Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 149
Episode Date: September 28, 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. How Bread Bloc Feeds Unhoused People In San D...iego Anarchism In Brazil, Pt. 1 feat. Andrew Anarchism In Brazil, Pt. 2 feat. Andrew Gig Economy Terror: What Israel's Pager Bomb Attack Means for You Wild Faith: A Conversation with Talia Lavin 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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Hello, and welcome to It Could Happen Here.
It's James today, and I'm joined by Luca and Sailor.
They're both from Breadblock, which is a mutual aid group in San Diego.
How are you doing today?
We're doing great. Great. How are you?
Wonderful. Yeah, I'm thriving. I've just received my 75th COVID booster, I think. So having
a little miserable day, but that's okay. Not going to get novel coronavirus, which is always
nice. So can you guys start out by maybe explaining
what Bread Block does, how long it's done it,
and why it does it?
Yeah, so we are a mutual aid group.
We mostly provide hot food that's
like the core of our services.
We feed about 100 people, like 80 to 100 people,
depending on the day, weekly in East Village in San Diego.
We also provide clothing and harm reduction supplies and other things like tampons and
Plan B when we can get our hands on it. And we try to be we are there like at the same time every day I
will not say the exact location but if you are interested in getting involved
you can always reach out and that's like what we're doing right now and that
happens weekly and say am I missing anything yeah so this form of what we're
doing with RedBlock in a more organized way, we've only been doing
it a few months.
However, initially we started doing it in 2021 when I started getting into harm reduction
stuff and I was working out of syringe exchange and realized a lot of people would be asking
for food and we weren't giving that out there.
And so that's why the initial idea came about.
And then we just had enough people who were willing to do it in a weekly manner. So that's how
we chose that location and got started doing that. There's just a lot of people down there
on those nights. So it's timed to happen at the same time that a harm reduction services happen,
the needle exchange. So it's at a time when a lot of people are down there
and the amount of time are like collective doing
this specific thing as they exist is I believe since
end of March, early April is how long we've been like
consistently providing services every week.
Yeah, that's great.
That's a long time still, especially through like
summer can be a difficult time
if you don't have a house in San Diego,
like it gets increasingly, it gets very hot.
And particularly the streets themselves get hot
and that becomes dangerous for people.
Yeah, exactly.
So I want to start with like, at some point, right,
say that you were doing your syringe exchange
and you were like, these people need to be fed,
they are hungry.
And now we're here and you're feeding them every week, right? But you had to do a whole lot of things in between here and there. And like,
I know this because listeners email me all the time. So many people want to do that too.
And it might not exist where they are, they might not know. So like, can you explain how you went
about like seeing a need and then organizing to meet that need.
Yeah. So I guess what came before that was we had already built relationships with each other
around our leftist ideals and our and protesting and different stuff. So we already knew a lot
of people who are who are interested in mutual aid in that capacity. But I will say things
like Instagram have helped just meet more people who are looking to get involved in
mutual aid.
Yeah. Yeah. Like Salus said, we had spent some time building community with each other
and getting a core group of people that trust each other that had gone to protests together that were
maybe in affinity groups already with each other.
And then there was just enough of us that were in community with each other at the time
that when Zayla was like, the encampment ban is really making things so much worse for
people in communities and we really need to do something.
We were all just like, it just happened because we were all sitting in a room together
one night after a social event.
And Ceylo was like, we need to talk about this.
And we were like, okay, yeah, we need to do this.
And we had enough people where we could pull together a first distro and then a second and then gradually adding like more organizations
so that we could continue doing it sustainably over time. Yeah. Yeah. That's like, I want to put a pin
in the camping ban because the camping ban is making things worse for people who already have
a hard time just surviving here and it fucking sucks and it's Todd Gloria's fault. You shouldn't
vote for him. Yep. Let's talk about though, like I want to get to nuts and bolts.
Right.
You're feeding 100 people.
Right.
You need a giant ass pan.
You need loads of food.
You need a place where you can cook.
How did you identify all those things?
And how did you get to a place where you could regularly have those things?
So in 2021, when I had initially started this with kind of a different group of people,
but there was definitely overlap.
We just did it and like use my mom's kitchen and found some big pots and just made it happen.
And I feel like if you have the will to make it happen, you're going to figure it out.
And you know, maybe in the beginning, it was a lot more chaotic which you know we are anarchists
so we're okay with the chaos but it just after doing it week after week it just became more
streamlined and you know we just buy a lot of essential bulk food and we have a few giant pots
food and we have a few giant pots. We like to make soup a lot.
Yeah. Currently our kitchen is like, like our cooking equipment includes two large pots and a rice cooker that someone
recently donated to us and then we needed a fridge. So we got a
free fridge off OfferUp and cleaned it up and put some cool
stickers on it and then plugged
it into a garage. Currently the kitchen that we use is like a couple of us just
like live together and so we use our kitchen and we have access to our garage
and we just store the supplies in the garage. We store the fridge in the garage
and we make it work through donations we get on Instagram.
So we knew some comrades that work with the community fridges.
There's like some community fridges in San Diego.
And so they already had a relationship with a grocery store.
And so we were able to hop in on that and we get some donations from that.
We get some donations from what's,
Sayla, the group?
Oh, Porchlight.
Porchlight.
Yeah. And there's so much food waste that I feel like if we were to find the right people,
we could be fully self-supporting on just things that would be thrown away alone.
Yeah, definitely.
Yeah. We just have to meet the right people in order to do that. But we're getting there Yeah, and I do want to say the kitchen is a small regular size kitchen
So you don't have to have some big crazy warehouse type kitchen to make this happen
Yeah
and then
You're feeding people right like presumably you're doing it like in the afternoon or evening
Have you found there are things that you said you like soup?
But I know like we fed a lot of people at the border last winter, right?
And we found out that like certain things work, certain things didn't work.
And we always tried to keep it vegan because of people's religious needs or preferences, right?
Is there anything like that that you found that works or doesn't work?
We have done a lot of chili with our squad and I know that Luca has done a lot of curry
So there are certain things and they can both be easily made vegan
Yeah, initially a lot of people when we would have vegan stuff would ask for me alternatives to which I understand people
You know, they don't always have access to protein. So
We try to have both options when we can nice
protein. So we try to have both options when we can. Nice. Yeah, it varies what we have because our group kind of functions with four like
autonomous squads, like all semi-autonomous that take turns doing the distros so that
you're only really responsible for it once a month, which helps reduce burnout.
Yeah, definitely. How does that work? Explain how like you came up with that and how it's organized. Yeah, so this was kind of like something we've been talking about for a while.
Some of us are like more into the theory than others, but we're just kind of talking about like,
oh, well, like, how do we get more people involved? Because I think what happens oftentimes with these
mutual aid groups is there's like a lot of people sitting in a group chat, and there's like,
mutual aid groups is there's like a lot of people sitting in a group chat and there's like a small core of people who do end up doing the majority of the labor.
And that often results in burnout for those people and building a resentment between like
the people who are doing a lot and the other people.
Because I think also like sometimes people feel left out and they don't feel like they
can get involved.
And then they feel like the people who are doing the core of the labor are like in charge and they have
to defer to them yeah which creates a lot of problems which I'm not saying
like we don't have any of those problems like we're still trying to work out the
kinks but the squads sort of like dynamic makes it so that groups of about like
five to ten because a distro you need about like six people to make
it happen so about five to ten people um take turns so you just rotate so you have you know
when your day is it's once a month that you are responsible for the distro and you are responsible
for choosing the food that you're cooking making sure it gets cooked organizing with your other
comrades getting the
donations, all of that stuff. But you can always ask the larger group for help or extra hands if
you need it. But it sort of shares that responsibility. Because I think the most stressful part oftentimes
is like, oh, the distro happening tonight is on me. And if I don't do it, it's not going to happen.
And so it sort of spreads like that sort of labor,
but we have members who like show up
to every single distro because they want to,
and that's totally fine.
Even if they're in like whatever designated squad they're in.
Right.
Yeah, or some people who show up like once every few months
because they have other stuff going on, you know,
so it's very open and you don't have to be in a squad.
You could just choose to join whenever you have the time with whoever's week it is. So it's pretty loose
Yeah, I would tell but it does give a good sense of structure. Yeah, that helps a lot
I remember one day like last year last winter and
I was out building
shelters with an Uzbek guy and a few Kurdish guys and
we built these shelters and we built three of them.
And afterwards I was sitting down with some of my friends
who were also there as volunteers
and they're all anarchists too.
We each asked each other what we did.
And then one of them said, so what did we all learn?
What did you learn when you did that today, right?
And I think that's a really valuable question
that we should be asking ourselves in our organizing spaces.
So like from your first distro to now I want to ask like what did you learn?
um, I would say
We've really learned
How to trust each other we're working on, you know how to get consensus models how to
Split the labor between different people how to work with different people
And also yeah, like I said in the beginning how to really how to work with different people. And also, yeah, like I said
in the beginning, how to really how to trust each other, which, you know, we all want to see the
revolution happen at some point. And so I feel like one of the most important and valuable things
we can be doing is building relationships and communities with each other where we can
actually rely on each other. And so having a mutual task really helps with that.
rely on each other. And so having a mutual path really helps with that.
Yeah.
Yeah. And I think for me, like, we've like tried to do stuff in
the past like this. And I think the issue we've always run into
was that like, sometimes there's like a tendency to want too much
structure right away, and be like, oh, if we don't have
everything planned out, we don't know how everything's gonna work,
then we can't do it. And we need to figure everything out beforehand.
And we learned a lot doing it.
And even if we didn't have everything figured out, we're still working on our consensus
structure.
We're still working on how we're going to make big decisions as a group and when the
squads can make their own decisions and when the group can make their own decisions.
We don't have everything figured out.
It's very loose, but we didn't need that.
We've been able to do a distro for months and we don't have everything figured out.
We have something.
We had enough to get us started and we're working on slowly adding things as we need
to without overburdening ourselves because I think sometimes like
lots of layers and lots of complexities can
Really make it difficult to organize and adapt to what's happening on the ground
Definitely, I think yeah, we can over complicate it and like be too anxious talking of anxious. I'm anxious
So we have yet to pivot to advertisements.
So let's do that and then we'll come back.
And we're back. Okay. So you spoke about like a lot about the logistics of cooking, which
is great, but I know from experience of feeding hungry people can be a challenge, right?
Like it's no one's fault, especially when people are hungry.
Like we're not ourselves.
It's a whole advertising campaign built around that.
So how do you organize your distro such that everybody feels that they're being taken care of?
Everybody feels safe and knows that they're going to get enough to eat.
Yeah.
So that also goes back to something more we've learned.
And we try to have enough people at the distro
so we can have different people doing different things.
And sometimes that means one person is just
walking around talking to people,
deescalating a situation if need be.
And then we also figured out that at the end when we run out
of food in order so that people who have been waiting in line don't get mad, which it's
understandable, you know, they've been waiting in line and there's no more food and they're hungry.
Yeah, of course.
We try to have like different snacks and like muffins or granola bars and water just to hand
out at the end for those people who still need something. And so sometimes we have music and we all just try to bring a good energy and so far nothing
that we haven't been able to handle has happened. Yeah, yeah that makes sense. I know we found the
music was really helpful and we were distributing food when really big groups at the border like
play some music, have a friend who plays music, play some music and then we'd always ask folks
from the group who we were feeding to volunteer to help us and that helped us overcome language
barriers and stuff.
That's happened a couple of times as well where people have just stepped up and wanted
to help with just and great.
Yeah, it's nice and it gives us all like part of what we're doing with mutual aid isn't just meeting material needs. It's also like
the difference between solidarity and charity, right? Like we're there because we care about you
as people, not just as like hunger mouths that we can take off a spreadsheet like, and working
together is an integral part of that. And it's, it's what distinguishes us from charity model.
And thankfully, most of the time we have enough people
that if somebody needs to step aside
and have a one-on-one conversation with somebody,
because that's what they need in that moment,
then we can do that.
Yeah, having floaters is really important.
We always have at least two people serving food,
and then we have a snack table, a water table usually,
and then we have a section for harm reduction that usually gets served on like another
table and then we have like a section for clothes depending on what we have and
people sort of like go down the assembly line kind of like going down grabbing
the different things and we give people like plastic bags that we get from
grocery stores so they can get their things. But we also have floaters usually
so that if someone's having a medical issue or someone's upset or whatever is going on,
someone can step aside and spend some time with them.
The other day we had a woman who was not feeling well because of the heat and she had been
out and she needed to sit down. So we
grabbed one of our chairs and we sat her down and got her some water and just talked to her.
And we had a couple people who could step aside and do that. And then everyone else just could keep
feeding people without it kind of stopping things, but she still got what she needed.
And during that heat wave, one of the distros, I remember you ran across
And during that heat wave, one of the distros, I remember you ran across and thought somebody gate raid
because they really needed electrolytes.
So we're lucky that we have enough people
that we get to be able to do stuff like that
when we need to.
Right.
And I imagine that regularity is really important.
People know that you will be there and that they can come
and you will feed them.
That builds trust right
like and everyone I think benefits from a little structure and being unhoused it can be really
fucking hard to find structure. Yes exactly and and it's very hard to get like home cooked food.
Yeah this is something I've encountered living in my car like it's hard to get healthy food. The food you buy is shit. It's more expensive and it's
less good for you. And like this these things compound over
time to have health and psychological consequences.
Yeah, everything we cook, we eat as well. And you know, if we're
cooking or we're helping out with this, of course, it's
stuck with mutual and mutual aid, we can also eat it.
Yeah, yeah.
That is definitely something else we learned that the border was like, especially if we're course, that's a mutual and mutual aid, we can also eat it. Yeah, yeah. That is definitely something else we learned that the border
was that like, especially if we're cooking something that's
maybe not a cultural cuisine, because we're meeting people
from all over the world. And a lot of times, it's like, like
you were saying, chili and curry, it's like hot, wet food,
right? Like, you know, that big semi liquid pan of chili or
whatever that we would cook and spaghetti and like folks being like, what's that?
We're like, Oh, do I'm going to eat some.
Do you want some?
Yeah.
And like, I honestly had some of the happiest moments of last year.
Uh, just like, I remember one day I've been building yurts all day with an
Uzbek guy and then we sat down and had our beans and just like talked about
our lives and it was really sweet.
Yeah.
I think that that is a moment of solidarity that you don't get when you're,
you know, I've seen NGOs and the US military tossing MREs at refugees and I think the same
thing.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, there shouldn't be like a line between like you and the people that you're providing
mutual aid to.
I mean, like it should you should never give someone food that you're not willing
to eat yourself and
Like if someone's hungry while we're cooking like they can totally eat the food that we're making too. It's not like
cordoned off
Yeah, like of course we like, you know, we wear our PPE and we like, you know, aren't getting our hands in there or whatever. But I mean, because a
lot of the people who are like who do provide mutual aid and
work in mutual aid groups, like, are also people who may face
houselessness or have trouble paying for groceries or
something. Yeah, for sure. Yeah, there's no separation, you know,
between us and them at the end of the day.
Yeah, and that's super important.
So I want to talk about the camping van.
Maybe let's take another hour break.
We'll talk about the camping van when we come back.
We are back.
We are now discussing the topic which I love to talk about which is evil things
that Todd Gloria has done. And today, it could be the whole podcast every day of the week
for years. But we're going to talk about this camping van. For folks who didn't listen to
our camping van episode, can you give me like a 60 second synopsis on the camping van and
then we can
dive into what is done?
Yeah.
So basically earlier this year, the Supreme Court overturned basically a ordinance that
you don't have the ability to cite or arrest somebody if there's not shelter available,
but they overturned that.
So now they can.
And Gavin Newsom issued a sweeping order that the agencies have to clear encampments
and ordered that cities and counties do the same. So now there's 14 plus cities in California
that do have a camping ban in place. So that's criminalizing living outside.
Yeah. The existence of unhoused people is now a crime.
Yeah. So what have unhoused people is now a crime. Yeah.
So what have you seen post enforcement?
Yeah.
So I also like work in the field of harm reduction.
So you know, I do this in my free time because I want to do it, but I also do it for work,
which there's definitely sometimes I feel weird about like working for an organization
and wish that I didn't have to, but it's just one of those things and I've seen it's really hard and really sad because when people are in encampments
a lot of times they build a sort of community and family and they learn how to take care of each
other and constantly being split up is destroying these communities and then they just have to
travel further and further away so that they're disconnected
from not only their community but also resources that they do have. And so it's just really
hard and sometimes we lose connections with people we don't know where they went, you
know, or they end up in jail or it's been really horrible. And we're just talking about
how it just seems like people don't really care. And it's crazy that this is happening in our communities and people aren't talking about
it and aren't outraged by it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
These bands also have like a really nasty ripple effect because when these people got
pushed out of San Diego, then they go to other cities that don't have an encampment band
like Chula Vista, National City, and now Chula Vista National City and other
cities are advancing their own camping bands and citing an influx from San Diego. So it's like
creating this really awful like just progressive expansion of these bands. Yeah and one more thing
I'll add is that some people are like oh well that well, that's just going to, you know, be good because some people are going to get into shelters or
alternative ways of getting help.
But that's not what's happening because we have not had any more shelters.
It's really hard to get into a shelter actually. And, you know,
since Newsome has been governor,
we've had apparently so many billions of dollars,
24 billion spent tackling homelessness and it's
like what is there to show for it? Right. People still don't have a place to go and even if they
do get into a shelter, a lot of the times there's so many rules and regulations that if somebody has
a high level of mental health needs and they're not going to be able to stay there and there's just
no solution. Yeah, it's giving the appearance of doing something to make homeowners, right, people
who they think matter happy.
It's really bleak.
Yeah.
Let's discuss a little bit then, like this camping ban, as you say, has forced people
to other cities.
Like, what do you think it does to the unhoused community?
Like you talked a little bit about breaking up encampments, like
where do people end up, right?
When their encampments get broken up, when the community and like, where do they end up?
And how can people, because this is something that's nationwide, right?
Gavin Newsom is being a particularly odious turd about it, but like other people,
other states are doing it too.
It's something I've seen in San Diego, for instance,
people ending up in a riverbed. So can you talk about like, the
risks there and then like, yeah, the needs that it creates and
how we can meet them.
So you're right, some of them are ending up in riverbeds.
There's also like what they refer to as the island kind of
close to old town where a lot of people have been going but
You know, you have to get a raft to go there and it's not easy to get there
They don't have a lot of resources there. There's a lot of
Crime that happens and it's not
the best scenario and other than that they're making these safe
sleeping sites, which are not actually safe and they're kind of like concentration camps and
They're from people I've talked to actually live in them. They're not good places to be yet
Yeah at all and it's just kind of like pushing the problem out of view without actually doing anything
Or providing anything meaningful to people. Yeah, which is the goal I think is to make poverty invisible
yeah, yeah, exactly. And the other thing that happens is like, I live in an area where there are a lot of
encampments, and there probably would be permanent encampments,
if it weren't for the ban. And personally, I would prefer that
because like, what happens is these people get like, moved,
like their their encampen will like crop up.
It'll be there for like maybe a week and then like it'll disappear and like,
I'll wake up one morning and they're gone and all of their stuff often gets
thrown away. They lose access to their things. If they're not there to take it,
they basically can take only what they can carry on their backs.
If they're lucky, if they happen to be there,
when their stuff is being thrown away. They're cited, they could be arrested. And then usually
I see sometimes the same people come back, but they just had to go find somewhere else. So they're
basically being forced to be migratory rather than staying in one place, which means that it
also makes the people who live in neighborhoods,
because I can't form relationships with these people
as much as I could before.
I can't know my neighbors as much
because my neighbors are constantly getting moved around.
So I'll form a relationship with someone
and I'll be like their beer guy.
And there's people that I'll know that I'll go buy a beer for,
go get water for if I see them, and I know their name and that, but then when
with the encampment ban, they might just disappear one day and I don't know if they got arrested.
I don't know if they've just been displaced and that's like not great for me. Not great
for them. Not great for literally anyone around because it's like people are safer if they're
able to have like a stable place to be definitely
Yeah, like everyone is safer. Yeah. Yeah, if I stayed the goal is getting people off the streets like chasing them around the streets
Isn't doing that make it harder for people to find stability. Yeah, and
You know, I've talked to people also about the reason
Sometimes I don't like the term homeless is because they're like, yes, we may not have a house, but we make our homes, we make a community,
we make a home and losing that sense of security, any little bit of security
they have constantly having to move, not ever feeling comfortable or safe.
You know, that's traumatizing.
Thinking about situation and making it worse.
Just what the state likes to do.
I wonder like before we finish up, a lot of people, like I said, want to start a mutual
aid thing.
Do you have any advice for them?
Things that you would do if you were starting over, things that you feel like you did well.
If you wanted to start Breadblock now, how would you go about it?
Get signal, start a group chat, maybe make an Instagram where you can post about it and
find people who are also interested in that.
Go to local events.
What else, Luca?
Having a place where people can congregate with each other, having a regular community
event to meet people and get to know each other and trust each other.
I really wish that we had started sooner
because I think we had the capacity to start sooner
way beforehand.
And I think it was the Encampment ban
and like, Selah being like, we need to do this.
Happening it, it just takes one person
being excited enough about something
and then their comrades being like, yeah, no, you're right.
We do need to do something.
And I think people are really afraid to be that person,
to push for something, to try to wake other people up,
or convince other people that you have the capacity to,
because I think the state can be really disempowering.
And they make you think that you need a budget,
and you need all of these things to be able to provide
people aid, or mutual aid to provide people anything.
And we did it with literally like a couple of our members just
like gave some money that we had and that we had like, you know,
like we had like a couple hundred dollars that we got from people.
And then that was enough to start.
And like you could literally start with like 50 bucks and figure it out.
Yeah. Yeah.
We did not come from a place of any of us having a lot of money. So we've basically just had to figure it out. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We did not come from a place of any
of us having a lot of money. So we've basically just had to figure it out and anybody can
figure it out. You know, I feel like our culture is so individualized, but we do have the capacity
to come together and yeah, just take somebody being like, all right, let's do this. And
you'll, you'll meet enough people who are also interested in that because people do
want community at the end of the day and people do want to help people. Yeah. Is there anything else you guys want to mention
before we go? Yeah, the only last thing I wanted to mention is that we do have a lot of future goals
of expanding and doing more street medicine as well and expanding to different areas or also having
as well and expanding to different areas. We're also having mobile teams where we can go out
and reach people who aren't in one location
or who maybe have certain disabilities
and can't walk and get there.
So we have a lot of ideas for that.
And that just takes meeting more people who are into this
and getting more funds and yeah.
Yeah.
So we'll see if that's something we can do.
And I just wanted to briefly mention
one of our members did some really great research
on the way that Hillcrest Business Association
is using the encampment ban to further harm
and they're actually using like private security
to push people out so people can enjoy their nightlife without having to deal with
an objectionable minority that wants to live however it pleases.
No, for fuck's sake.
The quote from Mr. Ben Nicholas of the Hillcrest Business Association. So they have an initiative
called Hillcrest Clean and Safe Program, where they displace people
from Hillcrest for the benefit of the businesses.
If you go on Voice of San Diego, you can hear some...
Just the way they talk about these people is really insane and really dehumanizing.
It kind of notes how businesses, how like capitalism and the state are working
together hand in hand to displace our community members. So the business associations and
the businesses themselves are being empowered by these encampment bands to further perpetuate
violence on people.
Yeah. And on that topic, the way that people actually are dressing it here
is making it so much worse. Like San Diego has a hot team which is part of the police department.
It's called the homeless outreach team and they're supposedly supposed to help um get people into
shelters and stuff like that but anybody I've talked to who have tried to reach out for them
and ask oh you know okay if you're going to move me like I need to get into a shelter. One of them was talking to about this in his 70s
and very medically vulnerable. And instead of helping him find somewhere to go, they just put
his car which he was sleeping in because it was unregistered. And so they're not actually helping
at all. It's just a cop. And that's why you know, just us regular people have to do something because
the state's not going to.
Yeah, I think that's a great thing.
That's the fucking dark about the Hillcrest
Business Association.
Like for people who aren't familiar with San Diego,
San Diego is like LGBTQIA neighborhood is called Hillcrest.
One in three of our trans youth are unhoused.
And like, I guess they don't matter
to the Hillcrest Business Association.
Not surprising, but just fucked up.
Where can people, if they want to support you, if they want to follow you,
if they want to come out and do food distro, where can they find you on the internet?
Yeah, they can find us on Instagram.
Our Instagram is breadblock underscore distro.
If you want to provide like direct funds, bread underscore block is our Venmo.
Block with a C, not a K.
B-L-O-C.
Oh yeah, yeah.
B-L-O-C like block.
Yeah, we are anarchists though.
Yeah, and I also wanted to mention
a couple of comrades of ours are facing
houselessness themselves.
And there's a mutual aid post on our Instagram.
And you can also find them at ruster.music.
That's r-u-s-t-e-r music.
Or their Venmo is also in a post on our page.
They could really use some help
because they are really big individuals
who show up all the time and help us cook
and are a big part of our group
and also could use some mutual our group and, you know,
also could use some mutual aid.
Yeah, that's nice.
I hope people will help them.
Thank you so much for your time, guys.
Thank you for doing all that important work and thank you for sharing it with us.
If people have questions, they can reach out to you, right?
Yes, yes.
Of course.
Thank you so much for having us.
Yeah, thank you so much.
It's much appreciated.
Yeah. having her. Yeah, thank you so much. It's much appreciated.
So y'all, this is Questlove and I'm here to tell you about a new podcast I've been working on with the Story Pirates and John Glickman called Historical Records.
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When you think of Mexican culture,
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Hi everyone, it's me, Katie Couric.
If you follow me on social media,
you know I love to cook or at least try,
especially alongside some of my favorite chefs and foodies
like Benny Blanco, Jake Cohen, Lighty Hoyt, Alison Roman, and of course,
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be happy you did.
Welcome to Cut Up In Here. I'm Andrew Siege of the YouTube channel Andruism. I'm joined by...
Garrison Davis. Hello there.
Once again, hello. And today, I regret to inform you that you must come to Brazil.
I've heard mixed things about Brazil currently, but I'm not against the idea. I have considered it before.
Yes, well, we're not going to the Brazil of present times, we'll actually be time
traveling.
Continuing the somewhat informal series I've been doing on Latin American anarchism, we'll
be dipping our toes into the sand and the sea, the farmlands and jungles, the mountains
and deserts, the cities and villages that make up the land and ground of the potential liberty of the people of Brazil.
Particularly the struggles for anarchism that they would have had in the late 19th and early
20th century. All this is of course thanks to the scholarship of people like Edgar Rodriguez,
Jesse Kohn, Felipe Correa, Rafael Viana, The Silva, Juan William Dos Santos,
Edeline Toledo, and Luigi Piondi. And without further ado, let's get into it.
So the Portuguese landed in the region that would become known as Brazil in 1500. Prior to their
colonization, the land was home to ethnic groups linked to four main language groups. The Arawak, the Tupi-Guarani, the Jey, and the Kalinago.
Some of the specific ethnic groups included the Potiguara, Trememembe, Tabahara, Kayete,
and so on.
After Pedro Alvarez Cabral landed, the fallen centuries would be marked by colonization
and enslavement.
As lands were dispossessed and cleared, plantations were established, roads were laid, bridges were
built and so on.
Or by the auctioned and purchased efforts of whipped and exploited human muscle.
The oppressed enslaved Africans in this society would sometimes flee into the jungles and
form kilumbos, or fugitive slave settlements.
Including the famous Pal Palmares, which survived
for almost a century with a population of between 11,000 to 20,000.
After Brazil gained its independence from Portugal in 1822, retaining its own monarchy,
it experienced numerous maroonages, reforms, and popular revolts, including the Setembrada
and Dovembrada revolts, the Ouro Preto uprising,
the Sabinada and Bailada revolts, the Cabanachim revolt, the Guerra dos Farapos revolt, the
liberal revolution, the Praia da Revolução, the extremely late abolition of slavery in
1888, and the proclamation of the first Brazilian republic in 1889.
It was in this tumultuous sociopolitical landscape that anarchism would take root.
As in much of Latin America, anarchism would be brought by immigrants, through port cities
like Rio de Janeiro and Santos.
But revolutionary ideas would also come to Brazil by way of Brazilians themselves.
Some went to France and Portugal for their studies and discovered anarchism there.
Others would find the words of Kropotkin and Malatesta in the bookstores of their native cities. Dr. Fabio Luz, a Bahian
hygienist and doctor, wrote two novels which sought to grapple with the social question of
exploitation of man by man in Brazil. Dr. Luz also spent his time working alongside unions
and helping to fight the yellow fever and smallpox epidemics
that plagued his nation.
Another novelist, Manuel de Mendonça, also published in this time, contributing to a
slow-growing libertarian literary universe.
These anarchist intellectuals, alongside others, would go on to launch a popular university.
Other contributors to the propagation of anarchism in Brazilian soil included
Eliseo de Carvalho, J. Martin Fontes, Pedro do Cuto, Rocha Pombo, João Gonçalves da Silva,
Maximino Maciel, Benjamin Mota, Francisco Viotti, etc. Anarchism in Brazil was actually quite diverse
as well as it formed immigrants from Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece,
Ukraine, Russia, Germany, Canada and England, alongside former black slaves and mestizos.
It found children and it found women. Lima Barreto, Domingos Passos, who was known as
the Brazilian Bakunin, Nino Vasco, Edgar Llewinroth, Jose Oitica, Maria Lacerda de Moura, and Maria Angelina Suarez all made
key contributions to the development of anarchism in Brazil.
Dozens of newspapers like Cliché Avi Pianchi, L'Avigny, O Livetario, and O Despertar will
also be published.
Hundreds of lectures will be hosted, alongside language classes and artistic
activities, at anarchist cultural centres and schools like the Illes-Jurikluse School and the
Modern Schools in Sao Paulo, which also provided literacy courses and vocational training.
Revolutionary plays would be put on in theatres by groups such as Grupo Arte e Instruccião
and Grupo Dramático Qu e Quedamina, blending
entertainment with the syndicalist propaganda and fundraising efforts for the labour movement.
Workers' festivals featuring poetry, song, dance, and sport raised money for anarchist
syndicalist organisations and reinforced a sense of solidarity. The anarchist workers,
being so numerously immigrant, attempted to create a cosmopolitan counterculture centered
on working class values and priorities.
So all these projects and institutions were the result of their efforts.
Over a thousand foreign agitators would be deported from Brazil as a result of their
radical efforts, and a few would even be killed.
The first anarchist to be murdered by the state in Brazil was the Italian Polenise Matte, killed in São Paulo on the 20th September 1898.
Earlier that year, the first gathering of socialist-leading workers in Brazil would
take place in Rio Grande do Sul, attended by delegates from various associations, anarchist
groups, and a newspaper.
As usual, the Italian immigrants were heavily represented. The anarchist immigrants
even managed to establish a settlement known as the Guararama Anarchist Colony, organised
by Italian anarchist Artur Campagnoli, where perhaps the most notable contribution to anarchism
by the Italians in Brazil was the Cecilia Colony, which deserves special attention.
It bears mentioning of course that this project, as with everything taking place in Brazil
in this time, took place on colonial land, which seemingly went unacknowledged by the anarchists
themselves, but it was regrettably common in the colonial conditions of Brazil.
In the southern state of Parana, in the rural municipality of Palmeira, a group of Italian anarchists led by Giovanni Rossi and Gigi Damiani founded the Sicilia colony in 1890.
The land was originally granted to them by Emperor Pedro de Sackland, but after the proclamation
of the first Brazilian Republic, the new government did not acknowledge that land grant and so the anarchists had to purchase it instead.
The anarchists sought to experiment and create a society based on collective ownership and
free love.
They built a communal shed for shelter and began the process of constructing individual
homes.
The population of the colony quickly grew to almost 300 people, including Rossi himself.
But by the end of
1891, the colony was facing its first big challenge. They'd outgrown the infrastructure.
With only 20 wooden houses and one community shed, the settlements simply couldn't sustain
the influx of people. At a big matter's worse, many of the settlers were industrial workers
with little or no agricultural experience, and this lack of farming knowledge made it
difficult for them to produce enough food to feed themselves.
They tried to organise tasks based on people's existing skills.
Artisans stuck to their trades, but the farmers struggled, especially with the differences
between Italian and Brazilian soil.
While they managed to plant crops like maize, the results weren't immediate.
The money they brought, they could buy groceries, tools, and seeds, but it wasn't enough to sustain them until their crops started
yielding results. So many settlers had to seek work elsewhere, with some even taking government
jobs. The colony wasn't just about farming though. Over the years they built roads, sheds, barns,
a mill, and even a fish tank. They planted a huge cornfield, dug wells, and set
up a nursery for seedlings. They even tried out free love, with Rossi himself participating
in a polyamorous relationship.
Many such cases.
Many such cases. But despite all these efforts, the cracks were starting to show. In 1892,
seven families packed up and returned to Italy. By the end of the year,
the colony's population had dwindled to just 20 people.
Oh, dang.
Yeah. Yeah. It's a very, very rapid decline.
Yeah. The sustainability of these types of projects is always like the big thing. And
especially when it comes to like food and farming, like that is unfortunately the joke
whenever people talk about these sorts of projects now, all of these artisan craftsmen don't want to spend out
time toiling away in the fields.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a challenge that that persists to today.
So far, it seems like there's like a decent mix of like labor organizing, like
social organizing, like with like newspapers, like theaters, plays,
like that kind of like more like cultural engagement stuff with like unions and this little like
anarchist society that they try. They've kind of like sped run through a whole bunch of like,
I don't want to say like social anarchism, because that is a term that means something else.
But there is a lot of stuff that's kind of very similar to that, at least like so far.
And I'm not hearing very much stuff that leads me to believe there's like, you know, a large degree of
conflictuality towards the actual Brazilian Republic. But was that also like an aspect during this time period?
They would end up engaging in a lot more heavy, like you talk about like direct engagement with the state.
Yeah.
I think in this early period when they were still building up and spreading the word, it was sort of a honeymoon period for the movement.
Okay.
In a sense, a lot of the dramatic confrontations are very soon pending.
Okay.
Okay.
So the cracks were starting to show.
Families had packed up and returned to Italy. The colony
had gone down to just 20 people. And because a lot of the colonies meet up with intellectuals,
doctors, engineers, artisans, many of them left for nearby cities where they founded the
Giuseppe Garibaldi Society, which I couldn't find much information on that particular society from
that particular historical period
in my research, but it seems to have been a mutual aid society.
I'm not 100% sure.
I mean, that would like make sense as it's like within like a bigger city.
Yes, yes.
And Gary Baldi has a rather interesting history that I'm only recently learning about.
And I didn't even know he went all the way to like South America and
Scalavanton and stuff, but like I learned very recently that he had married, I believe
an indigenous or a mestizo woman while he was in South America.
And they had like this very romantic, dramatic life together,
leading battlefield side by side side, all that stuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I'm not surprised that the Italian anarchists were perhaps inspired by Garibaldi, even if
he himself was not an anarchist.
Sure.
So anyway, by 1893, new settlers had arrived, thankfully, and the colony was trying to manufacture shoes and
wine barrels so they could make some sort of an inn car.
They eventually grew to 64 residents, and they established two wells and a new access
road.
But even with those new developments, the colony was still struggling.
They were dealing with material poverty, the neighbouring Catholic communities were extremely
hostile toward them, and they also
had to deal with very poor sanitation conditions.
And then in their fourth year, they also had a crop epidemic that pretty much decimated
the colony.
And of course, as high-minded as the ideas may have been, they were the internal struggles.
Free love and communal living may have been central to
the colony's philosophy, but not everyone adapted well to the ideals. In theory,
they embraced the values, but in practice, there was some insecurity and jealousy that
ever was out of that. Also, many such cases.
Many such cases. By the end of 1893, it was abundantly clear that the colony couldn't survive.
Labour was in high demand in nearby cities, and despite efforts to attract new settlers through
socialist propaganda in Europe, the colony just couldn't maintain its population. In 1894,
Cecilia Colony officially came to an end. There have been many plays and dramatizations of the historic Cecilia colony. Most of them, as you'd imagine, are in Brazilian Portuguese.
So good luck finding them.
I'll try to find a dub somewhere, maybe.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I need to learn Portuguese.
But anyway, so the experiment had held on for four dramatic years, defying pressure from the newly established
Brazilian Republican government, heavy taxes, and even military incursions.
But eventually, material conditions, disease, and internal conflicts brought it home.
And how are we entering into the 20th century?
1903 saw the founding of the first formal structure inspired by international syndicalism,
the Federation of Class Associations.
This organization would take part in the First Workers' Congress in 1906, which brought
together 43 delegates, predominantly anarchists, from across Brazil in over 12 sessions
discussing 23 items of discussion. Giovanni Rossi, the guy behind the Sicilian colony,
was among the attendees. The Congress sought to advocate for economic resistance societies,
and laid the foundation for the Brazilian Workers' Confederation, or CAB, for short, in 1908, which united over 50 unions, primarily from Rio
de Janeiro, São Paulo, and Rio Grande do Sul.
Between 1905 and 1908, the workers' movement witnessed a surge in strikes, notably among
shoemakers, railwaymen, and other industrial sectors.
Porto Alegre saw a degeneral strike in 1906.
São Paulo was the scene of insurrectionary strikes in 1906 and 1907 as part of the campaign
for the 8-hour workday.
In Santos, the strikes for the 8-hour day only ended in 1921, meaning they spent well
over a decade, close to two decades, fighting for the 8-hour day.
The workers' movement also held several congresses in this time,
including the 1st and 2nd São Paulo State Congresses, the 1st Mas Heres State Labor
Federation Congress, and the Parana Labor Congress, which affirmed the movement's
commitment to anarchist syndicalism. And as with other anarchist groups around the world,
they organized a demonstration to commemorate the death of Francisco Ferrer, the modern school founder who inspired rational education efforts across Brazil.
They also supported the Russian workers in both 1905 and 1917, supported Mexican workers
and peasants in 1910, and commemorated the Chicago martyrs on subsequent May days.
1913 marked the second Brazilian labor congress, much larger than the first, where delegates
from 117 bodies across eight states debated 24 items.
In 1914, Anarchists in São Paulo organized a conference to select two delegates to represent
Brazil at the London Anarchist Congress, which was eventually and unfortunately cancelled
due to the outbreak of World War I.
This is such an interesting moment in like international anarchism
that at least right now, just like we have like the Internet, but that sucks.
Like the style of like actual like like international like anarchism.
It's just something that I've never really been able to like experience before.
But, Garrison, you're forgetting something.
We have discourse.
Oh, I'm sure they also had discourse, but they got to go to London to do their discourse,
which sounds much better than doing it from my toilet on Twitter.com.
Sorry, xx.com.
My apologies.
No, but that's true, though.
I would much rather the discourse take place in person over, you know, the discourse, who
has on the Twitter and Reddit threads.
I mean, especially in that international aspect, like there's certainly like anarchist gatherings
and like conferences and convergences, you know, within within countries.
I've been to many in the United States.
But yeah, this sort of like,
like having anarchists in Brazil go to London to talk with anarchists from everywhere else
in the world, like compare their experiences and compare notes. Yeah. Then talk about like
what their actual like political goals are. It's something that I think just sadly doesn't
really exist anymore.
And that's really a vital component for international solidarity, because that kind of solidarity, that kind of fraternity is very difficult to find just through virtual
interaction. There's something meaningful in shaking a person's hand and embracing them
and laughing and crying together in person, sharing a meal, I think really makes a difference.
I mean, yeah, especially when you have like, the spread of anarchism is so built on that
internationalism, like you have anarchists from Portugal and Italy and Spain.
The immigrant influence.
Exactly.
Is very, very profound.
Yeah.
But although there was the outbreak of World War One, closer to home, the anarchists were
still involving themselves in that sort of regional discourse.
The Mayors have been flying to London, but they managed to meet with delegates from Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay at the International
Peace Conference and the South American Anarchist Congress in October 1915, all in an aim to foster
both regional and international anarchist cooperation. As the war raged on, in addition
to the anti-war propaganda, Brazil's anarchists continued to rally against unemployment, rising living costs, scarcity of basic foodstuffs,
while resisting the capitalists, the clergy, and the state which sent young men to the
slaughter on the battlefield.
In response to the pressure levied by the libertarian proletariat, the government gave
the go-ahead for direct sale by the producer to the consumer without taxes levied, easing
the hugger crisis in the country.
So their struggles worked.
This period, and particularly from 1912 to 1920, marked significant worker mobilization.
The period from 1917 to 1920 in particular was marked by significant strikes, including
the Sao Paulo General Strike of 1917, which saw 70,000 workers
participate, with sympathy strikes in Rio Grande do Sul and Parana, demanding better
working conditions, wages, and the 8-hour workday.
This period also witnessed an increase in unionization and the growth of the workers'
press, which provided critical platforms for revolutionary ideas.
In 1919, an uprising exploded in Rio
de Janeiro, leading to the death of three workers and the imprisonment or deportation
of nearly a hundred. The government deployed police, troops, and even naval warships to
crush the resistance of the workers. And they also attempted to exploit racial divisions.
They would take Afro-Brazilians and use them as scabs,
and then once the strike was over, once they broke up the strike, they would fire those same
black workers to reaffirm the privilege of white labor. Eventually, the government would concede
and force capitalists to make some concessions where wages were concerned. But this came at a
cost. Alongside the mass imprisonment and deportations, the state's efforts included infiltration
of the unions, which eventually stared reformist unions into the leadership position of the
working classes, supplanting the more revolutionary organizations.
Thus, anarchism arguably entered a new era in the 1920s.
There were still anarchist-led labor congresses, including the Third Brazilian Labor Congress
and the Second and Third Rio Grande do Sul Labor Congresses, the latter of which endorsed a
declaration of principles from the IWA and established an international anarchist solidarity
pact.
But by the 4th Rio Grande do Sul Labor Congress, attended by 16 workers' organizations,
2 newspapers, 6 anarchist groups, São Paulo militants, and delegates from Uruguay, Paraguay, and Argentina, anarchist efforts in Brazil had to become much more clandestine.
Following the deportations, the state intervention, the general repression of the successive Brazilian
regimes, the anarchist movement had indeed weakened.
And it took another blow with the establishment of the Brazilian Communist Party, the PCB,
partially inspired by Bolshevism in 1922, which absorbed many former anarchists, including Edgar Leunoroth,
who co-authored the Charter, and Astrid Guildo Pereira, who served as its Secretary-General
for nearly a decade before he was expelled.
The PCB competed for union leadership and worked with the governments of Artur Fernandes,
Washington Luiz, and
Getulio Vargas to suppress the libertarian movement and the free trade unions.
The Bernadés government, by the way, sent thousands of political prisoners, including
Anacis, into the remote penal colony of Clevelandia, where the harsh conditions killed hundreds.
And the Luiz and Vargas governments, of course, were not any better.
I was also wondering, like, where were these people, like, deported to?
Like, it sounded like they've been in Brazil for quite a while.
When you were mentioning there was all those all those other people
who were deported out of the country.
Like, where where did they go?
Yeah, there was a story I was reading about that.
And I didn't maintain to my notes someone you have to half remember it, but one of my sources would have had it of the names I listed at the beginning.
But they had spoken about how there were these, I believe, Portuguese people in Brazil,
as in Portuguese from Portugal, who had been living there and working there and whatever,
for years and years and years. And because they hadn't
naturalized they were like subject to like these heavy attacks and I believe some of
them were deported as well. And so I'm assuming whatever country of origin they could be traced
to they would be deported there or they would be deported to a neighbor in South American
country. But I didn't really find specific details on where they were sent. I assume
it's mostly their home countries or
neighboring countries. Between that and like sending thousands of people to a penal colony
with hundreds dying like this is a massive wave of repression they're dealing with in like the
early 20s here. Indeed, indeed and unfortunately their supposed allies weren't exactly a help.
In 1927 the anarchists Antonio Dominguez and Damião da Silva were murdered by the communists,
who also wounded another ten members of the Printers Union and attacked and stole the
assets of the Footwear Workers Union.
So that further weakened the anarchist struggle when they were already dealing with that government
repression. And in a sense anarchists are like roaches, we just keep on struggling and surviving.
And the persistence of anarchist resistance, in spite of all this repression, would trigger
a further backlash by the bourgeoisie, which would also arise to challenge the survival of anarchism
and the left in general in Brazil. From the very
same Italy that brought many an anarchist also came many a fascist. Which brings us to the Brazilian
integralist movement. But to find out what happened in the 1920s and 30s and onward,
you'll have to wait for the next episode. I've been André Sage, you can find me on
youtube.com slash Andrewism and
patreon.com slash st. tru and this has been It Could Happen Here, what power to all the people. So y'all, this is Questlove and I'm here to tell you about a new podcast I've been working
on with the Story Pirates and John Glickman called Historical Records.
It's a family friendly podcast.
Yeah, you heard that right.
A podcast for all ages.
One you can listen to and enjoy with your kids, starting on September 27th.
I'm going to toss it over to the host of Historical Records,
Nimmini, to tell you all about it.
Make sure you check it out.
Hey, y'all.
Are you ready for an explosive new podcast that brings together
hip hop and history?
My name is Nimmini, and I'm the host of Historical Records,
a brand new podcast for kids and families that proves
in order to make history, you have to make some noise.
Flash slam, another one gone.
Bash bam, another one gone.
The cracker, the bat, and another one gone.
The tip of the cap, there's another one gone.
And the best part, I make this show entirely by myself.
Impressive, right? Me too, right?
Oh, okay, okay. Maybe I get a little bit of help from my sidekick, Tina the Raccoon.
Every week on Historical Records, join me, Nimony, and Tina the Raccoon as we learn about the unsung
heroes of the past and turn their history into hip-hop.
Listen to historical records on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017 was murdered. There are crooks everywhere you look now. The situation is desperate.
My name is Manuel de Lilla. I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere, a podcast that
unearths the plot to murder a one woman WikiLeaks.
Daphne exposed the culture of crime and corruption that were turning her beloved country into
a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your
podcasts.
To listen to new episodes one week early and 100% ad free, subscribe to the I Heart True
Crime Plus channel, available exclusively on Apple podcasts.
It was December 2019 when the story blew up.
In Green Bay, Wisconsin, former Packer star Kabir Bajabiamila caught up in a bizarre situation.
HGB 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.
Voila! You got straight away.
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.
Hi, everyone. It's me, Katie Couric. If you follow me on social media, you know I love to cook,
or at least try, especially alongside
some of my favorite chefs and foodies like Benny Blanco, Jake Cohen, Lydie Hoyt, Alison
Roman, and of course, Ina Garten and Martha Stewart.
So I started a free newsletter called Good Taste that comes out every Thursday and it's
serving up recipes that will make your mouth water.
Think a candied bacon Bloody Mary, tacos with
cabbage slaw, curry cauliflower with almonds and mint, and cherry slab pie with vanilla
ice cream to top it all off. I mean, yum, I'm getting hungry.
But if you're not sold yet, we also have kitchen tips like a foolproof way to grill
the perfect burger and must have products like the best cast iron skillet to
feel like a chef in your own kitchen. All you need to do is sign up at katiecurrik.com
slash good taste. That's K-A-T-I-E C-O-U-R-I-C dot com slash good taste. I promise your taste buds
will be happy you did. 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 is much more than just a sport and much more
than just entertainment.
Lucha libre is a type of storytelling.
It's a dance.
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'll 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.
Welcome to Cat Up and Hear, I'm Andrew Sage of the YouTube channel Andrewism. Today we're
continuing the Latin American anarchism series with our exploration of anarchism in Brazil.
I'm joined by...
Garrissa Davis, hello there.
And once again thanks to the scholarship of Edgar Rodriguezríguez, Jesse Cohen, Felipe Correa, Rafael Viana de
Silva, Juan William Dos Santos, Edilene Toledo, and Luigi Biondi.
When we last left off, anarchist labour resistance in Brazil had triggered a turning point and
a reaction. Weakened by the splits caused by the Bolsheviks and the military repression
of the government, another faction would step in to cripple the anarchist cause even further.
The Integralists
In the 1920s and 1930s, Brazil saw the rise of the Brazilian Integralist Action, the AIB,
a nationalist movement led by Plinio Salgado.
During a trip to Europe, Salgado became enamoured with Benito Mussolini's
fascist movement in Italy. Upon his return to Brazil and at the height of Getulio Vargas's
dictatorship, which was ushered in thanks to a cool-weather liberal alliance, Salgado
founded the Society for Political Studies, gathering intellectuals who were sympathetic
to fascism. Then he assumed the October Manifesto, laying out the groundwork
for the Brazilian integralist action. The movement closely mirrored Italian fascism,
with its green-shirted paramilitary wing, regimented demonstrations, and militant rhetoric.
Though Salgado publicly rejected racism, many members of his party adopted anti-Semitic views.
Integralism was financed in part by the Italian
embassy, with the Roman salute and the Tupi word, Anaue, meaning, you are my brother, as key symbols
of their unity. Integralist action drew its support from lower middle class Italians and
Portuguese immigrants, alongside sections of the Brazilian military, particularly the Navy. As the
party grew, it became the dictator Vargas' primary right-wing base of support,
especially after he began to crack down on the Communist Party.
Integralists frequently engaged in street violence and terrorism aimed at leftist groups.
In 1931, Vargas introduced labor regulations based on Mussolini's labour charter.
Independent industrial unions were banned.
Union membership had to be registered with the Ministry of Labour.
Two thirds of union membership had to be native born or naturalised Brazilians.
Oh no!
Yeah.
And union officers were required to either be resident in Brazil for 10 years if naturalised,
or 30 years if foreign born.
That's pretty fucked up. I would assume also just very damaging to the entire
labor movement in the country. A very intense series of restrictions.
Yes. As a very immigrant empowered labor movement. Yeah, that was definitely
targeted. Definitely, definitely targeted. Obviously, like the class
consciousness of the immigrant workers was such a threat that
they had to root them out from any position of influence within the sanctioned unions.
Salgado and the integralists of course welcomed these decrees and worked with the police to
capture militant workers.
The communists also apparently welcomed the impositions to the Ministry of Labour.
Meanwhile anarchists and workers were weathering rightist violence.
One time, integralists kicked down the doors of the bakery workers union, the construction
workers' league, the mill and warehouse operatives, Stonemason's union, and Union of Cafe employees,
destroyed their assets, and extra judiciously hauled away the workers as prisoners.
So they just started kidnapping people and doing like, it was basically state-sanctioned
terrorism.
Exactly. Another integralist, Gustavo Barroso, used his walking stick to break the arm of
an anti-fascist 16-year-old worker named Nair Colejo as she was making a speech against
fascism.
Time is a flat circle.
Indeed it is.
Instead of sticks this time they're using cars, but it's the same principle.
And sticks!
Oh yeah, people are still collecting sticks.
I have been hit by many a stick from a fascist at a street demo, especially as a teenager.
Hm.
Damn.
So with all this violence they're dealing with, in this time the anarchist press had
to hunker down and prepare to face further attacks.
In 1933 the Libertarian Anti-Fascist Committee sounded alarm on the dire threat of integralism.
As well anarchist press wrote, Like fascism, integralism means to enslave and fetter the
people.
Let us now defend our liberty like men.
Let us be forced to weep like fetter the people. Let us now defend our liberty like men. Let us be forced
to weep like madmen hereafter." On December 24, 1933, the tensions were at an all-time high.
Following a humiliating defeat at the Salon Celso Garcia, Plinio Salgado's integralists,
known as the Green Shirts, planned a show of force to assert their dominance. Their target? Union leaders
and leftists, particularly anarchists, who stood against their fascist vision for Brazil.
According to reports from NoCervos on December 1st, the integralists had organised 18 companies
of green-shirted marchers who would parade through the heart of São Paulo, prepared
to crush any resistance that came their way.
Reinforcements from Rio de Janeiro, led by Gustavo Barroso, bolstered their numbers, with 500 trained assault troops primed to attack. The police of course were openly supportive of the
integralists, and had even stationed machine guns at key points throughout the city to ensure the
march went smoothly. Colonel Arlindo de Oliveira had an additional 400 troops, made up of infantry, fire brigade
units and cavalry, ready to intervene.
Seems like clear overkill, but it was a sure force, so to be expected.
By the time the marchers reached the Prussia des Sey, a huge crowd had gathered, some curious
onlookers,
others outright opponents of the fascist movement. As the integralists arrived at the cathedral,
cries of Death to the Fascists and Down with the Green Shirts echoed throughout the square.
Suddenly, shots rang out. Some say the firing began accidentally, when a machine gun set up by the Civil Guard
was nudged. Others claim it was the Communists lying in wait, ready to ambush the march.
Regardless, chaos erupted before the anarchists had even initiated their planned attack. The
scene quickly devolved into pandemonium. People fled in terror, shots continued to fire, and several were mortally
wounded. The planned pledge of loyalty to Plinyo Salgado, the head of the integralists,
never took place that day. But by 1937, Salgado launched a presidential campaign, hoping to ride
the wave of growing support for his movement and become a dictator in his own right. However,
when Vargas cancelled the elections
and established the authoritarian Estado Novo regime, he banned the integralist party along
with all the others, Sidon and Salgado. In response, integralist militants launched
two uprisings in 1938, both of which failed. Salgado was imprisoned and later exiled to Portugal.
After spending most of his life
supporting the dictators of Brazil, his attempts to become one of his own utterly failed.
There's a few interesting things in this moment here, particularly how the initial
struggle against fascism once again laid at the feet of anarchists and communists had like a degree
of hesitancy to like to like jump in fully. And then also, like, I find it interesting
the way that these like this era of fascists in Brazil, particularly were targeting unions,
but as almost as a way just to target like immigrants, like it was like the easiest way
for them to actually just do anti-immigrant violence was through
the unions.
Yeah.
Anti-immigrant violence is almost always anti-wooker violence as well.
Yeah.
In the States, at least right now, we're just seeing another kind of uptick in anti-immigrant
rhetoric and violence.
And yeah, a lot of it is tied to like labor and like how immigrants are taking
jobs away from the lower classes, that sort of thing.
As always, remember that, you know, it could happen here and it's important to be
constantly aware and on guard against even the ghost, the shadow of fascism
creeping up in your communities.
the ghost, the shadow of fascism creeping up in your communities. It's easy to be treated by the media or by others as just, oh you're making a big deal about it, you're over-exaggerating the threat,
but no, these things snowball very quickly. They need to be nipped in the bud. And it's
largely thanks to anti-fascists on the front lines that
the situation is not as bad as it could be right now. Even though it is getting worse every day.
For the already weakened anarchist and labour movements in Brazil, integralism had posed
a dire threat. They were already splintered and in decline, struggling to maintain influence,
and integralism's rapid rise, with its militarised structure and anti-leftist violence, further
suppressed their hopes. The Communists weren't exactly a help either.
The anarchists lost a significant stronghold of their struggle on the premises of the Anti-Clerical
League in Rio de Janeiro when Communists sent to disrupt their meeting called the police
on them, leading to the arrest of eight anarchists and the closure of the Anti-Clerical League
Centre and its newspaper. With the help of the integralists, communists, and leaders of Cardinal
Sebastião Leme's Brazilian Catholic Party, Getúlio Vargas faced little resistance in establishing
his Estado Novo dictatorship. His authoritarian regime lasted from 1937 to 1945, and was marked
by continuous crackdowns on labour autonomy and anarchism. But despite the common claims of the 1930s marked the end of anarchism in Brazil.
Anarchists remained active in unions and cultural spaces despite repression. Anarchists published
influential periodicals like Aplebe and Achao De Rita and aimed to create a national anarchist
political organisation.
Post-1945, in the era of re-democratization, anarchists converged in São Paulo for Brazilian
Anarchist Congresses in 1948 and 1959, which brought together veterans and motivated the
re-establishment of social centres.
The anarchists resumed educational and cultural activities, like founding the Centro de Cultura
Social, the CCS, which became a hub for anarchist intellectual life, hosting lectures, conferences, literary
events and even theatre performances.
The anarchists were back.
The CCS had played a key role in building anarchist networks, even hosted anarchist
exiles from Spain, and helped establish similar cultural centres in the suburbs of São Paulo
and other cities across Brazil. In Rio de Janeiro, a similar space emerged in 1958, the Centro de Estudos
Professor José Oitica, or SEPTIO. Like the CCS, the SEPTIO hosted courses, lectures, and debates.
In 1961, it helped establish an anarchist publishing house called Mundo Libre. In Sao Paulo,
union activity surged, with 300,000 workers striking in 1953 and another 400,000 in 1957.
This period of intense mobilization provided an opportunity for anarchists and independent
socialists to come together and form the Syndicalist Orientation Movement, or MOS. Created in 1953, MOS aimed to fight for the autonomy and freedom of workers' unions,
resistant state, and corporate control. By 1957, they had enough momentum to contest union
leadership positions, especially within the graphics sector. Despite these strides, however,
the anarchist movement faced considerable challenges.
The re-democratization after 1945 offered some room for growth, but the labour landscape
was dominated by corporatist forces, the Communist Party, and the Brazilian Labour Party.
Anarchists found themselves battling for influence in a crowded political field.
Their efforts to revitalize the movement were further stifled by a lack
of resources and militants, which limited their presence in social movements.
The momentum gained in the 1950s came to a crash and halt with the military coup of 1964.
Once again, Brazil entered a period of authoritarian rule, placing anarchist activists in a precarious
position.
In May 1964, anarchists from Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo organized a secret meeting to
strategize, focused on safeguarding anarchist resources.
Many went underground, facing renewed repression and uncertainty about the future of their
movement.
They shifted focus to educational and cultural spaces to survive, with initiatives
like the newspaper O Protesto and the publishing house Himminal. Anarchists, including young
students new to the cause, formed the Libertarian Student Movement, the MEL, in 1967, with the
intention of fixing a position and fighting back, as well as having an active presence
in class and ideological struggles, marking
all directions more in accordance with Federalist principles which had governed the life of
every class organization.
But after one student, Edson Lewis, was murdered by the Military Police, the Mell and other
student initiatives faced heavy persecution after the 1968 Institutional Act No. 5, or
the AI-5, which suspended most civil rights,
including habeas corpus, allowed for the removal from office of opposition politicians, enabled
federal interventions in municipalities and states, and enabled the institutionalization
of arbitrary detention, torture, and extrajudicial killing by the regime.
This military dictatorship that gripped Brazil from 1964 to 1985 forced anarchist
movements into survival mode. In Rio de Janeiro, the Centro de Estudos Professor José Coetica
operated secretly, while in São Paulo, the Centro Cultural Social kept the flame of
anarchist thought alive through underground propaganda and secret meetings. These centres were vital in maintaining
connections with international anarchist movements, ensuring that the ideology persisted despite
the harsh political climate. You see the importance of international solidarity for the people
in its head yet again, and you see also the importance of having cultural centres, social
centres, community centers, where the
movement can draw strength even when it's not directly engaging in labor organizing,
or direct political struggle. Just that rejuvenation of community is enough to
maintain the survival of that ideological struggle, even when all hope seems lost.
S1 05 This is something like you see a lot, especially after or during like a movement that's faced incredible repression is that kind of it goes back to kind of its earlier forms, at least in terms of like the social aspects.
Like in some ways, it feels like it's kind of regressing back to kind of where it like started back in the last episode with some of those like same like, you know, like, like underground newspapers, all this like this, this like cultural engagement, as you said, kind of like a way to like keep
the light alive during like an intense like military style effort of repression.
Yeah, it's really quite necessary. Unfortunately, in 1969, the headquarters of SEPTUO was raided by Air Force agents. The
invasion resulted in the arrest and prosecution of 18 members, including the anarchist Adiel
Perez, who endured a month of imprisonment and torture.
So between 1972 and 1977, anarchists were forced into even greater degrees of secrecy, meeting in very small, tightly knit groups. In terms of organisational strength,
this might have been the lowest point for anarchism in Brazil.
But things began to shift in 1977, as the dictatorship started to lose its grip.
That year the anarchist periodical, O Enemigo Lure, or The King's Enemy, was launched in
Bahia, marking a significant moment for the movement.
This newspaper brought together student and union militants from various parts of the
country – Bahia, Rio de Janeiro, São
Paulo, Rio Grande do Sul, Paraíba, and Pará. Despite internal conflicts and ideological
differences, the paper played a crucial role in reorganizing the anarchist movement. Under
the influence of the counterculture, O Enemigo Dore tackled issues like revolutionary unionism,
anarcho-syndicalism, the student movement, gender, sexuality, and
political theory. The paper ran until 1982, and after a hiatus, resumed briefly between
1987 and 1988. During this same period, there was the first sign of notable anarchist engagement
with the labour movement in years. Following a wave of strikes involving more than 40,000 workers, anarchists
began questioning the bureaucratic union structures. In Sao Paulo, the Colectivo Rebutario de Oficial
Sindical, or COLOPs, was formed, closely aligned with the ideas of the metalworkers opposition
movement. COLOPs was officially established during the first national meeting of workers in opposition to the trade union structure,
or ENTOs, held in September 1980 in Itaroy. This meeting brought together union opposition
from 16 states across Brazil, further sparking the revival of anarchist involvement in the labour
movement. But one of the most significant developments to come out of this period was
the rise of the Movimiento dos Trabajadores Uruguay-Sempera, the Landless Workers Movement, or MST.
Emerged in 1984, just before the end of the military regime, the MST became a mass movement
with distinctly anarchist-communist characteristics. It adopted a decentralized, non-hierarchical
structure that prioritized autonomous, direct
action – principles deeply aligned with anarchism.
However, the MST has resisted being identified as explicitly anarchist, avoiding the label
to maintain broader support and avoid the stigma attached to anarchist movements.
Over time, while maintaining its independence, the MST has built alliances with various political
parties, including the Workers' Party, which would go on to form the government in 2002.
But in the 1980s, Brazilian anarchism began reflecting the broader, new social movements
that had emerged globally after the 1960s.
Ecology, feminism, and nudist causes on sexuality were now key components of anarchist thought. The 1980s
saw the rise of pro-homosexual activists like Nestor Peronguer, an Argentinian born intellectual
who became a central figure in Brazilian anarchism.
You know, some have considered me a pro-homosexual. Okay. But no, this is continued. It is interesting to see this starting with student movements
and then getting back into labor over time after they rebuilt their movement through
students and then continuing to adopt more and more modern social views and cultural
engagement. I have an image here
of one of their newspapers that has what looks like two men having sex right on the cover
of something like the 70s which is quite something.
Incredible. Must have been very scandalous at the time.
Yeah.
So in the 1990s, as Brazil transitioned to the New Republic and embraced neoliberalism, anarchists became key players in shaping a wave of social movements. They actively helped to create
and integrate into these movements, advocating their principles and strategies. One prominent
example is Brazil's involvement in the global anti-globalization movement, inspired by protests
like the Seattle WTO demonstrations in 1999. In Brazil, this movement
began in Santos on the same date, led by anarchists, ecologists, and libertarians. By 2000, a coalition
of these groups emerged, particularly in São Paulo, and continued organising actions against
neoliberal policies until 2003. The protests targeted institutions like the IMF, the World
Bank and the WTO, and introduced the Black Block tactic to Brazil.
Anarchists also helped establish Brazil's Centre for Independent Media, CMI, part of
the global Indie Media Network, which aimed to challenge mainstream media dominance.
Active between 2001 and 2005, CMI was a key platform for independent journalism across
14 Brazilian cities.
Beyond protests, anarchists were involved in broader social movements, contributing
to housing struggles in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, as well as supporting feminist,
indigenous, black, and LGBT causes.
They played significant roles in movements like the National Movement of Collectors of Recycled Level Material, MNCR, the Landless Workers Movement, or MSD, and
the Homeless Workers Movement, the MTSD, reflecting their deep involvement in Brazil's diverse
social landscape.
In the early 2000s, the anarchist Popular Union, the UNIPA, helped form networks such
as the Class and Combatant Student Network, or the RECC, and the Federation of Revolutionary
Syndicalist Organizations of Brazil, or the FOB, further cementing anarchism's influence
in student and workers' struggles.
Despite being considered part of a broader leftist current, anarchists specifically made
a lasting impact on Brazil's social movement during this period.
Today, Brazilian anarchism continues to evolve, shaped by the principles of a specificismo,
a strategy where anarchists work alongside broader social movements while maintaining
their own distinct ideology.
Many anarchist federations have found common cause with groups like the MST, supporting
their struggles while promoting their own vision of a stateless, non-hierarchical society.
The story of anarchism in Brazil is one of endurance, adaptability, and reinvention.
Despite decades of repression, the movement has continued to shape Brazil's political
landscape from underground propaganda during the dictatorship to the mass mobilization
of landless workers and intellectuals alike.
Similar to what they were doing 90 years ago, we've also seen like a
resurgence of anarchist anti fascism in Brazil.
Indeed.
Around the same time, we kind of saw this rise in the United States as
well, as in Europe with the emergence of these like, right wing populist
politicians between like Trump and Bolsonaro, you've been seeing more of
like the black bloc style anarchism in Brazil,
which often kind of in this era went hand in hand with like anti-fascist action and
organizing. Indeed.
So that's been the story, a very summarized account.
Like I would recommend that you check out,
of course, the scholarship of the folks I mentioned at the beginning,
the resources all across the internet, particularly in the anarchist library discussing
Brazilian anarchism. This has been It Could Happen Here, I've been Andrew Sage, you can
find me on YouTube.com slash Andrewism and Patreon.com slash StDrew. I've been here with
Gare and that's it. Peace.
Sup y'all, this is Questlove and I'm here to tell you about a new podcast I've been working on with the Story Pirates and John Glickman called Historical Records.
It's a family-friendly podcast.
Yeah, you heard that right.
A podcast for all ages.
One you can listen to and enjoy with your kids starting on September 27th.
I'm going to toss it over to the host of Historical Records, Nemini, to tell you all about it. Make sure you check it out.
Hey y'all, are you ready for an explosive new podcast that brings together hip hop and history?
My name is Nimini and I'm the host of Historical Records, a brand new podcast for kids and
families that proves in order to make history, you have to make some noise.
Flash slam, another one gone.
Bash bam, another one gone.
The cracker, the bat, and another one gone.
The tip of the cap, there's another one gone.
And the best part, I make this show entirely by myself.
Impressive, right?
Me too, right?
Okay, okay, maybe I get a little bit of help from my sidekick, Tina the Raccoon.
Every week on Historical Records, join me, Nimony, and Tina the Raccoon as we learn about
the unsung heroes of the past and turn their history into hip hop.
Listen to Historical Records on the iHeart radio app, Apple
podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October
16th 2017 was murdered. There are crooks everywhere you look now. The situation is desperate.
My name is Manuel de Lilla. I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere, a podcast that
unearths the plot to murder a one-woman WikiLeaks.
Tephany exposed the culture of crime and corruption that were turning her beloved country into
a mafia state. And she paid the ultimate price.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
To listen to new episodes one week early and 100% ad free, subscribe to the iHeartTrueCrime Plus
channel available exclusively on Apple Podcasts.
In a galaxy far, far away.
No babe, that's taken.
We're in our own world, remember?
Right.
In our own world, we're two space cadets.
And totally normal humans. Sure, remember? Right. In our own world. We're two space cadets.
And totally normal humans.
Sure, totally normal humans.
Embark on a journey across the stars,
discovering the wonders of the universe one episode at a time.
We'll talk about life, love, laughter,
and why you should never argue with your co-pilot.
Especially when she's always right.
Right. And if we hit turbulence, just blame it on Mercury retrograde.
Or, Emily's questionable space piloting skills.
Hey! Join us on In Our Own World for cosmic conversations, stellar laughs,
and super corny dad jokes.
Listen to In Our Own World as a part of the MyKultura Podcast Network
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And don't worry, we promise to avoid any black holes.
Most of the time.
Senora Sex Ed is not your mommy's 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 GenX 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. I had sort of had my
first sexual experience. If you're in your señora era or know someone who is, then this
is the show for you. We're your host, diosa and mala, and you might recognize us from
our flagship podcast, Locatora Radio. We're so excited for you to hear our brand new podcast,
Señora Sex Ed. Listen to Señora Sex Ed on the iHeartRad 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.
It was December 2019 when the story blew up.
In Green Bay, Wisconsin,
former Packer star Kabir Bajabiamila
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. situation. A family man, former NFL player, devout Christian, now cut off from his family
and connected to a strange arrest. 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, 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.
Welcome back to It Could Happen Here,
a podcast in which every week I sit down with my friends,
Mia and Garrison,
and I walk them through a little backyard chemistry project.
Now today we are building a common,
commonly used explosive in Gattonators called,
oh, what's that Garrison?
That is, we cannot give those instructions on there.
Oh, oh, oh.
Well, what about for RDX?
Like Hexogen's safe, we can make Hexogen, right?
I think you need a special tax stamp or permit
to teach that, sorry.
All right, well, what if we talk about
how to make it in Roblox?
Oh, yeah, no, that's fine.
They haven't cracked Roblox yet.
Yeah, they cracked Minecraft.
That's good, that's good.
The feds don't know about that one, okay.
They don't know about that one yet.
Well, in that case, I'm going to read these this ingredient list for PETN that I found in a torrent of Taylor Swift songs.
So this is I'm certain the best information available right now. Anyway, we're talking
this week about explosives. We're talking particularly about the fact that Israel just
carry out an attack against Hezbollah, a militant organization in Lebanon, using
PETN, which is one of the two ingredients in Simtex.
It is commonly used as the detonator.
It's a stable high explosive.
It's often used to trigger the larger explosive charge, which is generally like hexogen.
You mix the two together with plastic agents like that's where you get the traditional plastic explosives.
And it's come out recently that the massage managed to sneak some of this stuff.
Well, sneaks not even really the right word, but they managed to impregnate a batch of
pagers and radios with PTN.
Now this was a pretty big story last week. I think a lot of people are focusing kind of on the wrong parts of it.
But yeah, that's what we're going to be talking about today because there's an element of this story that hasn't gotten out,
which is the degree to which what Israel did to Hezbollah here is something that anybody with roughly $30,000
could imitate to a surprising degree of fidelity.
This is an attack that is deeply easy to carry out.
The fact that Israel has made the decision to pull this up is the breaking of a seal in a way.
And I think it portends some very frightening things
for all of us and particularly for air travel.
So that's what we're gonna be talking about today.
Do you think like the either like hijacking
or infiltration on the supply chain is as replicable for
Yes.
a non like state agency?
Yes, that is the thing that is scariest
about this attack to me. And that is gonna be kind of the meat of what we're talking
About we should probably start but they're sort of laying out the scale. Yeah the attack. I mean, I also have one main question
What's a pager?
So garrison once upon a time, uh-huh
We kind of had the ability to broadcast signals over large areas
We kind of had the ability to broadcast signals over large areas, but it was a real pain in the ass to like do that with a phone call or anything, but a couple of words at a time.
Oh, so like a text message?
Like a text message, except for you can't really respond to it.
Oh, okay.
But it looked pretty cool to clip on your belt in the late 90s if you were like one
of the doctors on the set of ER.
Did you ever watch ER Garrison?
Were you too young for that?
That's the George Clooney show, right?
Cloontang, but yes.
He looked great in it.
Yeah, so that's where Pagers came from, was the television show ER written by Michael
Crichton, which means Pagers are related to dinosaurs.
And yeah, so Israel managed to get, we'll talk a little bit later about how, but they managed to get
explosives in an unknown number, but certainly hundreds of these walkie talkies, particularly
in the batteries.
By the end of the first day of attacks, around a dozen people were dead and 2,700 had been
wounded.
Many people seriously, there's like horrible videos of folks folks flying off of bicycles and the like
when this stuff detonates. It takes very little PETN to create a pretty significant explosion.
We're looking at about.11 grams of explosive agent in each walkie talkie, which was enough
to kill and maim a shitload of people. Some of these folks were members of Hezbollah.
I think Hezbollah has confirmed that eight of their fighters were killed.
At least four of the dead are children.
The second day of the attack, a bunch of radios went off as well.
Another 20 people were killed and hundreds more wounded.
You're talking about a very sizable attack.
Israel has not claimed credit for this, but the New York Times
has done some pretty deep reporting on this and per that quote, 12 current and
former defense and intelligence officials who were briefed on the attack
say the Israelis were behind it. And it's just also obvious that this was Israel.
Who else would do this? Now one of the reasons I'm getting into this is that there were a lot that was like the
first kind of concern that people had when this attack was carried out is like, oh shit,
was this some sort of a hack?
Did Israel exploit some sort of a glitch in how these products batteries worked and basically
like hack them to cause a runaway thermal escalation within the battery that led to it detonating. Is all of our
electronics just one hack away from turning from being turned into a bomb?
No. And I understand why people focused on on that aspect of it but it led to I
think some articles that are this is going to be one of those we always we
try to I hope we usually manage to be the like calm voices in the room, but this is one of
those cases where really people need to be less calm.
And I do want to highlight an article that I think went in the wrong direction on that
front.
It's a CNN business piece called, we still don't know how the Lebanon pager attack happened.
Here's what we do know about our own electronic devices.
And I'm going to, I'm going to read a quote from that.
In short, your communications device is not at risk for exploding unless it's heavily
tampered with and laced with explosives, experts who spoke to CNN said.
Justin Kapos, a cybersecurity professor at NYU, said that it's possible to cause damage
to a variety of batteries, most commonly lithium batteries.
But he said it seems like the devices were intentionally designed to explode when triggered,
not a pager that everyone else in the world is using.
If you're a normal person with a lithium ion battery, I would not be over concerned about
this," Capo said.
And I think that that is an error.
And we're going to get into as to why, but let's talk about how Israel did this first.
And this is again, all kind of per the New York Times reporting, how Israel built a modern day Trojan
horse.
They seem to be the first people who have put all of this together to an extent that
is probably pretty close to accurate.
There are some debates as to did they actually have a detonator in here or did they cause
a thermal run?
Because PETN, while it's very stable,
can be set off by heat.
So it's theoretically possible to get a battery hot enough
that it can detonate PETN,
but it's not gonna be as reliable
as using something like a bridge wire cap,
like a traditional triggering device.
And so it's a little bit unclear as to how this was made.
But whatever the case, basically what Israel did is
they made their own batteries for walkie talkies
that were clones of an earlier kind of walkie talkie
made by a Taiwanese company
that were no longer in production, right?
So this Taiwanese company had made real walkie talkies
for a while.
They stopped making them.
Israel got their hands on some originals and manufactured copies. Taiwanese company had made real walkie talkies for a while. They stopped making them.
Israel got their hands on some originals and manufactured copies.
Now that is the part of this that would be hard to replicate.
But the copies of the walkie talkies themselves were not the explosive agent.
What actually where the explosives were was in the detachable battery.
And Mossad crafted batteries themselves for these walkie talkies and wove
PETN into the battery.
So if you haven't really looked at a lithium ion battery, like one of the kinds of batteries
that you're going to like, I mean, it's similar to the ones in your phone, but it's just also
like any kind of electronics battery.
They are kind of these weird folded things like that. They look just like a little
square packet, usually with like a cord coming off of it if you actually look at the battery.
But the way they're assembled is they're like laminated into an aluminum foil pouch. And
while you are kind of doing that laminating process, you can basically just weave some
PETN into like alongside the battery and it will cost you a
Small fraction of the the batteries like life like you won't get as much actual battery time out of it
But it's not going to detonate on its own
PETN is they actually just conducted in 2020 a study to show that it can last for years
This is like the compound we use in the detonators on our nuclear devices
Once you get a bunch of walkie-talkies that are impregnated with this stuff out there, you could sit on them for years until like you needed to
actually use them. Now the key thing about this, it seems like when you're
talking about wrapping a battery that's got you know plastic explosives in it,
well that's the kind of thing that only a state level actor can do.
And this is going to bring me to the source that I really want to get to people for this
episode, which is an article by a guy named Andrew Huang at Bunny Studios.
Andrew is a computer scientist.
He's got a doctorate in philosophy from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
And kind of critically for some personal projects that he had done recently, he has manufactured
his own lithium ion batteries.
And in doing so, he's figured out
how to actually build a personal production line
to make batteries like this that you could customize
to fit into basically any kind of electronic device you want.
You can buy an entire pouch cell production line
that will allow you to make your own custom
lithium ion batteries using alibaba.com.
Yeah.
Oh boy.
Yeah, so that's great, right?
Or yeah, these are lithium pouch batteries.
And it cost about $15,000 in order to be able to make somewhere between like a few dozen
and several hundred of these, right?
So 15 grand will provide you with all of the materials you need to from the ground up make
at least, you know, probably a couple hundred pouch cell batteries, right?
And it's the kind of thing where it's not just any idiot could do it, but any reasonably
intelligent person with the degree of like experience in engineering can do it.
Right?
Andrew is obviously a very smart guy with a lot of capabilities that, you know, a lay
person might not have, but basically any kind of competent engineer could figure this out
pretty much.
And you're talking again, a few thousand dollars to get potentially hundreds or even more of
these made.
Now, the other side of the attack here is that the Israelis created a bunch of shell
companies.
They started manufacturing copies of these walkie talkies so that they could put their
own explosives impregnated batteries in them.
And then they built a bunch of shady ass companies in order to sell them.
And this was effectively what they were doing was creating like an Amazon like shipping
company, right?
In the same way that like anybody who wanted to can, you know, get a business license and
get access to like a bunch of electronics and sell them on Amazon.
Like you could buy a consignment of a thousand walkie talkies, make your own batteries for
them and sell them on Amazon.
Amazon does not do a particular like any really checking up on the people who choose to sell
through their site.
Yeah.
And even if they were to do that, PETN is effectively impossible to find, right?
There is a way to scan for it, but it takes like a half hour per package.
And it's the kind of thing where even if you're taking this stuff apart, unless you have someone
who is like doing chemical tests on what's in there, anyone who's even like even someone
who is moderately trained is not going to be able to recognize a battery that's had
some PET input into it from like a regular battery.
So I'm going to read another quote from that New York Times article about how the Mossad
kind of structured the shell companies here that allowed them to pose as a company making
pagers.
By all appearances, BAC Consulting was a Hungary based company that was under contract to produce
the devices on behalf of a Taiwanese company, Gold Apollo.
In fact, it was part of an Israeli front, according to three intelligence officers briefed
on the operation.
BAC did take on ordinary clients for which it produced a range of ordinary pagers.
But the only client that really mattered was Hezbollah and its pagers were far from ordinary.
Why were Hezbollah using pagers in the first place?
Oh yeah, I can talk about that.
Couldn't they afford an iPhone?
Great question.
Or something.
Well, I think we'll let Mia talk about that a second.
But Garry, I will say an initial response to that.
You know how like all of the activists in the United States after 2020, especially are
saying like, hey, your phone isn't safe.
Don't use your phone, you know, for
any kind of like actions the state can listen in on it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, Hezbollah has been
paranoid about that for a long time. And the Mossad actually has spent a lot of effort spreading
rumors within Hezbollah about how capable Israel's smartphone exploits are, like how strong their
ability to like listen in on conversations.
And that played a significant role in changing like policy from the top in Hezbollah to like,
we are going to use the lowest tech communication solutions possible.
And we're going to talk some more about that.
You know, it's not low tech.
These products and services that support this very podcast.
That's right. High tech and absolutely
no explosives in them, probably.
But really, there would be no way to tell if
there were.
And we're back.
Mia, you wanted to talk.
Yeah, the other thing I want to mention about that is that there's been a lot of focus in
terms of the pager use on Hezbollah trying to build this communications grid that's more
difficult to do.
To compromise, yeah.
Yeah, well, to compromise from digitally, right?
But the other thing that's kind of going on here that I think is getting a lot less attention is that
So Lebanon's economy has been an absolute shit show for probably like eight nine years now
There's a massive dollar and kind of the the terminal like heart attack a moment was that barge exploding?
But it had not been doing it had been on the road down for a while. I mean, there were, I mean, there were, there've been huge riots there over.
So part of what's going on is like,
there aren't dollars in the economy.
And this has made everything unbelievably expensive.
And one of the things that's unbelievably expensive
is phone calls.
And so there are,
I don't think there's been much coverage of this,
but it's like, there's also just regular people
also use pagers for things in order to set up what a phone call is going to be.
Because if you're going to have a phone call with someone, you have to make sure that both of you are like there.
Yeah. So it's not purely just a military thing. just because of how unbelievably expensive like calling people has gotten and this sort
of terminal crisis of the Lebanese economy in the sense that like, there aren't dollars
to pay for things. And so we've gotten to this point where even even sort of stuff that
we consider like fairly basic and not that expensive like phone service has just gotten
unbelievably expensive for everyone. And this is sort of caused a lot of regular people
who have no affiliation with this whatsoever
to sort of move down the technology chain
because it's just expensive.
Yeah.
And again, it's this kind of perfect storm
of paranoia and economic sort of factors colliding here.
But the sort of gist of it is Israel definitely wanted to push Hezbollah
to adopting.
They clearly had an understanding of what they could do and wanted deliberately to push
for this because it's a lot easier to get a manufactured explosive and it would have
been a lot harder to do this with iPhones.
Not that Israel hasn't done this with cell phones in the past.
Very famously back, I think it was the 90s, there was this Palestinian man, Yahya Ayash,
who was, I think, generally credited as an architect of car bombing attacks, who the
Mossad killed with a cell phone that they had put explosives in.
But in that case, it was a very labor intensive process with a single phone meant to target and blow the head off of one guy. This is a much more reckless and
much more civilian casualty open operation. Again, I'm going to quote from that New York
Times article. In Lebanon's Baka Valley in the village of Serein, one young girl, Fatima
Abdullah, had just come home from her first day of fourth grade when she heard her father's pager begin to beep.
Her aunt said, she picked up the device to bring it to him and was holding it when it
exploded, killing her.
Fatima was nine.
It's probably worth noting here that while Hezbollah is a militant group, they are also
effectively the state in a decent chunk of Lebanon and a lot of the folks who would have these
because these pagers and radios were generally seen
as part of like a defensive measure.
Like if there is an attack, if we go to war again,
these are our safe comms system, right?
Like this is our like low tech comms system
to allow us to like stay in touch.
So a lot of these people would have been folks
whose role was more on the social side of
things rather than like actual armed militants.
You have no way of knowing who you're blowing up.
Everyone's just getting these devices.
And it's interesting to me that the Masad or that Netanyahu, because I'm sure this order
had to have come from the top, gave the order to carry out this attack now.
They had had these in place for a while.
Exactly when is a little bit unclear, but long enough that there was like a nickname
for the attack itself that everyone knew they were going to carry out at some point.
So it's a little bit like, I wonder why this was specifically targeted for this point in
time.
I kind of suspect it may have been due to the fact that Israel's actual ground forces are still tied up in Gaza.
And so they were looking for a way to escalate with Lebanon, with Hezbollah that didn't necessitate
the deployment of forces that would still have a massive impact and be disruptive, which
this certainly was.
But when it comes to us and why we're talking about this today, it's the fact that this
is I think a Pandora's box style attack.
You have at this point opened up the possibility to doing this to any actor that has the resources.
As we've noted, about 15 grand will get you the capacity to manufacture battery packs
like this.
You can just go on Alibaba and buy things like radios or other, it doesn't have to be
that.
You could get, you know how like most, a lot of people now carry around battery devices,
right?
Like external batteries to charge their phones when they're out.
You can purchase those from Alibaba by the thousand.
You can disassemble them, stick in your own batteries.
It's not the kind of thing where you have to be capable of doing this on the scale that
the Masad did.
You could stick this and you could buy 2,000 batteries.
You could stick this in 200 of them, your own replacement explosive packs, and you could
just send those out into the world.
Especially one of the things that scares me is the idea of you get a bunch of these
shipped, you impregnate a few with explosives, but you have a bunch of batteries that you
then have on shipping through the air and trigger in the air while they're being shipped
to a destination.
It's the kind of thing you would eventually be able to unravel who had created the front
companies and the like, but there really is nothing built into the system that would very
effectively be able to tell that you'd done this, as long as there was a degree of light
care taken in the manufacturing process.
I want to turn back to Andrew Huang's article here.
This is him talking about the way in which you could hide the fact that you had impregnated
these battery packs with explosives.
Once folded into the core of the battery, it is sealed in an aluminum pouch.
If the manufacturing process carefully isolates the folding line from the laminating line
and or rinses the outside of the pouch with acetone to dissolve away any PETN residue
prior to marking, no explosive residue can escape the pouch, thus defeating swabs that
look for chemical residue.
It may also well evade methods such as X-ray fluorescence because the elements that compose
the battery separator and PETN are too similar and too light to be detected.
And through-case methods like SORS, Spatially Offset Raman Spectroscopy, would likely be
defeated by the multi-layer copper laminate structure of the battery itself blocking light
from probing inner layers.
Thus, I would posit that a lithium battery constructed with a PETN layer inside is largely
undetectable."
And this is, from folks I have talked to who have a degree of expertise in the matter,
I think very accurate.
And I think even if you're not striking air travel here, number one, it would be easy
to get stuff like this on planes.
There was in December, somebody attempted to and just kind of their detonation method
failed which is kind of with explosives when people don't die and explosive attacks, what
always saves them is it's kind of tricky to get the detonators right.
But I'm very worried that the Mossad has effectively provided people with a perfect plan of attack
to fuck with air travel or to fuck with the supply lines because it
imagined just like a
Couple hundred people over the space of a week or so have battery packs or other
Electronics detonate on their person like or a couple of dozen people
What that does both to the economy to the the supply lines, like the extent to which
that would be disruptive in society is like the potential is enormous. And the potential
for like runaway terror is enormous.
Yeah, I mean, that that was one of the first things that we talked about once news of this
drop is like, beyond the actual like physical injuries and death caused caused by this attack.
This is like, primarily an infrastructure attack.
In this case, it completely destroys the communications infrastructure of Hezbollah,
but in the strategy behind this attack, it can be used just to target various types of infrastructure,
whether that be supply chains, travel, it puts distrust in your own equipment,
and certainly its application on airlines is obviously very worrying.
Well, it's very worrying.
And one of the things that I keep thinking about is the degree to which the way Amazon
has restructured the economy, and particularly the way that digital commerce works, has created
an opportunity for a malicious actor to carry out an attack like this with excellent security.
Because you don't even have to be the one
shipping these out, right?
No.
You can get, I mean, you have to ship them at some point,
but you can ship them to a third party
that is the actual company that deals with Amazon.
If you have enough kind of resources and ingenuity
behind it, basically set up a drop shipping scam
where you are having someone else send explosives to Amazon, which provides a lot of opportunity for you to both
get away and a lot of opportunity to you could seed with a couple of different manufacturers,
different devices.
It's like terrorism in the era of the gig economy.
Yeah.
And that was one of the reasons I liked Fincher's recent movie, The Killer.
Yeah.
Just in terms of how much of the gig economy was like worked into these like traditional like industries,
whether that be like terrorism, because like hitmen aren't really real, but certainly terrorismists.
And I think there's a lot of ways that these things can be applied in this kind of bizarre Uber, Amazon world
that we've created
where the economy is just so fractured in all these little ways.
There's also, I think, the sort of production angle too,
which is that because the way that manufacturing is happening
has become so decentralized and because it's become based on these...
It's kind of less so now, but a lot of Chinese manufacturing had worked like this,
where you'd get these sort of like smaller pop-up things. And each of these sort of like,
fairly small, like production facilities is like shipping stuff to like a larger one,
who's like doing assembly or whatever. But that means that yeah, like as you're saying with
Alibaba, it's like all of this stuff is just available to purchase because it's designed
to be sold to these people who are starting
their small-scale production line.
Yeah.
There's no quality control, there's no intense vetting, it's all extremely accessible, it's
very easy to infiltrate this process.
Yeah, here's another line from that Andrew Hwang article at Bunny Studios, B-U-N-N-I-E
Studios, which-U-N-N-I-E Studios, which
is his blog.
You don't even have to go so far as offering anyone a bribe or being a state level agency
to get tampered batteries into a supply chain.
Anyone can buy a bunch of items from Amazon, swap out the batteries, restore the packaging
and seals, and return the goods to the warehouse.
And yes, there is already a whole industry devoted to copying packaging and security
seals for the purpose of warranty fraud
The perpetrator will be long gone by the time the device is resold
Yeah, and and the other the other worrying part about that too is that you know, okay
So getting the explosives to work is kind of difficult, right?
Like bomb making is not easy, but you have to have a degree of competence. Yes, but the actual cost
$15,000 like that's not even like you're looking at like a millionaire.
That's something your local dentist can afford to pull off.
You could carry out an attack like this in terms of cash expenditure for the cost of
like a reasonably nice car, which is not prohibitive to a large scale international terrorist organization.
Or even just like a rich guy.
Yeah.
And not even that rich guy can pull this off.
Yep.
Which is I guess the kind of the main inhibiting factor is we still don't quite know how Israel
got these to detonate.
Yes.
Whether that is some sort of hack that that overheated the battery, whether it was like
a message that was sent out that like triggered something within the device. It seems to have been a message that made the explosive detonate
because they did send a message immediately before. So it seemed to have been tied to some extent
with a message. Andrew Huang kind of looked into and came to the conclusion that you could very
well do a thermal runaway to set this off. But obviously the massage doesn't have any trouble getting a hold of military detonators.
Wang also walked through how you could build a circuit into the actual battery itself,
like a trigger circuit. You know, I'm just going to go ahead and I'm going to go ahead
and talk about this a little bit when we come back. But let's do our second ad break now
before we tell everyone how to detonate plastic explosives.
This is going to be the one that gets all arrested.
Yeah.
And we're back.
Here's a quote from Andrew on how these might have been detonated.
Detonating the PETN is a bit more tricky. Without a detonator, PETN may conflagrate, burn fast instead of detonating and
creating the much more damaging shockwave.
However, the Wikipedia page notes that an electric spark with an energy in the range of 10 to 60 millijoules is sufficient to initiate
detonation. Based on available descriptions of the device is getting hot prior to detonation, one might suppose that detonation is initiated by a trigger circuit
shorting out the battery pack, causing the internal polymer spacers to melt and eventually
the cathode-anoid pairs coming into contact, creating a spark. Such a spark may furthermore
be guaranteed across the PET and sheet by introducing a small defect, such as a slight
dimple in the surrounding cathode anode layers.
Once the packet is to the melting point of the spacers, the dimpled region is likely
to connect, leading to a spark that then detonates the PETN layer sandwiched between the cathode
and anode layers.
But where do you hide this trigger circuit?
It turns out that almost every lithium polymer pack has a small circuit board embedded in
it called the PCM or protection circuit module. It contains a microcontroller, often in a TSSOP8 package, and at least one or more large
transistors capable of handling the current capacity of the battery.
And basically, that's where you put it.
Oops.
And again, I did talk to someone with expertise in explosives who said that they thought it
was likelier
that there was a conventional detonator, not because it would have been impossible to do
with a thermal runway or the way that Andrew set up, but because this is the massage, they
have access to detonators and a detonator guarantees that you get the proper kind of
explosion.
But again, even if you're using kind of the less Gucci method here that would be available
to a non-state actor, if only 50 out of the 300 devices you impregnate with explosives
do a proper explosion and the rest just kind of conflagrate, well, that's still a very
successful attack.
You can do a tremendous amount of damage to people's sense of well-being and to the economy,
to supply lines by carrying out an attack like that.
This is so terroristic in nature and like if any other group did this, like if Hezbollah
did this attack, if Hamas did this attack.
Oh my God, we would be bombing them right now.
Yeah.
If some like just random accelerationist network somehow pulled this off, like we would be
pulling our hair out.
We would like go to war over something like this.
And the fact that it's like this type of attack is only okay when this one military does it
is just, I don't know what to do anymore.
They have endangered everyone, right? Like every single person listening to this is less
safe because Israel carried out this attack.
What is airport screening going to look like if this keeps happening?
Most importantly, am I going to be able to take all of my batteries on the
planes that I can play video games on a 14 hour flight garrison? You know? Yeah. The
plugs in the seats don't always work. Well, I mean, and even like, what if you're able
to do this to like the electronics of like the pilot? Geez. And then you just, you just
like take out an entire airport. Yeah. It's like, it's such a fucked up Pandora's box
that it feels like there's gonna be no real consequences for it, which is just kind of how things have
been this past year, I guess. Yeah. And the other the other issue with it is that like
the only way to fix this would be an actual like you would you would have to change how
our supply chains work. And it's like, well, no one's going to do that. No one. There is
no number of people that you know, Maybe if they literally killed the president of the United States, maybe you could get enough political capital together to
Try to do something about it. But like there's no way no and it and there's there's no way and like the way the state
Will respond to this is by making air travel vastly worse, right? Yeah
It's probably not the only thing that they will do but that is like because there's just not an actual it's not
really with present technology.
There's not an easy way to actually find these things like
it within kind of the context of like air travel or the way in
which like digital merchandising works.
Right. Which is again why the massage probably should have
done this.
No.
What many reasons.
What have many reasons? The dead kids being another. Yeah. I do want to conclude. I've
quoted a lot from Andrew Hwang's wonderful article, turning everyday gadgets into bombs
is a bad idea. But I want to quote from his conclusion here. Not all things that could
exist should exist. And some ideas are better left unimplemented.
Technology alone has no ethics.
The difference between a patch and an exploit is the method in which a technology is disclosed.
Exploding batteries have probably been conceived of and tested by spy agencies around the world,
but never deployed en masse because, while it may achieve a tactical win, it is too easy
for weaker adversaries to copy the idea and justify its redeployment in an asymmetric and devastating retaliation.
However, now that I've seen it executed, I am left with the terrifying realization
that not only is it feasible, it's relatively easy for any modestly funded entity to implement.
Not just our allies can do this.
A wide cast of adversaries have this capability in their reach.
From nation states to cartels and gangs to shady copycat battery factories just looking for a big payday. If
chemical suppliers can moonlight and elicit drugs, what stops battery factories from dealing
in bespoke munitions? The bottom line is we should approach the public policy debate around
this assuming that someday we could be victims of exploding batteries too. Turning everyday
objects into fragmentation grenades should be a crime as it blurs the line between civilian and military technologies. And that
should be something everyone can agree on.
Yeah. Yeah, I think I think so. Jesus Christ. It just is enacting terrorism through like
the gig economy ecosystem. Yeah. And oh boy, what a fun time we've we've built for ourselves.
What a great fresh hell for us all
Yeah, very excited for us to have our first drop shipping terrorist attack. It's gonna be great. It's gonna be it's gonna be great
Yeah, yeah. Anyway folks, maybe drive next trip you gotta take
Probably should note before we come out here the obvious question and and there's not a long answer to this for obvious
reasons, is like, well, could a non-state actor get their hands on PETN or RDX, you know, these
kind of explosive compounds that you can make into plastic explosives? And the short answer is yes,
any moderately competent chemist with the right ingredients could make this stuff, and they're
not super hard to find, but also a lot of people in commercial spaces particularly have access to PETN.
It's a kind of thing that like is is commonly demolition, right?
Yeah, it's coming to demolition.
It's also something artists use a good amount.
There is a specific formulation of PETN where they make it like a thin sheet that you can
use to suddenly weld metals together explosively.
And there are a couple of specific famous artists who use PETN
in order to make Bob relief sort of artworks.
So it's, again, not something that is impossible
for people who are not the Massad to gain access to.
You need a chemist, an engineer, and someone who knows how to set up businesses.
And between the three of them, they're going to have enough money to do this, which is
not great. Yeah, not great. Anyway, everybody I'm here to tell you about a new podcast I've been
working on with the Story Pirates and John Glickman called Historical Records.
It's a family-friendly podcast.
Yeah, you heard that right.
A podcast for all ages.
One you can listen to and enjoy with your kids
starting on September 27th.
I'm gonna toss it over to the host of Historical Records,
Nimini, to tell you all about it.
Make sure you check it out.
Hey, y'all.
Are you ready for an explosive new podcast
that brings together hip hop and history?
My name is Nimini, and I'm the host of Historical Records,
a brand new podcast for kids and families that proves
in order to make history, you have to make some noise.
["History"]
And the best part?
I make this show entirely by myself.
Impressive, right?
Me too, huh?
OK, OK.
Maybe I get a little bit of help from my sidekick,
Tina the Raccoon.
Every week on Historical Records, join me, Nimony.
Me!
And Tina the Raccoon, as we learn about the unsung heroes of the past Definitely Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017 was murdered.
My name is Manuel de Lilla. I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere, a podcast that
unearths the plot to murder a one woman WikiLeaks.
Tephany exposed the culture of crime and corruption that were turning her beloved country
into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
To listen to new episodes one week early and 100% ad free,
subscribe to the iHeart True Crime Plus channel, available exclusively on Apple podcasts. 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.
I had sort of had my first sexual experience.
If you're in your señora era or know someone who is, then this is the show for you. We're your host, Dioza and Mala, and you might recognize us from our flagship
podcast, Locatora Radio. 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. 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 is much more than just a sport and much more
than just entertainment.
Lucha libre is a type of storytelling.
It's a dance.
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.
radio 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 Bajabiamila 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.
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.
radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, and welcome back to It Could Happen Here, your daily dose of the horrors that are in fact already happening all around us. I'm your occasional host, Molly
Conger, and I am delighted to be joined today by the critically acclaimed author
of Culture Warlords, journalist, researcher, sword enthusiast, sandwich
expert, and my friend, Talia Levin.
Hello.
Yeah, I once introduced myself at an event as a sandwich historian, which I think was
the pinnacle of my public speaking career.
But this is the second pinnacle.
Hey, Molly, what's up?
Thank you so much for coming on today to talk with me about your new book, Wild Faith.
It is coming out in just a few weeks, October 15th, right?
Yeah, Wild Faith, How the Christian Right is Taking Over America, not the terrible B
movie entitled Wild Faith.
The SEO is scrambled on that one, but the book, however, is very good.
Yeah.
I mean, first of all, I just want to say, like, so I've been reading the galley copy that you sent me, which honestly made me feel very good. Yeah. I mean, first of all, I just want to say like, so I've been reading the galley copy that
you sent me, which I honestly made me feel very fancy.
I've never received a galley copy of a book that's not out yet before.
So I felt, you know, kind of a kind of a broadcasting professional with my special book.
It's an exclusive club.
You're one of like five people that's read it.
Oh my God, that is that's very exclusive.
Yeah.
Well, it's about to become a lot less
exclusive. So feel special while you can. Right. But I realized while I was reading
it, you know, I have my little sticky tabs because I'm reading a lot more books lately,
regrettably, not a big time book guy. I'm always reading. I read a lot of court documents, but I'm
reading a lot of books right now for research for my show. And it's like I'm a little sticky tabs.
And as I'm reading it, I realize I'm not marking passages that I think would be
useful for us to talk about in this interview.
I'm just putting my little tabs on passages that just like punch me in the gut.
You know, sorry for punching you.
No, but I mean, I mean, with the, with the power of of your words, because a lot of what I'm reading sucks.
It's just, right?
Like, I spent all day yesterday reading 25-year-old issues of Resistance, which was the quarterly
magazine for a white power music label.
So this, I mean, it's a real departure.
So really just reveling in the richness of the prose and the fact that it didn't want
to kill me.
Yeah, no, I also have experienced neo-Nazi research fatigue and also just like the sort
of relentless grimness of plowing through these fundamentally hostile texts and also
like academic texts, which are difficult in their own way.
I try to write excessively or just excitingly.
I find that a lot of, especially non-fiction,
sort of journalism-y books tend to be a little dry
and I'm like, let's not be dry, let's be spicy.
And you know, like form and function.
Like you're more likely to be moved by a message if you find the writing compelling, you know?
It's just you have such a way with words.
I mean, you know this, you're a professional writer.
I don't want to embarrass you on the show.
I feel like I'm twirling my hair and being like, yes, I do write for a living.
If you'll indulge me, if it's legal, if the publisher will allow this, I just want to
read this passage from the introduction that I think is a good jumping off point.
And it was one of the first things I marked because I was just like, oh, hell yeah, we're
getting into this.
There's good words in here.
Okay.
The Christian right is a force in American politics and has been for decades, half a
century to be precise, during which it has steadily gained power.
It started in school rooms, continued in courtrooms, and perseveres with the aid of people who
are perfectly willing to call in bomb threats to hospitals and attempt to overturn elections.
It features self-proclaimed prophets with a distinct interest in politics, newly minted
apostles with very definite ideas about spiritual battle and its earthly components, and
pastors eager to usher in the end of the world. Its adherents have hymns and
devotionals and speak in tongues on occasion, and the showiest among them are
known to march their cities blowing ram's horns in an effort to topple, as
Joshua once did, the wicked cities of the world. They have their own insular world,
their own media apparatus.
They have legislators who give fire and brimstone speeches from the badly carpeted rooms where
laws are made.
They have lawyers, too.
And in case the lawyers fail, there's always the promise of congregations that might coalesce
into mobs or arsonists whose burning, holy zeal coalesces into the tiny pinpoint of a molotov cocktail.
And I knew from the intro that we were in for a ride.
Yeah, it's like cast of characters, the worst people ever, but like, let's write about it in
an exciting way. I think that one of the themes of the book is really how
these extra-legal extremist movements, like the anti-abortion terror movement
and the legal framework of a movement work together.
I actually initially heard about this from a friend who was talking about
how during the gay rights movement you had sort of the ACT UP, well, demonstrations, the die- gay rights movement, you had the ACT UP,
well, demonstrations, the die-ins.
And then you had the more respectably coded gay people
who were talking to the government
and trying to get elected and really trying to influence
research, and that every movement needs
a radical outside and then a respectable inside.
And I'm like, oh, this works in like theocratic movements too,
where you have like this, you know,
fringe that's burning down clinics
and then people steadily working for 50 years
to like ban abortion.
And they have the same DNA and they have the same goals.
They just go about it differently
but complement each other.
And I think that's like a running theme in the book they have the same goals. They just go about it differently, but compliment each other.
And I think that's like a running theme in the book is that like, you have lawyers and
you have legislators and then you have mobs and they're sort of all working towards the
same goals. And that's really what we're seeing, I think, from the Christian right after decades
of building power.
Yeah, one of the notes that I wrote down in that vein while I was reading was that, you
know, the Christian right drives its power across a spectrum, right? From the clinic
bomber to the senator. But it's not, you know, you might say, well, it's two sides of the
same coin. But to me, it looks like this isn't two different spheres of power or two sort
of separate but coexisting or comorbid ideologies, they're just different numbers on the same
dial, right? It's turning up and turning down.
Yeah, it's like the hand that lights the torch and the hand that puts it to the, you know,
pyre. They perform different functions, but they have really the same goals. And if, like me, you view stripping
half the populace of its bodily autonomy,
imposing a theocracy, hounding queer people out
of public life slash into death as fundamentally violent goals,
yeah, I don't think there's a respectable iteration,
necessarily.
There's just cosplaying respectability. Yeah, I don't think there's a respectable iteration necessarily.
There's just cosplaying respectability.
You can say it with a tie on the Senate floor, but it's the same message.
Yeah.
And I think so much of our media apparatus and governmental apparatus is really views,
again, this like form and function,
right? Like if you are, if you say something politely, it doesn't really matter what you're
saying. Like if you say something with a suit on in the register of like, you know, in a
calm sort of Mike Penceian rush limba and decaf as he called himself boys.
Jesus, did he say that?
Yeah, that's what he called himself when he did a evangelical radio show.
Yeah, no matter what you say, as long as you are white and you say it politely, this is
fundamentally fine.
And then if you look at it from a step or two back and you're like, no, actually, no matter how politely you say it, this is like a violent, deeply unpopular, theocratic agenda that fundamentally is incompatible
with multiracial democracy.
I also think, and I keep running into this, well-meaning liberals being like, but isn't
there a separation of church and state?
I'm like, I don't know.
Do you fucking think there is in Alabama? Do you think there is in
Arkansas and all of these, you know, in Texas, like all of these figures are like, we're Christians,
we're making laws for Jesus and we have covenant marriages and we want you to too.
Yeah, like we're going to outlaw divorce because of God and like, you know, women dying of
sepsis in hospital parking lots is what Jesus wants.
And like, and I experienced this, I think you probably have too, when you like report
on, you know, zealots and extremists, and people inevitably wind up like measuring other
people's wheat by their own bushel.
In other words, they're like, they can't really believe this stuff.
And it's like, no, they really do.
They can't really have these goals.
First of all, they do, but also does it matter?
Right.
I mean, the question of like impact versus intent.
First of all, I think it's perfectly possible to be both a grifter and a true believer at
the same time.
That's just synergy, baby.
Yeah. And also fundamentally, this is a world premised on grievance, where it's this idea
that the world has got one over on you. And so in a sense, grift is just like, well, the
world's corrupt and I'm fighting a righteous cause. So what does it matter? The ethics
that I sort of
skimp on along the way? I mean, once you've amped the stakes up to we're fighting the literal devil and everyone who's
getting in my way is animated by actual demons from hell. I mean, the stakes couldn't be higher.
So you do what you have to do.
Exactly. And it's this theory of power. And so then people sort of standing outside of
that paradigm, who are not keyed into this idea of like, we're in an ethical spiritual battle,
like, and we must create like a kingdom of Christ on earth in America to win against the devil.
And then people outside being like, you're hypocrites. And it's like, it's not a valid
criticism to them, because they're like, first of all, you're not like a Christian if you're a liberal, but also
like you're not on our level. Like we're fighting Lucifer and you're probably a stand like on
his team if you oppose us. So, you know, a multitude of apparent hypocrisies can be excused by the idea that like,
this is a holy war and in war,
there's like all kinds of behavior that's okay.
Doing holy war crimes.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, this is why, for example,
you see a lot of like prominent female figures
from Phyllis Schlafly, you know, in the seventies and eighties
to like the trad wives now. And it's like, how does this fit in with your overall sort of idea that women should be
chaste and submissive and meek and silent? I mean, first of all, tradwife stuff is often fetish.
That's fetish content. But yeah, I mean, Phyllis Schlafly made a living professionally saying that
women shouldn't make a living professionally, but that contradiction doesn't matter
Yeah, I mean, I think I I call them Valkyries for feminine submission in the book
Yeah
I mean at the end of the day like if you believe that this is your you're calling your mission
You know your mission field in the service of the Lord to undo the demonic sort of
Influence of feminism like Like, of course,
you're going to speak. You've been moved by God to do so. Yeah. And, and of course, like female
leaders within the evangelical community, like sort of minority Republicans can be like knocked
off their pedestal quicker and easier, but like they still can come out and exist and testify. And Schlafly throughout her very long prolific and lucrative career was like, I'm a housewife
with six kids.
And that was how she defined herself, even while being this incredibly prominent figure
and one of the sort of key architects of the current Christian right coalition of like, right wing
Catholics, she and Paul Weyrich and Leonard Leo and some other right wing Catholics brought
these Catholic values of being all about abortion to the evangelical right, which prior to the
seventies was like, that's a weird Catholic thing. We don't really care.
Yeah, I wanted to talk about that. So So I'm not sure how sort of common knowledge this is, but
the Protestant Christian community in the United States did not care about abortion
until the 70s. It was not an issue in their communities. They were generally pro-abortion.
They were, you know, the Baptists were in favor of Roe v. Wade.
Yeah, the fucking Southern Baptist Convention came out in like, 74, I think it was, and was like, yeah, we approve of Roe v. Wade. Yeah, the fucking Southern Baptist Convention came out in like 74, I
think it was and was like, yeah, we approve of Roe v. Wade. So it's not like, you know,
opposition to abortion is baked into Christianity. It is baked into the American evangelical
Christianity of post 1975 or so, because of this sort of conscious, cynical, political
decision. And that I think is so
interesting because, you know, we get into this conversation of, well, what are their deeply held
beliefs and do they really believe it and does that matter? But we can pin down the moment they
started believing this and we know why and its segregation. Yeah, I mean, and first of all, I would say like people can still like, this is like several
generations later of like, constant barrages of extremely violent propaganda against abortion.
So right.
So the belief is sincere today, but you could look at it where it was born.
Yeah, exactly.
You can should have been aborted.
Right?
Yeah, no, it definitely should not have been carried to term. It's crazy. And in addition to Mois' book, Randall Balmer does some really good coverage
of this. So the sort of general arc is like pre sort of 1970s. You had this like generally
conservative population of Southern Baptists who were like on board with McCarthyism,
hated the godless Reds,
but kind of viewed politics as like worldly
and not really their sphere
and were not particularly politically engaged.
And then Brown versus Board of Education passes.
Immediately the white Christian populace
just disinvests, we use from the public schools, passes, immediately the white Christian populace just
disinvests, leaves from the public schools,
leaving multiple counties in the South
without functionally any public education at all.
And this mushroom after rain kind of like patches
of parochial schools with church or Christian in the name
start popping up and
they're all white schools.
Their segregation academies is the sort of term of art for these.
And they're explicitly under a Christian aegis.
They're religious schools.
They're tax exempt as a result.
And then in the late 60s and 70s, the government was like, you can't be tax exempt and consider
it a charitable organization if you are segregated and don't have any black students or minority
students.
And that is what woke the sleeping dragon of the Christian right.
Really get your filthy government hands off our tax exemptions. Like they just went, you know, nuts. They were really mobilized, you know,
like these are the people who are like throwing tomatoes at Ruby bridges. Like, you know,
they're really politically motivated for the first time because they're experiencing like
a consequence for segregation. And so this is when like Jerry Falwell and Ralph Reed and James Dobson start sort of
coming forward and being more prominent.
And then by the sort of mid 70s to 80s, you had these like savvy or political operators
coming out and saying,
hey guys, segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever is like,
it's great that it really fired y'all up, but it has sort of a limited appeal.
They shot George Wallace, it's over.
Yeah, like there's going to be a ceiling on that.
And a lot of people think you suck.
So why don't you get in on the ground on this new civil rights struggle abortion, where you can fight for the unborn who conveniently
will never disagree with you. Right. Their voices don't have to be centered here. We
can speak for them. I mean, they're the most convenient political constituency in history.
Right because they're so innocent and you can't milkshake duck a fetus. He's not even
here. Yeah, he can't talk. He's not going to say shit. So, I mean, that's like the very capsule
history. And then of course, it becomes this idea of
like the moral majority, and we're the guardians of America's soul, and we're going to get
really weird about sex. Also.
It's just like, if you strip it all the way down to the studs, like, the core of this
is women are bleeding to death in hospital parking lots because Jerry Falwell didn't
want to pay his taxes or stop being racist.
Yeah.
Like, I mean...
That's not fair.
No, but people sometimes like are a little skeptical when I'm like, all of the hatreds
are interconnected.
But then you look at like concrete historical examples of like this world historical wave
of misogyny.
I mean, it's not that this population was weird about sex
or weird about women, to start with.
Maybe they would have gotten here a different way,
but that's how we got here.
Yeah, we got here by just like,
no, we will pay taxes on our segregation academies.
Bob Jones University's interracial dating ban
is perfectly great and we're gonna mobilize about it.
And so what you have then now is just like 50 years of political lockstep because and you see
this in like other religious communities. I mean, like I know, like it's sort of notorious how much
corruption slides by in New York because like the Hasidic communities vote as a block. Like it is
slides by in New York because like the Hasidic communities vote as a block.
Like it is very useful to have a congregation that all votes the same way.
It's politically useful.
I mean, what other populations can you get together once a week as a captive audience
and speak to with authority? If you can mobilize those people.
And that's what Jerry Falwell saw, right?
Is like, this is a great way to get a lot of people
to vote the way I want them to vote.
Yeah, and you know, the church has always been
like a really prominent institution
in American civil society,
especially as the rest of sort of civil society
has fallen away and degraded.
Like churches are some of the only social outlets
that Americans have.
And what's interesting when you talk to evangelicals
and ex-evangelicals is just like being a Republican
is like part of their religious identity in a major way.
It's like, this is how you vote and this is, you know,
how you dress and this is how you go to church and so on.
But like the idea of being a Democrat is like not only,
you know, a little bit out of step
with your community. It's heretical. I mean, that's how the demons get in. Yeah, yeah, demon crats.
I mean, and like, yeah, it's stupid, but it's also like half of the people saying demon crats,
like literally mean Democrats are aligned with Lucifer. And I think that's a point that I don't
want to get lost on the listener. This, you know, this idea that people literally have demons in them,
that demons are active in the world,
that demons are motivating the actions of their enemies is real for them.
And I'm not saying that to be derisive or, you know, it's real. It's real.
It is an animating factor for a lot of these people.
And that's hard to wrap your mind around.
I mean, I struggle with the idea that that is real for them, but like,
that's how you get things like satanic panic.
And we see echoes of satanic panic in this idea of, you know, groomers in kids' schools.
They really have this fundamental, like, foundational belief in this,
you know, whether or not they're calling it demons,
that the existence of some sort of ontological evil that is coming for their children. And once you arrive at the
place where like, where you understand that that's real for them, their actions make more
sense. Like they're not behaving irrationally. If you truly believe that these things were
happening, you'd act crazy too.
Yeah. I mean, it's really hard to get people to step outside their own worldviews.
And in both directions, right?
Like I don't believe that demons are, you know,
a broad in the world and motivating like every element of political action to
someone who-
I'm starting to see them some places, but generally no.
To someone who does, my viewpoint is incomprehensible and vice versa.
So I think part of, I mean, not
that I'm like one of those people that's like polarization is the big problem, like, you
know, as opposed to anything with like concrete policy, like, you know, where it's like the
big problem is we all don't like each other enough. And I'm like, no, the big problem
is like, people are espousing policies that will cause deaths. And like, also that people
like believe their political enemies
are literally agents of Satan,
I would say is a bigger problem
than polarization and the abstract.
But yeah, I mean, this doctrine of sort of spiritual warfare,
which if you Google it, it's just like,
oh, this is the mindset.
And it's like you, the listener to, it could happen here.
You've been drafted into the spirit war from birth.
Congratulations, Private.
You're probably on the side of the devil. So good job. I mean, I don't know. A lot of
Americans believe in angels and demons and that's fine. But it's like when that starts
impinging on the political sphere in a very serious way. It's like, how far would you go if you believed your opponent was under the thrall of like Satan, you would go pretty damn far.
Beth, I mean, that's why, you know, clinic bombings were, and I guess are on the rise
again, right? Like these arsons of clinics, it's not like other kinds of crime in my mind,
right? It's not a crime of passion or an interpersonal dispute. It
is people who have been motivated by this belief that this is a place where a genocide
is happening, that there's a Holocaust going on in there, that people are ripping, you
know, actual living babies limb from limb. And if you really did believe that, their
actions make sense. And that's why it happens so often, right? Because these people are
motivated by this belief that God commands them to take this action.
Yeah, I mean, there's sort of dual element to that.
I mean, first of all, absolutely.
Yes, like I've read some anti-abortion terror manuals
speaking of extremely unpleasant research.
And it's just really like, these people are murderers.
It's mass murderers.
Like you're like killing Hitler, right?
And wouldn't you, wouldn't you kill baby Hitler?
Exactly.
Jeb Bush would.
It's not hypothetical about baby Hitler in like a country-wide scale.
And when specific abortion doctors have been mentioned in right wing media, those guys
end up dead and that's not a coincidence.
So there's that element of it, which is the majority of it.
It's huge.
But there's also this idea
of demonic geography where demons can possess sort of places like abortion clinics or institutions like Planned Parenthood or even the Democratic Party, which, you know, I read a lot of demonology
books and taxonomies of demons. Pigs in the Parlor was this really big hit in like the 70s
and it's been like reissued and reissued in millions of copies.
And it's just like, on one level, it's really compelling
because it's like, are you tired?
Are you sad?
Are you feeling clumsy?
Do you have like persistent stomach aches?
It's demons.
And here's how you deal with that.
And like in a country with shitty health care
I can totally see why someone who's like really depressed
Might go to like an exorcist or a deliverance minister, which is the Protestant
If you'll try anything and this guy's gonna do it for free
I watched so many videos of deliverance ministers doing their thing and it's like freezy
It's like people, you know, are just like sitting there
and there are like people praying over them
and screaming in their face, like,
and they wind up vomiting and crying
and it's all very like intense.
And, you know, if you think about it
from a placebo perspective for like one second,
you're like, obviously this person would feel
a weight lifted from them.
They've had this ecstatic experience.
And this isn't the majority of this is about 14 percent of America
identifies as white evangelical.
So many.
Protestants, it's still so many people because people keep asking me,
like, how many people really believe should like this?
And I'm like, well, about 80 to 90 percent of like people who identify
as white evangelical
Protestants espouse most of these beliefs. So that's like 30 million people.
Yeah, yeah. And then you add in the Catholic right, which is getting weirder
every day. Yeah, JD Vance. I hate women. Women exist to reproduce, breed you
filthy sow. But like even beyond the adult Catholic convert style
weirdness, like right wing Catholics are an integral part of the Christian right. Like
Amy Coney Barrett, you know, Antonin Scalia, that kind of thing. That's another bunch of
millions. So this reactionary force has like numerically significant constituency. On the
other hand, it definitely punches way above its weight in terms of...
Right, they have an outsized influence of both, you know, on the legislative floor and
when it comes to, you know, who's racking up the most bodies.
Yeah.
And also even like the culture wars, right?
Like the sort of loudest culture warriors
tend to at least come from a background
of I'm speaking for God or Christ is King or whatever it is.
Like how many times have you and I encountered that
in extremist context, but also the sort of more mainstream-y,
what the fuck the mainstream is, I don't know,
it's full of piss. But like
the more mainstreamy like Christian grifter, right? They come from this, I'm speaking from
my faith, these are my religious principles. But like, it is worth noting again, and just
to rewind in our conversation, but like, the whole concept of religious liberty and religious
freedom, absolutely was like an ad slogan coined in the 70s around segregation.
Right. Religious freedom to do what? I mean, it's like states rights. States rights to do what?
Right. Yeah.
And like answer the question.
Yeah. It's religious freedom to have segregated schools is the answer to that.
And you still see echoes of that with either still religious schools that can't accept
federal grant money because they don't let students be gay, right? Like it's not racial
segregation anymore, but they are, you know, refusing to admit gay students and that is a
violation of federal civil rights law. Yeah. But that's where, I mean, that's where that slogan
started and then it's blossomed to include basically like a gay person came into my shop.
Except they didn't. Right? I know there's no standing. Right.
Like that whole case was built on a lie. Whatever. That's. Yeah.
It's like high and standing in the Supreme court is so ridiculous. This,
I mean in many ways this Supreme court is the culmination and embodiment and
apotheosis of like Christian right theocracy because you have these like
absolutely
Bat shit religious zealots. I mean amy coney barrett is like from a cult
And in this unaccountable body, they're passing unpopular
Theocratic principles that the majority of the american public, uh disagrees with
But like specifically what they are trying to enact and what they are what they are enacting is
But specifically what they're trying to enact and what they are enacting is this theocratic agenda where the government is in your bedroom, the government is in your doctor's office,
the government is sniffing your panties and it's gross and it's upsetting.
And fundamentally theocracies are just very famously all up in your junk.
They're obsessed with controlling and censoring sexuality
of all kinds, but particularly female sexuality
and queer sexuality.
Like snuff those out.
And so that's part of the reason why
so many abortion arguments.
Like, first of all, you're murdering this cluster of cells,
which is a full human baby.
Do you remember that article in The Guardian a couple of years ago that showed the actual
size of fetuses at various stages of development?
And it was like, they were just like, so little, like these little...
Little fingernails.
Yeah.
And it doesn't look like a tiny baby doll that's just very small.
Yeah, exactly.
It's not like a mini baby, like tides of gore. It's like literally like
a tiny cluster of cells. So anti-abortion propaganda, like you are not immune to propaganda,
it has like wormed its way into the popular consciousness just by virtue of its ubiquity
and constant repetition being the key to successful propaganda.
But so many of these arguments, in addition to this abortion is murder stuff, is also
just like you should have kept your legs closed.
Right.
This is a consequence.
God did this to you.
Yeah.
Like sex is a mortal sin and sex should be punished.
And they must be doing it wrong. Like, I'm like, why do you want sex to have consequences and be punished?
The like intensity of the misogyny around purity culture was so intense.
I wanted to ask you about the experience of writing the book, right?
So your first book, Culture Warlords, was traumatizing for you to craft, right?
Because you had to spend so much time in these digital spaces, in some cases physical spaces
with neo-Nazis, 4chan guys, aspiring terrorists. And so that's traumatic to experience, you know.
But largely that experience was alone, like at your computer screen, sort of consuming
this content that was eroding your soul.
But the second half of this book is about child abuse, right?
And you interviewed people who grew up in this movement about their lives, about their husbands raping them
and their parents beating them as children.
And like,
how do those experiences compare?
And like, what was that?
How did you prepare to do that?
I don't even know how to begin to do that with care.
I mean, I think my goal going in is like, I'm not going to betray you.
Like that was my guiding ethos of just like, I view like your trust in me as a sacred thing,
not like sacred in any formal religious sense, but just like, you know,
I view your trust in me as something that I hold very dearly.
It's very important.
I'm going to treat your pain with as much gentleness and respect as I can.
I interviewed over 100 people largely about their experiences with experiencing child
abuse in an evangelical milieu as it's laid out with painstaking instructions and all
of these parenting manuals.
Actually I think reading the parenting manuals was
even more disturbing than talking to people because like
People were like this fucked me up and it was wrong and then these books are like no
You must be your toddler because jesus says so and like
Here's exactly how to beat your toddler and here's what you should use to beat your toddler and here's the like
how to beat your toddler and here's what you should use to beat your toddler and here's the like supremely fucked up like weird ritual that we prescribe. And then like reading those
in tandem with like, like the accounts of people who are like, this specific thing like
fucked me up for life and really messed up my ability to have like intimacy or self confidence
or whatever. All that stuff. I mean, it was tough. I definitely took more time. Like I
wrote Culture Warlords in nine months. So I was totally immersed, constantly.
You just didn't come up for air.
Yeah, at all. And this one, I was like, I need a little more time, guys. I wrote it over,
almost three years. I also pretentiously started calling this philosophy, guarding your heart.
Because I really got lost in the sauce with culture warlords.
Like I was in a dark place while I was writing it.
And afterwards, I was also like,
like it came out in mid COVID,
so that didn't help either.
But it was a really rough experience with this.
I was like, I'm going to keep writing.
I'm going to write about sandwiches all the way through.
I'm going to like make sure I have friendships
and stuff that's grounding me.
I think consciously having that at the forefront of my mind really helped.
That being said, what was really encouraging was all of these people who had experienced
this sort of child abuse industrial complex in the evangelical community were like, we
really value that someone wants to
hear what we have to say.
And also that it's someone from outside the community is paying attention and thinks this
is important, which is not to denigrate ex-vangelical voices, but more to say that I guess there's
a certain validation when someone who didn't grow up in your corner of religiosity, dark corner.
And sort of bringing it to an outside audience to think a lot of expangelicals,
their audiences, largely their fellow expangelicals.
Exactly. And I'm someone who like, I grew up as a Jew and I'm like, yeah,
this sucked. This, this is terrible.
I'm like appalled reading like to train up a child by the pearls or,
or the strong willed child by James
Thompson, which like to be clear, the strong willed child is a bad thing. It's a bad thing
to have a child with us. You have to beat it out of them. Sure. Literally. And I ran
into this in the wild recently. I don't know if you have come across this guy online. Do
you know the nineties movie, the little rascals? Oh my God, Alf from the little rascals, turns out to be.
Alfalfa, the guy who played Alfalfa, his name is Bug Hall.
He like really like, I don't know, got into a sort of main character situation over some
posts about how he beats his infants.
He beats infants because that's, I guess a good way to raise a baby.
Yeah.
Also, I think he's homeless.
No, he's a a baby. Yeah. Also, I think he's homeless.
No, he's a serf.
Oh, he's in a voluntary serfdom arrangement.
Oh my God.
Okay, well, he sounds like a big rascal.
Yeah, he's a big rascal.
He's continued that trajectory of rascaldom.
But don't be your kids.
I mean, I will also say the reason why this book focuses so much on child abuse,
at which like I encountered some haters and losers and doubters along the way who were like,
why are you focused so much on child abuse?
And I was like, there are a lot of different theories about like how authoritarianism develops.
But one of the big ones is focusing on the pedagogy
in authoritarian societies,
like societies that become authoritarian,
evolve from democracy to authoritarianism
and beating the shit out of people
from when they're in infancy
and particularly when they display disobedience
or ask why,
or just deviate from expectations.
That's a great way to make an obedient brown shirt.
Yeah, exactly.
This is a recipe for future authoritarians.
Like the people I spoke to had sort of broken away largely
from this culture, but many of the sort of most obedient
soldiers in the Army of army of God like are
that way because again, I can't overemphasize how much these parenting manuals, which spanned
from like 1970 to 2015, these texts, you know, the dates that they were published, emphasize
having an obedient child. What you want is not like a child who's kind or curious
or thoughtful or smart. It's obedient, instantly obedient. Don't make me count to three is
the title of one of the books. And like what you're creating is a culture of people who
A empathize with the aggressor at all times. So hence this admiration for strength and
even admiration for cruelty, people who are trained to obey and obey without question.
And people who are very acclimated to the use of violence.
I mean, you're doing fascism in the home.
Right. So the author, like Alice Miller, the author of the book
For Your Own Good lays out a pretty, she was also a Holocaust survivor.
She lays out a pretty strong case for like, you know, early 20th century Germany having
this poisonous pedagogy that also involved beating the shit out of your kids until it
was illegal to love your children.
Yeah, to obey you.
And how basically this is how you make a torture.
And the book is called For Your Own Good. And yeah, I mean, I really think it
is like undervalued in politics, like how much this culture of corporal punishment,
which is, yeah, Americans have like moved away from universal approval of corporal punishment.
We're still like a lot higher than other Western democracies in that regard. And like on a national level, we're the only country in the world that hasn't
ratified the UN conventions on the rights of a child, which include like having a name
and like not being beaten and not being thrown into like juvie solitary.
Oh, well, that's why America can't touch that. We need to incarcerate the children.
Yeah, the children yearn for the cells.
But it's also just like a lot of it actually was like worries that like evangelicals
like would sort of object to the
Interference in there. It's an infringement on their religious freedom to be the shit out of babies
Yeah, and and their parental rights,
which is another buzzword of this movement.
Parental rights is a red flag for me.
Oh yeah, no, I hear parental rights
and I think you wanna beat the shit out of your kids.
You don't want your children to learn science.
Yeah, you wanna homeschool and under-educate your kids
or miseducate.
You want to cause a measles outbreak.
Exactly.
But that's like for us, because we're weirdos, we're like obsessively clued into this stuff.
If you're not, like parental rights is like religious freedom is like, it sounds good.
Yeah, it's an effective marketing slogan.
But like what it means is like we're going to show up at the school board and yell about
how I mean, and Trump
has like bought into this obviously, because he knows where his bread is buttered, he has
savvy, like, he's like, you guys do the policy, but like his current parental rights based,
his biggest like policy that he's advocating is like denying federal funding to any school
with any vaccine in mandate, which is basically just like make measles great again,
like bring back diphtheria. I think like, yes, the MAGA movement is sort of the efflorescence,
the apotheosis of this steadily building power, but like, there's also just like 50 years of
power building behind it. And like, even if Trump is defeated at the federal level, which I profoundly hope he is, sorry to come out
as a partisan.
A voter.
Like a hashtag a voter.
But I think it would be just a nauseatingly,
it's a horrifying thought that he, I mean, first of all,
he would absolutely enact every item in this theocratic agenda, starting with a national abortion ban. Like that would happen in the
first hundred days, I think, which would just functionally plunge American women into like a
very, very dark septicemic nightmare. Yeah, the dark place that we're going is a coffin.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But even should he lose, which, you know, hope,
there's still 22 states where abortion is outlawed or severely restricted.
And these places are becoming care deserts, like medical residents. My extremely sexy partner is a
medical resident. So I've no more about the state of medicine than I otherwise would,
but like residents don't want to do their residencies in states with abortion
restrictions. They're like, given a choice.
Gynecological providers just aren't practicing there anymore.
Like even if, you know,
even if your primary focus is not abortions or even if your primary focus is not, you know, pregnancy care, they just don't want to work there.
Well, it's also, first of all, that, but second of all, it's like, if you're in the ER, you're
going to experience pregnancy loss because it happens in one in five pregnancies.
Right.
So they're choosing to work in states where they're not going to go to jail for doing
medicine.
Yeah.
Like they don't want to incur the moral injury of not being able to apply the standard of care to patients in extremely common situations such as incomplete miscarriage and, you know,
pregnancy loss, whether, you know, self induced or just like miscarriage is super common and
nobody talks about it.
It's more common than we'd an ectopic pregnancy is so much more common than people realize.
Like there are so many things that your body could do to betray you that you need a doctor's
help with just ordinary pregnancy.
When then after the after the baby's born, then your lustrous hair all falls out.
Yeah, like ordinary pregnancy is so fraught with like weird body mont, the horror, like,
but anyway, that's besides the point, whatever the point is, someone presents with abdominal
pain in the ER, and it turns out to be an ectopic
pregnancy and you can't do standard of care like dilation and cure-tage procedures without
checking with the hospital lawyer.
That is a really bad position for a care provider to be in.
So when you have these fundamentally unscientific laws, right?
That are produced by people who don't know anything
about pregnancy and are like very intentionally ambiguous
so that cautious institutions will sort of interpret them
at a maximally interpret them, like the life of the mother.
How dead does she have to be first?
Yeah, she has to be almost dead, right?
And then sometimes she winds up dying because almost dead is tough to judge.
Like it's just winds up this grotesque sort of farce of medicine and very recklessly like
residents don't want to train, doctors don't want to practice in these places.
And so, you know,
Right. So this ends up killing more people than just the ones hemorrhaging in the parking lot.
There are people who have completely unrelated problems who are now unable to access unrelated
kinds of care because the doctors just aren't there. Yeah. Or people who have ordinary wanted
pregnancies who can't access neonatal care, who have to drive hours and hours and hours to get checkups.
Human reproduction is a pretty major part of life.
A lot of people are doing it.
Yeah.
It's sort of how people do it all the time.
Not being able to access medical care around the entire spectrum of reproduction is pretty
catastrophic.
But yeah, it also impacts all the people
not engaging in reproduction at this moment in time.
Doctors who are just like, fuck this,
I'm not working on an ER in Tennessee,
because I want to be able to treat patients.
Without a lawyer in the room.
Yeah, exactly.
And then there are doctors who are bigots and doctors
who are happily on board with abortion bans.
But like, do you want that to be the only doctor
in your county?
I don't think so.
You know, it's just, it's a really grim situation.
And I just like, I'm such an absolutist
about bodily autonomy.
It's like, if you don't own your body,
you are not a full citizen, period, end of story.
Like if a major organ in your body is is treated as a controlled substance like you are not right a full and equal citizen
with rights
Which I would like to be
I aspire to it
Yeah, so I wanted to ask you one one more question about your book and then we'll let you go
I told you that I wouldn't keep you very long and I lied
But it's like it's just because I like talking to you.
So it's I think I've done the majority of the topics you can't you can't be like,
It's about your book.
Which you should buy listeners.
Pre-order it now wherever you buy your books.
And if you like the dulcet tones of my voice, which are
I should have gotten you to narrate
my audio books.
You crushed that passage.
I'm a professional talker now.
Yeah.
Well, I narrated the audio book and then was like, why did I write such complicated sentences
afterwards?
So now that I read my own writing, like on a regular basis out loud, which is new for
me, right?
So I have my podcast and I'm writing my little scripts and then I'm reading them into a little microphone. Now that I struggle with that,
I noticed while I was reading your book that, oh, I wouldn't be able to read this out loud.
Where would I breathe? I know it was because I write like that too. And it's something
I'm like really grappling with right now. She's like, call me 10 claws. Oh yeah. I'm
like, oh, fuck this sentence is, fuck, this sentence is a paragraph.
Stop it.
Like I really lost momentum on that one.
Yeah, I know.
But like I managed to get through it.
And if you enjoy the dulcet sounds of my voice,
you can hear it for like, I don't know,
eight hours or whatever.
I still hear it being like, listen to my voice.
But you know.
Invite me into your mind.
Yeah, but I do think it's nice as an author to read your audio book because I can like get mad and like, you know, emphasize stuff that I think is important. And also I'm a theater kid. Like,
like I don't have many opportunities to perform. And it is a performance and it's, it's fun.
But yeah. And that comes out the same time as the physical book. Yes
It comes out audio ebook
Physical book with a cool snake on it. Oh, yeah. Oh, I guess this is an audio medium
The listener can't see that I'm showing the cool cover
Yeah, it's got a cool snake a red and black snake on the cover
I've named him Rocko.
He has a cross for a tongue. If you're looking for a book to give to the metalhead in your
life.
Oh yeah, it's pretty metal.
Metalheads, atheists, degenerates. Everyone is going to love this book.
It's perfect for everyone.
And if you're light on cash flow, one tip for supporting indie
authors is ask your library to stock it or your local bookstore because library
orders are really important and you can just like put in a request in your
library system and that is super helpful. Oh yeah, everybody go to your library's
website right now and request that they purchase a copy of Wild Faith by Talia Levin. Yeah.
Talia, where else can people find you online?
So I have a newsletter.
It's on button down.
I left Substack because they were like, we're never going to censor Nazis, but we will censor
porn.
And I was like, I don't like your priorities.
So I left for button down.
So it's button down.com slash the sword of the sandwich.
Or if you just Google the sword and the
sandwich comes up. Most Tuesdays I read about like the horrific
state of politics, etc. And then Fridays, I write an essay about
a different sandwich on Wikipedia's list of notable
sandwiches. And so far I'm I've written 111.
The sandwich content alone is worth the price of admission.
You need to find out about these sandwiches.
I mean, it just, and I get really deep
into the history and the provenance.
And I'm like, ah, the shifting of peoples
led to this sandwich.
So I get really deep into it.
And then you can also find me on Blue Sky,
where I most of the time now because Twitter is
just like robots and Nazis and Nazi robots, where I'm at Swords Jew.
I'm still on Vichy Twitter as Moby Dick Energy.
And if you want to say hi or invite me to speak at your synagogue or bookstore, I'm
at TaliaLevenWs at gmail.com
or church if you're like cool. Yeah, if it's like a cool church.
Yeah. You show up and they pass you a snake. Yeah, exactly. Oh, God. I didn't do enough
speaking in tongues for this book. Well, Talia, thank you so much for coming on today.
Again, the book is Wild Faith by Talia Levin, and you can pre-order it now wherever books
are sold, and you should request it from your library.
Yeah, we stan Civic Services, and I'm a huge fan of public libraries and also of Molly
Conger.
So thanks for having me on, and take care.
Bye.
Bye. Bye.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of
the universe.
It Could Happen Here is a production of Cool Zone Media.
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