Like, they haven't experienced what it's like to have this happen to have a staffer randomly yanked out
During the middle of a really active campaign. Yeah, we need to go to ads again, but we will we will be back soon and
What our front-end services we're about to have unionized them and then also you'd nice your staff We are back.
So this is something we've been talking about in terms of your specific situation and how
it's the terrible impact it's had on both you personally and the organizing that's going
on.
And I wanted to come around to talking a bit about the impact that this structure and the organizing that's going on. And I wanted to come around to talking a bit about the impact that this
structure and the impact that getting denied benefits and stuff like that,
the impact that this has in general on, on the way that organizing new shops
works.
Yeah.
I think that the impact this has very concretely is that it does not let us do good work.
It makes us as organizers scared every three months that we have to have another plan.
It makes us have to prepare a plan every time that rolls around.
And then, you know, that takes our focus off of the organizing that we could be doing.
I mentioned earlier about workload.
Organizers get burnt out extremely easily
because there are no guardrails in place. And then there are plenty, plenty of other
circumstances that make it very difficult within this workplace to, for example, we
don't have just cause, we don't have grievance procedures.
Jesus Christ.
And it makes a very damaging environment, especially when you consider that the members
have to bargain for their own contracts and then they look at us and they're like, wait
a minute, why are your contracts that bad?
Yeah.
It doesn't inspire trust.
It doesn't inspire faith in how this union would organize for its workers if the staff
are insecure constantly.
And we're not asking for the moon and the stars and Mars,
which is unfortunately what the UW lawyer accused us
of doing so in a bargaining session.
We are asking for very simple guardrails on job security,
on workload, on healthcare that could help cover
our dependence on wages that are not stagnant.
You know, they're not even giving us COLA, which is the phrase for cost of living adjustment.
Jesus Christ.
A lot of us live in New York City and then there's folks in Boston and hell, even the
transport costs have been a bit of a sticking point.
Yeah.
Where we're like, can we please just get an MTA card?
Yeah.
Or the equivalent.
But overall, the structure does not inspire faith in terms of how our contracts are actually
negotiated and who is responsible for these contracts.
It is very difficult to hear from the UAW lawyer that we are reaching for Mars when
we are asking for things that are very present in our standard contracts that our members
receive.
We have taken language from the contracts that our members have and tried to apply them
for our own situation and we've been told that they're too extra.
And then, this has been kind of an odd year for union staff. I wanted to
highlight that NEA earlier this year, National Education Association, their staff were locked
out during bargaining. 1199 SCIU also just formed their staff union and during the drive,
they had one of their organizers fired. 32Bj at CIU just announced their union and again
during their drive one of their organizers, they've posted this on social media, one of
their organizers had a miscarriage and then asked for help, was put on a performance improvement plan
and then fired after a month. And, you know, there are these really uncomfortable trends
of this mistreatment happening, because
priorities might be elsewhere,
or there is an assumption that we are more expendable,
that maybe we are cannon fodder,
but that really, really is not what is
supposed to happen in places that are advocating for fair labor
standards. And I am glad that we're hearing more stories about this. I'm horrified at
the stories that are coming out about this. But you know, I hope there are more that are
formed because a lot of these things are very extreme.
Yeah. And it's, you know and it's impacting not just the organizers.
I think one of the reasons why unionization rates
are declining is like, well, yeah, okay,
you guys keep firing all of your organizers.
Like, yeah, of course we're not getting shops formed.
And I want to say one other thing about just like,
specifically like the mood and the stars thing,
is it's like, okay, this is not to say
that this kind of stuff will be okay at a smaller union,
but like, this is not, like, we've had a lot of independent unions on this show and those are people, you know,
who have formed their own union completely independently and the money they've collected
is stuff that's come from them like putting out their hat out the street, right? I mean,
you know, some of these unions have like a thousand dollars of assets. This is the UAW.
The UAW has hundreds of millions of dollars. They have unbelievable amounts of money.
And earlier this year, they were just bragging about how they are putting so many more millions
into new organizing.
Yeah.
And it's like, well, okay, if you're going to put, if you're going to put all this money
into organizing and they again, they probably should, they should be doing more because
what is the point of sitting on this much money?
Right.
It's like you're behaving like a financial institution and not a and not a union but like you have the money to actually like
Cultivate and develop effective union organizers you have the money to meet like pretty mild contract contracts that are like
Like your contract is probably significantly cheaper than like the contract that they're negotiating
Right like this is just this is nonsense
Like we know you have this kind of money also because you're paying your like managerial staff
or six figures.
So clearly you can do this and you're simply not.
And I think that should outrage everyone.
I think that's exactly the response of a lot of our members
because knowing that a lot of our temp organizers
and staff organizers are people that are most passionately
devoting themselves to the labor movement and,
you know, are met with such unstable job conditions is truly horrifying because this is not a path to
careerism. Like as a temp organizer, there is not much upward mobility here. Let me be very clear,
there's not much upward mobility. It's not like this is a cushy job. There is no real way for me to just like sit back and relax on piles of
bureaucratic money or something like that. And that reminds me of how I shout out to
our Korean comrades that I've met at LaborNotes, where I explained to them what a temporary organizer's job is like and how many people we handle
and how temporary our status is.
I was talking to some of our equivalents in the auto industry as well, the union workers
there and they were pretty horrified at the workload, at the insecurity, at the just,
again, lack of equivalency.
And again, I'm not trying to claim that Korea's labor organizing world is perfect.
Like absolutely nobody is.
But the shocker to them is like, well, why are you doing this?
Why do you, why are you working in this job?
They have asked me this to my face.
Why are you working in this job? What have asked me this to my face. Why are you working in this job?
What is possibly good enough for that for you?
And unfortunately, a lot of it is optimism of the will.
And I think that's a lot of what's keeping us going.
And so my last day is supposedly September 28th, but hopefully this month there have
been fantastic outpourings of support and we are also picketing the political
leadership conference on the Friday the 13th. Ooh, scary. And I think that is going to really align
with how Yuzu has needed to escalate. I think this is again just a boiling point and it has shown how
all of this culminates in a very unfair labor standard and practice
of which we have filed a few charges. But there's a lot more that needs to be done.
And even if I don't get reinstated, I think that Yuzu is a great example of how there's
still more change that needs to happen within UAW.
Yeah, 100%. I want to close by talking about through a lot of these episodes that we've done.
We've talked with a lot of people who work for Planned Parenthood.
We've talked for a lot of people who work for NGOs.
And this is the same behavior that they do where quite frankly, what they are doing is
exploiting the labor of people who believe in the cause.
And because people believe in what they're doing, because the work that they're doing is vital and necessary, these NGOs and these
unions think that they can just continuously exploit the people who work for them. And
this damages the workers, this damages the people who they're nominally trying to help,
and this damages the entire left. Because when you're sort of churning to organizers
and when you're sort of fundamentally betraying organizers and when you're sort of fundamentally betraying the the missions that you're supposed to be
doing in order to just do more exploitation, this significantly damages
literally the entire organizing project that we're all fighting for. So Alex,
thank you so much for coming and talking and talking to us about this and I...
Where can people go to support you and support Yuzu?
Our accounts are uawstaffunited on Instagram and Twitter.
Please follow for more.
Check out the adorable Yuzu lemon logos
that we have everywhere.
If you're in New York or Boston, those are our major hubs.
So keep an eye out for future actions.
Awesome.
Thank you again for coming on the show and
yeah if you are a union staffer because I know a number of you are listening to this. If you're in
the UAW raise hell and if you're not in the UAW and you don't have your own staff union consider it.
Yeah, thank you. I'm Jessica Acevedo, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series, Dancing
for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films
and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast,
Forgive Me for I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper
into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films
and LA-based Shekinah Church,
an alleged cult that has impacted members
for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high control groups and interview dancers,
church members, and others whose lives and careers have been impacted, just like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members and new, chilling firsthand accounts,
the series will illuminate untold and extremely necessary perspectives.
Forgive Me for I Have Followed will be more than an exploration.
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring these types of abuses never happen again.
Listen to Forgive Me for I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This summer, the nation watched as the Republican nominee for president
was the target of two assassination attempts
separated by two months.
These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
I always felt like the one that was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife
working undercover for the FBI
in a violent, revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This is Rip Current, available now with new episodes every Thursday. Listen on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. When you think of Mexican culture,
you think of avocado, mariachi, delicious cuisine,
and of course, lucha libre.
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Lucha libre is known globally
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Lucha libre is a type of storytelling.
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Its tradition is culture.
This is Lucha Libre Behind the Mask,
a 12 episode podcast in both English and Spanish about
the history and cultural richness of lucha libre.
And I'm your host Santos Escobar, the emperor of lucha libre and a WWE superstar.
Join me as we learn more about the history behind this spectacular sport from its inception
in the United States to how it became a global symbol of Mexican culture.
We learn more about some of the most iconic heroes in the ring.
This is Lucha Libre Behind the Mask.
Listen to Lucha Libre Behind the Mask as part of my Cultura podcast network on
the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you stream podcasts.
It was December 2019 when the story blew up in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
Former Packer star Kabir Vajabiamila caught up in a bizarre situation
Hey GB explaining what he believes led to the arrest of his friends at a children's Christmas play a family man
former NFL player devout Christian now cut off from his family and connected to a strange arrest
I am going to share my journey of how I went from Christianity to now a Hebrew Israelite.
I got swept up in Kabir's journey, but this was only the beginning in a story about faith
and football, the search for meaning away from the gridiron, and the consequences for
everyone involved.
You mix homesteading with guns and church and a little bit of the spice of conspiracy theories that we liked.
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I felt like I was living in North Korea, but worse, if that's possible.
Listen to Spiral'd on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Senora Sex Ed is not your mommy sex talk. This show is La Platica like you've never heard it before. We're breaking the stigma and silence around sex and sexuality in
Latinx communities. This podcast is an intergenerational conversation between
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I felt in control of my own physical body and my own self. I was on birth control. I
had sort of had my first sexual experience. If you're in your senora era or know someone
who is, then this is the show for you. We're your hosts, Diossa and Mala, and you
might recognize us from our flagship podcast, Locatora Radio. We're so show for you. We're your host, Dioza and Mala, and you might recognize us from our flagship podcast,
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We're so excited for you to hear our brand new podcast,
Senora Sex Ed.
Listen to Senora Sex Ed on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
Robert Evans here. This is It Could Happen here, a podcast about things falling apart.
And today I wanted to take some time to talk about Ukraine and particularly to talk about
the sort of cultural place that the Ukrainian resistance against Russia, the expanded invasion
by Russia has taken in American politics and in American kind of political culture.
Obviously, I am recording this within a few hours of another attempted assassination on
former President Trump.
This one by a guy who, among a confusing melange of other things, claimed to be a major advocate
of Ukrainian sovereignty and that that was a major reason why he was angry at the Republicans
and angry at former president Trump.
And kind of that at least failed assassination attempt is sort of in line with a lot of derangement
around Ukraine.
And you can find this on the left and the right and the center.
I've come to think that if you're trying to evaluate sort of how credible someone is,
as a geopolitical expert today.
One of the best things you can do is kind of look back to early February, 2022 and see
what sort of claims they were making about what was going to happen, whether or not Russia
was actually going to go into Ukraine and expand their invasion.
And that's obviously, you know, a bigger topic than I think we're going to get into today.
One of the things that I find really interesting when I kind of analyze how
particularly conservatives have turned on the Ukrainian cause is how kind of
incomprehensible that seems just based on the way in which I was raised by the
conservatives in my life to think about Russia and to think about like Russian
military aggression.
You know, I grew up largely in the post-Cold War era, but my
parents were both raised by Cold Warriors. They mostly grew up on military bases. I still
grew up with an awful lot of the Cold War shrapnel in my ideological training. The movie
Red Dawn was a big part of my childhood. You know, some of those early James Bond movies where the Soviet
unions are still the bad guy.
You know, this was all major stuff for me.
So it's, it's been particularly disorienting kind of watching
phyllo Russian attitudes infiltrate the right and us move from this idea of like.
These people are one way or the other, kind of a geopolitical opponent of the United
States towards these people are almost existing in an idealized version of the society we
bring around.
It's been a cause of some whiplash for me and for, I think a lot of people who were
raised in that environment and then kind of came out of those ideological beliefs.
And when we look at the kind of turnaround on the right about this
stuff, one of the people who's been on the bleeding edge of this has been vice presidential candidate
JD Vance. And in fact, Ukraine might mark the first place where Vance really came in ahead of
the rest of his party on an issue they would all ultimately move in behind him on. Back in early
2022, in the immediate wake of Russia's expanded invasion, Vance told
Steve Bannon in one of his many ill-advised podcast interviews, quote, I don't really
care what happens to Ukraine one way or the other.
Now as this paragraph from an article by Ed Kilgore in New York magazine makes clear,
Vance was swiftly followed by others, quote, then Congressman Madison Cawthorn parodied Russian propaganda by saying,
the Ukrainian government is incredibly corrupt and is incredibly evil and
has been pushing woke ideologies.
And his colleague Marjorie Taylor Green called the Ukrainians neo-Nazis.
Fox News' Tucker Carlson was a constant font of bitter hostility towards
USAID for Ukraine.
Now Cawthorn was and remains now a stooge, but I think it really is kind of drilling
into the precise wording of his claim here.
The fact that he's so focused on wokeness, you know, within the context of a conflict
that seems much more serious than kind of the standard American culture war bullshit.
A lot of why we're seeing this has to do with the fallout over the Russiagate culture war
that consumed the Democrats during the first half of the Trump administration.
This led to a the enemy of the enemy is my friend sort of thinking among the right, and
this was stoked consciously by Russian propaganda efforts.
After Trump left office, these efforts were redoubled, especially after the war in Ukraine
became an existential issue for Putin's regime.
A good example of the more obvious sort of messaging is this Moscow Times article from
May of 2023, with the title, Russia to Build Migrant Village for Conservative American
Expats.
Quote,
Timur Beslan-Gorov, a migration lawyer at Moscow's Vista Foreign Business
Support claimed that around 200 families wish to immigrate to Russia for ideological reasons.
The reason is propaganda of radical values. Today they have 70 genders and who knows what
will come next. RIA Novosti quoted Beslan-Gorov as saying, echoing President Vladimir Putin's
frequently deployed
grievances against Western countries' comparative gender freedom.
And here we see it again, the focus on hatred of woke as a justification for solidarity
with Russia.
A sizable plurality of Americans still support the US sending aid to Ukraine.
And the reality of Russia's invasion is hideous enough that the bulk of modern Russian propaganda
in this country today seems to focus on the woke issue more than anything directly relevant
to the war.
As I write this, one of the top stories in the country is how a Tennessee-based media
network Tenet Media hired a bunch of American influencers like Tim Poole and Dave Rubin
and paid them north of a hundred000 a video to make Russian propaganda.
Now, Poole and Rubin and their fellows claim to be shocked—shocked—that a foreign government
was involved in all, and deny acting as unregistered foreign agents or breaking the law in any
way.
We'll see how those claims look in a few months.
For now, I think it's illustrative to turn towards a wired analysis of the content of
dozens of Tenet Media videos, written by Tim Marchman and Drov Mirota.
It shows us the kind of propaganda that Russia found fruitful in ceding to an American audience.
Quote, this analysis does not show that in these videos the influencers were particularly
fixated on the Ukraine War.
The word Ukraine appears in the transcript 67 times, about as often as misinformation,
Christianity, and Clinton.
It does show the influencers stressing highly divisive culture war topics in the videos,
which carried titles like, Trans Widows Are a Thing and It's Getting All Caps Out of
Hand and Race is Biological But Gender Isn't?
The word trans appears 152 times, and transgender 98.
So 67 times we see Ukraine appear in these transcripts as opposed to well over 200 times
for trans and transgender together.
If you want a snapshot of just how absurd and divorced from reality the culture wars
have gotten, the Russian government funding a clandestine influence operation, considered stoking fears about
trans people to have a higher rate of return than actually propagandizing directly about
the war in Ukraine.
As absurd as this sounds, these tactics have borne fruit.
And I think the reason why is simple.
By building a sense of solidarity between bigoted American conservatives
and what they see as a similarly conservative, Russia.
Now obviously, the reality of the situation is that Russia is not exactly the country
these people think it is.
While it is true that the number of Russian adults who consider themselves at least somewhat
religious skyrocketed after the fall of the USSR, from 11% or so to over 50% today,
much of that is likely just explained by the change away
from an expressly atheistic government.
Even today, Pew Research notes, quote,
"'For most Russians, the return to religion
did not correspond with the return to church.
Across all three waves of ISSP data,
no more than about one in 10 Russians said they attend
religious services at least once a month.
The share of regular attenders, monthly or more often, was 2% in 1991, 9% in 1998, and
7% in 2008.
For reference, about 32% of Americans currently attend church, synagogue, mosque, etc. on
a weekly basis.
Now, this is down significantly from 49% in 1958 and does represent a low for church attendance
in US history.
But you can see we still beat the Russians in at least active religiosity by a factor
of like five.
Now, one of the modern bugbears of the right wing in the US is no fault divorce, which
often gets wrapped up in conversations about wokeness.
Here Russia is also not a bastion of good old fashioned values.
I'm going to quote from an article in Russia Beyond by Nikolay Shevchenko.
In 2016, the ratio in Russian of divorces to new marriages that year was 1 to 1.6, meaning
that Russians divorce more often than they marry.
In recent decades, over 60% of marriages in Russia ended in official separation.
There is precisely one issue where Russian culture is in reality more in line with the
kind of culture American conservatives claim to desire, and that is in its treatment of
LGBT people and ethnic minorities.
The last years in Putin's Russia have seen a surge in hate crimes against queer Russians,
as LGBT advocacy organizations have been declared illegal and punished by the government.
This is the Russia our American right wing finds solidarity with, and we shouldn't
forget that.
Right?
When we're looking at to what extent do these people see Russia as kind of embodying the
values they would like to bring to the United States, it has a lot less to do with actual
religiosity, with good old fashioned family values, and a lot more to do with hate for
specific groups of people.
And we're going to talk about what that means within the context of US politics in a little
bit.
But first, here's some ads.
So earlier this year, I headed to the Republican National Convention and I had a lot on my
mind there.
But one of the things I was kind of interested in is hearing the way in which conservatives talked about Ukraine when they felt like they were among friends.
It was not uncommon to hear Ukraine referenced in conversations as a geopolitical enemy of
the United States.
And you know, this is something I encountered a number of times and I wanted to make sure
it wasn't just a fluke of my own experiences there and I assure you it was not. Michael Waitley,
who Donald Trump picked to chair the RNC, appeared on Fox News in April and
lumped Ukraine in with China and Iran as aggressive adversaries of the United
States. Now, you know, we can quibble on that list for a number of reasons but
Ukraine, a country we are currently arming and training to fight in our stead, is just kind of absurd to describe
as an aggressive adversary of the United States.
Now, that very month, Congress voted on a foreign aid package, which caused a massive
split in the Republican Party.
The anti-Ukraine side was led by voices like Marjorie Taylor Greene, who told Steve Bannon,
the Ukrainian government is attacking Christians, The Ukrainian government is attacking Christians.
The Ukrainian government is executing priests.
Russia is not doing that.
They're not attacking Christianity.
Now, like most things, Greene says, this is not quite accurate.
The Guardian noted at the time, quote,
in fact, according to figures from the Institute for Religious Freedom,
a Ukrainian group, at least 630 religious sites had been damaged or looted in Russia's invasion by December last year.
Green received a speaking slot at the RNC, as did tech investor David Sachs, who spent
some of his time on stage, arguing that Joe Biden somehow provoked the Russians to invade
Ukraine by talking about NATO expansion.
Now this is a claim you'll hear on some segments of the left too, and it tends to ignore that
Russia invaded back in 2014, after a revolution against a Kremlin-backed President Yanukovych
threw their own plans in the region into disarray.
Ukraine to this day, despite the expanded invasion, is not a part of NATO, and Biden's
administration has been leery not only of pushing for this, but of supplying Ukraine with long range weapons to strike inside Russian
territory.
The fact that Ukrainians and others did start discussing Ukrainian membership in NATO after
almost a decade of war is certainly not among the things that we can blame the Biden administration
for starting.
As I trawled the RNC talking to attendees about their feelings on the war, I got a variety
of responses.
The most positive believed that Ukraine had been wronged, but that the war was unwinnable,
so the US had to negotiate some kind of peace.
More argued that the Ukrainians were somehow stealing US aid, which, they imagined, would
be put to better use helping Americans.
I found this an illogical position, personally, given that our aid to Ukraine has primarily
taken the form of old weapons systems no longer in use by US troops.
Unless you want to house homeless veterans in Bradley Fighting vehicles, I don't really
see how what we've sent Zelensky is much use to the kind of Americans who are actually
suffering today.
The most enlightening conversation that I had
while I was at the Republican convention
about their sentiments on Ukraine
came when Garrison and I stumbled upon Rudy Giuliani,
seated at the booth for some streaming network or another,
exiled from the main stage of the event.
I introduced myself to Rudy,
and we started off just talking about how surreal the mood was given the recent attempted assassination of the former president.
He's a conquering hero of this convention. We would have been even without Saturday. It's surreal. I think people feel they're living through history.
That image of him rallying America has to be one of our 10 historical great interests.
Now I included that because it's a fun snapshot of just how elated Republicans were that week,
right, before Biden dropped out and the whole election changed yet again on a dime.
From here, Rudy and I moved to talking a bit about how badly the Secret Service had fucked
up in protecting Trump, which is not really something I had a particular disagreement with,
although I think Giuliani was coming at it
from more of a conspiratorial standpoint than I would.
I think simple incompetence more or less explains
everything that happened that day pretty well.
This morphed in fairly short order into him ranting
about how all of this was Biden's fault
and how no one ever gets fired for incompetence
in the Biden administration.
He brought up Afghanistan and that is what led us finally to Ukraine.
Ukraine would not have happened if he hadn't been a complete coward over Afghanistan.
The proof is very simple.
Putin invaded three times under the last four presidents.
There's only one president he was scared of.
It was Trump. He invaded under Bush. he invaded under Obama, he invaded under Biden.
He didn't invade under Trump, so don't tell me he would have invaded under Trump.
He had a chance to what he did.
Now, I responded by pointing out that Giuliani's time frame was a little off.
Well, but I mean, I was there in 2015 and my friends who were in the Ukrainian military were
still fighting under Trump. You know, the invasion was still happening. I mean, I was there in 2015, and my friends who were in the Ukrainian military were still
fighting under Trump.
The invasion was still happening.
It was just not at the current level that it's at.
Rudy went on to blame Obama for not having given weapons to Ukraine in a timely fashion.
In fact, Poroshenko, who is a corrupt pal of Biden's told me that,
yeah, they were my friends,
but I didn't get any guns until Trump came in.
They wanted me to win with T-shirts and stuff.
He said, I never knew what side they were on.
Obama never gave them ours.
He gave them money.
Now this is again, not accurate.
By December of 2019, The US had provided Ukraine with about 1.5 billion dollars in aid since the 2014 invasion
This did include weapons including javelin anti-tank missiles and armored vehicles
Which is why they had some of these weapons when the expanded Russian invasion occurred
Rather than loosening the purse strings, as Russian aggression continued, President Trump withheld $391 million in aid to try and get a political favor from Zelensky.
We're going to continue with Rudy Giuliani and my conversation, but first, here's a
little bit more ads. And we're back.
So after Giuliani made his claim that the United States didn't send any weapons over
to Ukraine until Trump was president, he said this.
He let Biden handle the money.
The last guy in the world that should be handling money to Ukraine.
And Ukraine's gotten 200 billion and nobody let us order it. This is the acknowledged to be
most corrupt, second most corrupt, third most corrupt country in the world. The fact that they were invaded by Russia doesn't make them honest. It makes them the victim, doesn't make them honest.
And you pour a couple hundred billion in there
without controls.
What am I, a jackass?
I can't figure out what's happening.
And you don't win?
Now how much more do you have to get,
another 200 billion?
Now, Rudy, like most Republicans on this issue,
always describes the aid we've sent to Ukraine
as if it's cash.
I find it interesting that he claims Ukrainian corruption
is also somehow to blame for us not auditing the aid we sent.
Now there are issues with how the US Defense Department has audited some of the aid going
to Ukraine, but those are issues with the Defense Department.
In fact, it came out in January of 2024 that the United States failed to audit about a
billion dollars worth of military aid to Ukraine.
Now first off, this is not cash,
as Giuliani repeatedly insinuates.
It's all weapons, and there's no evidence
that any of these weapons were ever sold to another country
or used outside of Ukraine.
They simply weren't audited the way
that they ought to have been,
because the Pentagon fired all of the people
who should have been auditing this aid, right?
This is a pretty common issue with the Pentagon.
You can look back to Iraq and the sheer amount of aid that was sent to Iraq and then kind
of disappeared in the aether because they just didn't have anyone paying attention
to it.
Obviously, because that happened under a Republican administration, Giuliani isn't concerned at
all about it, but he is deeply concerned about this kind of fantastical $200 billion that
he believes has been shotgunned out to Ukrainian mobsters.
And here's Rudy again as our conversation continued.
Biden has us consigned to a war without end in Ukraine.
He doesn't even dare to suggest an end because he's afraid of confrontation with Russia.
So he's just going to get more people killed.
I mean, there probably isn't an American president that said
more people killed other than in a war than Biden.
It's interesting you describe it as them not winning,
because I do have trouble.
I know in the lead-up to the expanded invasion in February
2022, the expectation from most of the people in our military
and most people internationally was that the Ukrainian military
was going to fold in a matter of days.
And they're now back to about 17% of the country under Russian occupation, which
is a massive escalation over where it was previously because they pushed the Russians
out of Kiev.
Well, will that end the war?
Russia can keep 17%?
I don't think the Ukrainians are willing to end the war with that status. The war is won when you achieve the objective that has you stop conducting war.
They're not even close to it.
The only way Ukraine says it will stop fighting is if Russia is pushed out of Ukraine.
They haven't been able to do that, so they're not winning the war.
Nor are they presenting a plan that we're funding to do that.
We're not planning, we're not funding, we're just endlessly giving them money to keep the
status quo.
We do not have a plan to win that or end it.
So I mean, when I talk to...
Colin Powell used to say the worst thing about American foreign policy under unrealistic,
somewhat left-leaning liberals is war without
end. When you go into a war, you've got to be willing to commit yourself and you've got
to be willing to win it quick. Otherwise, you're going to lose it. And, you know, when
we started losing wars, that's the policy we followed.
But if you compare where Ukraine is at right now to the wars the United States has gotten
involved in in this century, Iraq, you know, around a decade or so, close to 20 years for
Afghanistan, Ukraine is two years since the expanded invasion.
And you know, war, it's a massive international conflict between a much smaller nation and
a larger one.
When I talk to Ukrainians and I ask them what do you think you need to actually win this,
one of the things they repeatedly say is the ability to strike Russian assets inside Russia.
Who doesn't give them that?
Who prevents them from doing that?
Yeah, I'm just wondering.
Four minutes and we gotta go, sorry.
Who prevents them from doing that?
They have a person, give them the name of the person.
Oh yeah, definitely, the Biden administration hasn't allowed that.
He tells us he wants them to win.
Do you think- Is he lying?
Would you be supportive under a new Republican administration
of allowing Ukraine to strike inside Russian territory?
I would be supportive of sitting down
and having a realistic conversation about a plan.
First thing I do is audit the money we gave.
Now, of course, Rudy can't support that. So he pivoted back to arguing that we need to
audit Ukraine to, quote, find out what happened to the money we gave him, him being Zelensky.
Again, I pointed out that we aren't giving him money directly. We're sending over weapons.
Nevertheless, our conversation continued.
The vast majority of the 200 billion that's been sent over though is in munitions.
We're not talking about cash primarily.
Have you found any?
It's the American industry.
It's an American industry.
So you want to defend the American military industrial complex.
You don't think there's a lot of leaks of money in the American.
I'm not concerned about money though, because what we haven't seen...
The money doesn't get to the field.
There's no javelins winding up outside of Ukraine.
There's no AGTMs winding up outside of Ukraine.
But they're getting plenty of money.
They're mostly getting weaponry though.
They're getting Bradley's, they're getting Abrams tanks.
They're getting Heimars systems.
They also have been on the market selling those things.
Where have they sold them?
They've been caught three times selling weapons.
Where?
Where?
I'd have to go back and look.
They've been caught three times selling weapons.
Plus, they have...
Now this was just a lie.
Ukraine has not been caught selling US weapons.
Rudy only claims they have been because he's consumed a huge amount of Kremlin-funded media
that has been arguing since 2022 that US weapons
sent to Ukraine will end up on the black market.
There's no outside evidence that shows that this has happened, and in fact, Elias Yusuf,
a research analyst for the security think tank the Stimson Center, recently told Business
Insider, I don't think we've seen any real diversion, particularly outside the country,
of weapons.
That article continues,
Pro-Russian media has aired similar claims of a mass diversion of arms meant for the
front line, some citing a retracted CBS report that included a source claiming only 30% of
weapons sent to Ukraine made it to the battlefield.
One conspiracy-inclined website, purportedly citing anonymous Ukrainians, claimed, the
weapons are stolen to such
a degree that Ukraine as of August had already lost the war because of the black market diversion.
Now in the months since that claim was made that Ukraine had lost the war because they had given
up all of their weapons, they took a bunch of those weapons and invaded Russia, punching a hole
through their lines and taking a considerable amount of territory in the Kursk region, which they occupy to an extent today.
As is always the case with guys like Giuliani, reality doesn't matter here.
It's about repeating the same talking points until you get a journalist ignorant enough
to take them as true.
And it's the kind of thing where if you're not up on all of the different claims being
made on the right and all of the claims about corruption and you know money being siphoned off and taken by mobsters
then you're not going to be able to properly argue with them right like if
you don't really know what you're talking about you might cede the point
to Giuliani that there have been at least three cases of the Ukrainians
caught selling American weapons overseas now when you look into it you see that
this is primarily a claim that spreads on right-wing
Facebook pages and there's not really any evidence of a sizable diversion, but that
doesn't really matter.
What matters is in the moment being able to kind of spread a point out to the extent that
nobody really questions you on it.
And I don't know, it's the kind of thing that happens a lot in politics and it's the kind
of thing that is probably pointless in politics and it's the kind of thing that
is probably pointless to really address, right?
Like me arguing with Rudy Giuliani got him hot and flustered and kind of pissed off and
certainly got me frustrated, but I don't think it accomplished much.
And I really, I think kind of the thing that you have to accept when you're looking at
sort of right wing lies about what's happening in Ukraine or the lies being told right now about, you know, Springfield, Ohio and the Haitian migrant
population over there, there's really very little point in actually confronting these
people directly about the disinformation that they put out because it's not really a case
where they care about the truth one way or the other.
It's a matter of you've kind of lost the
fight if you care at all about trying to prove reality to them. And that's kind of a bummer
note to end this on, but I guess I don't really have anything optimistic to say. I just thought
you'd be interested in my little conversation with Rudy Giuliani and some of the talking
points that are continuing to spread
up along the right. So, you know, at the very least, maybe the next time you wind up in an
argument this Thanksgiving with your uncle about Ukraine, you'll be kind of wary for some of the
arguments he's going to bring out, you know, to the extent that that does anybody any good.
Until next time, I'm Robert Evans, and this is It Could Happen Here.
If you want to see these sources for this episode
and do some reading yourself, they're in the show notes.
So just check them out there and we will be back tomorrow. I'm Jess Casaveto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series, Dancing
for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me for I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and
LA-based Shekinah Church, an alleged cult that has impacted members for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high-control groups and interview
dancers, church members, and others whose lives and careers have been impacted, just
like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members and new, chilling firsthand
accounts, the series will illuminate untold and extremely necessary perspectives.
Forgive Me for I Have Followed will be more than an exploration.
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring these types of abuses never happen again.
Listen to Forgive Me for I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This summer, the nation watched as the Republican nominee for president was the target of two
assassination attempts, separated by two months. These events were mirrored nearly 50 years
ago when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
I always felt like Glenn Nett was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI in a violent
revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This is Rip Current, available now with new episodes every Thursday.
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It was December 2019 when the story blew up.
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Hey, GB, explaining what he believes led to the arrest
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When you think of Mexican culture,
you think of avocado, mariachi, delicious cuisine,
and of course, lucha libre.
It doesn't get more Mexican than this.
Lucha libre is known globally because it
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Lucha libre is a type of storytelling. much more than just a sport and much more than just entertainment.
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This is Lucha Libre Behind the Mask, a 12 episode podcast in both English and Spanish about the history and cultural richness of lucha libre.
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Do you ever wonder where your favorite foods come from?
Like what's the history behind bacon wrapped hot dogs?
Hi, I'm Eva Longoria.
Hi, I'm Maite Gomez-Rejon.
Our podcast, Hungry for History, is back.
Season two, season two.
Are we recording, are we good?
Oh, we push record, right?
And this season, we're taking an even bigger bite out
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Seeing that the most popular cocktail is the Margarita,
followed by the Mojito from Cuba,
and the Piñacolada from Puerto Rico.
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There's a mention of blood sausage in Homer's Odyssey
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I didn't realize how old the hot dog was.
Listen to Hungry for History as part of the My Kultura
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Welcome to It Could Happen Here. My name is Garrison Davis.
I am joined by James Stout and Mia Wong
to talk about some of our favorite people to hate,
the Heritage Foundation.
Hello, everybody.
Hi, Garrison.
Hello. Oh, God.
I got brought in to talk to the Heritage Foundation.
Oh, no.
What a week.
What a week.
So, I mean, people have been talking a lot about the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025
because it is a massive, massive document that is honestly too long to actually read.
But it does, it does focus on LGBTQ issues for a decent chunk of the book, mainly finding different ways to both legalize and protect discrimination against LGBTQ people,
and like banning the public presence of LGBTQ materials deemed pornographic in public life, especially schools, libraries, all that kind of stuff, right?
It's kind of this nationwide, don't say gay bill type thing, along with legalizing and
protecting people's right to discriminate against for people.
So that's kind of the bulk of the tactics that are laid out in the Heritage Foundation's
Project 2025. But Trump and a whole bunch of
Republicans have been doing a lot of work to distance
themselves from this document. At the RNC, I was kind of
surprised that like, I did not hear a single a single mention
of Project 2025, unless I was the one to bring it up when
talking with people. They didn't they didn't like talking about
it because they know it's kind of just like, this toxic thing this toxic thing now. They kind of showed their power level to use an ancient phrase.
Yeah, who could possibly have guessed from the document where they talk about bringing
back the gold standard was going to be unpopular with literally everyone, including their own
base?
Yeah, I mean, I don't think that's the reason why it's unpopular. I think it's all of the
dictator fascism-y stuff. But the gold standard it's unpopular. I think it's all of like the dictator fascism stuff.
But the gold standard bit's pretty funny.
Even at the Heritage Foundation booth, not a peep of the project 2025.
It's like the biggest thing they've done in like the last decade, arguably.
Not a single peep.
But they did have a whole bunch of other like merch,
a whole bunch of little pamphlets, papers. I love papers. I love little documents.
The little ephemera, printed ephemera.
Yeah, I love collecting all this little stuff and it just sits on a pile on my desk for like
way too long. And in this case, it's sat on a pile on my desk for about two months.
And the pile became too big and too unruly. And now we're going to actually go through the pile of
stuff. Great. too big and too unruly. And now we're going to actually go through the pile of stuff and
talk about the types of things that the Heritage Foundation actually did have out on their
table specifically relating to gender identity, which is their term of choice for these issues.
Now, like gender identity, quote unquote, transgenderism, were frequent talking points at the Republican
National Convention, way more so than the Democratic National Convention in which they
were kind of just brushed aside as a political inconvenience.
But at the RNC, these things were front and center.
Almost every single person giving a speech on the main stage at least name dropped gender
ideology in some way to receive thunderous applause from the crowd.
So it certainly was outstanding, a very common topic brought up.
And here's what the actual literature that was proliferating at the event had to say
about it.
So let's let's start.
Let's start pamphlet number one.
How to speak up about gender identity questions and answers driving the debate.
So it's a debate is the first thing we need to know
about gender identity.
Again, I'm not just reading out all of their propaganda.
I think there is some use in actually learning what they're saying
in like their biggest convention.
And then actually not like debunking because like, come on,
I know who our audience is, but at least actually
laying out what they're saying and how it relates to like the actual information, I
think does have some use.
So I will be quoting from the Heritage Foundation saying some pretty stupid things.
But then we will kind of springboard a discussion and I do have some little fact checks on some
of these very common lies that you're now seeing get repeated so often.
You may be trying to be tricked into thinking
that they are real.
So we're gonna tackle the quote unquote,
the big questions.
What are sex, gender, and gender identity?
I'm sure this five page pamphlet will tell me
all I need to know about the topics of
what are sex, gender, and gender identity.
Yeah, I can't wait to learn.
They figured it out, They figured it out.
There's this centuries-long discussions have been, have been resolved.
What do gender dysphoria and transgender mean?
And how do gender identity policies affect me and my community?
I think this is largely targeted towards like, I mean, it's a target towards people at the RNC.
So like people in like their 60s, like grandparents.
Yeah. Is this how to talk to your friend about the transgenders book clip?
Kind of, kind of.
It's more so like, oh, no, your grandkids are maybe a little gay with it.
Your blue haired grandchild.
Exactly. What does that mean?
What is that about?
I think that's kind of what the main demographic is.
Okay. Anyway, here we go.
The common understanding that there are only two sexes in human beings, male and female, determined by each person's biology, has been the cultural norm and the basis for our laws since our nation's founding.
Has it, though?
Has it? That's a good question. I'm not going to do this because I'll go,
we'll take fucking an hour.
This isn't true.
It will.
And obviously, they're not going to mention intersex people.
They're not going to mention any any of that stuff.
Yeah.
Or that like every indigenous culture has multiple gender.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
We'll just leave that out.
Because only recently have we seen a shift away from this objective and scientific, no
citation, understanding towards an ideology that says a person's gender is determined
by what they believe they are, parenthesis, gender identity, rather than their biological
sex and should be legally recognized.
The transgender movement has rapidly advanced laws and policies that give special rights
and protections to some people while infringing on the rights of others.
This is a talking point that was brought up a lot when I was a kid around trans people,
how they have special laws that give them more rights than your average person.
And that's why like a good conservative basis should be opposed to them.
Even if you're accepting, you may not agree with them, but you're not going to kill them.
But they shouldn't have extra rights.
That was a big thing, is framing things that either protect trans people from discrimination
or framing things that ensure their health care as like special extra rights not provided to
like regular regular Americans. Yeah this is like a huge thing with just the
basis of all political conservatism is they all believe that like like they all
believe that immigrants have like a secret health care system that they have
access to and that like black people have like welfare and they're like
indigenous people get into schools for free and it's just like yep no it's all based on never talking to anyone who
isn't like you yeah in addressing the conflicts that emerge in addressing the conflicts that
emerge what are you talking about the the government must protect everyone's rights and
fundamental freedoms the introduction of the concept of gender identity into recent legislation raises concerns
about privacy, safety, fairness, liberty, and its impact on children.
It threatens the freedom of religion and conscience.
What?
The freedom of conscience.
What does that mean?
Because it's not just a religious objection my conscious tells right trans people are icky
Tells me I should have this person's house. Does that let me have it? I mean it should Yeah, yeah, yeah, my god just tells me a whole lot of shit
Does it it means you can't not like trans people like the government's going to come for you if you don't like trans people.
Is that what they mean?
I think they are legitimately scared of that, yeah.
Okay.
But it also threatens freedom of speech, equal protection and parental rights.
This radical redefinition of sex could dramatically alter our society,
creating significant disadvantages for some, particularly women and girls.
Okay, all right.
So there we go.
That is the introduction.
Now, onto page two.
All individuals have human dignity
and should be treated with respect.
Citation needed.
Including those who identify as transgender.
And note, they're very careful to never actually say trans people,
or transgender people.
There's people who identify as transgender, and there's transgender activists and gender
ideology activists.
They take great care to never actually say trans people are doing this.
They say trans activists are doing this.
It creates this degree of separation.
That's one kind of little rhetorical tactic that I noticed when first looking through
this.
Yeah, I think this is also kind of a legacy of the sort of trans tipping point and how
accepted things had gotten. We're like, I remember this with like, Alex Jones in like,
like even like 2022, 2023 would say like the most transphobic thing you've ever heard,
but it would be prefaced with there's some trans people are fine people I don't mean this day as people that say like yeah come into
rape your dog or something yeah anyway but by labeling realistic concerns and
scientific objections as oppressive transgender activists have shut down
open robust dialogue over the consequences of gender ideology and gender identity policies.
The serious real-world effects of gender identity policies on individuals and communities must be taken into consideration.
Many treatments promoted by transgender activists are untested, can cause serious side effects, and come with irreversible developmental consequences
when performed on children.
So this is my first kind of pause because this is a claim that we've been seeing, I
would say at an increasing rate ever since Matt Walsh's documentary.
This was like one thing that he really tried to like invent specifically that like quote
unquote like puberty blockers cause like sterilization.
Yeah.
Like, yeah, you can't reproduce when you're on them, obviously, but youberty blockers cause like sterilization. Yeah.
Like, yeah, you can't reproduce when you're on them, obviously, but you can when you go
off of them.
Yeah.
But that's something that like they never talk about.
They frame it as like this permanent thing.
Samantha Rosenthal has an independent piece in the LA Times that talks about like the
very long history of trans health care in the United States.
Modern trans health care goes back to the 1960s,
and hormone therapy has been used to assist
cisgender children in puberty since at least the 1940s.
These things are not untested.
These are medical practices with a long history.
And saying that there's irreversible developmental
consequences when performed on children.
The FDA approved hormone blockers for children back in 1993.
We have been using these for quite a long time.
And these false claims are actually causing some significant harm.
I'm going to quote from ABC News here, quote, England's National Health Service has banned
the use of puberty blockers for the treatment of gender dysphoria or gender incongruence
in transgender minors.
The NHS has not stated it will restrict puberty blockers for non-transgender children and young people. An NHS spokesperson told ABC News, the agency hopes to have a
study into the use of puberty blockers in place by December of this year with eligibility
criteria yet to be decided." So they are just like starting to ban these and of course we've
seen this in the United States as well. But this is like the National Health Service.
This is like a really, a really big organization that's only banning it for trans people, not
for cisgender children.
Yep.
So like, it's really devastating.
I think it's important to note too that this is the exact, one of the exact same lines
that anti-vaxxers use and you know, that's anti-vaxx campaigns have been a lot of those
sort of model for how, how attacks on trans health care works. But trans healthcare works but like yeah this this is this is literally the line that these
same people will say about vaccines it's like oh the RNA vaccine is like
untested. We tested it on most of the population and everyone's fine so you know.
And I did a clinical trial for COVID vaccines before they were released so did
thousands of other people. Yeah no and and in terms of puberty blockers, these have been used and tested for decades.
Like these are not a new technology. It's even funnier because again, it's like,
well, okay, so like we will give them to cis children. Like, it's not even...
Yeah. You can't even pretend with this stuff.
It shows how fake it is. I'm going to read one other quote from an ABC article. Quote, the Endocrine Society, an international organization of more than 18,000 endocrinologists,
calls the medication, quote unquote, fully reversible.
Once blockers are stopped, puberty continues with little to no proven side effects, according
to health professionals, unquote.
And there was a recent study in 2022 in the journal JAMA, which found the use of puberty
blocking drugs did
not lead to an increased chance of receiving gender-affirming therapy in the future and
actually were slightly less likely to, given the extra time to explore gender in the body
without the onset of irreversible effects of puberty.
Possible bone density losses largely remediated upon the presence of sex hormones, whether
from either just ceasing the blockers or starting HRT.
And this study also says at the end that perhaps we should just stop using the term puberty blocker
because it makes it sound like it just completely blocks puberty, like, from ever happening.
Like, it just is like, you know, now you don't go through puberty.
Yeah.
And instead opts to say, like, maybe we should just describe what the drug does mechanistically and clinically
Because maybe maybe puberty blockers just is just a it implies something more than what the drug actually like does temporarily
Yeah
so I
found that to be an interesting note and
The whole point of of and this something we'll probably talk about later the whole point of this drug is so that you can have
more time to actually decide what you want to do with your body and your gender.
And most people that do go on blockers, whether cis or not, are doing it to prevent irreversible changes from puberty.
And most people opt to not actually go on cross-sex hormones.
And that's like a successful treatment. Like that is what the drug is supposed to do
But there's definitely this idea among these like anti trans activists that like if you go on blockers
That means you're more likely to become quote-unquote like fully trans in the future, which also just like isn't true
But do you know what is?
reversible
Not liking their products and services and support this podcast you can You can reverse that and make it so you really like them,
which helps us a little bit, probably, I assume.
I don't know.
I don't think so.
I don't do the business thing.
Anyway, here are the ads.
["The Ad"]
Okay, we are back. Let's continue with this fine literature from our good enemies at the Heritage Foundation.
Yeah, great art and layout as well, I'm noticing.
It is very well designed.
Yeah, there's these...
Oh, wow.
There are some children.
These poor kids.
Yeah.
These poor stock photos of children.
Yeah. These poor kids, these poor stock photos of children. Yeah, I'm sure they gave their heartfelt consent to being used in hate propaganda.
The next section is called, What are sex, gender and gender identity?
The best biology, psychology and philosophy all support an understanding that sex is a
bodily reality and that gender is a social manifestation of bodily sex
It's the best biology. That's simply
best philosophy
Now this claim actually does have a citation. So it's true.
Now, let me check the citation.
The citation is, oh, oh, oh, wait, wait, wait.
Oh, the citation is when Harry became Sally responding to the transgender movement.
The the the anti-trans book from 2018 by Ryan T.
Anderson. Oh, God.
That's not a real philosophy, biology or psychology book.
Oh, OK. Well.
He won best philosopher.
Anyway.
I don't know what you're talking about.
The best all agree.
It's so good.
Now sex.
Sex is a biological reality referring to an organism's
overall organization towards sexual reproduction.
In human beings, just like every other species
that sexually reproduces, this organism includes the chromosomes we inherit from our parents and the reproductive
organs, systems, genitalia, and hormones that develop as a consequence.
As there are two reproductive systems, there are two sexes.
Just like every other species that sexually reproduces.
This is completely consistent.
I get no citation because that's not that is not how biology actually works
No, nor is your genitalia necessarily determined by your chromosomes. Nope, but sure why not?
The the best biology all support this understanding
Biology from a first-grade textbook. Yeah, actually that's unfair to first-grade textbooks, which are largely blameless in this matter
It is it is unfair. Yeah, no one's sticking janitale in a first-grade textbook
This organization isn't just the best way to figure out which sex you are
It's the only way to make sense of the concepts of male and female really
Yeah, the only way, yeah.
What an interesting sociological statement made by the Heritage Foundation,
that the only differences are purely mechanistical,
and there really is no social basis that determines what the concepts in male and female relate to.
What an interesting opinion that I'm sure is consistent across all of the Heritage Foundation's advocacy.
Yeah, I was going to say, you can pull out another booklet and call them on their ship with
their own words. Gender, by contrast, is the way one expresses their biological
sex. We shouldn't pretend that there are no differences between male and female
because the biological reality is that there are. We also shouldn't be trapped
in rigid gender stereotypes. Transgender activists
deny that sex is a bodily reality. They argue that what its perceived gender identity represents
who a person really is, even if it goes against their biological sex. They deny their biological
reality by suggesting that biological sex is merely assigned at birth. A little known
fun fact, you actually can, can like scientifically change your biological sex.
Yeah, rules. It takes a little bit of time, it takes a little bit of effort,
but your biological sex can actually just be like completely changed. This is something that is not
like set. Also, there is literally, there is literally physically a document where your doctor
assigns you a sex at birth. Yeah. Come on. Yeah, no, it is a box that they must take.
It's not even like a, not a line that they get to write in
whatever they want, you know, like.
But the cool thing is, is that when you change
which sex hormones your body is dominant in,
it actually changes the sex and the functions of your body.
Pretty interesting stuff, actually.
I don't care about my chromosomes,
but as soon as we want to do more
gene tampering, I guess that could be fun, but...
Get you crisp. I don't really care.
You can also change body parts out, so that's cool.
I know they're working on those womb transplants, but I'm not into that
freaky stuff. Anyway.
According to the American Psychological Association,
gender identity refers to a person's internal
sense of being male, female, or something else.
Hey, something else.
Nice.
It is distinct from either sex or gender.
Activists claim that it is a person's internal sense of gender.
Activists claim.
Wow.
They also assert that it's more than just male or female.
It's fluid, and there's a spectrum of various options
Beyond man and woman like a gender fluid inter gender or non-binary. I've never heard the term inter gender before that's
Yeah, that's a new one
But I guess if that knowledge the existence of intersex people that kind of fucks up the premise of that whole thing
No, this is inter gender. Maybe that's what it is. Yeah, maybe that's what it is. Yeah, but maybe that's what it is.
They can't say intersex because it destroys their-
Their whole shit.
So they've transposed.
Intersex isn't like an identity.
It's like an actual, like completely like medical thing.
I don't think they fully understand this shit, Garrison.
I think it's possible.
You're right.
Sorry, I forgot I'm reading from a heritage foundation.
Nevermind. They may be reading from a Heritage Foundation pamphlet. Never mind.
They may be coming from a place of hate.
All right.
Let's talk about gender dysphoria now.
Let's.
Gender dysphoria refers to the distress someone experiences
when they have a disconnection between their bodily sex
and internal sense of gender.
The diagnostic label gender identity disorder
was used by the DSM until its reclassification as gender dysphoria in 2013 with the release of the DSM 5.
They really want that old DSM back. They want it so bad.
Before the DSM went woke. They really want DSM 4.
Transgender can refer to a man who identifies as a woman or a woman who identifies as man. Some activists,
activists go so far as to say that a trans woman is a woman
crazy
Not all people who suffer from gender dysphoria identifies transgender not everyone who identifies as transgender suffers from gender dysphoria
surprisingly woke statement
It's a surprisingly controversial and woke statement from Heritage foundation here anti-trans man anti true scum
heritage foundation
What the fuck base the seven people who get that you're welcome for everyone else. I swear to God. That's very funny
It's it's a little funny. Oh
Gary
I was workshopping some kind of like Tumblr post style joke, but I still have like two
pages of this pamphlet.
So now how do gender identity policies affect me and my community?
The question on every Republican grandparents mind.
The first area of concern, privacy.
Privacy concerns arise when a man who identifies as women can enter female-only spaces.
For example, changing rooms, gym class, they're doing bathroom stuff.
That's what they're doing.
The reason we have separate facilities in the first place is not because of a gender
identity, but because of the bodily difference between males and females.
That's interesting.
I wonder what happens when some of those bodily differences start to change or your social
rules in male and female also change like a young trans girl going into the men's bathroom
That could maybe be a little bit uncomfortable anyway
Preventing sexual assault is another major area of concern when it gender
identity determines who may enter a women-only space.
Public safety experts such as Kenneth V. Lanning, former FBI supervisory special agent assigned
to the behavioral science unit, they're doing the Buffalo Bill.
At the National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime at the FBI Academy for over 20 years, it is just the Buffalo Bill guy, explains that predators abuse gender identity
policies to gain access to victims.
While victims in law enforcement become less likely to report incidents for fear of having
misunderstood and being accused of discrimination.
The primary concern is not that people who identify as transgender will victimize women,
but that predators will exploit gender identity policies to do so. So this is interesting.
They're actually not doing all trans women are secretly rapists.
They are doing the what is actually more like more legit is that no, like men will be fucked up and men will like
do fucked up shit. The thing is they don't need those policies to do fucked up shit men will do it regardless
But you are the heritage foundation your your base your entire base
Are shook as composed of churches who do this literally every day like come on what are we doing here?
But I know I find it interesting that they take this line of approach
I will say this pamphlet feels like a much more sort of moderate, this feels like a gateway thing versus like the stuff that they're, stuff that
they actually believe or like the sort of like more hardcore stuff that they
distribute. Well I'm not sure how to how to segue to an ad break from this one,
I'll be honest. You know what else the Heritage Foundation supports? Oh well
that probably is true. Capitalism and these ads that help fuel the churning machine of death and suffering.
Ha ha!
Okay, we are back.
Let's talk about fairness. Gender identity creates an unfairness when
biological males, biological males, compete against females in sports and other activities.
It also reduces girls chances of winning athletic scholarships.
Yeah, the other fucking Title IX defense. Every time.
Scholar, I'm sure all those trans girls are taking up all the scholarships.
Yeah.
Let's just, let's just see where the Heritage Foundation stood on fucking
Title IX, shall we, when that came in.
I'm sure they were totally supportive.
Already several high school girls have lost state championships.
Oh, woe is me.
To quote unquote boys who were allowed to compete against them.
These two boys have won 15 girls state championships that were held by 10 females in the previous
year.
I tried to search some of these keywords to find exactly what they were talking about.
The first result was from the reputable news publication,
The Daily Signal, which is a Heritage Foundation puppet site.
And the article was just listing like a handful of like trans girls across the country who participated in school sports.
And that's like all it is.
And then of particular interest to James, this next sentence,
Oh, God, fucking.
A man who identifies as a transgender. Whoa, that's an interesting one.
A man who identifies as a transgender has also won the Women's Cycling World's title.
I know who they're talking about here. This is someone called Veronica Ivy. She was formerly
known as Rachel McKinnon when she won the world title. Okay, she won a UCI Women's Masters Track World Championship.
If you want to find an event where gender affirming hormones are used
on a regular basis, I suggest you check out the Men's Masters Track World Championship,
because every fucking year one of those dudes gets popped for using testosterone.
I don't see that in the Heritage
Foundation's complaints. Like, this is just asshole. They've she has been a particular
target for these people. Cycling has been a particular target for these people for a
very long time. And it's very funny that they continue to like put out this propaganda,
which completely misunderstands like the things
that let you win the Masters Track World Championship are having money and having time.
It is inherently unfair.
It's a hobby sport right 35 to 44 there are not professional athletes in that age group
but the people doing this are the people who have the time and the money they buy the fancy
bikes they travel to the race.
It's, if you care about fairness in master cycling,
there are a million other places to go after it.
This is bullshit.
Oh, it's so transparent because now
the biggest trans sports controversy
has been over a cisgender woman
who just is appearing too masculine, right?
Like the biggest thing, the biggest controversy in this whole trans women in sports thing
at the Olympics earlier this year is just actually a cisgender woman.
Yeah, but that's the whole thing, right?
Like policing the way people present their gender is what this is about for them.
Yeah, and they're willing to throw anyone under the bus,
as long as it like puts forward like whatever disinformation they want.
With the sole purpose of just changing public opinion,
not actually like caring about any of the people involved here.
Yeah. But like a return to like, I don't even think traditional gender roles,
but like, let's just say 1930s gender roles, not even 1930s.
Right. There were women fighting in the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s. Victorian England gender roles, not even 1930s, right? There were women fighting in the Spanish civil war in the 1930s.
The Victorian England gender roles.
Yeah, totally.
Like it is what they want.
And like, they're not throwing Emanuele Calif under the bus so much.
She is part of a target because she's not a girly enough girl, right?
She's, she's a woman who punches other people in the face.
And like, that's not collateral damage to me me, like, that is part of their thing, right?
Yeah.
It's not coincidental that it was a boxer.
It's part of their larger political project.
Yeah.
Yeah, and obviously it's also their conception of womanhood
is also highly racialized.
Yes.
Obvious reasons.
Yeah, it's not coincidental there's an African woman, right?
No, many of the trans girls who were listed in the Daily Signal article were trans girls
of color.
Yeah, that is who they're going after.
They're going after like the most oppressed person you can be in the country.
Yeah.
Now, onto one of our final chapters.
How transgenderism affects your personal liberty.
Transgenderism.
That's a good one.
Transgender policies also violate our freedom
of speech and freedom of conscience by forcing people to speak or act in ways contrary to their
personal judgment and deeply held beliefs. In New York City, you can be fined up to $250,000
for misgendering. What's the citation that? They do have a citation. Okay, hit me. They do go to
They do have a citation. Okay.
Hit me.
They do go to the NYC commission.
And this isn't true, despite the citation.
They're trying to take like a city ordinance and twist it to make it sound like you will
be fined a quarter of a million dollars for calling someone the wrong pronouns.
And that's not what the audience says.
Yeah, it's employment law, right?
Correct.
It was first written in the early 2000s.
It was then revised in 2015.
I'm going to quote from Snopes, quote, discrimination against transgender individual could result
in fines up to $250,000.
But these fines won't be handed out for accidentally misusing pronouns.
According to the new guidelines, the commission can impose civil penalties of up to $125,000
for violations of the law and in extreme circumstances, $250,000
for violations that are the result of willful, wanton, and malicious conduct.
Yeah, this is for like, employment discrimination.
Yeah, employment discrimination happens literally all the time and it never, there's almost
never consequences for it.
Yeah, but that's where this number comes from.
Right, and it's completely misleading to suggest that, like, the woke police are going to find you.
Correct. And it's not for misusing pronouns.
It's for, like, extreme cases of, like, continuous harassment or, like, legal discrimination.
The next sentence is, quote,
both a high school teacher and a college professor have been sanctioned by their employers
for using
Biologically correct terms with their students. Is it Jordan Peterson?
Now obviously those terms are not biologically correct because you can
Scientifically change your biological sex and what they're talking about here is no just teachers who are just like harassing their students
Who are like calling them by like the wrong name or calling them by the wrong pronouns
Like if you did that to a cis person over time,
yeah, you would also get in trouble,
because that's just like harassment.
Yeah.
And like, you're just a shit teacher.
If you're fucking going after your students
for who they are, then yeah,
you probably shouldn't be a teacher.
They then talk about how trans activists
are trying to get medical providers
to provide gender-affirming healthcare.
They're complaining how Catholic hospitals are getting in trouble for not wanting to
do gender-affirming healthcare.
They talk about an Obama mandate that forces healthcare plans to cover gender-affirming
healthcare and making sure that physicians actually have to do it even if they personally
don't want to.
Be like, no, this is your job.
You have to provide healthcare.
So they complain about all that kind of stuff.
And then the last section of the pamphlet is on child development.
Transmitting our ideology is now promoted in schools where children are taught that
gender is fluid, falls along a spectrum, and is detached from bodily sex.
In addition, activists seek to punish anyone who expresses any reservations about radical
treatment plans for gender dysphoric children.
These plans can include socially transitioning children as young as four, administering puberty
blocking drugs as young as nine, cross sex hormones as young as 14, and surgery as young
as 18.
This ideology threatens parental rights.
In Ohio, a Catholic family lost custody of their daughter when they opposed treatment
of gender dysphoria with cross-sex hormones.
So actually, this is actually a pretty good breakdown of how gender-affirming healthcare could work.
If a kid wants to socially start transitioning very young and they want to, yes, that's great.
There's no harm in that. If getting on puberty blockers at around nine, that makes sense. Hormones as a teenager, yeah. And surgery maybe a little
bit later. Yeah, that all seems quite reasonable. And in terms of this Catholic family, so trans
public parents lost custody of their 17-year-old trans son in 2018 after inducing suicidal
ideation for refusing to let their child receive
hormone therapy prescribed by a medical team who had been treating the child for two years.
Custody was transferred to his grandparents. So this wasn't the state just like stealing
this child away. It's like, no, you're like basically abusing this kid. So we're going
to move custody over over over to the grandparents. Also, like you're opposing this for a 17 year
old. This is almost like a full legal adult. I'm going to quote from CNN here, quote,
the parents attorney had argued that the child was not even, quote,
close to being able to make such a life altering decision at this time, unquote.
The county prosecuting attorney argued that the parents wanted to stop
the treatment because it violated their religious beliefs, unquote.
So, yeah, you're so scared that this 17 year old is going to make a choice
that you personally find a little bit icky.
Like come on.
I'm pretty sure you can legally emancipate yourself at 17, right?
Yeah, and usually you have like medical freedom, at least in Oregon, you have medical freedom
at 16.
I don't know what the case-by-case basis is in a lot of states, but that's pretty fucked
up.
Now, there is nothing in the coverage about this family being Catholic.
Heritage might be conflating this other story from Indiana, where a Catholic family lost
custody of their trans kid in 2021 for alleged child abuse.
And then earlier this year, the Supreme Court declined to hear the parents' case.
So, there you go.
Big L for them.
They then talk about, quote unquote, research, what the research says about transition.
The view that social medical transition is the appropriate treatment for people, including
children who feel at odds with their biological sex is becoming more widely accepted.
However, transitioning treatment, including puberty blocking hormones for children and
sex change surgeries for teens and adults come with serious consequences.
Today, parents are told that puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones
may be the only way to prevent their child from committing suicide.
However, according to the DSM-5, as many as 98% of gender-confused boys
and 88% of gender-confused girls eventually accept their biological sex
after naturally passing through puberty.
Okay, let's go over this because there's some weird phrasing here because no, that's not what the DSM actually says. A writer named Micah B broke down this claim in a medium post from 2018.
This exact sentence has been reused in a lot of right-wing publications over time.
So, accept their biological sex after naturally passing through puberty.
It's a very loaded phrase. Like, a child who suffers from genitosporium may receive treatment,
whether that's through speech therapy, like talking about it with a therapist, or hormone blockers.
And they may then choose to cease treatment and go through their natural puberty, right? Like that is, but that's not them like, quote unquote, like naturally passing through puberty.
Like no, that also involves a degree of treatment.
Now, the reason why these numbers are might be a little bit kind of odd,
and also they're also false, like the way that they're like being framed here.
But in particular for kids, like the criteria for children having genitisphoria is different from the criteria for teens and adults
Right does mean different things. Yeah, they also say as many as 98 percent
interesting phrasing
Because the DSM 5 actually says that
Quote in natal males persistence has ranged from 2.2% to 30%. In
natal females, persistence has ranged from 12% to 50%. So they took the lowest possible
number and switched the stat around by saying that as many as 98% eventually accept their
quote unquote biological sex. So that's a cute little flip around.
And then also according to the DSM,
a majority of boys, 63 to 100% who quote unquote grow out
of gender dysphoria, just later turn out to be gay, right?
There is a difference between like gender dysphoria
versus like gender deviance.
That's why you, yeah, you should like work
with an actual medical team.
If you have like a kid who's pre-puberty
who has a degree of gender variance.
Because yeah, that could result in a whole bunch of things.
And the fact that some of them just grow up to be gay kids is the result of successful
medical treatment and a loving family.
That is a good outcome.
Similarly, the DSM says that 32 to 50% of girls whose
gender dysphoria does not persist later identify as gay. So there we go. That's pretty average
stuff. They then go on to list all of the quote unquote side effects of gender affirming
treatment saying, quote, Meanwhile, radical gender affirming therapies pose serious medical
risks, including disfiguring acne, high blood pressure, weight gain, abnormal glucose tolerance,
breast cancer, liver disease, thermoprosis, and cardiovascular disease. These are all
the consequences of just puberty.
Yeah.
Like, depending on what puberty you go through, yeah, it's going to have different effects.
That's just how puberty works.
They also include, and of course, sterility.
And this is still a hotly debated topic.
There's some recent studies that show that there's actually a pretty good chance of people
who go on estrogen being able to, like, regain fertility after, like, six months of ceasing treatment. It's not consistent, right?
I've everyone who everyone who goes on like HRT has an understanding that that it can affect
How they reproduce in the future?
You're definitely encouraged to like if you want to have kids or think you might want to have kids in the future
Like you can save your sperms. You can save your eggs, you can get that stuff
ahead of time. But this is also something that people are like working on of being able to like
maintain the ability to have kids even like during or like after gender-affirming healthcare
treatment has like commenced. So that's cool. Finally, quote, puberty blocking therapies and
cross-sex hormones are non-reversible, largely untested and highly dangerous, especially for children.
We've already talked about how all of that is not true.
We've already gone through all of that.
Sex reassignment surgeries have not been shown to reduce the extraordinarily high rate of suicide attempts
among people who identify as transgender, 41% compared to the general population's 4.6%.
So this is also just like not true like everything.
It's just not true.
Also, there's no there's no citation here.
A peer review in the Journal of Adolescent Health found that hormone therapy for trans
youth reduced the rate of depression and suicide by 40 percent.
It also found that having like parental support during this process also like heavily impacts
the effectiveness of this treatment,
specifically on depression and suicide.
Like if you're going through this treatment and your parents still hate you,
yeah, that's going to actually hurt the ability of this healthcare to actually be effective mentally.
An investigation by doctors at the University of Washington found that trans youth
who receive gender-affirming healthcare reduce their risk of suicide by 73%
compared to those who do not receive care.
And a policy brief in the VA wrote, quote, since 1975, more than 2000 scientific studies
have examined gender-affirming care, supported by over 30 leading medical associations, including
the World Health Organization and the American Medical Association, gender-affirming care
is deemed evidence-based and effective at reducing suicide rates."
This is all widely understood.
This is such a non-objectionable stance that even famous woke institution, the VA, is like,
yeah, no, it's actually really effective.
Okay, and now actually, finally, for this pamphlet, quote, the most helpful therapies
for children experiencing gender dysphoria do not try to remake the body to conform with thoughts and feelings, which
is impossible.
No, not impossible.
But rather, rather to help people find healthy ways to manage their tension and move towards
accepting the reality of their bodies.
Unfortunately, 15 states have passed laws banning talk therapy for minors who struggle
with gender dysphoria, and there's a bill in Congress which would do the same.
There's no bill banning talk therapy.
This is a conversion therapy ban.
This isn't actual talk therapy, which is a part of actual healthcare treatment.
This is against conversion therapy. That is what they're actually talking about. So that is the bulk of like actual healthcare treatment. This is against like conversion therapy.
That is what they're actually talking about.
So that is the bulk of the pamphlet.
I also got given this other kind of, I think it's called a fact sheet, which is ironic,
by the Heritage Action Group, which is the kind of lobbying activist arm branch of Heritage.
It goes over a whole bunch of like the same stuff.
They particularly
don't like that the Department of Education released a report banning the use of offensive
and inappropriate terms like mother and father in school. This isn't true. What they're talking
about is that there's been a push to include just more gender neutral language. Like instead
of saying your mom and dad just say parents. Like yeah, that that makes sense. Yeah, that's
that's specifically what they're complaining about.
They complain about like books in schools.
They call the genderqueer graphic novel a book riddled with
pornographic and pedophilic content.
Not true. It's just simply isn't true.
All these kind of old lies that we have talked about on the show, like many times
before. And then they also just rehash a whole bunch of the claims from the other pamphlet.
They talk about the claim that in Virginia, a girl was sexually assaulted by a teen boy
pretending to be a girl. And this is not an isolated incident. We've talked about that claim
before. This was a fake story invented by the Daily Wire. This person was not trans. This was
someone who was in a relationship with this girl who sexually assaulted her in a bathroom.
Not a trans person, just a regular cisgender male.
And then they talk about sports, they talk about how men have more upper body mass, and that
puberty blockers do not change height, organ size, skeletal structure, muscle mass, or any of the biological characteristics that make men
unequal opponents.
They absolutely do.
Hormones literally, they just list all the things that hormones actually change. Like they actually, of the biological characteristics that make men unequal opponents. They absolutely do.
Hormones literally, they just list all the things that hormones actually change.
Like they actually famously do change all of those things.
Height, skeletal structure, organ size, and muscle mass.
Those are the main things.
Yeah, I mean, if that wasn't the case, you could just take testosterone and it wouldn't
affect you apparently.
Yeah, famously, testosterone never changes your muscle mass.
Yeah, testosterone sounds like a man who never benefited.
They also complain about how the Biden administration is wanting people to use preferred pronouns
if you work in government, which is again, it's just trying to stop people from like
harassing by using the wrong pronouns.
It's all just ways to prevent harassment.
And they complain about all that kind of stuff as well.
So it's a lot of the same stuff from the pamphlet.
It's a pretty fun little fact sheet.
Those are the two main pamphlets that were going around the RNC about gender ideology.
That was kind of the most in-depth it ever got.
Most of the speeches did not even get into any specifics.
They just threw out keywords for actual discussion.
This is the most in-depth stuff they had.
So this is largely the bulk of the average RNC attendees' knowledge.
This is actually probably more in-depth than most average RNC attendees, at least in terms
of what Heritage is putting out publicly.
That is their talking points.
Any kind of closing thoughts here?
Just dog shit.
I don't know what to say.
Yeah, it's really quite bad.
It's not my favorite, but honestly, I think it's just so poorly written and I don't know what to say. Yeah, it's really quite bad. It's not my favorite, but honestly, I think it's just so poorly written, and I don't know how effective this is.
It could be a lot more transphobic, oddly enough.
They have a lot of the same lies that the right has been like, workshopping around certain claims around trans health care and specifically how it relates to kids.
But I honestly don't see this as a very effective messaging for heritage.
Yeah, I think it is that like...
It's that pathway to hate thing, you know, that like,
your grandchild has a nose piercing, how do you deal with this?
Yes.
That like, it's not...
If you come at it too hard, people are gonna be like, what the fuck?
But it gets people there.
Yeah. I mostly wanted to go over this because like we're going to be entering the
holiday season pretty soon. So whatever, whatever Thanksgiving or Christmas
dinners you're forced to attend. Yeah. You know, if people start talking with
that kind of stuff, it's probably going to be claims that are similar to some of
the stuff in here. And these things are like very easy to to like research Especially all of the like puberty blocking stuff like that
There's it's so easy to be like this just isn't true
And most of them just have no idea because if the information they're getting is in line with this kind of thing
It is just an alternate reality that that they are living in
Yeah
And some of them are fueled by like actual ideological hatred and some of them are just actually like legitimately just like misinformed
And it's always that's something I can't tell you how your family
thinks because I don't know your family but it is it is a good thing to to like keep in
mind that there is ways to talk about some of the sort of things there's also if you
just want to avoid that void it all together and play Nintendo in the basement during Thanksgiving
dinner with your cousins that's also yeah Yeah, some sometimes the move. Yep
Support that. Well, this has been exciting. We will see you again probably tomorrow for more breaking news
It is news that breaks you slowly that is that is our demo news that breaks you slowly over time. That is her demo, new set breaks you.
Yeah.
Yeah. I'm Jess Casaveto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series, Dancing
for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me for I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films
and LA-based Shekinah Church,
an alleged cult that has impacted members
for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths
between high control groups and interview dancers,
church members, and others whose lives and careers
have been impacted, just like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members
and new, chilling firsthand accounts
The series will illuminate untold and extremely necessary perspectives. Forgive me for I have followed will be more than an exploration
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring these types of abuses never happen again
Listen to forgive me for I have followed on the I, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This summer, the nation watched
as the Republican nominee for president
was the target of two assassination attempts
separated by two months.
These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago
when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life
in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S.
president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
I always felt like Glennett was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover
for the FBI in a violent revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This is Rip Current, available now
with new episodes every Thursday.
Listen on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Senora Sex Ed is not your mommy sex talk.
This show is La Platica like you've never heard it before.
We're breaking the stigma and silence around sex and sexuality in Latinx communities.
This podcast is an intergenerational conversation between Latinas from Gen X to Gen Z.
We're covering everything from body image
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We even interview iconic Latinas
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I felt in control of my own physical body and my own self.
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If you're in your senora era or know someone who is,
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We're so excited for you to hear our brand new podcast,
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Listen to Senora Sex Ed on the iHeartRadio app,
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It was December 2019 when the story blew up. In Green Bay, Wisconsin, former Packer star Kabir
Vajabiamila caught up in a bizarre situation. Hey GB, explaining what he believes led to the
arrest of his friends at a children's Christmas play. A family man, former NFL player, devout Christian, now cut off from his family and connected
to a strange arrest.
I am going to share my journey of how I went from Christianity to now a Hebrew Israelite.
I got swept up in Kabir's journey, but this was only the beginning in a story about faith
and football, the search for meaning away from the gridiron, and the consequences for everyone involved.
You mix homesteading with guns in church and a little bit of the spice of conspiracy theories that we liked.
Voila! You got straight away.
I felt like I was living in North Korea, but worse, if that's possible.
Listen to Spiral on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi everyone, it's me, Katie Couric.
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Hi, everyone, and welcome to It Could Happen Here. I'm James and today I am joined by Billy
Ford from the United States Institute of Peace, third time podcast guest. Billy, how many?
I think it's just my second, but thanks for
Second. Okay. Well, we'll give you a bonus one. Thanks for the re-invite.
Yeah and we're here to discuss the revolution in Myanmar and bring you up
to date on conflict stuff and natural disaster stuff and answer some questions
people have asked me by emailing me. So yeah thanks for joining us Billy. We're
at another Crossroads in the Conflicts we talked about before we started recording. Can you perhaps explain to folks
like what has happened since 1027 part two?
Sure. Yeah. I mean, I think last time we talked, we were just kind of in the throes of the
initial 1027 phase. I mean, I think zooming out for a second, the February 2021 coup, September 7, 2021,
defensive wars announced and armed resistance really kicks off.
And then 2023, October, things really escalate.
After a few years of steady gains by the resistance, then there was a major level change and the
trajectory of the war favoring the resistance forces.
Yeah, I think as you mentioned, there was a second phase of 1027 in July and early August
that took things to another level.
Although it is just a continuation of a sustained push by the resistance. I think some have perceived these moments of October 2023
and July, August 2024 as real watershed moments,
but I think we can see how these are illustrative
of broader trends, trends in which the Myanmar military
is losing its capability to defend strategic positions,
its inability to counterattack
on the resistance side, much greater coordination among resistance armed stakeholders, growing
fighting capability, better weapons access, all these sorts of factors that have swung
the balance of military power further in the favor of resistance forces. But essentially what happened in July and August was
building off of the October advances, the resistance in northern Shan state not far from the Chinese
border pushed further into central Myanmar in collaboration. This was essentially ethnic-based
armed organizations collaborating with the Mar people Defense Forces, under the command structure of the National Unity Government. And they started making advances into central Burma. So whereas the initial phase of the
war and the NUG strategy was to focus on building relationships between the People's Defense Forces
under their command with ethnic-based armed organizations and focusing strategically on
the peripheries to build those relationships,
to build ethnic buy-in to the broader revolution, to get access to weapons and to make steady
advances.
Now we're at a phase where the resistance is pushing into central Myanmar.
Now the focus is on the city of Mandalay and central Burma, which is the biggest commercial
center of the country. So, yeah, I mean, this has sparked
another phase of, I think, pressure and anxiety within Napier and the capital among the
state administrative council, junta leadership, and more energy on the resistance side. And it's
occurred alongside advances on multiple other fronts. I mean, in the very north of the country, in Kachin state, starting in March, the Kachin
forces pushed the Myanmar military out of, I think it was 200 posts within four months.
And similarly in Rakhine state, which I think, well, maybe we'll touch on more.
The Arakhan army has made steady advances.
So it's not just in these sub regions, it's happening virtually all over the country at this point.
Yeah, it does seem and like
clearly the SAC, the Junta is kind of on the back foot. Like it started to forcibly conscript people which in turn
kind of gave people a choice between the resistance or the military and seems like more of them are choosing the resistance.
Some of the conscriptions, you know, people can buy out of them, which obviously causes not great
for the morale of the population.
That's combined with shortages and inflation.
Pretty shit situation for folks living under the junta.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
I mean, I think the Myanmar military, I mean, there's a big question here about the resilience
of this Myanmar military.
I mean, frankly, militaries in other countries have collapsed under much less
pressure. So there's a question here about like, what is holding
this all together, particularly given that its primary
resilience factors are heavily degraded. I mean, things like
its ideological value. I mean, it's historically been about,
well, we hold the country together, we manage the
diversity of this complex country, We defend the Bhamar and the Buddhist populations. These factors are no
longer credible. I think it's more than 100,000 homes in central Burma have been burned to the
ground. Most of those are Bhamar Buddhists. And, you know, some in the sangha have risen up,
the Buddhist sangha have risen up in protest, including a recent killing of a senior monk.
So I think that ideological foundation is totally degraded.
The other factors which are economic, the economic benefits of being in this institution
are also withering as like the entire economy is collapsing, as you reference.
And then the third component is like the social status that one achieves through being a member
of this institution.
It used to be a place where you could get economic benefits
and social benefits, and now it's really neither.
I mean, you're reviled or a target
for resistance assassination
if you're affiliated with this institution.
So I think the question remains as to like,
what are the key factors keeping it in place
given all of these pressures that it's facing and happy know happy to go into that but I think there's there it's an interesting case
study in institutional resilience and the challenges faced by resistance movement that's
has major resource constraints and you're fighting up against a military institution
that has learned how to orchestrate and sustain authoritarian governance structures for decades.
Yeah, I think we can maybe circle back to that.
One thing I did want to talk about before we move on to talking about what's happening
in Rakhine State is I wanted to talk about the recent flooding that people will have
probably seen if they have Burmese friends on social media or keep an eye on publications
in the region.
Can you explain a little bit about the scale of the flooding and the absolutely bungled,
if any, response from Napidore?
Sure.
Yeah.
I think the latest figures that I've seen were 160,000 displaced, 630 affected by the
floods, 230 dead, and 70 missing, I think was what I saw this morning.
But yeah, I mean, I think that gives you a sense that this is another humanitarian catastrophe
on top of a, I think what is now rated the second most intense violent conflict in the
world by Aclid.
So this is just one crisis on top of another. And yeah, as you kind of alluded to, the Myanmar military is incapable and unwilling to kind
of address the needs here of the population.
I mean, the one factor is that they don't have territorial control to move resources
if they had the political will to provide assistance.
But of course, they're doing the exact opposite.
In some of the most
flood-affected parts of the country, they are continuing to conduct airstrikes on civilian
populations. I mean, it's just kind of a level of brutality that's kind of hard to fathom. But,
yeah, I mean, there's all these other kind of ancillary effects of this. I think there's
signs of a cholera outbreak in Yangon. The economic conditions, as you mentioned a little bit earlier, are horrendous.
The economy has lost 30% of its value, and it's not a rich country to begin with.
Inflation is, I think, 32% year on year, with Myanmar and Chad having lost 200% of its value.
I mean, yeah, it's 200% less value than it was once it occurred. So this
is like, you know, it's just one catastrophe on top of another and it's really testing
the Myanmar public's capacity to support one another, which is that's really been the incredible
story here. And it's not the first time that the Myanmar military as a governing stakeholder has failed to
meet the needs in that moment of crisis. Of course, Cyclone Nargis, one of the worst natural disasters
in the region's history, was another instance in which the Myanmar military refused international
assistance and kind of instrumentalized a humanitarian catastrophe for political aims.
Yeah, yeah.
I think people, it's worth reading up on that
if you're interested in like,
so sort of longer term history of the conflict
and sort of the military in Myanmar.
Maybe now's a good time to take a break
and we'll come back and discuss a little bit
about Rakhine State. And we're back.
Okay.
So I think if people follow the conflict, they will have probably seen like a series
of conflicting and confusing articles and messages about what's going on in Rakhine
State.
And some of that is because there's not a great deal
of reporting in the English language,
a great deal of sources in the English language.
And even if there is, like none of us can really make it
to Rakhine state right now, going through Bangladesh
would be quite a challenging thing to do at this time.
And so I guess we should start breaking down
if people aren't aware, the people who live
and have lived for a long time in Rakhine state and the conflicts have existed between
them and the Burmese state.
Sure.
Yeah, I mean, Rakhine state borders Bangladesh on the western side of Myanmar, it's along
coastal border as well, and the site of some of the largest extractive oil and gas projects,
including the terminal for a major gas pipeline
that feeds 14% of Yunnan province's GDP.
So it has huge strategic value.
It's also China's aiming to kind of access the Indian Ocean
and circumvent the Strait of Malacca
by going directly to this kind of region of the country.
So it's, view strategically important.
But it's also, I think it's the second poorest state in the entire country and arguably the
most conflict affected at least since 2012-ish. So the population of her kind state is highly
diverse. It kind of elicited of the broader country's demographics. It includes a Bamaar
population, which is the dominant ethnic group at the national level. The ethnic majority is
Rakhine. There's historically a very large Muslim population, Rohingya Muslims primarily, but also
other Muslim minority groups including Khaman Muslims. and then a number of other smaller ethnic minority groups,
Muramadji, Kami, and others, as well as a small Hindu population. So you can kind of get the sense
that this is a highly diverse space. I mean, many of the listeners will have heard 2016-2017,
there was the site of a massive clearance operation and the genocide of Rohingya Muslims, about 750,000 of whom were
pushed into Bangladesh and almost all of them are still there inhabiting the largest refugee camp in
the world. Yeah, I mean overall conditions for the Rohingya, it's hard to imagine a more difficult set of conditions. The Bangladesh government is quite impatient,
having hosted many hundreds of thousands of Rohingya, some for seven years, but others
for actually for much longer than that, as 2016 and 2017 was a moment in a genocide.
But there have been instances of more military atrocities against the Rohingya population dating back to the 1970s as well.
Yeah.
So this is a long-term kind of situation in which the Bangladesh have been hosting Rohingya.
And yeah, I mean, I think conditions in those camps are really, really challenging.
The major issue now is the arising insecurity in the camps as some Rohingya militia groups have gained ascendancy in the camps, most
of which have very little public support among the Rohingya population, should be noted.
The major dynamic that's happened recently, I mean, the Arakan army, which is almost entirely
of Rakhine ethnic groups and has broad public support among the Rakhine population and Rakhine
state, has made massive advances across Rakhine
state and now controls virtually all of northern Rakhine state and is pushing south. It took the
city of Tondwe and the airport, which is the first time a resistance group had taken an airport.
It recently took a naval base, the first time that has ever happened in the history of the
Myanmar military. And now it's pushing as far south as Guas, potentially threatening to control the entire
state.
So, as this has occurred, the Myanmar military is in a state of complete panic.
And as it is losing forces on this front, but also on numerous other fronts, it has
attempted to buttress its forces through forced conscription.
And in the most potentially horrifying move imaginable, it has forcibly conscripted the
Rohingya into the Myanmar military.
They conducted genocide against the Rohingya population and now they are forcing them to
wear the uniform of their genocider.
It's kind of a level of horror that's hard to understand.
And one way in which they've undertaken this effort is by collaborating with Rohingya
Militia Forces, including ARSA, the American Rohingya Salvation Army, and the Rohingya
Solidarity Organization, ARSA, which have presence in the camps and have been facilitating
recruitment from the camps.
So the primary aim here is a military one, but a secondary aim, which is really critical,
is undermining inter-communal cohesion in Rakhine state.
Because ultimately, the Myanmar military operates through coercion, force, and violence, but
also through fragmentation so that it doesn't face a unified resistance.
And in this case, they want to incite instability
by creating hatred between the Rohingya and Rakhine population and building off of the
vitriol that had built over decades. So this is kind of a new paradigm that everyone is
trying to better understand. But yeah, it's kind of a new level of horror.
Yeah, it's particularly horrific, as you say. I think sometimes there's a tendency, especially with people who perhaps are not as familiar
with the situation in history there, to lump ethnic groups in as sort of monolithic actors,
right, or homogenous to be like, okay, so the Rohingya, as represented by Asa and the
RSO, have joined the Hunter, which is not the case.
Like every Rohingya person I speak to, everyone I speak to in Cox's Bazaar
shares a loathing for those organizations, their forced conscription of young people.
And yeah, their solidarity with the Hunter that committed the genocide against, and
it continues to commit a genocide against these people.
And I think the first thing we need to do is move away from that kind of
homogeneous perspective, but maybe we could explain there have been a few
accusations of
the our economy
Making attacks against the range of people right range of specifically Rehinger people who are not armed who are not part of our so
What are so yeah, can you explain like what we know what we don't know there? Sure. Yeah, I think there's
Just to start there is a massive fog of war in Rakhine State,
maybe worse than any other part of the country. So it is really difficult to disentangle fact
from fiction here, but I think there's pretty credible evidence that the Arkhan army have
committed atrocities against Rohingya civilian populations. In early August there was a specific incident in which hundreds of Rohingya were killed
in a drone strike and Fortify Rights, which is a human rights organization,
conducted an investigation into the incident and asserts that the Arakhan
army was responsible for that. Of course the AA these claims. And I think there's a few recent
interviews with the commander in chief of the Afghan army, Jumrat Nain, where he articulates
his side of the story, which you can find on irrawaddy.com and I think in a few other
news outlets.
Yeah, the diplomat did one as well. He's been on a publicity tour, I guess, recently.
Yeah, absolutely. I don't know if you've seen this, but his tendency to call Rohingya people Bangladeshis
is unfortunate, given that that's a language that was used to justify the genocide.
Right, absolutely.
Yeah, it reflects the language that the Myanmar military used.
Or Bengalis, who call them.
Exactly.
Yeah, it was very reflective of that.
Yeah, so this is really challenging, in part because I think there is kind of an important
distinction between the Myanmar military and the Arkhan army in this case, in part because the
Arkhan army has like broad public support among the Rakhine public. And so it has a more of a
legitimate stake to governance than the member military, which has none.
And so it's kind of an issue that requires attention and an honest accounting of the
facts and a long process of reconciliation, more because the Arkan army is likely there
to stay as a governing stakeholder.
So that is a really tricky kind of set of conditions.
And the other side of this is that the Rakhine public, I think there is a deep sense of grievance
among the Rakhine public.
And this is a population that has also faced years of intense political alienation and
persecution, not to mention war and violence.
Last year when Saiklo and Mocha hit Rakhine State, the Myanmar military did virtually
nothing to help them.
So it's a population with legitimate grievances and their perception is that the international
community only focuses on the Rohingya public's wellbeing.
I think the international community can do a better job of showing sympathy for the Rakhine
public's interests.
I think sympathy is not zero sum in that sense and that needs to be done better.
But honestly, like that equating grievances is also really kind of unfair and dishonest.
This Rohingya population is marginalized to just such an extreme degree.
And so those are really interesting report by Doctors Without Borders not too long ago
that showed that only like 600,000 of the 2.8 million Rohingya in
the world live in Myanmar, 57% are living in camps in Bangladesh or in IDP camps in Myanmar.
So it's like, there's just like a highly vulnerable population that has experienced genocide.
It's like there's a power imbalance.
So it's like, I think-
Yeah, it's not the same.
I don't know. The whole process of Rakhine-Rohinja reconciliation
is one that deserves immediate and urgent attention,
but it's also a long-term process of constructing
a governance structure that is acceptable
and that's not a highly exclusionary of Rohinja
and these sorts of things.
So it's a highly,, beyond the fact that we need
more deliberate investigation in some of these incidents, I think a broader conversation
about reconciliation and justice needs to take place. Yeah, and it's definitely one at least,
I speak to people who are probably on the more progressive side of the resistance and it's one
that they've acknowledged is something that they need to address and kind of
the litmus test for like a post-hunter
Myanmar is like are there places for these people who there weren't places for in the state before?
But yeah, how we get there is it's difficult and uh, I don't think that's not there's not a clear pathway that anyone's kind of
pointed to just yet. Yeah, the one thing I would add is like,
this is sort of emblematic of broader perceptions of Myanmar
and approaches to peace building in Myanmar
is that there's often a horizontal approach
that like we need to work on the inter-communal level,
individual level, trust building, that sort of thing.
And I think there is a place for that, for sure.
But we've done a couple pieces of research with an academic at UT Austin, who has found some really interesting
stuff about the nature of conflict in the country and nature of cohesion in the country.
And she's found, including through some experimental research studies and designs, which are quite
revealing, I think that national identity is often more important to respondents in her
surveys than ethnic identity, which kind of cuts against the traditional perceptions of how Myanmar
is. It's like, oh, it's this irreconcilably fractious place and it's so hard to build trust
between communities and that sort of thing. But her research kind of points to the vertical
dimension where it's the nature of politics
and the nature of governance structures
that highly exclusionary discriminatory governance structures
have sustained conflict for so long in the country.
And this is kind of like the main argument
for the resistance.
It's like a lot of the state borders,
at least a critical mass within this resistance movement,
they're trying to assert a new political paradigm in the country, you know, a more stable political paradigm
in which the Myanmar military is not a dominant stakeholder, in which violence is not your source
to power, and in which that's not, you know, built on exclusionary norms of belonging. So it's like,
it is generally a revolution in this sense and that is why
they're kind of pushing against the international pressures to enter into a power sharing agreement
with the Myanmar military because there's a perception that if the Myanmar military
remains in a position of political power, it will interrupt this reform process and
violence will persist in the country.
Yeah, yeah. I think that's probably a reasonable assumption to make.
Again, this is one of those things that I see a lot in different places in the world
where I go, right? There's this tendency to see things, I think, from a sort of colonial
perspective and just be like, oh, these ethnicities will squabble and fight.
And that's not necessarily the case at all. And if you look even to the PDFs,
I was speaking to
someone the other day who was saying like there are hijabi Muslim women fighting with the Karen
right now, which is something that doesn't align up with this idea of like ethnicities which are
clashing and can't combine. And we saw like a statement of solidarity from the Kareni to the Kurdish people,
which doesn't line up with this idea of an inherently Islamophobic,
like, you know, sort of massive of Buddhist people in Myanmar, which I think,
yeah, it's a little oversimplified to say that stuff.
And I think sometimes reductive and it's the analysis of Myanmar,
like as a place where colonialism is still occurring and the methods of colonialism,
lots of the things you described, like promoting fractures, promoting these different ethnic
identities, which are seen as kind of zero sum and mutually exclusive. These are things that
the United Kingdom did or Britain did all around the world for centuries and it's not rocket
science to see how that jumps to another
group which especially in some cases was trained by the British or had relations with the British
and you know to see how we got there but I think we'll take another little break here
we'll come back and we I want to discuss the resilience of the the Hunter and how it's hanging on.
All right, we're back. So for the last little segment of this podcast, I would like to discuss
how the the Burmese military is holding on to power.
When I speak to soldiers who have defected, I speak spoken to about half a dozen, I speak to soldiers who have defected, I speak, I've spoken to about
half a dozen, I guess, soldiers who have defected over time, it's almost comic how disorganized and chaotic things are. And at the same time, it's terrible the way like
every single one of them has described to me that their families were essentially held as collateral
to stop them deserting, right?. So they had to work with the civil
disobedience movement to first extract their families before they themselves took their weapons
in most cases because they got a bounty for their weapons and went to join the resistance or in some
cases went into exile. So maybe that gives us a good view on how the Hunter is continuing to force
people to fight in this war that it's losing.
Can you explain a little bit of how they've held on to power?
Sure.
Yeah.
I guess the first thing to note is that rates of defection are totally historic.
I mean, there's by our account about 15,000 deserters, which is actually not radically
different than historical norms.
The Myanmar military has comparatively high rates of
dispersion even before the coup, so that's not far outside of the norm. But the defection, I think
there's about 5,800 defectors by our count since the coup, which is unprecedented. There's never
really been defection to resistance in Myanmar's history. The other factor is the number of individuals who are surrendering
without a fight, with putting up little resistance. That number is hard to count, but it's by our
read, it seems to be quite high. There's forms of acts of disloyalty occurring that are not
spurring institutional collapse, but are degrading the Myanmar military's
fighting capabilities, which is a really important dynamic.
So say that at the outset.
The other thing I'd say is that I think we need to think about this at three levels.
So the rank and file soldiers, they are significantly demoralized.
Most did not join the military to fight.
They joined the military for economic stability and for social status.
And neither of those are available to them under this military's leadership.
They certainly did not join to commit atrocities against the Bhamar Buddhist population, which
is now what they're being pursued.
So I think that population, the large number of rank and file soldiers, is
highly demoralized and that's where you have seen lots of desertion, defection, often from the front
lines though. That population's defection, desertion is not going to trigger institutional collapse.
At the second level, you have like a commander core major, major and above. And these, I think since Operation 1027, you've seen their morale
to drop. And I mean, there's been the fall of Lachio and the loss of the Northeast Regional
Command, the first time in the universe history that a regional command has been taken,
that has sent shockwaves through the commander level. The other thing is that, mid-on-line, the commander-in-chief, in his attempt to consolidate
power and protect himself from internal fragmentation, he's rotating commanders based on loyalty,
not based on effectiveness, which is also degrading the memoir military's fighting capability.
But it's also, that's maybe one reason why you have seen less acts of disloyalty within that layer. At the senior level, I mean, mostly most of those senior
Myanmar military officials who are based in Napida, I think they, until the fall of Lashio
and the resistance moving into Mandalay, there was relatively high levels of sense of security and morale was okay, I suppose.
But the flow of Lassio and the ensuing events has really inflamed internal frustration from
what we understand.
So this has also triggered some shifts in the way in which the Myanmar military operates
its patronage structures.
So traditionally, the patronage structure is essentially like a feudal state. I mean, you have like a commander in chief that is extremely powerful, has authority
to rotate or fire or arrest virtually anyone. I mean, just huge amounts of power centralized
there. The deputy commander in chief has little capability to challenge the commander in chief's
authority. But then you have these regional commanders that operate as feudal lords at the
regional level. They're able to extract huge amounts of value or wealth through attractive
industries, illegal industries, all with total impunity, but often with the approval of NAPIDAW.
And that approval was often just given. Now it's less easily given. You've seen 90 senior officers shuffled, changed positions since the coup, and 50 have been
removed or arrested by our tracking.
You've also seen individuals detained and arrested because I think there's 15 colonels
or above, mostly brigadier generals and major generals who have been arrested
for business-related activities, which I think is emblematic of the restructuring of the
patronage network and centralizing the patronage network with Minnan line himself.
If you do not have his personal approval, you cannot conduct business activities, including
these highly lucrative scam operations that are generating billions in value, but also really frustrating the Chinese.
So this whole patronage structure, which is critical to sustaining the member military,
is being reoriented.
And we'll see whether or not that helps sustain the institution or introduces more instability.
But ultimately, the forms of resilience, I guess you would call it, are the ones maybe you
pointed to. I mean, their structure. I mean, it's like rotating office commanders and senior
officers regularly, holding families hostage. Essentially, you know, a soldier is sent to the
front lines, his family remains in the barracks. Payment is often made to the families, not to the front line soldier.
And there is retribution if the front line soldier defects or deserts.
This is also where the 5800 number I mentioned earlier is likely a radical undercounting
because and also the 15,000 desertion because a lot of people are recorded as KIA when they're
actually they've deserted or defected.
So right. Anyways, I'm not sure if that answers
your question with some thoughts relative to your resilience. Yeah. No, I think it does. Yeah. One
of the guys I met with described basically his entire, I guess, squad went out on a patrol and
defected. I guess the PDF had been, I don't know how to describe it really. It's basically shit talking
them in their barracks or like in their position for months, right? Like you see describe it really. It's basically shit talking them in their barracks or in their position for months.
You see this a lot.
It's a unique feature of the conflict in Myanmar, guys with megaphones just being like, you
can surrender if you want.
Your life is miserable.
I guess in this case it worked.
They will be registered as KIA.
They went out on a patrol and never came back.
Yeah.
I guess the other dynamic is that you need to align motivation and opportunity for
defection, desertion. And the motivation is there in a lot of cases, but opportunity is
not. The resistance is committing some resources to these efforts, but it's really limited
given the scale of the challenge.
There's a lot of factors that need to kind of come together like the ability to safely
communicate with resistance, the ability to move into resistance-held areas, the perception
that we were accepted and not face retribution, the perception that living conditions are
acceptable to them.
So there's all of these conditions and given the costs of defection
desertion, which could be like major retribution against your family, and deep uncertainty about
leaving this institution that is kind of a state within a state, that's why we're not seeing the
kind of large-scale commander level defection desertion, I think. Right. So one last thing I
wanted to talk about before we finish up. If people
I guess keep tabs on the conflict they would have seen recently a video I'm sure you've seen at the
Kachin independence army shooting down an aircraft with an FN6 Chinese manned portable air defense
system. It's what they sort of called man pads. I'm sure women can carry them too just fine or
anyone else for that matter. But I think it
happened in January and the videos just come out. Can you explain the significance of that within
the conflict landscape in Myanmar? Yeah, I guess there's a couple points. One is about China's
posture and the other is about the military balance. I think the Myanmar military's air power is its
primary comparative advantage.
I think at this point, it has fewer light infantry forces than the resistance, but that
its heavy artillery and especially its air power, that's how it terrorizes the population.
But it's also been a source of, it's been a very powerful mobilizing force. I mean, I think after phase one of 1027, the MNDAA
Kokong armed group essentially took back the territory that it perceived to be their own
and took the town of Lao Cai, which was really surprising, but a major advance. And then
everyone kind of perceived, okay, they'll just stay in the quote unquote Kokong areas.
They'll stay where they are. But I think there's a deep perception among the MNDAA,
but also broader ethnic minority groups that as long as the Myanmar military is in power and has
air capability, it will terrorize the public. Even if it cannot reach or ever take back Laotai,
it will bomb it. And that's exactly what we saw after 1027. You saw airstrikes in Laotai,
you saw airstrikes in Leipzig, the headquarters of the Kachin 1027. You saw airstrikes in Laotai, you saw airstrikes in Leica,
the headquarters of the Kachin Independence Army.
You see airstrikes in parts of Rakhine state
that the Myanmar military has no chance of recapturing.
You know, it's terrorizing the Pumbak thing.
Yeah, it's a punitive thing.
Yeah, it's a punitive thing.
So, and it also is powerfully motivating.
It's like, okay, now you see the MNDAA
pushing all the way to Laos. And a lot of people didn't think they would do that. But it's like, if you have a perception
that this Myanmar military can hurt me from a distance, they may need to eliminate them
altogether in order to achieve the level of stability and safety that they pursue.
So like it's a double-edged sword in that regard. But going back to your question, I mean,
think like if the resistance is capable of constraining the Myanmar military's air capability, it radically changes the balance
of power. I mean, I think there are some elements of this that are been a primary focus of some
of the international human rights community, for example, constraining access to jet fuel
and these sorts of things trying to push for
an arms embargo none of which have succeeded but there's been kind of progress on the margins
although i think we just saw russia delivered jet fuel and the maritime routes in southern
mars so yeah in exchange for the artillery shells that the miami has sent to russia right
okay i didn't realize.
Yeah.
So, I mean, they're able to sustain that.
And the Chinese have sold, I think, six aircrafts last year.
So they still have this fighting capability and they're still able to extract foreign
exchange essentially by stealing from exporters.
But that's a whole different conversation.
But anyway, I think this is a key dynamic if they're able to affect their air power.
The other thing is that China has attempted to play both sides. I mean, historically, that's sort of their approach.
I mean, they have deep connections with armed organizations along its border, maybe closer even than with the Myanmar military,
but they also provide political legitimacy and material that with the Myanmar military, but they also provide political
legitimacy and material assistance to the Myanmar military.
They just actually signed an MOU on law enforcement and security or some sort with the Myanmar
military.
That's a deep and abiding relationship, in part because the Chinese don't see an alternative.
I mean, I don't think they have much trust for the NUG or other resistance groups.
And despite the fact that they also don't really trust the Myanmar military or perceive
them to be competent, they see them kind of as their only potential partner in Ipida.
But it's kind of a question as to whether this strategy is still working for them.
I think we've seen lots of acts of defiance from both sides, the Myanmar military and resistance
groups vis-a-vis China.
I mean, the Myanmar military, they've been pressuring them to hold elections since the
coup, essentially.
Yeah.
And they're really no closer to that happening.
I mean, I think they dissolved the NLD, something the Chinese said not to do.
And more recently, they've designated a number of resistance groups as terrorist organizations, which essentially
obviates political negotiations, which I think would certainly frustrate the Chinese, given that they hope to achieve stability through
political negotiations between a subset of resistance groups and then again among military.
So there's these kind of acts of defiance also on the resistance side. I mean, the Chinese are pushing for ceasefires and yet the resistance continues to push into the country.
And there's sort of a perception that as the resistance groups align with China, quote unquote
align with China, maybe they aren't, gain ascendancy on the battlefield in particular,
that China's influence gains. But I'm not sure whether that's the case. It might actually be inverse.
As these groups push into Myanmar and have more territorial control, maybe they have
more options and they're less dependent on the Chinese.
So that relationship in the North along the Chinese border is also very much in flux.
I don't think it's clear exactly how that'll play out.
Yeah, no, it's not. And I think that's sort of the big question that's overhanging. Obviously,
you have actors that are more closely aligned with China, like the United War State Army,
who have sort of largely remained aloof from the conflict, or aloof maybe is the wrong
word, but are not like directly committing most of their forces to the conflict. It's
probably a better way of saying it, right?
Yeah, I think so. And now there's a ton of pressure on them to stop selling arms to other groups.
So we'll see whether that happens.
Yeah, which is probably where the Kachin independence army was able to get the surface to MSRs from,
which brings us back to that.
Yeah, it's never not complicated, but it's always very sad that like the folks caught in the
middle of this are suffering horrendously and sometimes suffering kind of out of sight
and out of mind for so many people.
This is, you know, a new cycle continues to kind of either trivialize or completely ignore
what's happening in Myanmar, which is really sad.
People often ask me like where they can find reliable news sources and where they can send their money
if they wanna help people in Myanmar.
Do you have any good suggestions for that?
Sure, yeah, I mean, I think for news,
I guess for like day-to-day news,
like Frontier Myanmar is a fantastic source,
as is Myanmar Now and the Irrawaddy.
These are, they have English language content
that would be really interesting and accessible.
My organization, the US Institute of Peace, you can check out our website.
We publish a lot of analytical work on there related to the conflict.
You're welcome to check there.
I think there's a really good, another podcast that's really good, Insight Myanmar, that
is worth checking out.
It started as a Buddhism-oriented podcast talking about Vipassana, and now it is
branched into a much broader range of issues. Some of the best stuff I've heard. And actually,
affiliated with Insight Myanmar is an organization called Better Burma that provides humanitarian
assistance and one you could contribute to. There's an organization called Skills for Humanity that
provides a lot of humanitarian assistance on the ground Yeah, and you mentioned liberate Myanmar before we started recording that you also be a good support
Yeah, yeah, I think skills of humanity also accepts some
Maybe they accept direct I was speaking to them about like medical equipment that they needed
Yeah, don't know if they accept direct donations or not, but people who want to volunteer medically, that's one to look out for. Yeah, that was fantastic, Billy. Is there
any way, anything else you'd like to plug, like where people can follow you or
USIP online?
USIP.org. Most of my writing is on there. I'm on Twitter,
the I-L-L-E-E, the number four, the letter D. But yeah, I mean, I checked those sources I mentioned.
It's too bad there's not more kind of content in the mainstream media, but there's a lot of
really incredible reporting coming from the ground, from people taking incredible risks
to share information. So, I encourage you to support some of those local outlets.
Yeah, definitely, including financially, if you can.
They're doing the work that really needs to be done.
Absolutely.
Thank you so much for your time.
Yeah, thank you, James.
We appreciate you being our host.
Cheers. Jessica Acevedo, Executive Producer of the hit Netflix documentary series, Dancing for
the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me For I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and
LA-based Shekinah Church, an alleged cult that has impacted members for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high control groups and interview
dancers, church members, and others whose lives and careers have been impacted, just
like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members and new, chilling first-hand accounts,
the series will illuminate untold and extremely necessary perspectives.
Forgive Me for I Have Followed will be more than an exploration.
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring these types of abuses never happen again.
Listen to Forgive Me for I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This summer, The Nation Watched,
as the Republican nominee for president,
was the target of two assassination attempts,
separated by two months.
These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago,
when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
I always felt like the one that was kind of his right hand woman. The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI in a violent revolutionary
underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This is Rip Current, available now with new episodes every Thursday.
Listen on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Señora Sex Ed is not your mommy sex talk. This show is La Platica like you've never
heard it before. We're breaking the stigma and silence around sex and sexuality in
Latinx communities.
This podcast is an intergenerational conversation between Latinas from Gen X to Gen Z.
We're covering everything from body image to representation in film and television.
We even interview iconic Latinas like Puerto Rican actress Ana Ortiz.
I felt in control of my own physical body and my own self.
I was on birth control.
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If you're in your señora era or know someone who is, then this is the show for you.
We're your hosts, Diossa and Mala, and you might recognize us from our flagship podcast,
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We're so excited for you to hear our brand new podcast, Señora Sex Ed.
Listen to Señora Sex Ed on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
Do you ever wonder where your favorite foods come from?
Like what's the history behind bacon wrapped hot dogs?
Hi, I'm Eva Longoria.
Hi, I'm Maite Gomez-Rejon.
Our podcast, Hungry for History, is back.
Season two, season two.
Are we recording, Are we good?
Oh, we push record, right?
And this season, we're taking an even bigger bite out
of the most delicious food and its history.
Seeing that the most popular cocktail is the margarita,
followed by the mojito from Cuba and the piñacolada
from Puerto Rico.
So all of these things, we thank Latin culture.
There's a mention of blood sausage in Homer's Odyssey that dates back to the 9th century BC. BC? I
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Welcome to It Could Happen Here, a podcast that is recorded when I'm very tired.
But you know who's not tired?
Garrison Davis, our host for today.
No, I'm probably more tired than you.
I was up till-
Oh, I don't know about that.
No, I was up till 9 a.m. EST writing this.
Oh, geez.
I went to bed by like five or six.
I slept for three hours.
I'm going right back to bed after this.
Excellent.
As is the grind, you know, rise and grind.
That's my motto.
Yeah, I'm going to do the same thing.
So.
All right, well, Garrison, what are we what are we talking about today? What's our episode about?
What's this soad on?
So it's it's been a while since we've done like an update on what meme politics are up
to.
I think that the last deep dive we did was like, I would say like a year year ago when Ron DeSantis then the
presidential hopeful. Meatball Ron Garrison, Meatball Ron. Me sorry sorry but
my apologies putting Ron just embraced the fast-wave like a meme aesthetic for
his then failing and dying campaign and that was kind of the last that we did in
one of these big deep dives into like how meme politics currently operate.
And it's been a long year.
It's felt in some ways much longer than a year since then.
And the meme landscape has changed significantly.
And that's kind of what I want to discuss today.
Just go over the current state of meme politics in September of 2022.
Great.
It's like the state of the union, September of 2022. Great.
It's like the state of the union, but
slightly dumber. But for us, yeah, just for all for
the the completely brain rot.
Yeah. Space of online politics.
People who have destroyed their minds
by spending too much time on the
Internet. Yes, exactly.
So now that most of these
like jokes and references we'll be talking about
are actually really old and not actually relevant anymore and are no longer trending, now we can
talk about how they worked, if they worked, and what they can tell us about the changing landscape
of meme politics in the year of our Lord 2024 and beyond. So let's start by going all the way back
to July 15th, which was just a lifetime ago.
Yeah, that was 1000 years ago. Yeah, this was this was the first day of the RNC.
Vance is announced as Trump's running mate. This was before Biden dropped out of the race.
But when we were pretty sure that that he was probably going to hopefully,
that's interesting that you were pretty sure because I kind of thought he was going to like make us like fucking hoist his corpse back into
the White House. I mean we got a really good indication about five days later
that his dropout was like imminent. Yeah yeah you're right. And it happened, it
happened less than a week later. So it was it was really on the line. But anyway
it was a very different world, very different time. Meanwhile on the first day of the RNC, after Vance is announced as the Republican VP candidate,
the Twitter user Rick Roods-Cavs posted this tweet,
quote, I can't say for sure, but he might be the first VP pick to have admitted in a New York Times bestseller
to fucking an inside-out latex glove shoved in between two couch cushions. Vance Hillbilly Elegy, pages 179 to 181.
So this is the start of the couch meme. The next few days, the meme spread online with
the help of liberals who were unable to detect the fictitious nature of the claim. Now,
unironic spread is crucial to the success of memetic attacks like this.
The couch fucking claims gained such widespread prominence on Twitter that on July 25th, the
AP decided to do an official fact check of the claim, running the headline,
No, JD Vans did not have sex with a couch.
Now this had two problems. By platforming this story in the
AP, the image of JD's couch coitus was propelled outside the confines of overly online Twitter
shit posters into the popular discourse. Now the topic was welcome on news shows, talk
shows and other respectable publications. The other problem is that you can't definitively say JD Vance has
never had sex with a couch. No, no, I'm sorry, I would never say that. You can say
it's untrue he wrote about sofa sex in his memoir, but not that he's 100%
never made love to a loveseat. Yeah. So making matters worse, hours later the AP
removed their fact check, leaving a webpage that just read, quote,
this story did not go through our standard editing processes
and has been removed.
I gotta know, I do desperately wanna know
what actually happened in the background there.
It's quite funny.
It's quite a big fuck up.
Now, this led people to reasonably conclude that if the fact check was taken down,
that really only leads us to believe one thing, is that this is a true claim.
Which, at this point, many people knew that it's not.
I think, interestingly, JD Vance has refused to comment on this claim, which is probably smart, but
his continued refusal to even deny the claim adds a bit to the humorous nature.
So the retraction of this fact check became a news story itself and gave a whole new life
to a meme that had kind of been reaching the end of its cycle.
People created doctored pages of Vance's book Hillbilly Elegy where he reflected
on tales of his youth in Ohio, where it was commonplace for young boys rejected by girls
to turn to couch cushions for sexual pleasure. The fake pages were framed as a limited first
edition of the book before Pierre Thiel found it and revised the book for a secondary wide-released
copy.
The next week the meme continued to proliferate,
having completely broken out of the Twitter shitposting bubble it was birthed in.
But the peak of the meme was stilt to come. On August 6th, Kamala Harris announced Minnesota
Governor Tim Walz as her running mate, and the two appeared together at a rally in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. During Walz's first speech, he made a very safe kind of dad joke style reference to
his vice presidential opponents viral sticky sofa situation. Like all regular people I grew up with
in the heartland JD studied at Yale, had his career funded by Silicon Valley billionaires,
and then wrote a bestseller trashing that community. Come on!
That's not what middle America is. And I gotta tell you, I can't wait to debate the guy.
That is if he's willing to get off the couch and show up.
So, you see what I did there?
So, due to the references kind of like explicit sexual context, this was a bit of an unexpected move.
Yeah, you could say that.
But for those already familiar with the meme, the bit served as a humorous yet tame in joke.
And for those unfamiliar, the huge crowd reaction prompted others to
inquire about the context for the whole JD Vance couch thing, once again boosting its
popularity as a trend.
Now, I think this was a bit of a gamble from Walls.
Definitely.
As acknowledging a viral meme often leads to its impending death, where recognition
and participation of viral trends from the mainstream establishment signal that something is no longer cool and is now instead cringe.
Now part of the long lasting presence of the coconut tree meme is the Harris campaign's
wise unwillingness to make continuing coconut tree references or capitalize on its imagery.
The White House going all in on Dark Brandon using the imagery for merch
and Biden increasingly making references to the meme in interviews and speeches.
Just killed a dead, nuked it.
Exactly, ultimately led to this meme's death, long before the death of the Biden campaign
itself. But this could be like a delicate balance. Before Biden made a Dark Brandon,
one of the early core aesthetic images associated with his 2024 reelection campaign.
The first few dark Brandon references from the White House actually increased the memes
spread.
And I think this is where Walz's joke was able to succeed.
The couch reference was vague enough and disconnected from the more explicit aspects of the meme.
And paired with Walz's goofy facial expressions and his kind of dad joke refrain of see what I did there,
it made what could have been a cringe and or crude moment into a charismatic and endearing one.
I think the other thing that makes me lean towards Walls'
invocation of the couch,
helping more than hurting, is that the meme had already begun to be legitimized by
the establishment.
When it's the subject of an article in every major publication and Stephen Colbert is making
couch jokes on TV, then it is already broken containment and hit the mainstream.
Yeah, I would also add, I think there's a degree to which like the the dark Brandon
stuff was cringy so fast because it was very clearly the Biden campaign
jumping on to a meme that
Biden himself certainly didn't understand. Absolutely not.
Whereas I think Wall's got a little bit of the kind of energy Trump used to get in part because it was it was like
such a I can't believe this is happening in American politics.
The VP candidate for the Dems just accused
the Republican VP candidate of having sex with the couch.
Like it was such a, wow,
this is like the breaking of a seal kind of moment,
which normally the Republicans have kind of had
to themselves these like line crossing moments.
And I think that does get attention and energy to you.
It was interesting to see them do it
and have it actually work.
Yeah, well, we'll talk about that a little bit later,
how this sort of tactic has been almost entirely monopolized
by the right to the past decade.
And in just now, we're starting to see some of that change.
I think Tim Wall's making a single couched reference,
I believe did very little to hurt the inevitable trajectory
of the JD Vance
couch meme. In the days after the speech, searches for JD Vance couch reached an all-time high,
and as is the nature for Peaks, was followed by a gradual fall off during the month of August.
But crucially, the spirit of the meme never really fully went away. I think one aspect that
separates the couch meme from Dark Brandon and even Coconut Tree to some degree,
is that it's not based on trying to prop up
a political figure like positively,
but is instead attacking a widely disliked figure
with slanderous disinformation.
And though the couch meme is well past its peak,
there's been no shortage of ways to make fun of JD Vance.
The overall momentum against him specifically
has continued on utilizing memes with a true, untrue,
and semi-true basis, whether that be his inability
to order donuts or his legitimately possible interest
in dolphin sex as evidenced by his Twitter searches.
Do you know who also likes dolphin sex, Robert?
I mean, I could be convinced, but I guess let's check out these ads anyway.
All right, we are so back. So the right did not take kindly to Wells's acknowledgement of the whole sofa spectacle.
They were so pissed.
They were really pissed.
And it's funny, it's like as if their main guy has not spent the last 10 years making
up wild and spewing all sorts of offensive lies about his opponents.
Yeah, yeah.
That's why they're pissed.
Yeah.
We're supposed to be the ones doing this.
So, in response, the online rights finest posters cooked up a mimetic counterattack
against Tim Walz.
And what they decided on is that Tim Walz once had to get his stomach pumped from drinking
a gallon of horse semen with this meme originating from a fake screenshot of
an AP fact check posted by the Twitter account National Conservatism.
See, uh huh.
I'm sure you're going to get into it, but there's so many reasons why this was always
destined not to work.
Yeah, absolutely.
Almost immediately this was seen as like a massive misfire.
Yeah, yeah. It made it immediately clear.
Oh, you guys don't understand why what you used to do, like what you were doing, was working.
Yeah. Like you never actually understood the principles behind what you were playing around with.
And I think crucially, most of the attacks from these like weird online
figures never actually caught that much traction.
The only ones that succeeded were ones that were just parroting stuff that Trump was talking about.
Because I think Trump actually understands this line of attack much better than most of these right-wing posters do.
But yeah, it was very clear that this was a failure. Some of the first horse semen posts got immediately ratioed by replies and quote tweets, deeming the meme a manufactured and desperate attempt to respond to the natural
growth of the couch hoax from a random Twitter shitpost to the Democratic vice presidential
candidate's opening speech.
With a guy like Walls, you don't go with horse cum.
You do something like you start spreading a rumor that like he cooked a bunch of well-done
T-bone steaks at a barbecue or something like that. Totally Totally like something that really hits to the center of his dad core thing
It has to it has to line up with his vibe
Right, right, right. And his vibe is like, you know that nice Midwestern dad who's a dog shit cook, right? Like yeah
Which is something that waltz has actually been able to like
Utilize himself with his like white guy tacos and stuff, right? Like, right, right. Exactly. He's lead into it very smartly. He lead into it. And then
it becomes a strength that then the right also gets upset about accusing him of quote unquote,
anti white racism. That was quite a moment for American political history.
The other thing with like this horse semen thing is like, you simply just can't force these things to happen.
A crucial part of the success of a political meme like this is that it must have a degree
of unironic spread by people who genuinely believe it to be true.
Now, the horse semen meme was also intended to counter the Republican are weird talking point
that picked up steam this summer. And for some reason, they chose to go about this
by making an escalatory and just grossly bizarre claim
about Tim Walz guzzling animal semen.
Masterful gambit, sir. Not a weird thing to say at all.
No.
In doing this, the write displayed a fundamental misunderstanding
of why the JD Vance couch story was successful.
The reason why it caught on,
despite the easily verifiable fact
that JD Vance did not write about
pleasuring himself with a couch as a teenager,
is that JD Vance seems like the kind of guy
to have used a couch to masturbate
as a teenager in rural Ohio.
Yeah, you know that adolescence was awkward as shit.
Absolutely, like it wasn't successful
just because it was like a weird sex story.
It evoked a genuine feeling of something a sort of like white trash young guy might do.
On the other hand, swallowing a gallon of horse semen is such an outlandish jump into fantasy by comparison.
Yeah, nobody has done that, right?
Well, well, Tim Walz is no Mr. Hands. The vibes simply do not match.
And to be clear, Garrison, Mr. Hands wasn't swallowing it. That was part of the problem.
That is true. And like, meanwhile, Vance has the exact vibe of like a gross little teen
gremlin who fucked it inside out rubber gloves shoved between two couch cushions. So the
horse demon meme failed to reach outside the confines of niche right-wing Twitter.
But conservatives had another meme up their sleeve.
Chronically online, far-right influencers Cat Turd, Chaya Reichek, aka Libs of TikTok,
and Ian Miles Chung led the charge in branding Tim Walls as Tampon Tim in reference to a
bill Walls signed requiring menstrual products be provided in schools.
Oh, the horror.
The Babylon Bee wrote, JD Vance is weird says guy who signed bill to put tampons in boys
school bathroom unquote.
So similar to the horse thing, this attempt to frame Tim Walls is weird just didn't work.
The meme never caught on beyond its initial posts.
I think part of the reason why the overly online right is so focused on painting Walls is weird is not
just revenge for the couch joke, but because Tim Walls is often credited with popularizing
the quote, Republicans are just plain weird line of attack, something that's really caught
on this past summer. Now, the oldest clip I can find of Tim Walz
positing this message comes from December of 2023.
I'll include that clip here.
And you said basically there's no such thing
as a generic Republican.
These guys are weird.
Once they start running, their weirdness shows up.
What did you mean?
What weird have?
I'll stand by that.
Well, look, just the strange things they become obsessed with, demonizing our children, becoming
obsessed with people's personal lives in their bedrooms, restricting freedoms.
I'm surrounded by states who are spending their time figuring out how to ban Charlotte's
Web in their schools while we're banishing hunger from ours with free breakfast and lunch.
That's what the public's looking for.
That's what they're trying to get to. And they will weirdly obsess with everything to be mean
and cruel and small in their ideas.
And I didn't hear anything last night
that did anything different to that.
So I'll stand by that.
I just think Americans know
this is just weird stuff to be focused on.
Now we on Naked Appen here and Behind the Bastards
have similarly been advocating
for this type of framing for the new right for quite a long while.
Like Robert, I know you've been like really pushing for this as a tactic like for years
now.
Yeah, yeah.
If they'd made me the vice presidential candidate three years ago, I really could have made
some progress on this.
But glad to see what they've got up.
Like we decided on the name for Molly's new show,
like very early this year.
Like this was way, way before like the weird attacks
went viral.
It's really the only name we ever considered
was weird little guys.
Yeah, cause that's how we like internally refer
to these freaks because these are all unhinged,
anti-social freaks.
And many of them revel in being this antagonistic force.
I think part of their self-image is the idea
that liberals find them dangerous.
And the weird attack is very disempowering for these people.
It reframes them from this like scary existential threat
to being more akin to you're just off putting a creepy uncle.
Here's a clip of Wallace himself
kind of explaining the methodology behind this attack.
You've gotten some attention this week for calling Trump, and Vance, and Republicans in general
weird. And I think that you're the one that set this tone. And there's this shift.
The Harris campaign seems to be following your lead, echoing this language. Why do
you think weird is a more effective attack line against Trump than what Democrats
have been done previously, which is argue that he's an existential threat to democracy?
Yeah, and it's an observation on this.
And, you know, being a school teacher, I see a lot of things.
But my point on this was is people kept talking about, look, Donald Trump is going to put
women's lives at risk.
That's 100 percent true.
Donald Trump is potentially going to end constitutional liberties that we have, end voting.
I do believe all those things are a real possibility.
But it gives him way too much power.
Listen to the guy.
He's talking about Hannibal Lecter and shocking sharks and just whatever crazy thing
pops into his mind.
And I thought we just gave him way too much credit.
And I think one of the things is,
is when you just ratchet down some of the,
you know, the scariness or whatever,
and just name it what it is.
I gotta tell you, my observation on this is,
have you ever seen the guy laugh?
That seems very weird to me,
that an adult can go through six and a half years
of being in the public eye.
If he has laughed, it's at someone, not with someone.
That that is weird behavior.
And I I don't think you call it anything else.
It is simply what we're observing.
Now, an interesting side effect of the weird framing is that it's left
these ultra conservatives utterly incapable of effectively
combating this line of attack.
They've been so used to being on the offense
that they never really prepared for the position that they're now stuck in.
Over a decade of they go low, we go high, conditioned the rights to be completely unable
to cope with being put on mimetic defense.
Now my favorite retort of the weird claim is from conservative pundit Helen Andrew,
who wrote, quote, calling people weird is such feminine behavior. Textbook sex difference.
Men engage in open conflict. Women police conformity. It's honestly disorienting to
hear male politicians use the line.
I love too that we're talking about how men are naturally drawn to open, honorable conflict
when talking about a bunch of people who never log off, like everything you do is behind
the keyboard, motherfucker.
It's amazing that they're combating this by saying the weirdest things imaginable.
Yeah.
Now, I think this one's only one-upped by a reply to this very post by the author of
the self-published Kingmaker trilogy named Aerie Mendelson.
Christ.
Who posted a meme featuring a crowd of NPC Wojaks
all saying the word weird,
which I find actually be a very powerful image
depicting all the masses having agreed upon
that Republicans are weird.
But Mendelson wrote, quote,
"'It's both feminine behavior and herd behavior. They all started calling them weird at once.
It was obviously planned,
cooked up by a sophisticated wordsmith,
and then distributed by their network.
Yes, only the most sophisticated of wordsmiths knows the word weird.
It's amazing.
You've got to dig deep into the dictionary to hit that one.
Truly, truly, truly this must be the work
of a sophisticated word smith.
It's phenomenal.
That's fucking funny.
So in trying to combat the weird accusation,
the right has mostly opted for either responding
with escalation, like in the case of the horse seaman meme, which only makes them seem kind of more off-putting, or just going for the
classic uno-reverso, right?
I'm not weird, you're weird.
This is the ultimate sign of desperation and impending defeat.
I am rubber, you are glue, whatever you say bounces off me and sticks to you.
On top of being a strategy that often signals one has already lost, by employing this tactic,
you make the very basic error of repeating the enemy's claim against you, thus continuing
to amplify and spread the original attack.
Here's a clip from Trump.
There's something weird with that guy.
He's a weird guy.
JD is not weird.
He's a solid rock.
I happen to be a very solid rock. We're not weird. He's a solid rock. I happen to be a very solid rock. We're not weird.
We're other things, perhaps, but we're not weird. But he is a weird guy. He walks on
the stage and there's something wrong with that guy. And he called me weird. And then
the fake news media picks it up. That was the word of the day. Weird, weird, weird.
They're all going.
Now, similarly, I found a Megyn Kelly video
titled Tucker Carlson Explains Why JD Vance
Is Actually Normal.
Great, I'm sure Tucker knows.
The most normal man alive.
And Trump supporters have brought signs to his rallies
that read Donald Trump is not weird.
My I am not weird shirt has people asking
a lot of questions already answered by my shirt. It's a very basic mistake. Now, there
has been some pushback among certain swaths of people on the left who have historically
associated themselves as like societal outcasts and have found comfort in embracing words
like weird and freak. And on a certain level, I understand this. But I think this point of view is making the same fundamental error as the conservative right
when they try to flip around the weird accusation onto Democrats, progressives, and people on the
left by primarily using homophobia and transphobia. We're using the same word to refer to two very
different things. They call drag queens weird for being transgressive. Meanwhile, Trump, Vance, and the
far right are weird because they're oddly reactionary. They're trying to resurrect a
long dead world by forming an authoritarian movement behind a reality TV star who sounds
like your rambling conspiracy theorist uncle. It's a battle over the terrain of normalcy as a
shifting category. And while I sympathize with some's hostility
to the hegemony of normalcy,
how I often fall outside of that category,
I believe it's also paramount that we sabotage
reactionary efforts to gain any territory.
So that's kind of the cycle of weird.
And we will be back to talk about this kind of final
new stage of meme politics after this break.
Okay, we are once again so back. Now, I believe this election will truly be characterized by the complete proliferation of meme style politics. Now, even without like the use of a meme image,
I think politics, especially this year,
has itself functioned and spread like a meme.
Now, this is something that's been happening
for the past like eight years, certainly,
but the way it's happened this summer,
I think has been slightly unique.
The weird attack is, you know, the ideal example of this.
But even if you just look back a few months ago, we were in a very different position. It was a very different story. And
I'll let Stephen Colbert demonstrate that.
So the Biden campaign wants to build on the new viral trend of hand grandpa the phone
because reportedly they're looking for a meme page manager. So look forward to some hot new Biden social content like
Irmigurd Trumpers Hitler, I Can't Has Youth votes, and of course for the very
online Skibbidi Biden.
Okay, I really want to play more of that cliff, but I'm afraid I already included a little too much.
What a dire situation that is.
That is the peak of the liberals' memetic attacks.
Just truly abysmal.
Oh my God. attacks just truly abysmal.
Oh, my God. I become obsessed with skimity Biden just because it
demonstrates such like an
inevitable like self defeat
that that was like the best thing
these people had like cooking
as it's kind of obvious by the clip.
This led towards the death
of the Biden campaign.
They really had nothing in the tank.
Biden was a shambling old man.
And then like two months later, Kamala kicked off her campaign by embracing the Kamala is
Brat Summer, which yes, may have killed Brat Summer, but it did help secure the vibe shift
skyrocketing her popularity.
Quite frankly, I was ready for Brat Summer to die.
Yes, sure. But I think her weaponization of that term, endorsed by Charlie XCX, I think did help
skyrocket her early popularity and showed an early embrace of online culture.
And I believe the Harris campaign actually owes a lot more to memes.
In a ironic twist of fate, there is a compelling argument to be made that Kamala Harris's rise to the top of the presidential ticket can at least be, in
part, tracked back to Republican attacks which spawned memes. Last year the
account RNC Research ran by the GOP posted multiple clips and edits
attacking Kamala Harris for what they saw as odd phrases and awkward moments.
Earlier this year some of those videos from RNC Research went viral outside of right-wing
Twitter, which led to an ironic or post-ironic embrace of Kamala Harris among liberal and
leftist posters.
The biggest one was the Coconut Tree video, which spawned memes that started to pick up
steam in January and didn't peak until July.
Another one of RNC researchers' videos, a four-minute compilation of Kamala Harris saying,
what can be unburdened by what has been, provided the inspiration for the title of a document that
spread around political circles postulating Kamala Harris as the best successor to Biden if you were
to drop out of the race instead of a messy last minute primary or an open convention.
And I think these memes did a lot to increase Kamala's favorability in the first half of
this year.
Kamala, prior to this, was a relatively kind of disliked figure nationally.
She was one of the first to drop out of the 2020 presidential race.
Yeah, she wasn't.
I wouldn't even say disliked as much as like not a figure.
Like the big, the number one thing people said about her is that like she's been a non-entity
as a vice president.
Yeah, yeah.
And she certainly wasn't popular.
Yes, definitely not popular.
So although the GOP may have inadvertently helped to improve the public profile of Kamala
Harris and have failed to effectively combat the weird attacks, they have not totally failed on the memetic warfare front. The
past two months, the right has landed on a somewhat effective meme style politics
by utilizing a combination of disinformation and AI images to create
fake news stories that rile up their base on certain key issues. So far, mainly
trans people and immigration.
Now a few months ago I did an episode on how the right's been using memes to create this
fake epidemic of transgender mass shooters.
And then in July, a new anti-trans psyop went super viral.
False claims that the Algerian Olympic boxer Aman Khalif is transgender or in some kind
of unverified way quote
unquote biologically male spread around online with the help of British
newspapers and went just completely viral for a whole week with the
disinformation subsequently becoming a new story itself. This fake story caught
traction after an Italian boxer quit a match 45 seconds into a fight after
receiving a single hard blow to the face.
Anti-trans memes are a well-worn part
of this type of disinfo ecosystem,
and there was no shortage of trans sports memes
now using Khalif.
I'm gonna quote from Ruby Hamad in Al Jazeera, quote,
Khalif's subsequent match was against Hungarian Anna Hamari,
who in the lead up posted and deleted
an image that I believe to be among the most significant of the entire affair because of
how it lays the subtext bare. In this AI generated image that Hamari sourced from Instagram,
Caliph was not merely represented as a man towering over a dainty vulnerable white woman,
but was denied humanity altogether and drawn as a supernatural mythical beast."
Many other AI images of Caliph spread throughout this viral trend, some with just Caliph having
a stereotypical male body that were AI generated, and others with this similar monster-ish look.
And I think beyond the actual use of these like AI memes and kind of anti-trans
memes using Calif, I think the way the actual story spread was like a meme. I think that's how
I was able to gain such like a vital traction in just like a few days. I think the next version
of this is the eating cat story, which started with a post to a Springfield crime
watch Facebook group from someone who shared a fourth hand account based on a rumor from
a neighbor who claims to have heard the story from a friend who heard the story from an
unnamed source. Now, news guard tracked down the woman who told the Facebook poster about
the story and she told them, quote, I'm not sure I'm the most credible source because
I don't actually know the person who lost the cat.
I don't have any proof, unquote.
In Springfield, they're eating the dogs, the people that came in.
They're eating the cats.
They're eating.
They're eating the pets of the people that live there.
I just want to clarify here.
You bring up Springfield, Ohio, and ABC News did reach out to the city manager there.
He told us there had been no credible reports of specific claims of pets being harmed, injured
or abused by individuals within the immigrant community.
Well, I've seen people on television.
Let me just say here, this is the—
The people on television say my dog was taken and used for food.
So maybe he said that, and maybe that's a good thing to say for a city manager.
I'm not taking this from television.
But the people on television say their dog was eaten by the people that went there. So maybe he said that and maybe that's a good thing to say for a city manager. I'm not taking this from television.
I'm taking it from the city manager.
But the people on television say the job was eaten by the people that went there.
Meanwhile, the Ohio Division of Wildlife told TMZ that the main photo of an alleged Haitian
immigrant carrying a dead goose, presumably on the way to eat it, was in fact a random
black man removing roadkill from a street in Columbus, Ohio, with no evidence
to suggest he is from Haiti, he is an immigrant, or was intending to eat said goose.
Still, JD Vance particularly spent a lot of work boosting this fake news story.
Also if he was, what's wrong with eating a goose?
Yes, exactly. Like there's so many problems with the Haitians are eating
pets and wildlife meme. And we don't have enough time to fully get into it. So just kind of one
anecdote in this kind of series of memetic attacks. And I think one of the guys who was
spearheading this was JD Vance, who spent a lot of effort trying to push the story into the national spotlight.
Either the day of or before the presidential debate, Vance tweeted,
quote, in the last several weeks, my office has received many inquiries from actual residents of Springfield
who have said their neighbors' pets or local wildlife were abducted by Haitian migrants.
It's possible, of course, that all these rumors will turn out to be false.
Do you know what's confirmed?
That a child was murdered by a Haitian migrant who had no right to be here."
Unquote.
And now I think the last thing that he's referring to was an unfortunate car accident and the
Haitian man was a legal immigrant, not an illegal immigrant.
And the father of the child who died has been advocating that people stop using his child's
death as this racist ammunition in this weird culture war debate.
God, it's bleak.
Which is really hard to see a man pleading that these unhinged racists stop using the
death of his son to further their like, they're just extremely gross
and transparent agenda.
Yeah.
It's one of the more disgusting things that's happened.
Part of the spread of the eating a pet story has been the use of AI images, particularly
of black men kidnapping and eating pets, as well as images of Trump rescuing cats from
what I would describe as a horde
of immigrants, which is what I would assume the AI prompt would be.
Now, these images aren't necessarily meant to be passed off as real, but in the absence
of actual evidence, they serve an important purpose of providing a visual just to stick
in people's minds.
And I think that that's crucially what's going on with all of these AI images,
whether they be of Trump saving cats or holding cats,
or they just be very racist depictions of black men
trying to eat or kidnap people's pets.
Earlier this year at the RNC,
I know me and Robert went to this panel
produced in part by Microsoft,
talking about the use of AI images
in politics and how they're advocating to not be using AI depictions of candidates,
which is something that Trump has consistently been doing, posting or re-truthing AI videos
of Kamala Harris, of people like Taylor Swift endorsing him, which then led to Taylor Swift
endorsing Kamala Harris, which seemingly upset Trump greatly.
Now, to me, if you look at the trans-Olympics debacle
as well as the Springfield incident,
it feels like this endless series of new disinfo trends
is designed so that individual confrontations
just don't matter that much.
Like pointing out the whole trans-Olympics thing is fake just doesn't matter because
then they're going to move on to Haitian immigrants are killing people's pets.
Each individual lie is so flimsy, but the constant sequence of them builds a structure
that has a degree of stability for conservatives.
And this is a project that they've been working towards for a long, long time. I know Robert, we've talked about this.
Yeah, this I mean, I saw the start of this as like a kid, right? Like this is kind of
what, what guys like Limbaugh were always doing on sort of the ground floor level, you
know, you could, you can look at, I think one of the first big like cleavage points
in our realities was the whole Clinton
death count thing, which if you're unaware, as this list conservative started spreading
in 1993 or four, of all of the people that Bill and Hillary had supposedly had murdered.
It was guys like Vince Foster who'd killed himself, who worked for them and whatnot.
It was all bullshit, but it was kind of the start of this,
like when you get enough of these things,
it doesn't matter that each of them
takes seconds to debunk.
They form a sort of like,
like a cushion.
If you exist within that reality,
you can kind of slide along
without touching the ground,
and definitely now.
Yeah, it forms like a mesh-like net structure
that where each individual piece is very weak,
but together it provides an actually like
pretty resilient like resting place
for these people's alternate version of reality.
Yeah.
Now Vance is kind of somewhat admitted in some ways
to having manufactured this media story.
This was interesting to me. Yeah.
And I'm going to put that clip here and I'm going to include a bit of a longer clip than what's usually used in soundbites.
Just because during this interview, just Vance's behavior and his pauses are very odd.
So there's going to be a few seconds of dead space, but that is in the actual interview.
American media totally ignored this stuff until Donald Trump and I started talking about
cat memes.
If I have to create stories so that the American media actually pays attention to the suffering
of the American people, then that's what I'm going to do, Dana.
You just said that you're creating a story.
We ought to be talking about public policy.
Sorry, you just said that you're creating the story.
What's that, Dana?
You just said that this is a story that you created.
Yes.
So, the eating dogs thing is not actually.
We are creating, we are, Dana, it comes from firsthand accounts from my constituents.
I say that we're creating a story, meaning we're creating the American media focusing on it.
Now Vance has subsequently said that,
no, no, no, I'm getting this information
from firsthand accounts from my constituents.
When I say that I'm creating stories,
I'm creating a media story.
But it's hard not to see this as a little bit
of like a tactical slip on his part.
Right.
Now, this has all created a very odd situation for the Republican Party, as we've kind of
talked about the past few months.
Journalist and researcher Jared Holt wrote, quote, the Trump campaign seems to be doing
the same failed dance as the DeSantis one at the moment.
Pander heavily to terminally online weirdos and get mad when the general public goes,
uh, what the fuck?
Unquote. Yeah.
And this is the thing, when you have someone on stage talking about eating pets,
that is a turnoff for many normal people because they immediately
clock this as being probably complete bullshit. Yeah.
And we're in a very interesting moment in the Republican Party,
considering the right wing's electoral losses in 2018, 2020, 2022, and
possibly going into 2024, this kind of weird culture war grievance, anti will strategy
just might not be electorally viable when matched against a more normal alternative.
And I think making matters worse, the Trump team and the Republican National Committee
have spent the past four years handing over a lot of their comms and outreach to just certifiable freaks like Laura Loomer, Ian Miles Chung and Libs
of TikTok. People who are very disconnected from what regular people care about. People
that are only liked by other really online freaks.
And people who have no crossover appeal, right? Joe Rogan is such a powerful card in their
hand because he has a lot of like normal dude appeal, right? And Rogan is such a powerful card in their hand because he has a lot of like normal
dude appeal, right? And so when he starts parodying a talking point, he can actually push it to people.
Laura Loomer does not, right? Like, like if you if you show a normal person, Laura Loomer, they're
like, what the fuck is wrong with that lady's face? And they're a very double edged sword, because
And they're a very double-edged sword because, although they are very off-putting, and that in some ways can damage Trump, they also carry a degree of very real harm.
Oh yeah.
Whenever all these people hop onto a trend, a very consistent thing that has followed
is bomb threats being called into whatever their target is.
They love doing that.
Whether that be hospitals providing trans-health care, abortion clinics, or in this
case, just schools in Springfield, Ohio, which have now received multiple bomb threats.
And again, like it is a very double edged sword because obviously that's like very real
harm being done.
And you could argue that, you know, that makes the situation worse for the Trump campaign,
that the fact that their attacks that they're spreading are resulting in like bomb
threats being called into schools.
But it also creates a degree of actual harm for like kids and many of the legal Haitian
immigrants in Springfield that are now seeing a very like unprecedented as of recent wave
of like extremely racist attacks.
There's a good article by Jared Holt in MSNBC
that kind of goes into this topic specifically
that I'll link in the sources below.
So yeah, that kind of rounds up my update
on the current state of meme politics.
All of its various forms that's taken
these past few months from couch fucking jokes
to bomb threats in Springfield.
And it's a very dominant form.
Like, I don't remember memes being this front and center, at least in the 2020 election.
Yeah, no, I mean, they 2016 they kind of were.
But it was it was like a much rougher and ruder attempt this.
There's like so much more buy-in by like large
Organizations and Democrats have like finally jumped on board to this
Yes, yes, absolutely They they have long rejected this line of attack as an illegitimate form of politics and they are not taking that stance anymore
Yeah, they picked the gun up off the table fucking finally. Well that that at least does it for me
Yeah here at it could happen here. I will leave us with with one closing sound bit the gun up off the table fucking finally. Well, that at least does it for me. Yeah.
It could happen here.
I will leave us with one closing sound bit from JD Vance.
Something that Governor Walz has called due in Donald Trump and that is weird.
Sure.
And it is taken off.
The New York Times reports that when Donald Trump was asked about it, he said, not me,
they're talking about it. He said, not me, they're talking about JD.
Well, certainly they've levied that charge against me more than anybody else.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from
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