Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 155
Episode Date: November 9, 2024All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. Trump's Constitutional Sheriffs Remember, Remember, the (Other) 5th of November An Election Episode feat. Rober...t Still Don't Panic: An Election Response Trump's Deportation Plans 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 Sources: Trump's Constitutional Sheriffs https://politicalresearch.org/the-insurgence-sheriffs Remember, Remember, the (Other) 5th of November https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/inspire-me/real-story-of-bonfire-night/ https://www.ajc.org/news/on-luther-and-his-lies https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/guy-fawkes-bonfire-night/index.html https://deadline.com/2024/10/lilly-wachowski-anarchists-united-grants-1236161483/ https://www.autostraddle.com/lilly-wachowski-interview/ Trump's Deportation Plans https://www.reuters.com/graphics/USA-ELECTION/MIGRATION-DEPORTATIONS/akpeoeoerpr/ https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats/cbp-enforcement-statistics/title-8-and-title-42-statistics-fy22 https://www.reuters.com/world/us/how-trump-would-crack-down-immigration-second-term-2023-11-14/ https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-pledges-10000-extra-border-agents-fight-with-harris-over-immigration-2024-10-13/ https://www.americanimmigrationcouncil.org/research/mass-deportation https://www.ice.gov/identify-and-arrest/287gSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome back to it could happen here a podcast about it happening here and the it that is on everyone's minds right now
This will be dropping two or three days before the 2024 election
Possibly two or three days before everyone's life changes substantially
We have no way of knowing I'm not
Optimistic or pessimistic I have no idea what's going to happen
but one thing that everyone ought to be aware of whether or not Trump wins is kind of
To put it bluntly The man has shooters and some of those shooters are literal shooters in that they are local sheriff's departments
People who call themselves constitutional sheriffs. This is an organization that's really got off the ground in
2012 and for more than a decade has been making inroads with elected Republican leaders with Republican
decade has been making inroads with elected Republican leaders, with Republican influencers, with groups like the Oath Keepers.
These are guys who in brief believe the sheriff is the only, you can kind of get two versions
of this, but generally either the sheriff is the only legitimate law enforcement authority
in the country or the sheriff is the highest legitimate law enforcement.
I've heard it both ways in the country.
The reason for this basically is a lot of people in rural areas that are more conservative do not want to have to
listen to or follow the laws made by people in cities. And more to the point, they believe that
the country has been taken off of a good track by dangerous liberal communist types. And they want the ability to use force against migrants,
against the undocumented, against people they see
as criminals, against left-wing protesters.
And this is kind of a way for them to argue
that they have a right to do it without any restrictions.
Now, the whole story is much deeper than that.
And to talk about what I think is one
of the most important subjects to be discussing
right now, because people laugh a lot about the gravy seals or whatever, all these different
kind of out of shape militia dudes, the kind of silly fumbling that we saw a lot at January
6th, which I think is a mistake just because January 6th was still quite dangerous.
But when we're talking about these guys, these are not just like random yahoos.
These are people who have the force of law behind them.
They're armed, they're organized,
and they're quite dangerous.
And to talk about how dangerous they are
and where they came from,
I wanna bring on a wonderful journalist,
investigative reporter, and PRA research director,
Chloe Cooper, who has co-executive produced a podcast
on the constitutional sheriff's movement called The Insurgents, which is a co-production of
political research associates and Quintero Productions.
Chloe, I think I got that all right, right?
That was awesome.
Yes, you did.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Yeah.
So let's talk about this.
Where do these guys, I gave a little brief overview, but like, where do these guys come
from and, you know, what are we seeing from them in the lead up to this election?
Like what are they, what are they going to do?
Do you think?
Yeah.
I mean, I loved the overview that you just gave.
I think that was such a great way to approach this all.
So the leader of the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association
is this guy named former Sheriff Mack.
And he was a sheriff in Arizona,
but one little important detail to note
is that he actually kind of got his bearings
before that in Nevada.
And he was courted by someone who was basically in very close company with the John
Birch Society. Always comes back to them. I know. He actually becomes a sheriff partially because
of some of the ideas that come out of the John Birch Society and some of this kind of emerging
trend that in some cases is actually like skeptical of the federal
government, skeptical of state governments.
And then they start to build out with sheriffs in different parts of the country.
At times I would say the network has really ebbed and flowed.
But a couple of things that have been important to note like throughout the six years of researching
this network of sheriffs that I think is really important especially in advance of the elections.
One is that sheriffs who are aligned with this have really embraced this idea
that you can deputize anybody. Yeah. So in some cases you have oath keepers and
other militias going to the sheriff to say hey hey, you want to deputize me.
But in other cases, we've actually followed sheriffs who are going into churches and saying,
we're deputizing all of you.
Great.
Sheriffs in Virginia, when the state passed a law that was like a law for some gun restrictions,
saying, don't worry, people, we're actually going to deputize you.
Yeah.
That way you can have whatever gun you want and carry it anywhere.
Yes. Yeah.
And also, what we started to see is that during the former Trump administration, he
was really actually courting sheriffs around the country.
And I think he started to see networks like CSP OA as like part of his ground
troops. And so I think that there is a potential danger in
sheriffs that are part of this formal network called the CSPOA or other sheriffs because there
are hundreds more that just have like aligned with their way of thinking about things, just playing
this role of deputizing more people and creating this kind of idea of like a super citizen or
this kind of idea of like a super citizen or people who are kind of aligned with a far right way of seeing the world and then getting deputized to be part of the kind of ground
troops for that.
Yeah.
So that's like one thing.
And then in addition to that, there's also CSPOA itself teamed up with this group called
True the Vote, which has mostly since been discredited, but it's
been one of the loudest groups in the country that has been spreading this idea that the
2020 election was stolen and has been actually working with county sheriffs to try to investigate
voter fraud at the local level. But in some cases also working with sheriffs to align
with vigilante groups on the border, for example, to intimidate
people from actually voting.
And so, there's kind of, I would say, like a multi-pronged series of potential risks
and dangers that could play out, particularly from this network, in the coming weeks.
One other quick thing I'll note is that one of the very latest things that we saw,
and this actually came out of a close kind of colleague in the movement,
Devin Burkhart, who works at the Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights,
is that he came across a plan that the Constitutional Sheriffs' and Peace Officers' Association
put out in Florida. And the plan is to essentially resurrect kind of sovereign citizen style groups in Florida,
citizen militias in collaboration with sheriffs to do kind of old school style, like intimidation
of election clerks, of people involved in the election process, and they
plan to try to hold tribunals if, for example, the certification of election goes in the
direction they disagree with.
Yeah.
And now as a hardcore leftist, you may find like how, what do you actually think about
voting and whether that actually changes things and all of that.
And I'm like, I've had those, you know, thought bubbles in my brain for a long time also. But I think what we have, what I've started to see is that constitutional sheriffs to
me represent and also the groups of people who have aligned with them are actual, not
just white nationalists, but people who are neo Confederates.
And I think of it more of like a neo Confederacy and that what we could see is something like sheriffs actually coming in confrontation
with potentially even police and mayors and governors
and them representing a different kind of politic,
a different type of way of seeing society.
And one person also talked about how the constitutional,
what are they really referring to?
Are they referring to, you know, what is it,
the organic constitution, essentially before slavery was abolished, before women had the right to vote, before the Native Americans had the right to vote?
And so if that's the case, that that is actually the kind of constitution that they are upholding and representing, then they are actually been quite successful in building out different alliances around the
country within a somewhat prominent law enforcement institution that has very little accountability.
Yeah.
So this is where I kind of wind up in conflict with both liberals and a lot of leftists is
I think that the leftists who say like there's no point in voting are wrong.
For the same reason that like, I think people who say
there's no reason for civilians to be armed.
I don't happen to agree with that.
And I don't happen to agree with it because I think
if somebody who wants to kill you has a weapon
and you have the ability to either match that weapon
or take it from them,
then that's probably what you should do for the sake of your own survival. And handing over complete control of the state, the military, and the police apparatus to the far right
is handing them the most powerful weapon anyone has ever made, and I just don't think that's wise.
Now at the same token, the thing that kind of liberals will bring up a lot,
which is that like just vote, just get out and vote.
Well, we've been doing that and Democrats have overwhelmingly outperformed conservatives
in elections this century.
And it hasn't been enough and it hasn't been enough in part because these people don't
care about the law.
You know, there's a moment in your podcast where I like you have an expert on who's kind
of talking about the sheriff deputizing, people or whatever in this small town and being like,
well, he's not actually allowed to do that.
The actual letter of the law does not give him the right to be doing this.
He's misinterpreting the constitution.
But the reality of the situation is that he's allowed to do whatever he can get enough people
with guns to back him in doing.
And that's honestly the root of all politics is how much force can you bring to bear in
order to support the reality you want to support, right?
That is how it all works.
And the bet the right is making with all of these different anti-democratic strategies
they're trying is that no matter what they do and no matter how far against the Constitution,
against the rule of law they take things, they will have the force to support their
version of reality.
And I don't know how we thread this needle, right?
The easiest thing is like, well, maybe if Kamala has a really resounding victory,
there just won't be much for them to fight on, right?
And they'll kind of back down.
But even if she wins in 2024,
which I think is the better of the options that we've got,
these people aren't going away.
And in fact, I think you are going to see challenges
at local levels.
I think it's not impossible that we wind up
with like an anti-Pope style situation with the presidency.
Whereas like Trump holds his own inauguration
and a bunch of state and local leaders say like,
no, we're not recognizing the Harris administration.
Donald Trump is our president.
Like there's a lot of weird shit
that could wind up as the result of this.
And I just don't see us getting out of this
purely through electoral methods. And I just don't see us getting out of this purely through electoral
methods. And I don't know how else we handle it, right? Because you also get into this
situation of like, okay, well, we're going to send in the police to crack down on these
sheriffs that are breaking the law. Well, what if the police don't want to do it? What
if the police are more supportive of these sheriff's departments than they are of, you know, their elected leaders in the state or at the federal level, you know?
What if the FBI, as has happened in the past, what if the feds are unwilling to go up against
a bunch of heavily armed, quote unquote, patriots, you know, like we saw in some of the Bundy
shit from about a decade ago, right?
Like what if the people who are supposed to handle this
for the citizenry in a situation that abides by the law
abrogate their responsibility because they're scared?
You know, who backs us up then?
Wow, okay, you just put a lot out there.
Sorry, sorry.
I was like, I wanted to respond about a minute ago
and then I was like, oh, one more.
I apologize, that was my bad.
No, that was so great. I think, okay, a minute. Yeah. Oh, one more. I apologize. That was my my was my bad. No, that was so great. I think okay, what a couple a couple of thoughts. One is that I think that
far right movements are very much mobilizing within the government right now. And or you could say
maybe fascism is trying to mobilize within the government. Yeah, absolutely. And so I think you
have I think we have to grapple with that really seriously.
And so in terms of anti-fascist strategies,
I don't know what could that actually look like right now.
But you have to grapple with the reality
that many far-right movements have made serious, serious headway
into not just former president, but into state legislators, into the judicial system,
into sheriff's departments.
And so we are seeing a major fissure right now.
So I don't know how to respond completely to some of the questions around electoral
politics.
Neither do I.
But I think those are really important questions
that you're posing.
And then just to go pivot back to my wheelhouse,
which is the right and the far right
and some of their strategies,
one of the things that you touched on is
something that a number of different far right strategies
have been practicing over the years.
And it is about this idea of both nullification or interposition is what they call it.
So these constitutional sheriffs, one of the tactics that they have used over the years
is to get sheriffs around the country to not enforce state laws.
Right.
And so you had a whole wave of sheriffs around the country
supporting sanctuaries for the Second Amendment. Second Amendment sanctuaries.
Okay? So they said in their own county, we're not gonna enforce down restriction
laws. Again, think about that however you will. All good. But they're saying we're
not gonna enforce it at the county level. Yeah. Then you had all these sheriffs
around the country being like we're not gonna enforce lockdown orders. We're not
gonna enforce mask mandates.
What are they practicing?
They're practicing the muscle of exactly
what you just talked about.
Right, right.
Yeah, I think that's a great way to look at it too.
Independent of what's happening at the federal government,
independent of who wins right now,
there is like a confederated situation happening
in the country.
And these sheriffs and also others
have been very much in those muscles.
So it's not just kind of the militias
that will back these sheriffs
that are interested in that type of strategy.
There's the whole, like all these different movements
that come out of the Christian reconstructionists
all talk about interposition.
So the idea of getting sheriffs,
other elected officials within the local magistrate
to prop up and kind of protect your politics
regardless of the state or federal.
And so now we have this interesting moment
where you've had in recent history,
you know, a former president that actually aligned
with some of those politics.
And then you have a bunch of state legislators that align and
and so I think understanding some of the strategies that's important it's important to understand that you may have sheriffs that are backing this and they may not always align
with the police and they may not always align with the governor and so it's going to be a little
different than what we may often think of as like systemic white supremacy where all the state and
law enforcement are lock and step together.
Yeah.
I think looking at the Civil War as you've done so many different times is actually really
important.
Like how does this reflect patterns that are more similar actually to, you know, the Confederacy
against the North or those or, you know, these types of other moments in US history?
I'm going to throw the ads and then I'll come back.
So yeah, everybody here's some ads.
We're back.
I wanted to ask, are there cases you can think of
of like some of these guys, these constitutional sheriffs
who have been voted out and like forced out of office and had kind of these, some of these like policies
that they've been pushing reversed. Like do we have, do we have any kind of case studies
of times sheriffs went, you know, hard into this ideology and actually lost power as a
result of it?
So actually in episode four, it touches on it briefly,
but it's a really interesting and kind of rather both in some ways inspiring,
but also disturbing case study to some degree. Yeah. There was a sheriff in North
Carolina, Sheriff Jim Pendergraf of Mecklenburg County, and he was really
inspired by the former Sheriff Joe Arpaio in Arizona.
And he is one of the people who really champions this program called 287G, which allows sheriffs
to basically deputize their office as ICE, federal ICE agents, and work with ICE.
So he pilots that in Mecklenburg County and then is basically picked up by ICE and kind
of helps try to spread it all throughout the South.
Something pretty historic and incredible happened in some ways in 2018 where you had black organizers,
immigrant rights organizers pushed for this whole campaign to oust him and a number of other close by kind of
real white supremacist sheriffs in North Carolina.
And they were successful and there was a sheriff that ran and a number of black sheriffs were elected in the state.
And some of the sheriffs ran on not complying with ICE and ending this program called the
287G agreement.
And seemed like this historic moment, this historic win in the immediate aftermath of
that, as opposed to in moments where you have sheriffs saying,
we're not gonna enforce the lockdown order.
And essentially,
besides some reporters reporting on it, nothing happens.
Instead, what happened is that within a few months
of this sheriff ending the 287G agreement,
the federal government comes in
and issues pretty massive ICE raids through the county
and actually ends up locking up over 100 different people,
many of whom got deported.
Pretty soon after that,
you had a number of other sheriffs in the state,
including this one constitutional sheriff
who also had aligned with another large
anti-immigrant network called the
Federation for American Immigration Reform,
essentially organizing in the state for the state to push back and push an
entire statewide mandate that all sheriffs comply with ICE. So that's not
really an uplifting story. Yeah. Actually, not quite. I think what it demonstrates in
a tough way is more about this kind of like when sheriffs claim all of this autonomy at the local level,
which they seem to actually in many cases be able to practice kind of quite well, you
know, when they say they want to enforce the state wide gun restrictions or mask mandates.
Again, from what I understand, and I've been in touch with some of the like leading constitutional
lawyers who are trying to look into it further, almost nothing happens. But then if you have, let's say, a sheriff in this case, you know,
not enforcing ending the agreement with ICE, there is a pretty serious and significant
backlash. There has also, though, been, you know, there was an amazing campaign to eventually
get Sheriff Joe, former Sheriff Joe Arpaio out that took like a ton of organizing by
immigrant rights organizers in Arizona. And that was pretty incredible and sustained.
And there's been a lot of good stuff written about it. So it's not the case that people
have built campaigns and have been able to unseat their sheriff. Yeah, yeah. I mean, and that's good to know because like, I much prefer the like slow disassembling
of this in a world in which they don't just get full power and start, you know, going
after people with the wrong signs on their front yards than any other option here.
It just, it seems like it's one of those situations where the deck is very much stacked in their
favor, right?
In part because of how long I think this problem has been ignored.
It's really just now, I'm so glad that y'all's podcast is out because I still don't think
there's nearly enough attention on what these sheriffs are doing, because this really is, it's so fundamentally anti-democratic
in a way that is also has a great deal of legitimacy
in the eyes and ears of at least a lot of the people
living in these areas, right?
Like this is not just some Yehu declaring himself,
you know, a militia.
It's not like the state of Jefferson movement saying like,
we're totally gonna secede from California. These are guys with real power. So I guess kind of where
I where I'd like to close by is asking, do you see a shift in rhetoric from these people
from like 2020 to 2024? Like, because I feel I feel like right now the rhetoric is much more like aggressively anti like the
enemy within, whereas, you know, in 2020 it was much more focused on gun rights and going
after migrants, but I think you would have a better sense of that than I do.
So one thing is that immediately following 2020, there was some effort on the part of
CSP OA to start to slightly distance themselves from the Oath Keepers.
Yeah.
CSP OA and the Oath Keepers, I mean, the former Sheriff Mac, that was the founder of CSP OA
was on the board of the Oath Keepers.
And Stuart Rhodes, who's been charged with seditious conspiracy for his role planning
J6, has been working closely with CSP OA for the entire time that CSP OA for the most part who's been charged with seditious conspiracy
But I would say that the other thing that you touched on is also true. As opposed to focusing so much on kind of nullification of any sort of creating, you
know, Second Amendment sanctuaries or those types of things, they've really leaned hard
into investigating election fraud and kind of stop the steal style rhetoric.
Oh, right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, of course. And they've really leaned hard in a very frightening way
into more like really harsh
and horrible anti-immigrant rhetoric.
Yeah.
And so, you know, back literally at their 2024
spring CSPOA convening,
they're talking about the great replacement theory.
They're talking about doing every single thing
in their powers to make sure that there is not election fraud. They're talking about, you know, making sure that I don't want to use
the terms here, but that undocumented people don't vote in the elections and those types
of things.
Yeah.
And then what was really frightening in this plan that I spoke about briefly in Florida
that the state director of CSP OA released is that they are actually embracing more far-right views overtly
in that plan than they have in any other time actually since they were formed. So
they're explicitly quoting, for any of your nerds out here that follow this
stuff, this guy Matthew Trujela. Yeah. And he openly advocated for political
violence and was one of the people who actually justified violence
against abortion providers in the 1990s.
They quote him numerous times
when talking about setting up citizen militias
to actually essentially target election clerks
in the event that they are not happy
with how the elections turn out.
Yeah.
So there is a shift, I would say,
in multiple directions, some of which would say, in like, in multiple directions that that
some of which are very, very much just in line with Trump and the Trump campaign to
some degree, and some of which are already kind of, you know, plans for a different type
of insurgence at the local level in the event that things don't go in their direction. Yeah.
I'm going to throw us to ads once more
and then we will come back and kind of close ourselves out.
So everybody have an ad.
And we're back.
So Chloe, yeah, just kind of in closing, what are you kind of keeping your ear to the ground
on as we near election day?
Like what are kind of your, do you have any like particular sort of red lines that you're
keeping an eye out for from these people?
I am looking closely at Florida and whether some of the plans that they've actually laid out in Florida might
happen.
I'm also keeping a close ear to battleground states where it seems like a number of these
militias are kind of activated, aligned with some sheriff's departments.
And I want to particularly see if there's any type of cases that kind of show up in
terms of either voter intimidation or those types of things.
And it's just been dawning on me more and more that a number of the people who are in
the CSPWA network are actually in battleground states.
And I just wonder to what degree that's a coincidence or not.
I think I'm just trying to kind of get a sense
of how also some of the framing from these sheriffs
continue to shift and whether they actually become activated,
whether they're posse or citizen militias
that become kind of mobilized
as they did to some degree in 2020. Well, that's what I will be keeping an eye on too. Thank you. Um, thank you so much for coming on.
Thank you for putting together this podcast series. Everyone listened to the insurgents
sheriffs, uh, co-produced by political research associates, uh, political research associates and
Quintero productions. Again, that's the Insurgents, Sheriff's, you can find it
wherever podcasts are found.
Thank you for coming on.
Everybody check this out and hopefully we will have
a drop of the podcast and the Bastards feed
so people can listen in on that too.
Thank you so much, Chloe.
Thank you so much for having me.
And thank you, listeners. Welcome, I'm Danny Trejo. Won't you join me at the fire and dare enter?
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Hola mi gente, it's Honey German and I'm bringing you Gracias Come Again, the podcast
where we dive deep into the world of Latin culture, musica, peliculas, and entertainment
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your podcast.
Welcome to It Could After Here, a podcast taking place on a day that will live in infamy and set a country ablaze.
I am of course referring to Guy Fawkes Day.
I'm your host, B.O.W.G.
With me is James.
Hi, I'm here.
Yeah, I'm excited.
I'm excited to share with people some of our national traditions in the United Kingdom.
Yeah, and so as a person from the country who won the revolution, I get to do the British episode because...
Yeah, I've been relegated to the listener status.
...you should have fucking beaten the French. Yes. So, alright, the thing about the gunpowder plot is that like another event occurring on November 5th,
there are no heroes and everyone like sucks shit.
Yes. So,
in order to return to a time of heroes and to get the context of
what the fuck is going on here,
we're taking a digression because I am never going to get another chance to talk about this part of history unless I write a Martin Luther
episode so we're going all the way back to the the origins of the split between Protestantism and and
Catholicism good bit about to Luther. Yeah, I was raised a Lutheran
Okay, so I got a very very sanitized version of who Martin Luther was and that I read about Martin Luther actually was and I was like
Holy shit
Yeah, different dude Martin Luther and this is the part also that doesn't really get talked about in the sort of Lutheran tradition because Lutheran
The Lutheran tradition is not a revolutionary tradition shall we say that?
the thing that Lutheran did, we started Protestant Dism by accident, was
accidentally kicked off a genuine full-scale social revolution in Europe with his attacks in the Catholic Church.
He was not trying to do this, but he very quickly has in fact accidentally done this and
through the sort of breach that he'd opened and like the ironclad walls of Catholic monarchical rule came the German Peasants Wars and my favorite dude in this entire period of time
Florian Geyer. I don't think I'm as you familiar with Florian. Good name. Oh this guy rules
This guy fucking rips. Okay. There is a knight who there's a lot of debate about this
But the sources that I've read long time ago when I was reading about this guy
Says that he is the only like they are the only like nights like mounted nights in like the entire history of Europe to defect
And join a peasant revolution. Oh, they're these guys. They're like the yeah
Yep, the black company. Yeah. Yeah, he fucking rules. Yeah, it's collapsed
So the different peasant wars kick off and he he enjoys the peasant revolution with this sword that is
Supposedly inscribed with the words neither cross nor crown
Unbelievably based he fucking
Yeah, and his thing he came in the black company, which is part like
It's part Knights part like peasants, just basically
run around Thuringia and kill the shit out of nobles and priests and like spread the
glorious fire of the peasant revolution.
What a hero, yeah.
It's awesome.
I found a picture of him.
Strong chin as well, I will say.
Powerful jawline.
Yeah, and he has an interesting sort of conflicting legacy.
So he gets killed eventually because the
Giant Puzzle Revolution is is eventually destroyed and we'll talk about Martin Luther's role in that in a second
but he has this interesting legacy where he's taken up as a national hero by like
every kind of non-establishment
faction of German politics, so he's like, there's an SS division named after him.
Oh dear.
He's also like one of the heroes of East Germany.
Yeah, I can see this, yeah.
And like, this is one of these things where like in like, in like 20th and 30th Germany,
you will have communists, social democrats, and the Nazis all singing like the same songs
about this guy.
Yeah.
You know, he's one of the few sort of redeemable figures in German history.
Because he fucking rips.
Yeah, and this is what happens with national myth-making right you just take this thing and make it plastic
It's like you mold it to whatever you want it to be whatever you want your national story to be yeah
Yeah, and like like this happens with Mokno and Ukraine this happens with when we talked about this on
Margaret's show and I did we did a bunch of episodes about
Anarchism in Korea and like they do this with a bunch of Korean anarchists, too They have like national like state heroes and it's like well, okay
This guy would have absolutely shot you
I'm like this is one of these things where it's like like if you if you if you were to show
If you were to show this guy the SS you'd be like what the fuck
Get my sword out again
It's time to start the killing again.
Yeah.
And very specifically, Geyer is like, he actually had known Martin Luther back before he like, enjoyed the peasants.
And like specifically the fact that they're like, these peasants are like, sacking castles and killing priests and like, the ruling class,
very specifically makes, is like, the fact that the ruling class could conceivably be in danger is the thing that convinces Martin Luther to become...
I think I've made this argument on the show before, but I think he is at very worst, like
the second greatest kind of revolutionary in like the last four or five hundred years,
because I hold that the greatest kind of revolutionary is the one who starts the revolution and then
realizes holy shit I can't control this and I don't like where it's going and then immediately turns kind of revolution to kill everyone who was involved
No, not like that. Yeah
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So the product of this is that Martin Luther writes this
book
kind of long pamphlet called against the murderous thieving hordes of peasants and aligns himself with the princes. Yeah and
You know the murderous thieving hordes of peasants and aligns himself with the princes. Yeah. And, you know, so this is the start of what is eventually a century, you know,
there's a couple of centuries of religious war in here we're going to get to, but this is in a lot of ways,
I think the beginning of the reproach ma between Catholicism and Protestantism because-
Sure, yeah, because class is more important.
Yeah, yeah, and that actually weirdly is an extremely important part of the story of Guy Fawkes Day.
Yes.
Yeah, and the other thing that Luther's up to in this period is trying to outflank the
Catholics on anti-Semitism, which is pretty hard because is the early this is the early like 1500s, right?
Yeah, we are like 40 years out from two Spanish monarchs like expelling the Jews from Spain. Yeah, so like
16th-century anti-semitism is like pink. I know it's hard to exactly like
Tier-list the like periods of anti-semitism
But like right like the Holocaust, the Holocaust is
obviously number one and then like this period, like the Komenitsky pogrom and
like some of the stuff in late 19, in like late 1800s Russia are like, yeah,
something like the worst periods in human history for this. Yeah, this is
pretty horrific shit. And Luther decides that he's going to like outflank
the Catholics and anti-Semitism and so
he writes this book called On the Jews and their Lies which is like yeah the
first version of this that I wrote had a joke here about how it could have been
written by Hitler but then I then I like did a little bit of reading about it and
was like holy shit this specific thing was used by like Nazi like I'm sure
Lutheran pastors specifically to justify the biblical Holocaust in like 38.
So that's great.
Yeah, how cool.
Yeah, so this is the sort of formation of like what you could call like the Protestant kind of revolution against the sort of social revolutionary forces they kicked off right but the anti-semitism like hardline stuff is a bit later, but there's there's one more kind of big uprising
Which is very funny, which is the the Anabaptists and Moonstar who formed this like oh, yeah
pretty base Democratic commune that eventually kind of turns into like a sex cult thing but like in a way
That's more like people realize they could be poly than it is like
normal sex cult people it's people like emerging from an extremely constrained like socialized sexuality, I guess.
Yeah, and you know, this is like, this is, you know, those are the two sort of periods
of like high of like the highest levels of class conflict that are the result of the Protestant Reformation. And this kind of ends with Munster when they all get killed by the monarchies.
And this is something about the European peasantry that I don't know.
Maybe one day I'll do a project on why the European peasantry was so much worse at doing revolt than the Chinese peasantry.
Because the Chinese peasantry knocks off dynasties all the time.
Like the Chinese central government is like a hundred thousand times more formidable as a force
than like any of these dipshit like holy Roman Empire principalities, but the Chinese peasantry
did it anyway.
The German peasantry fought hard.
It doesn't go great for them.
Yeah.
I mean, the entirety of the European society is structured along like the state monopoly
on violence and how...
Oh yeah.
Feudalism is, like the sine qua non of feudalism is having the ability to kill all your peasants.
Yeah, and it's a system, and I think this is something that...
Like, you know, there's reflection of this you see in sort of like fantasy a lot, right?
Where like people will write monarchies
and then you'll get like or like he's using like science fiction right we're like people
people understand what's bad about a democracy because you've all lived in one and you know all the ways that it sucks but because most of us like haven't Compared to this shit like like people don't understand
how just hideous this shit is and
This is gonna play a role. I mean this is like again
This is like the thing that starts the French Revolution
Where the first time that not the first time like when people actually like start beating the monarchists seriously
People to have this tendency to remember like the violence, the French Revolution. It's like,
yeah, there was a lot of shit that was very bad, but also like these people,
these people that they are fighting, these are, these are people who for hundreds and hundreds
and hundreds of years, anytime anyone has like even dared to talk back to them, has just fucking
murdered them, their families and everyone around them. Yeah, like as horribly as possible.
Yeah. Yeah. And, you know, and as the process of their,
them holding on to their fucking deranged hereditary power system.
And the consequence of this is that once these revolutions are put down,
sort of Protestantism versus Catholicism, like, it's not fully this because it's like there are sort of
popular-y, I mean, not in a good sense, but there are sort of like more mass, like, Catholicism
versus Protestantism stuff, but like, a lot of it politically becomes the domain of like princes
who are either sort of running wars that are like nominally religious based, although like,
go look on what side France enters on the 30 years war and about 20 years when France enters on the side of the Protestants to figure out exactly how much, right? But like, you know,
but this kind of conflict becomes this kind of more, the actual politics becomes centralized
in the ruling class yeah the
metaphor that popped in mind to me is one that will make sense to about four
people but it's kind of like the way that all politics became centralized in
the bath party in Syria over the course of like the 60s and 70s like all where
like you have this mass politics but the only politics that matters is the
military and the military factions the military fighting it out like that's
kind of what's happening here is that like all of these princes are sort of
centralizing religious power but this is that like, all of these princes are sort of centralizing
religious power, but this means that like, religious
wars quote-unquote and conflict becomes the domain of like, these coups and countercoups by like, princes and they're like noble factions and shit.
Yeah.
And that's where we find ourselves in the year 1604 at the beginning of the gunpowder treason.
And before we get that, do you know what else supports the gunpowder treason?
The 17th century.
Yeah, definitely Chumbacasino.
Yeah, they're really major funders of the gunpowder treason.
It's okay if you lose your money at Chumbacasino, guys, because they're trying to blow up the houses of parliament. We are back. We are back to the past. We're back to, I guess, the future of where we were
several seconds before that. So England famously became Protestant when King Henry VIII wanted
a new wife and the Pope wouldn't let him get a new wife.
Yeah, yeah. Another new wife, right? Like, was it?
Like, no, this was a new wife. Wait.
There's a rhyme for this. Divorced, beheaded, died. Divorced, beheaded, survived.
Beheaded, survived, yeah.
Yeah, I think it was the first divorced because after that he just went ham on the wives.
And through this incredibly silly chain of events, they leave the Catholic Church and become Protestants
through Anglicanism, which is Catholicism light.
Like.
Yeah, and I think it's more Catholicism light.
This is like Lutheranism also gets described
as Catholicism light.
Yeah.
But I can emphatically state there was a major difference
because I was raised Lutheran
and I fucking have no guilt whatsoever.
It rules.
No guilt, zero. I feel have no guilt whatsoever. It rules. No guilt.
Zero.
I feel bad about nothing.
It's awesome.
It's no shame Catholicism.
Church of England is more or less Catholicism minus Pope.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And obviously they differ over time because.
Yeah.
Because it's just the drift of history.
They evolve differently.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But then, but this, this starts like actual a series of kind of horrendous religious conflicts inside of the UK,
where just like a bunch of random people get killed because once princes become the people controlling religions,
everything gets unbelievably stupid really quickly.
Yeah, it's just a vehicle for like elite fucking ambition.
Yeah.
They can pick a faction and use that to get a little bit higher up the ladder
So there's like there's this series of like coups and counter coups to attempt to like reinstall Catholic rule or get rid of cuts
And like it's all really boring like it's
It's so boring. I cannot emphasize like yeah, let me tell you Mia. I did that in history in school for years
Somehow I overcame that to get a PhD in history, but that shit was dull
It's it's hideously boring like which is insane because like like Bloody Mary is involved in this and it's still boring
Oh, yeah, there's a lot of beheadings the princes in the tower famous
Yeah, we did a little dead children a lot of blood of murder
Yeah, but boring murder, which is staggering.
How do you make murder boring? Easy.
Ah, you do this shit.
Shakespeare wrote some good plays about this shit, for those of you who are interested.
Yeah, go consult that.
I don't know.
So, by 1604, a group of guys that would eventually extend to like 13 Catholic guys start to form a frankly not very good plan
to do a coup and appoint a child king to restore Catholic rule to England.
Yeah.
Or child queen. Yeah.
They love a child king.
So this plan has...
Okay, I'm separating it out into three stages. I don know whether it's fair to but I'm doing it so part one use a bunch of gunpowder to blow up the English Parliament
Okay
Now there's something that's very important to understand what's happening here
This is not a Parliament in the sense that we understand it today
like this is not like a representative body like the Parliament is
Basically, it's an assembly assembly of nobles. Yeah, it's the instrument of power of the English aristocracy Like this is not like a representative body. Like the parliament is basically,
it's an assembly of nobles.
It's the instrument of power of the English aristocracy.
Which is one of the greatest forces for human evil
in the entirety of human,
like the 300,000 year history of humanity.
Yeah, we don't have it,
Britain doesn't have a universal franchise
until after 1832.
So like-
Yeah, and this is 1605.
Yeah.
Right?
Like, and throughout that whole period, the power is sort of the aristocracy like ways, but this this is they are
Unbelievably powerful. I see they don't have an universal manhood suffrage even till later 1848 before that every
Constituency it has its own franchise rules, which makes Parliament even fucking weirder
Yeah, you have some that like proto-democratic and you have some where it's just a guy.
And he just shows up to parliament
and represents himself.
It's great.
Yeah.
So, you know, this part of the plan
the blowing up the parliament plan, great, we love it
we support it, destroying the English aristocracy.
Always great.
Get the king, why not?
Was it going to be at the state opening of parliament?
I think. It was going gonna be at the state opening of Parliament?
I think it was it was going to be at some session of Parliament where the king was gonna be there
That was part two of the plan. Yeah, the state opening of Parliament. Yeah. Fun fact Britain still does this
incredibly antiquated like
Barbaric country. Yeah, this is where the
We need China to conquer the UK and establish civilization there like
We need China to conquer the UK and establish civilization there. They're like, Britain couldn't even do a bourgeois revolution.
Do you know how easy it is to do a bourgeois revolution?
Like, Sun Yat Sen pulled it off.
No, but that's because Britain has the most established fucking aristocracy in the world.
So, at the British state opening of parliament, which still happens to this day, right?
Incredibly antiquated procedure.
They searched the cellars of parliament beforehand to check that no one else is trying to blow
them up.
Like this is now part of the, part of the, and like there's a whole, there's like an
exchange of hostages.
Like, like there are all these things that are built in from bizarre episodes in British
history.
They, they send someone from parliament to Buckingham Palace to be like a hostage
No, I'm like the duration of the ceremony. It's an incredible. Yeah, this is the stupidest
system and the like
The British the British system like I think functionally it is a more advanced democratic system than the American system
But in terms of the way that it's like procedure works
Oh, yeah, it is like like the American Constitution, which is like one of the most regressive
Constitutions like a constitution that failed to enshrine one person one vote. Yeah, right like that
Constitution looks like fucking Star Trek compared to like watching the stupid ass king hauling around a scepter
Yeah, some dude bangs on the door three times and then yeah sausage
Yeah, just gets in there and reads his speech. Yeah, so so part two of the gunpowder plot is to kill the king
Who's gonna be there too? Um, this is also great. We like killing the king and the cool zone media is a pro killing the king
Yeah, I
Regicide establishment. Yes is it Regicide rules. We love it. It's great.
Part three is to install a Catholic theocracy to replace the Protestant one, and we simply do not love this.
This shit sucks.
That's where we diverge, sadly.
Yeah.
This part's very bad.
V for Vendetta may have misled you about the intentions of Guy Fawkes.
Yes. And we'll get to V for Vendetta, because that, I think, that's an important part of the closing of this story.
So the plan falls apart, the plotters get betrayed, Guy Fawkes, who's the guy who's supposed to light the gunpowder, gets caught and like tortured,
which is really funny because you'll read accounts, I'm going to read a bit from an account from
the somewhat dubiously named EnglishHeritage.org that that is like they're just quite pretty good on this
Yeah, they like um, they own lots of like big old houses and stuff
Like if you want to go and see like a manor house, you're pretty gonna give them some money to go in like
It's not like as bad as something named English heritage could know I guess it could be a lot more racist in an open and explicit
way, yeah, yeah now but like the thing about this right is like they don't actually I guess it could be a lot more racist in an open and explicit way. Yeah. Yeah
Now but like the thing about this right is like they don't actually
Describe
what
Happened to him during his interrogation as torture even though they tortured the shit out of this guy. Oh, yeah
The king was there. Well, they tortured the shit out of this guy
Very unpleasant. I imagine yeah. Yeah, yeah. Very unpleasant, I imagine.
Yeah, yeah. And so eventually, like, all the plotters are, like, either captured or killed.
And I'm going to read this from that English Heritage article. Quote,
Each was found guilty and sentenced to a traitor's death by the grizzly ordeal of
hanging, drawing, and quartering. Oh, yeah, hung, drawn, and quartered.
The men were hanged. It's so bad. I loved this shit when I was in school.
Me, you don't understand how great this is for like
eight year olds boys.
Yeah but Jesus fucking Christ. So they were hanged, cut down while still alive, castrated,
dismembered and beheaded and then their bodies were cut into quarters and displayed for all
to see and for birds to feast upon.
Yep.
According to all accounts, all face their fates bravely. So these like
this is something that like is genuinely important to understand because we're
going to get to the French Revolution part of the story very soon. These people
are fucking deranged. They're like they're psychopaths. Like they just they
do this as public entertainments. Oh yeah. Like they hang people and then cut
them down and castrate them and then dismember and behead them while they're
alive. Like they do this like for fun.
Yeah.
Isn't this the opening scene of Discipline and Punish by Foucault?
Doesn't he describe this?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And like, you know, like this is, this is the thing you have to remember about the French
Revolution is that like these are the people who rule Europe for 700 years.
Oh yeah.
Or these motherfuckers.
And so, you know, they stop the gunpowder treason, no one gets blown up.
And November 5th immediately gets declared a holiday.
But it's not really the same holiday as we have today.
I'm going to read again from that article.
Quote,
I'm gonna read again from that article quote since 1673 and up until the 19th century some crowds had paraded an
Effigy of the Pope through the strong up above a bonfire
This symbolized continuing prejudice prejudice towards Catholics Which again like you motherfuckers weren't Catholics until like fucking seven seconds ago
What is wrong with you people like I
Like you you you were all Catholics until your king decided to make a fake pope so he could get divorced.
Like, what the fuck?
Ugh.
Yeah, yeah, the anti-catholicism goes pretty hard.
Like, for a country where, like, you were all literally Catholics until the king decided you weren't, what is...
Oh my god I
hate Christianity so much this shit sucks so badly talking of parades have
you have you read about the the Lewis bonfire in Sussex no okay they like they
go super hard for bonfire night they also like I think it was the same day or
something that some Protestants were burned at a stake there. Oh great.
They have this big parade where they like, they drag like, I think it's burning barrels
of like pitch or tar. Oh my god.
Or possibly those are the same thing. They have like, I'm going to invite you to Google
Lewis Bonfire. Just tell me what the first image you see is.
Oh Jesus Christ
That's correct, yeah
Jump scare so you don't just burn Guy Fawkes in effigy. They they have these big sort of
Every day every year they'll have like the person of the year they're gonna
burn so like effigies that they've burned include David Cameron, Jeremy Clarkson and
Seth Blatter.
Some of it goes surprisingly hard.
I think at some point like there's like a formal like they've been investigated by the
police for hate crimes multiple times.
Jesus Christ.
Nearly all of them are against politicians.
You know.
We probably should mention that they also burned a Romani caravan once, which is pretty
fucking terrible.
Yeah.
All right.
Speaking of burning David Cameron, do you know who else burns David Cameron?
Is it the goods and services that support this podcast?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Great.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're now returning.
Let's go back to that thing I was reading about what happened to them, them hanging
the pope.
Yeah. So, the last, this symbolized continuing presidencies
against Catholics. However, during the French Revolution, English and Irish Catholics fought
for Britain, which found itself on the same side of the pope. And perhaps because of this,
in around 1800, Guy Fawkes seems to have finally entered the picture as the boogie man of bonfire
night rather than the pope. Fawkes was barely mentioned in 5th November sermons in the 18th century and his name doesn't feature in the titles of books or tracks before
1800. But after that date his name began to appear and Fox seems to have quickly become a
central character in English popular culture, often portrayed as a dashing doomed anti-hero.
Yeah.
And this is a reminder that Protestantism versus Catholic Catholicism is a fucking joke.
The ruling class has always had one religion counterrevolution.
And when their asses are on the line, Protestant terrorists and Catholic Supreme Court justices can work together just fine to make sure you can't get a fucking abortion.
Yep.
So, you know, what we have here, and this is an interesting thing in the sense that like,
Guy Fawkes becoming the guy that Guy Fawkes day is about and not like the Pope is
Literally an icon of sort of like of kind of revolution. Yeah, that's a good point
Like specifically against the French Revolution, but it's interesting because it's like this eventually seems to kind of have backfired
Because Guy Fawkes kind of like becomes a central figure, right?
But then and this is something that like this article also mentions that I want to go into more
Everything sort of changes again about this when the movie V for Vendetta gets made
Yeah, it's very strange
Yeah, and let's actually so before we do V for Vendetta
Can you talk a little bit more about like what people do during during Guy Fawkes day because it's fun. Yeah, totally. Yeah
what people do during Guy Fawkes Day because it's fun. Yeah, totally.
Yeah.
So it is fun.
It is a nice like a little as as burnings in effigy go, you know, a fun one.
At least what we used to do, I grew up in a more rural area is we'd all, everyone would
if you had like wood or you chop down a tree, you know, on your land or you had old furniture,
you don't bring it to one place, right?
Big field, you pile and you're you're with, it's fucking high.
It's like a couple of stories high by the time.
Damn.
And then you go down on the 5th of November,
everyone gets fireworks.
This is where I'll tell my fireworks story.
Very amusingly, when I was younger,
everyone in my village club together
to buy one of those fireworks displays,
you know, where it's like a box and you light one fuse
and they all go off, yeah.
Oh shit. So we've set that up, my dad dad and his mate and we're in the van there. We've lit it
Then we've we're sort of standing there like ready to go. Whoo. Ah
Um, unfortunately placed it upside down
Fucking bouncing off the ground and then it flips on the side
We're out behind the
van and it's just fucking smashing the van.
So yeah, what you do is you get fireworks, you shoot them at your friends, you shoot
them in the air, you have a massive bonfire.
Like, and it's, this is November in Britain, right?
So you know, days are short, nights are long, everything's wet.
So you're using a lot of petrol to start the bonfire, like, you know, days are short, nights are long, everything's wet. So you're using a lot of petrol to start the bonfire, like, you know, irresponsible amounts,
flammable.
You just have a huge fire.
And then if you have old clothes, at least I'm sure it's different if you grew up in
like a more urban setting, what we would do is we get our old clothes, tie the bottom
of the trousers together, tie the wrists together, and then you stuff all
that with straw.
Oh!
That you have, right?
And then you put a head on it, a pet like a bag, like a plastic bag or a flower bag,
you draw a little face on it, and that's your guy.
You can go around to people's houses and ask for a penny for the guy.
That had sort of become quite old fashioned by the time I was a child. But you make these guys and then you take them down there and then you put
them on top of the bonfire before you light it. And everyone watches as he catches on
fire and burns to death. And you have toffee apples at the other thing.
Oh, that's fine.
Apples dipped in toffee. Yeah, I used to like it. And you have sparklers, you know, which
is, you know, a little sparkler on a stick. Yeah, it was fun. It's got something for every age. You're a little
kid, you have a sparkler. And then once you get to, you know, like 10, 12, you can shoot fireworks
at your friends. And like, really, it's something for everyone. I guess, unless you're Catholic.
Yeah. But that's the thing though, that Catholicism and Protestantism.
It's secularized.
Yeah, like they've been united. They've been united in the single great British religion
of counter-revolution.
So now everyone can celebrate Guy Fawkes' state together.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's true.
And it's supposed to like reinforce the state
and be like, if you fuck with the state, we will burn you.
Which V for Vendetta kind of, I guess,
messes with a little bit, but I-
Yeah.
And this, I think it is actually a really interesting process
because I think Guy Fawkes now is most known
for the Guy Fawkes mask, which was one of the symbols,
the symbol of anonymous and like one of the symbols of...
Yeah, but it wasn't before that.
Yeah, yeah.
And part of how this happens is so,
is a character named Guy Fawkes in Alan Moore's
Vifra Vendetta and Vifra Vendetta is not about
a Catholic plot to establish
the Catholic rule in Britain.
This is about like effectively the government of the UK is going to have in five years when
they just like completely descend into fascism.
Yeah, we're not that far away now to be honest.
Yeah, yeah, and it's about that government getting overthrown by an anarchist revolution.
Yeah.
And it's like this because like, you know, Alan Moore is leftist.
It's made by the Wachowskis of like, of matris fame who are also trans leftists.
We're gonna close on them actually, but you know, sort of what happens here, right, is
like this mask becomes a symbol of like, kind of like, really altogether detached from the
original figure of Guy Fawkes and like through the form of this movie, like this becomes
the symbol of like the 2011 like Occupy
Cycle Revolutions everywhere. Yeah. And like one of my most sort of like harrowing
memories like coming up in that movement was of this like 2014 everything's
going by 2014 everything's going to shit right like the students of war has
kicked off through a mob massacre in Egypt has like slaughtered a bunch
of protesters and Egypt's like just under full military rule.
And there's a, there are like Palestinian kids like wearing Guy Fawkes masks.
And there's like this image that haunts me.
So there's a video and an image of it of this kid.
It is like, this kid's like 17 maybe like 16, 17, like wearing this mask and he walks
around a quarter and Israeli sniper just fucking shoots him in the head and
There's this picture of him with like this just like mask with a hole in it next to his face
He's just like lying there on the floor and it's yeah
one of the things that is like the reason why the way I am now is
because of that shit
Yeah, and you know in some sense like he's becoming weirdly an enduring danger to the state in
ways that he would be extremely pissed about.
Which is very funny to me.
Yeah.
It started as a graphic novel, right?
It was a graphic novel before.
Yeah, yeah.
It was an Alan Moore graphic novel.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I want to close on the Wachowski's.
And specifically, I wanted to shout out.
So again, like the Wachowski's made the movie V for Fadeta,
which is the thing that like popularized it
and is in a lot of sense responsible
for like the aesthetic of the 2011 revolutions.
And she's founded a new project called Anarchist United.
I'm gonna quote from an interview with her, quote,
"'It will be a studio wholly owned by a foundation.
"'It's owned by this 501C3.
"'The 501C3 provides grants for artists
and young filmmakers with marginalized points of view.
Hopefully those people will create stuff,
bring it over to the studio.
The studio can make it and then fund the foundation.
So you create this evergreen operation
that can hopefully exist outside of the studio system
if necessary.
And so they're making a bunch of trans shit.
Like they're adapting Gretchen Felkenbarten's Man Hunt,
which is like the most transfem ass
like book of the last like it's a book about trans misogyny and it's getting we're getting
it fucking adapted so yeah it's really cool and yeah like i think i think i don't know that that's
the thing i want to close on is like a note of hope of like even the most deranged kind of revolutionaries actions against the state can sometimes
Ricochet around 400 years later
Like a revolutionary movement bounce back into transform films, and it's like I often think about Hunger Games
Yeah, the Hunger Games symbol. I would love to interview the lady who wrote Hunger Games
I think she's quite like,
she doesn't like the media attention so much from what I've heard. Yeah. But like that became the
symbol of the like around the the Milky Alliance, right in Hong Kong, Myanmar, obviously, even in
Thailand, they use it. Yeah. And like, it's fascinating how these things have these cultural
and like, yeah, they sort of bounce around and becomes a bit completely different from what they were.
Yeah. Well, and, you know, it's this weird thing too, because like, The Hunger Games was born of Suzanne Collins, like, flipping channels between coverage of like, watching the bombing in the Iraq War and reality TV.
Yeah, I remember reading that and you see and you're watching like this rebound of this like like the intense reaction of this cultural moment
2003 2004 like they're like one of one of the peaks of
American like kind of revolution rebounds around and suddenly a bunch of like
Revolutionaries of EMR are doing the like fucking two fingers thing. Yeah. Yeah doing the cub scouts
Yeah, and so, you know, this is one of these things for like you know
Who knows where where your story one day is going to end up in rebound to?
But if we survived this we are promised that this year was the beginning of the Golden Age of leftist transcend
so let's let's fucking get there more and
Yeah, if you're in England, enjoy burning shit tonight.
Yeah.
Yeah, if you're in America, who knows?
Maybe same.
Also enjoy burning shit tonight.
Yeah.
Woo.
Welcome.
I'm the Drell.
Won't you join me at the fire and dare enter Nocturnum, Tales from the Shadows, presented
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Take a trip and experience the horrors that have haunted Latin America since the beginning
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Listen to Nocturne Tales from the Shadows as part of MyCultura podcast network available
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
Muhammad Ali, George Foreman, James Brown,
BB King, Miriam Makeba.
I shook up the world.
James Brown said, said love.
And the kid said, I'm black and I'm proud.
Black boxing stars and black music royalty
together in the heart of Zaire, Africa.
Three days of music and then the boxing event.
What was going on in the world at the time made this fight as important
that anything else is going on on the planet.
My grandfather laid on the ropes and let George Foreman basically just punch himself out.
Welcome to Rumble, the story of a world in transformation.
The 60s and prior to that, you couldn't call a person black.
And how we arrived at this peak moment.
I don't have to be what you want me to be.
We all came from the continent of Africa.
Listen to Rumble, Ali, Foreman, and the Soul of 74 on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Defne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017 was murdered.
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.
Tafni exposed the culture of crime and corruption
that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price.
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.
Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast,
and we're kicking off our second
season digging into how tech's elite has turned Silicon Valley into a playground for billionaires.
From the chaotic world of generative AI to the destruction of Google search, Better Offline
is your unvarnished and at times unhinged look at the underbelly of tech from an industry
veteran with nothing to lose.
This season, I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel winning economists to the leading
journalists in the field, and I'll be digging into why the products you love keep getting
worse and naming and shaming those responsible.
Don't get me wrong, love.
I love technology.
I just hate the people in charge and want them to get back to building things that actually
do things to help real people.
I swear to God things can change if we're loud enough, so join me every week to understand what's happening in the tech industry and what could be done to make
things better. Listen to Better Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
else you get your podcasts. Check out betteroffline.com. and I'm bringing you Gracias Come Again, the podcast where we dive deep into the world of Latin culture,
musica, peliculas, and entertainment with some of the biggest names in the game.
If you love hearing real conversations with your favorite Latin celebrities, artists, and culture shifters,
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We're talking real conversations with our Latin stars, from actors and artists to musicians and creators,
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You know it's going be filled with cheese man laughs
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Join me for Gracias Come Again,
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podcasts.
You wake up before dawn.
This was once abnormal for you, but ever since the election, you've found it harder and harder
to sleep. You just barely drifted off when the
sound of shouts wafted in from across the street, reflected
sirens bounce off your bedroom window. Through a fog of sleep,
you reflect on the last few days. Voting went better, you'd
feared. It's what happened in the days after that's kept your
spine at a constant eerie tingle. Several Republican led
states are refusing to certify their election results.
Most analysts say the blizzard of lawsuits launched on behalf of Trump have no chance
at winning, but that didn't stop the candidate from declaring victory and promising to carry
out his own inauguration, no matter what the courts decide.
It's all absurd, laughable, but you live on the border of a majority red county, and
your sheriffs just announced support for the real winner of the election.
Your local PD have been notably silent, while right-wing provocateurs online have started
circulating allegations of election fraud that the sheriff has promised to look into.
That was yesterday.
Today, just after five, you're jolted awake in your bed by
the sound of breaking glass and screaming. You stay low and crawl to your front window
to peep out, across your yard and into the street before you. Three police cruisers are
stacked up in front of your neighbor's house. You can't imagine why. You know, he did
some volunteer canvassing a few weeks back. He volunteered at a voting precinct.
Could they be there because of that?
You try a few different search terms on social media to puzzle out the truth.
It looks like a few people around the country are reporting similar raids,
but most of the posts register as deleted before you can click on them.
There's more shouting from inside your neighbor's house,
and within seconds a pair of burly deputies drag him out
in front and into a waiting squad car.
It's dark outside,
but you think you might see blood on his face.
Your heart starts to pound.
You feel the urge to call someone,
but the cops are already here.
Who else is there?
As your mind races,
one of the officers stationed outside turns back
and looks towards your window.
Recognition sparks his eyes. He sees you. He starts to walk over. You turn back, drop the shades,
and with a pounding heart retreat to your bedroom. Maybe he won't knock.
Maybe he just wanted to scare you. Maybe.
Hello everyone and welcome to It Could Happen Here. I'm Robert Evans and back in early 2019 I released the first season of this show.
It wasn't a daily news and politics podcast back then.
Instead, it gave a focused argument for why a new US Civil War was more frightening and
possible than you might guess.
Over the last few years, that belief has become, unfortunately, mainstream. It is no longer
fringe or unique to talk about a new Civil War as a real possibility. There was a blockbuster
movie earlier this year based around presenting what it called a realistic picture of such
a possibility. I'll leave my thoughts on that for another time.
A Marist poll from earlier this year showed that 47% of Americans consider a second civil
war likely or very likely. This is a massive shift considering where things were when I
wrote this podcast series in 2019. That number includes an expected 53% of Republicans, but also 40% of Democrats and 41% of independents.
Depending on how you want to see it, I've either been vindicated as much as is possible
for someone in my line of work, or I've played an outsized role in creating a particularly
dangerous egregore in the collective unconsciousness of our nation, effectively talking this possibility
into being.
I'm really not sure either way.
My conscience has been troubled on that matter ever since the first episode started coming
out.
If you'll remember, midway through the first season, we dropped an extra episode.
I hadn't initially intended as part of the run, just trying to stop people from panicking.
And ever since, I've kept that as a particular goal in my head.
However you want to think about this, the first season of It Could Happen Here undoubtedly
helped to make my career.
Today Sophie and I run an entire network that employs several dozen people, largely on the
strength of that series.
And yet, I have no issue telling you that I don't have any idea how Election Day is
going to go.
We've had a lot of polls lately that seem much better for Harris.
A number of pollsters are starting to shift.
There's a good chance that they were hurting in the direction of Trump because they didn't
want to underestimate him again.
But there's also a good chance that that Selzer poll is an outlier and now these guys are
hurting in the direction of Harris
winning because they don't want to be embarrassed.
I really have no idea what's going to happen.
My official stance is that it's probably pretty close to a coin flip, although maybe one that
favors Harris now more than one that favors Trump.
Whatever happens, I don't know what's going to happen, let alone what's going to happen
the day after. As I sat down to write this let alone what's going to happen the day after.
As I sat down to write this episode, which is going to air on the day of the election,
I went back and forth as to where the focus should be.
I did consider doing another Don't Panic style episode.
Perhaps that would have been the call.
Depending on how today goes, people might either be listening to this and relaxing or listening to this and in a heightened
state of panic.
It really depends on where things are and where things are in the counting of votes
by this period of time.
My reasoning on what I decided to do is pretty simple, which is that I think there's a good
chance we either know or have a strong inkling of how this election is going to shake out
by the time this episode airs.
And at the time I write this, the indicators do look better for Harris than for Trump.
Enough that I'd say the election leans in her direction.
And so I think there's a lot of value in talking about what might happen in the aftermath of
that.
If Trump tries to protest the election results, and if he goes particularly trying to protest
by force, and if that's the case, if that's the direction he lands in, I think these shooters
that we have to worry about, and I mean that in the figurative sense, right?
People who support him, people who will put skin in the game in order to try to force
him into office, I think they're different than they were last time.
I don't think the threat here is that a bunch of proud boys and the like raid the Capitol
next January.
I think the threat here has a lot more to do with licensed law enforcement officers
who have already declared themselves in the tank for Trump.
We ran an episode just the other day about the constitutional sheriff's movement.
There's a lot to say about that.
One in four law enforcement officers today report to a sheriff.
They make 20% of all arrests in the country.
Earlier this year, Wired published an article on the far-right sheriffs ready to disrupt
the election.
It focused heavily on Darleef, who sits on the board of the Constitutional Sheriffs and
Peace Officers Association, or CSPOA.
Leaf, a Trump supporter and sheriff in Berry County, Michigan
has spent the lead up to this election
investigating the 2020 election.
He's tried to seize voting machines
and run militia training courses
where he offers to teach potential jurors, homeschoolers,
ladies and gentlemen, how to form an ad hoc posse.
Each member armed with quote,
a standard AR-15 type military grade weapon
and at least 500 rounds of ammo.
Speaking of 500 rounds of ammo,
you probably can't buy that from our sponsors,
but here they are.
We're back and we're talking about a constitutional sheriff who sits on the board of that organization
named Dar Leaf.
Leaf has already promised to have his posse patrolling stations in Berry County to watch
for evidence of fraud and illegal immigrant voting in what's expected to be one of the
swing states this election might hinge on.
Deeply reported articles like that wired piece have warred in my own personal paranoia with
troubling accounts on social media.
The day before the election, which is when I wrote this, I came across a post on the
Pennsylvania subreddit from a Philly voter titled, My Dad Just Got Harassed by a Police
Officer About the Election.
Quote, He was driving down the old Lincoln Highway when a trooper stopped him and asked
him if he was voting tomorrow.
Trooper, will you be voting tomorrow?
Dad, that's none of your business.
Trooper, who are you voting for tomorrow?
Dad, none of your business.
Trooper, oh, so you're illegal.
Now the poster's dad, who is Hispanic, stated that he didn't have to answer that
and asked if he was being detained.
The trooper let him go.
But later, according to the poster, this happened.
When my dad went to the precinct, there were three other people there to report the exact
same story.
Election harassment at a traffic stop.
Turns out the officer or officers doing it aren't even from Bucks County or Pennsylvania.
They're New Jersey state troopers, wild across state borders to harass people
driving down the highway.
In the lead up to the 2020 election,
we were all deeply worried about the dangers
of different far right groups,
militias and organizations like the Proud Boys,
who wore right wing death squad patches
and threatened to throw leftists out of helicopters
when their God Emperor won reelection.
Today, most of those figures are either a spent force or something that cannot act on
its own, reliant upon the backing of groups like the aforementioned constitutional sheriffs,
or being empowered by a Trump-controlled White House if they want to have any hope of being
directly relevant again.
The positive side of this is that it allows us to triage our fears.
The downside is that independent paramilitary actors are, in fact, something we can easily
combat as individuals and communities.
Portland proved that when it eventually won its 5 year street battle to oust these sundry
right wing groups from constant occupations of the city.
When groups like the Proud Boys cross the line into outright violence, it is legal to
meet them with defensive violence, and they can and have been beaten this way.
That's simply not something the extant left-wing community defense organizations and political
groups in this country can say and do against, for example, law enforcement entities hell-bent
on executing a purge against the left.
In rallies prior to the election, Trump has often merged promises to prosecute his political
opponents, us, with promises to use ICE to deport 20 million illegals and descend in
the military or federal law enforcement to clean up cities.
I want to quote now from an article in the New Republic, reporting on a rally earlier
this year in Wilmington, North Carolina.
Today, I am announcing a new plan to end all sanctuary cities in North Carolina and across
our country, said Trump.
No more sanctuary cities.
As soon as I take office, we will immediately surge federal law enforcement to every city
that is failing, which is a lot of them, to turn over criminal aliens and we will hunt
down and capture every single gang member, drug dealer, rapist, murderer, and migrant criminal that is being illegally
harbored."
The article goes on to note, Trump has previously vowed to militarize U.S. law enforcement to
restore law and order to our cities, which he claimed to become cesspools of bloodshed
and crime under President Joe Biden.
Trump has argued that additional federal funding and forces would help supplement supposedly
defunded police departments, but that extra help would only go to cities that complied
with ICE.
Now, this is scary stuff and it would necessitate some sort of response if it were to happen,
but I don't really know how to tell you to organize against it right now.
There are so many unknowns that one would need to factor into any plans.
I could theorize about underground railroads to help people avoid deportation or to avoid
being raided for their past political activism.
And I could base those theories on, for example, how activists in Nazi Germany helped hide
people from the Gestapo.
But those heroes of yesteryear existed in a world where the technological tools available
to the enemy were primitive beyond compared to what exists today.
Perhaps the most chilling article I read this year had nothing to do with ICE or right-wing
paramilitaries and everything to do with a technology that has been standard among law
enforcement for years.
License plate recognition systems, like Motorola's DRN, use optical character recognition technology
to identify the text of a vehicle's license plate and put it in a searchable database.
The policing implications of this are obvious and not all negative, although it's far from
clear if they actually work, too.
The idea is that if someone carries out a drive-by shooting or assaults a woman on the
street or is seen fleeing some other form of dangerous crime by someone who gets the
car-making model and maybe the first couple letters of the plate, DNR's database of more than 15 billion vehicle sightings built from
automatic recordings of license plate reading cameras on police cruisers and tow trucks
and the like might well help identify and stop someone before they hunt or kill again.
Now there's serious reason to question whether or not this system actually works this way.
I'm not claiming to take a stance on this one way or the other.
I'm not an expert on this.
But the issue here from a privacy standpoint, when we imagine what might happen in a future
Trump dominated government, is that you can't train a system like this to only pay attention
to license plates.
Nor is there any benefit to Motorola in doing so.
And recent investigations conducted by a private detective with access to DNR's database for
her work have shown that someone with access to this database can search based on more
than just license plates.
They can look up signs supporting political candidates and match them to front yards and
thus to people's addresses.
They can find individuals who were captured by these cameras and there are again billions of these photos wearing, for example, Planned Parenthood shirts. This is not an idle
fear. This is a weapon that could very easily be used by the enemy within months of you listening
to this. This is also a weapon that in an event like the one I forecasted at the start of this
episode could be used to crack down on activists and voters
in counties that are loyal to Trump in some sort of national schism situation.
Police officers already misused databases like this with comic regularity.
In 2022, a different Wired investigation showed that hundreds of ICE employees and contractors
had been caught abusing similar databases made via license plate recognition
systems.
Some had used them to stalk citizens.
Stuff like this pairs forebodingly with threats made by emboldened pro-Trump cops earlier
this election season.
I'm talking about something that happened in September when Ohio Sheriff of Portage County
Bruce Zukowski posted a screenshot of a Fox News segment criticizing the current president over his immigration record and the impact of Haitian migrants on Springfield, Ohio,
from an article in the AP by Michael Rubicam.
Likening people in the US illegally to human locusts, Zukowski wrote on a personal Facebook
account and his campaign's account, When people ask me what's going to happen if the flip-flopping
laughing hyena wins, I say, write down all the addresses of the people who had their signs in their yards.
That way, Zoukowski continued, when migrants need places to live, we already have the addresses
of their new families who supported their arrival.
Now, as the full context of that statement makes clear, Zoukowski was not technically
threatening Harris voters.
But it's pretty much impossible for me to take that as anything but a threat, just one dressed up enough for plausible deniability
in an environment where the future ability of Zukowski and those like him to punish Democrats
is still unclear.
And we're going to talk more about that, but first, here's another ad break. Now, I don't mean to make it sound like there's nothing that can be done to fight against
technological tools in the arsenal of repression like this.
But I have no doubt that if the Republicans do take total power, they will read any positive
election result for them as a mandate to punish the left and purge the people Trump has already repeatedly called the enemy within.
And I worry that in the event of any sort of national schism, either where there's an
extended period of time where Trump is claiming to have been the winner, or if there's a situation
where he just has himself inaugurated in Florida and you have a bunch of these counties and
states around the country sign up for Trump, that the first thing we'll see law enforcement do in these areas is punish the enemy within,
especially if they declare themselves on a war footing with the rest of the country.
These are all things that are maybe not the likeliest possibility here, but they are something
to keep in mind and they are something that represents a real danger at this point.
I don't think anyone who's paid attention to the kinds of things the Republicans have
been saying lately can deny that.
Now it is important to remember that whatever plan these people try won't work as well as
they hope.
We've been watching them for years and if there's one thing you know about all of the
people around Trump, it's that they're fuck ups.
That doesn't mean they can't win.
It doesn't mean they're not dangerous.
It just means that they're going to make mistakes. Now those mistakes aren't going to be survivable for everybody that we care about,
which is something that should be on your mind. Bruce and most of the Trump-aligned police,
local and federal, still feel a need to couch their threats in deniable terms, though.
But many on the far right have been less careful. And one thing we've seen as this election has
lurched closer to its conclusion is a
lot of people, people like particularly Elon Musk, have absolutely taken their masks off.
Now I think this had a lot to do with the fact that Trump was looking more like the
favorite a couple of weeks ago and they felt like after years of having to do what Bruce
did, having to cover up their outright eliminationist impulses, they no longer had to do that.
Now, obviously, some influential people on the far right have been masked off for much
longer, and this is something that should concern you as well.
One of the most sinister examples of this is Jack Psobik, a former US Navy intelligence
officer whose recent book, Unhumans, is framed as a secret history of communist revolutions.
From an article in Mother Jones, quote,
they, they being Psobic and his co-author claim,
for as long as there have been beauty and truth,
love and life, there have also been the ugly liars
who hate and kill.
And these people of anti-civilization
have always gone by different names.
Communists, socialists, leftists, and progressives.
The pair contend that these folks,
be they the Bolsheviks of Russia
or the BLM activists of this decade, are better called unhumans.
It's a hard edged message.
The foes of conservatism are not merely misguided souls pushing the wrong policies, but people
who seek to annihilate civilization.
They rob and kill Psobik and Lisek, his co-author maintain.
They don't believe what they say.
They don't care about winning debates.
They don't even want equality.
They just want an excuse to destroy everything.
They want an excuse to destroy you.
Jack has been a laughable character for much of his career, but his outright eliminationist
rhetoric has had an audience in the halls of power.
JD Vance himself provided a blurb for the book, claiming it shows us what to do to fight
back.
Steve Bannon, meanwhile, wrote the foreword.
I started this episode with a fictional vignette, imagining what might happen if Trump chooses
to contest the election without right force. And he might. The good news is, I think that
such an effort would be doomed to fail. If he sticks to the courts, trying to refuse
certifications and kick the election to the House is a better chance at succeeding. And
it is possible that isolated thefts of ballots and arrests of poll workers could play into a broader effort like this. But doing so is a big risk. My gut tells me that
moving so openly, resorting to violence first, creates a situation in which the Biden administration
and the incoming Harris administration would have to respond with force. There would have to be
consequences. And given that they currently control the arsenal of state power, I think they
would win even in the event that you have all of these sheriffs break for Trump and some sort of
insurgent situation develop. If that were to happen, having backed this insurgency would put
Trump in real jeopardy and it would put a lot of his backers in jeopardy as well. It might even
force consequences for provocateurs like Psobik and even Elon Musk. Backing an outright violent coup is almost the only thing I can imagine putting Musk
behind bars.
There are pieces of this logic train that I find comforting, but there are also pieces
that aren't.
Many of us, me included, made the mistake of assuming that after January 6, 2021, Trumpism
might finally be a spent force.
He'd gambled too much and he'd lost too big.
But despite the existential threat he presented himself as being, the Democratic party and
the Merrick Garland Justice Department largely chose Mercy for the main players.
I suspect anything short of armed insurrection will see a similar reaction from them this
year.
I don't believe Musk's fears that the Democrats will throw him in prison if Harris wins are
real.
I'll read that instead as his own predictive justification for the violence he'd like to
support against his political enemies.
That desire won't go away just because Trump rides off into the sunset and the Republican
party has to go searching for another Fuhrer.
If we defer their dream, it will simply sit under the floorboards and fester, waiting
for the next opportunity, and that won't take long.
Kamala will inherit a broken system in a world where climate change and conflict are on the
rise.
Low information voters, less literate by the day, will continue to swing back and forth.
The feral beast we've heard growling all year long will surge forward, all the hungrier
for being made to wait.
If you've kept up with our election coverage this year, you've probably noticed that we
haven't endorsed any candidates and I haven't wasted any time advising our listeners to
vote.
I happen to be someone who does think a Harris win represents substantially less harm than
a Trump win.
To a lot of people.
But I don't think that the folks who listen to our podcast are waiting for me to make
that decision for them.
I don't agree with the anti-electoralist side of things on every matter, but one place where
I do agree with them is that a Harris win won't fix what's broken.
It represents the historic equivalent of jinking out of the way in a dogfight, necessary maybe,
but not something that guarantees future security.
Hey everybody, Robert here.
I've changed location so sorry if it sounds a little bit different.
I'm currently in a cabin waiting out the election, trying not to think too much about it.
But I wrote a new ending to this because I just thought that what I had there was incomplete.
Now, when it comes to what does work in the long run to beat these people. My mind is drawn back constantly to perhaps an odd place.
A 2011 article in the scientific journal Nature titled The Evolution of Overconfidence.
The gist is that this was an attempt by two scientists to solve the evolutionary mystery
of the Dunning-Kruger effect.
It seems to be extraordinarily common for people who know very little about a subject to overestimate their competence
in it. This is probably why so many Americans think they could win a fist
fight with a bear. Such a phenomenon seems profoundly maladaptive. How could
overestimating our abilities provide any kind of benefit to evolutionary fitness?
The explanation devised in this paper is that overconfidence is beneficial more often than
not because in a hypothetical situation where two organisms are competing for a resource
and evenly matched in the event of a fight, the organism that is more confident is likelier
to reach for that resource.
If they do, one of three things can happen. They fight and win.
They fight and lose.
Or the other organism backs away, insecure in its chances of victory, and they get that
resource without even fighting for it.
Such a scenario favors the overconfident individual, so much so that it might explain why many
of us seem to have a built-in tendency to irrationally judge our own capabilities.
Now, I first became aware of this research almost a decade ago, when I started work on
my first published book, A Brief History of Vice.
At the time, I found it interesting because it posited a likely adaptive basis for a kind
of bad behavior, and that's what my whole book was about.
In the years since, though, I've come to see it as the fundamental underlying explanation
for how fascists win.
It's well established that fascist regimes and individuals themselves are bad at threat
modeling.
We can bring up examples as varied as the invasion of the Soviet Union, or that proud
boy who got shot in Portland after picking the wrong fight, and of course, January 6th.
There are many examples to choose from, but as often as they fail, the success of these
movements is also based entirely on their willingness to dare, and the fact that liberals
in particular are often too frightened and cautious to confront them.
We are still dealing with Donald Trump and his foot soldiers in 2024 because no one quite
had the guts to confront him to the degree he needed to be confronted.
Doing so would have meant taking unprecedented legal steps and risking right-wing backlash
that likely would have included acts of terrorism.
In the end, most people with any say in the matter chose to either back away or, at best,
pull their punches until after the election.
On other episodes of this show, our correspondent Mia and I have talked about the actual path
to destroying the far-right's organizational and electoral base.
We are up against a coalition, a fused car dealer, supplement salesmen, multi-level marketing
ghouls, sheriffs taking blatantly unconstitutional stances on their own power, and churches that by any decent measure lost their justification for tax-exempt status years ago.
These are all forces that can be targeted and neutered through the courts and the legislative
system with consistent activism and pressure applied to elected leaders.
Sitting here, I think that the odds the Democrats embrace such a strategy are exceptionally low,
but we do have to try to make them. Because when you're sitting across from a monster,
one that's fattened on overconfidence, and you see him start to reach again,
the only sane response is to swallow your fear and take a swing. I'm Danny Sonora.
An anthology of modern-day horror stories inspired by the legends of Latin America.
From ghastly encounters with shapeshifters,
to bone-chilling brushes with supernatural creatures.
Take a trip and experience the horrors that have haunted Latin America since the beginning of time.
Listen to Nocturna, Tales from the Shadows, as part of my cultura podcast network,
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast,
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Muhammad Ali, George Foreman, James Brown,
BB King, Miriam Makeba.
I shook up the world.
James Brown said, said love.
And the kid said, I'm black and I'm proud.
Black boxing stars and black music royalty,
together in the heart of Zaire, Africa.
Three days of music and then the boxing event.
What was going on in the world at the time
made this fight as important
that anything else is going on on the planet.
My grandfather laid on the ropes
and let George Foreman basically just punch himself out.
Welcome to Rumble, the story of a world in transformation.
The 60s and prior to that,
you couldn't call a person black.
And how we arrived at this peak moment.
I don't have to be what you want me to be.
We all came from the continent of Africa. Listen to Rumble, Ali, Foreman, and the soul of 74 Defne 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.
Tiffany 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.
wherever you get your podcasts. hearing real conversations with your favorite Latin celebrities, artists, and culture shifters, this is the podcast for you.
We're talking real conversations with our Latin stars, from actors and artists to musicians and creators sharing their stories, struggles and successes.
You know, it's going to be filled with cheese may laughs and all the vibes
that you love each week.
We'll explore everything from music and pop culture to deeper topics like identity,
community, and breaking down barriers in all sorts of
industries. Don't miss out on the fun, El Te Caliente and life stories. Join me for
Gracias Come Again, a podcast by Honey German, where we get into todo lo actual y viral.
Listen to Gracias Come Again on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast, and we're kicking off our second
season digging into how tech's elite has turned Silicon Valley into a playground for billionaires.
From the chaotic world of generative AI to the destruction of Google search, Better Offline
is your unvarnished and at times unhinged look at the underbelly of tech from an industry
veteran with nothing to lose.
This season I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel winning economists to leading journalists in the field and I'll be digging into why the products you love keep
getting worse and naming and shaming those responsible. Don't get me wrong though,
I love technology, I just hate the people in charge and want them to get back to building things
that actually do things to help real people.
I swear to God things can change if we're loud enough.
So join me every week to understand what's happening in the tech industry and what could
be done to make things better.
Listen to Better Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever else you
get your podcasts.
Check out betteroffline.com. Welcome to It Could Happen Here.
On today's episode, we have Robert Evans, Harrison Davis,
Mia Wong, James Stout, Margaret Kilgore,
and I'm Sophie Lichterman.
This is the post-election episode, Robert.
Yeah, it happened here, is happening, has continued to happen here.
Yeah.
Yeah, this has been a podcast from the beginning about things falling apart,
which is a great business to be in, I guess, because they keep doing that.
I want to start by kind of talking about yesterday's episode, the one that I
dropped before the election, because I thought a lot about like, what to put out on the day of the election.
And I kind of made the call, which I don't know, regrets the wrong word.
I made the call yesterday that like, okay, we've got this new poll from Selzer, people
are starting to feel like, you know, some of this late breaking news is good for Harris,
some of the pollsters are hurting back in that direction,
I probably should do something to kind of like
pump the brakes on enthusiasm and remind people
that even if she wins,
there's still a lot of dangers out there, right?
Cause that's what I saw as like the big threat model
is Harris is likely to win and then people are going to
forget about these constitutional sheriffs
and all these different kind of like right wing ghouls
that will still be a problem if we don't take care of them, right? If we don't do anything
to actually like hamper their ability to exercise power. So I wrote that episode with that in mind.
And it turns out I was being overly optimistic. I think I was being overly optimistic in part,
you know, I tend towards pessimism, which is why this show exists in the first place.
Sure.
You know, one of the things that's happened is we've gotten bigger and more people have
listened is whenever like shit happens in the world, we get bombarded on the subreddit
and just like in emails to myself with people saying versions of like, I don't know what
to do using language that's like very worrying sometimes about how hopeless they
feel.
And so I've kind of felt a growing responsibility to like spread calm and hope.
And I think that merged to a degree with the, you know, after my dad died, this desire to
like not just be sad and to doomer.
And I think it led me to have, I guess, more of an optimistic, like I forced myself into an unreasonably
optimistic frame of mind, just because I thought that was the responsible thing to do.
And I guess I'm kind of like evaluating that now, like what should I have done differently,
you know, if I'd been in a more logical state of mind.
And I guess the answer is, I don't know how to be in a more logical state of mind. The problem is, there's so much, you've got this hyper object of a political realignment
happening in our country in this very dark direction.
You're also trying to deal with, and I'm sure everyone listening is dealing with versions
of this on their own, people you care about getting sick and dying and losing jobs or
having to start new ones and embarking, starting
to become a parent or whatever.
Everybody's got all these massive things in their own lives and trying to keep a completely
rational perspective on the political happenings in this country while remaining unaffected
from the way in which your own life is going to color
your optimism and biases is probably a hopeless cause to some extent, which I
guess is part of why we're here to try and as a collective offer people our
most reasonable sort of averaged opinion about what's going to happen. So I guess
that's what we're gonna try to do here. That's what I've got to start with. I mean, hope is illogical, but it is necessary. And I think
that's really where we have to start. I'm going to toss over to Margaret real quick. About hope.
Yeah. Yeah, Margaret, fix this for us. Just to say, I woke up today with some hope and I think a lot of that is from my friendship
with Margaret and I don't think there's a better person to talk about that than her.
Yeah, Margaret.
I appreciate that.
I often make the joke about the fact that I named myself Killjoy in my 20s and then
became a professional optimist.
But I think that, and I think that actually it could happen here.
I think folks here do it really well.
Sometimes determination is almost sometimes the right word instead of hope, right?
Or like optimism isn't always the right word because you're like, well, bad things are
happening and they're going to happen and they're going to keep happening, right?
And so sometimes we look at like climate change, for example, which is the broader problem,
you know, you're like, well, no matter what we do, it's going to get worse.
And so the immediate electoral problem in front of us, like no matter what happens,
it's going to get worse before it gets better.
But we need to stay aware of that and stop pretending like the bad things aren't coming
while then still looking at saying like, well, what can we do?
And for me, the thing that I focus on, I have a therapist friend who talks about how agency is the opposite of trauma, you know, and that the more that we act
with agency while bad things are happening, the less that they destroy us emotionally.
And so I think that focusing on what can we do is just incredibly useful and necessary. And also,
the fact that things are in turmoil right now,
and that means lots of bad things are happening,
the old status quo is gone.
We saw that with the defeat of the Democrats.
Their whole thing is that they doubled down
on the old status quo, and people don't want that.
People want something different.
And Trump offers something different,
a very horrible nightmare thing that's different.
And the Democrats did not offer something different.
And so I actually think in a weird way, we are in a good position to, on a grassroots level,
build something different and say that people want something different. And I think that by working
towards something different and better, what's the best way to keep our own spirits up, you know?
to keep our own spirits up, you know?
Yeah. Thanks, Mack, I absolutely agree.
James, what's your perspective here?
Yeah, like it goes without saying
that like Trump's proposed border policies are horrific
and his proposed migration policies are horrific.
Harris's were also bad.
I think like that doesn't mean that
that Trump's are acceptable or the same, they're not. But also, I think having spent as much time as I have with refugees, having
spent as much time as I have with people who have gone through things that are
horrific and state hostility, state violence, civil war, et cetera, I have a
lot of hope that like Margaret said, right, there's this quote from De Rutti that probably isn't real about how like, we're not afraid of ruins and
we've lived in ruins our whole lives and we'll build our future in the ruins of
the old world.
But like, when I think about the next four years, like the state will be
absent or hostile, right?
And absent at best and hostile at worst.
It's been that way at the border for a very long time.
Yeah.
And we've built our little community and our little world.
And like, when I am sad, when I'm despairing, when I'm scared, I think about the things
that we did in the last year, right?
We fed tens of thousands of people by ourselves.
And in doing that, we demonstrated how powerful we are in the absence of the
state, because the state wasn't there or the state was actively hostile.
We were able to step in and from nothing, we were able to build something that
took care of people who needed to be taken care of and that like, we're not
special or unique, you know, we didn't have like some incredible structure here
before people just showed up to help people and like
more people
Will need to do that now
And that will mean that there are more people in in difficult places who need help, right?
but that doesn't mean that you can't do it if we can do it you can do it and
Having done it
Has made me less
I I just i'm not as scared as I would be if I felt like I was on my own,
or if I felt like that we can't deal with this because we can,
and I know that because we have.
And I want, obviously that's something we're going to focus on, right?
We have between now and the middle of January,
I have no idea how many weeks or days that is,
but it's a lot of time to
organize and it's a lot of time to put aside some of the differences we might have, some of the petty
disagreements we might have, some of the shit that people have said on twitter.com and like get
together and organize and build a way of taking care of each other that doesn't rely on the state.
Because that's always been what we needed and we need it now even more so.
Yeah.
Speaking of what we need now, here's some ads.
Oh, Robert, tonal tone.
Bad.
What else was I supposed to do?
What else was I supposed to do?
You just can't stop him.
That was just physics.
There was no other way for that to go.
An object in motion. Yeah. That was just physics. There was no other way for that to go. An object in motion.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That was like the oceans forming
after the moon hit the earth
or whatever happened to make oceans.
I don't know how oceans came about.
Don't ask me that question.
They call him Robert Tectonic Plate Evans.
["Tectonic Plate Evans Theme"]
["Tectonic Plate Evans Theme"] All right, welcome back to It Could Happen Here,
where it is happening here and Robert still can't help himself to make strange ad transitions.
Garrison, what do you got for us? Yeah, I don't know. I feel like I am not an optimist and I also put a lot of work into not being a doomer.
I try to be pretty realistic about a whole bunch of my thoughts and analysis on this sort of thing.
And I tend towards survival as kind of one of my main priorities.
And I'd like to talk a little bit about kind of some of what we actually saw on election night and some maybe some small like misconceptions going around.
Yeah.
Mainly this kind of idea that the country has like wildly swung to the right. Like people have like overwhelmingly like more so than ever before have have voted for like far right figures have voted for far right like figures, have voted for far-right bills,
basically wanting this complete nationalistic takeover.
If you look at the presidency, the Supreme Court, the House, the Senate,
and the final count is still coming in.
We are recording this Wednesday afternoon. It's noon on the West Coast right now.
And Trump has almost the same number of votes as he got in 2020.
I think it's a little bit under at this point.
Now there is some demographic changes.
Certain groups may have leaned more towards or against Trump than in past elections.
But the final like average popular vote number is at this point pretty much the same.
Now kind of why this has happened, why he's still kind of sweeping all of these swing states, is we've kind of had a collapse of trust in the Democratic Party.
And you could attribute this to a lot of things. I don't think it's a single thing. It is obviously a confluence of events.
I think one of the big things is like 9% inflation is kind of hard to beat. If people, to Margaret's point earlier, they're looking for something different. And Harris meaningfully was not offering anything like substantially
different. She's the VP, right? She has that legacy. I don't think Biden could have done
much more to alter the inflation, but like that doesn't matter. People feel this and
that's very strong. And there's other reasons why people have kind of lost faith in the Democratic Party
or aren't as willing to come out in as high numbers as we saw back in 2020.
And crucially, back in 2020, in a lot of the swing states, the vote was very close.
Although the popular vote swung pretty heavily towards Biden,
in a lot of the crucial swing states, in some of the states, he was only like 20,000 votes ahead.
Like it was a pretty tight race in some of those states.
Now, the other thing I'm kind of seeing, which kind of reflects this idea that like the country hasn't wildly,
like the average people haven't wildly become a more fascist.
It's that even in states that have elected Trump, they have also passed like a decent number of progressive initiatives,
including abortion
rights.
Voters in Arizona and Missouri approved ballot initiatives that will serve to protect abortion
rights until further laws are in the books.
In Maryland, in Montana, Nevada, and New York, where abortion is legal, and Colorado, where
there's no laws restricting abortion, they all passed measures
that enshrined those rights into law.
Now, Florida, unfortunately, was not able to do this due to the super majority rules.
Even though majority people did vote for this in Florida, they did not reach the 60% threshold.
So that did not pass in Florida.
But 57% though.
Very close.
It was close and it was an outright majority.
Yeah, so people are willing to vote
for these types of things, even if they're unwilling
to vote for a Democrat at the top of the ticket.
And this is something that is worth considering
when trying to figure out what exactly happened here
and consider why people have kind of lost faith
in the Democratic Party as a reliable institution
to improve their lives or represent the things
that they believe in.
The Gaza issue being kind of the prime example of this in the past year.
One other thing I was thinking about this morning when trying to kind of look forward
and imagine what the next four years would look like, specifically with the concern of
figures like Elon Musk and RFK Jr. being put into pretty important positions of government,
right?
The idea that RFK Jr. is going to be in charge of the CDC and determine public health policies
for the country is a very worrying prospect.
Having Elon Musk in a senior advisory role in some kind of governmental department of
efficiency doesn't sound great.
But as I was having my coffee next to a beautiful river in the mountains of North Georgia this
morning, I was thinking about Steve Bannon because my brain is just fucked up like that.
But specifically, how Trump used Steve Bannon to get elected back in 2016, even though Bannon's
actual tenure at the White House was quite short-lived for whatever reasons.
Like personality clashes with Trump happen all the time, and he loses friends and advisors
at a pretty frequent rate.
And I think because Trump is just like petty and ableist and a bad guy, he might just find
R.F.K.
Jr. and Elon Musk annoying to be around.
Considering R.F.K.
Jr.'s speech impediment and Elon Musk's apparent neurodiversity,
Trump just might not want to be around us.
So even though he did utilize both these figures to get elected, albeit slightly later on in the campaign,
it took a while for Musk to kind of worm his way into Trump's orbit,
I am not convinced that they will have direct
access to Trump for very long.
Now, this could happen.
But if you look at Steve Bannon, who was similarly a worrying figure, he did not
last very long besides Trump.
So something like this could happen.
Now, I don't think it'll happen the exact same way.
Elon Musk has been positioning himself to have the government be a reliant on
him for contracting, and he'll
probably continue to exist in some form in that regard, but in terms of his direct influence
on the White House and controlling sectors of government, this won't necessarily be a
four-year thing.
I think that is most of what I had on this topic.
I guess the other thing is it turns out in Harris's efforts to kind of court independence and court Republicans, that largely failed.
Massive failure. Massive failure.
I mean, again.
It turns out when you have a party that's running as kind of like a mini-fascist party, and then you have another party that's running as just a conservative party.
We've got Dick Cheney.
Yeah, it's not a solid opposition party.
No.
Why like this hasn't worked for like the second time in a row.
The the stats are almost identical to 2020 on this issue of Republicans voting for the Republican Party.
In fact, it was a slightly few, slightly fewer of them voted Republican back in 2020.
More of them voted Republican in 2024.
I think it's by about 1%.
Trying to court the conservative vote means that the conservatives are going to vote for conservatives.
Maybe we should have an actual opposition party if you believe in electoral politics.
Yeah, no. I mean, like the lesson people should take from Trumpism, Trump did not get where he is
by courting the conservative vote.
Trump took over the Republican Party
and made it the Trump Party.
And that is what worked, right?
And that's the actual lesson.
The reason why Dick Cheney was fucking doing appearances
with Kamala Harris was because
Conservatives what we had known as conservatives prior to Trump coming to power
Largely are out of the picture, right?
Like the new crop of guys are all weirdos that have molded themselves in the image of Trump
Since his rise to power, right?
Yeah, and one of the things that is like the lesson is not we need to make our own Trump.
Although by God, some people are going to take that lesson out of this.
The lesson is that you have to come to people with a vision, right?
Like you don't come to people by saying, well, what if we put a Republican in our cabinet, right?
What if it's basically the same as this last thing that you're not really that happy with,
but instead with more cheney, right?
It turns out that doesn't drive voter enthusiasm.
And hey, like that's, you know,
I'm hitting the libs pretty hard
because this is like the most catastrophic failure
of any political party in living memory, right?
So they do deserve to be hit,
but it's not like the left accomplished anything, right?
Either electorally or otherwise, right?
There is no organized national left-wing movement
that is worth talking about
in any kind of building power way.
Like it simply doesn't exist.
And ignoring the blind loyalty that people have for Trump
was a mistake.
Not considering like targeting that audience.
It doesn't seem like all of the January 6th ads did anything at all.
Nope.
Did fuck all.
I mean...
In fact, statistically, they did nothing.
They did nothing to hurt Trump.
Yeah.
Right.
If Trump gets essentially the same total number of votes, they didn't do anything to hurt
him.
Like, that strategy was not successful. Yeah. that he didn't do anything to hurt him.
That strategy was not successful.
You have to offer something and the large swath of electoral nihilism that the Democratic Party keeps running up against
continues to be its most existential threat.
Robert, Gare, and I at the RNC talked to a variety of people who did not give a flying fuck about Trump's record.
Oh, of course not.
All they cared about was...
No.
No.
They had blind loyalty to him.
I posted this on Twitter.com and I'm thinking specifically of the woman that was like compared
Trump's evil, for lack of a better word.
Oh, sometimes he's ridiculous, like my husband.
And that blind loyalty and the Democrats were gonna fucking flip those people.
That was not gonna happen.
They took a gamble.
Wasn't even really a gamble.
They took a gamble on the wrong crowd and like that's not effective.
But, you know, it's not really here or there at this point.
It happened kind of like now what?
We haven't really heard from me much.
So I'm going to I'm going to shoot over to Mia.
Yeah. And I mean, I think I think where I'm at is that,
OK, we're in this moment.
Our one of our biggest advantages is that we're not the Democrats.
Right. This has been a fairly comprehensive referendum
on the failure of the Democrats to offer anything
we also
like
Screwed up offering a better world, right?
Yeah, this is you know
if you look if you look at what happened to 2020 and you look at the places that we actually sort of like
I mean took power is a strong word, but like there are places we ran the cops out and
we screwed up making those places like a world that
was like ideologically compelling enough to spread and
Like we're not gonna get like a third do-over of that right? We have to be able to sort of
Like when the moment arrives, we have to be able to actually create a world that is better enough than this one
That we can move but that's not impossible
Yeah, I think what we have right now is we have a period of time before Trump takes power and we have this time to Sort of wash our beasts. We have this time to organize we have this time to plan and
I think
At least part of what we need to do and we'll get into this more like in other episodes and probably later, too
You know, there's there's there's the obvious tasks of organization,
there's getting people involved in things, there's getting into meetings.
I also think, and this is something that's I think easier to do like literally immediately,
is that we've been fighting completely defensively on the cultural front for four years,
and it's been a complete disaster. And we need to have a large-scale cultural offensive.
There needs to be something other than
fucking TikTok Mormonism.
Like we need alternatives to tradwife shit.
We need alternatives to this like terrible,
like the fucking manfluencer sphere.
There needs to be something else.
We need to create that very, very fast.
Yeah.
Anarchist tradwife stuff like Nia.
Jesus Christ.
That's what's gonna save us.
All right, everybody, everybody go buy a sundress right now.
Get out there.
Both of you to assume we don't have them, Robert.
And I'm gonna pull Robert Evans in speaking
of buying things this time for our last ad break. MUSIC
Alright, we're back.
And I do want to get into a little bit more specifics of what can we do now?
And I just want to say, a fucking lot.
The cards are on the table.
It's going to be a busy four years.
Yeah.
You know, I attended Margaret's book signing last week,
and I've attended lots of our events.
And one of the questions, and Q&A's,
and one of the questions that gets asked all the time is,
how do I get involved?
How do I find, how do I meet people?
How do I do these things?
And, you know, I want to get into that.
I also want to give some very basic, tangible advice. you know, don't post stupid things on the internet.
If somebody tells you we need to go out and engage in revolutionary activity, maybe sit at home right
now. You don't want to come into this thing with a criminal record. Nobody is making good plans
right now. Go make good ones. Don't just reactively show up and follow someone
with a clipboard in the streets.
Don't post actionable threats on the internet.
Don't post that picture of that comedian
that gave that really funny joke.
Just don't do it.
There's no reason to.
It's not cool.
Yeah.
Like, don't, if you know what community I'm talking about,
you'll get it, you'll get it.
If you're going to get messed up,
use substances in order to cope with things,
log out of social media on all of your devices first.
You know?
Sounds like that's some advice you were giving yourself.
I'm sober as a church mouse, Sophie.
Just coffee and clean mountain air for me.
A very basic recommendation that I have for people
is to get Delete Me.
Yeah.
It is worth the investment.
It is a good product.
That is what I'll say.
Yes.
Delete Me is a service that helps purge aspects
of your public record from the internet, right?
There's a lot of different sites.
Like you have been involved if you are a person who participates in the economy from the internet, right? There's a lot of different sites, like you have been
involved if you are a person who participates in the
economy through the internet, right?
If you buy things through the internet,
your shit has been leaked, right?
Their tagline is your private information
is no longer private.
And so essentially what they do is they scour the internet
and remove your personal data from online.
And they don't do that once, they continuously do it. scour the internet and remove your personal data from online.
And they don't do that once, they continuously do it.
This is like a fantastic plug for the product that you're not paying us.
Let's just say that Trisha Scientology could not find me.
Hell yeah.
I will say there is some alternatives to Delete Me that are trying to get up and running.
We might do a full episode on data removal in the future.
Yeah, we definitely should. It does require you to also do manual inputs. We might do a full episode on data removal in the future.
It does require you to also do manual inputs.
There are certain sites that delete me when they send take down requests to data brokers.
Certain sites will not comply. You have to send requests manually.
It's pretty simple, but they will give you a list of certain sites as well to go through this process manually. Yeah. But I think like kind of the last thing we want to talk about is like, we have 75
days, right?
To like prepare for stuff.
We have 75 days to prepare for the next four years.
In some ways, it's going to kind of be like 2017 to 2019 again, which was a very
busy time, kind of all of the right wing ghouls that have been hiding under the
rocks the past few years because of the liberal DOJ will probably start coming
out of the woodwork.
It's going to be, you know be a lot more stuff going on.
And those of us that are here were able to make it through those years.
Some of your friends probably weren't able to.
And it is up to us to take care of each other to try to ensure that ourselves and people we know have a better chance of making it through these next four years.
And I think kind of lastly, I'd like to kind of just go around talking about like what that will look like and how to kind of start that process,
especially during these first 75 days.
Like brunch is over. Brunch has been over for a while.
Brunch should have never started.
Yeah.
But brunch is over now.
So what can what can we do in these next 75 days? over for a while. Brunch should have never started. Yeah. But brunch is over now.
So what can we do in these next 75 days?
It's a share your black coffee with friends time.
Share your black coffee with friends, maybe cork the champagne.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, cork the champagne.
Keep drinking that orange juice though.
You don't have enough vitamin C.
Or when you and your anarchist tradwife friends get together for brunch,
just make sure to actually talk about real radical things you can do. Because if you already have a
way of gathering with your friends, you should just turn it into talking about more than just
how your day is. Absolutely. Yeah. I feel like I need to put on the record that what I said that
what I was trying to say is we need we need feminism, not anti-trad wife. I don't know how that was conveyed.
I was trying to recruit you into my trad wife cult.
Thank you for clarifying Mia, but that was very much understood.
But being being a little bit literal right now is not bad. Yeah Gare, so true. I just think about the ways that I've found my people
and the way that I have made my community.
Obviously, the taglines of talk to your neighbors
and things like that are absolutely important.
But the recommendation, obviously joining orgs are great.
Sure, that's a great talking point,
but that's not really how I met my community.
The people that are a great talking point, but that's not really how I met my community the people that that are
essentially my family now I
met by going to
content and different creators shows and music and different events where we had mutual interest even if that meant that I had to
drive pretty far and
found people that liked the things that I like and
and found people that liked the things that I like.
And it turns out a lot of the people that like the things you like, believe the things you believe.
And if they don't, they're usually pretty open
to hearing you out.
Yeah.
And I think it's super important to listen to your friends.
And also like I've said this quite a bit,
support your friend's weird hobby.
Yeah.
That's super crucial. Listen to friend's weird hobby. Yeah. That's super crucial.
Listen to the people around you and it's not easy.
I had basically no friends for a very long time because I did not have the right
people around me and it took a lot of effort to find my core humans.
I mean, I'm not recommending this, and several of us did do this.
I moved to a different state. You save up for it.
It's definitely not an affordable thing to do, definitely not an easy thing to do.
But I don't know where I would be without those people.
And I love them.
Yeah, politics and culture do go hand in hand in so many ways.
And kind of cultural engagement and ways to kind of grow your social network, especially, you know, in places where there's probably, where there's, I mean, in my case, you know, like trans people, queer people, people that I'm kind of around and people who I'm like, you know, concerned about, like personally, people I like know, you know, going into these next four years. I guess like the biggest thing I was kind of thinking about last night is like,
yes, these next four years are going to suck.
And in many ways, it'll just be like everything will just get slightly worse.
But like, I know that myself and those I know, like immediately around me will be fine.
Like we will be OK.
Things will be fine.
It doesn't happen by itself. It requires effort. And it requires resistance to this idea of community nihilism.
This kind of belief that community is not a real thing, that doesn't actually exist.
Which is a very privileged thing to believe.
Because there's people out there who rely on this and will continue to rely on this even more in these next few years.
But there are those without that.
And that's the people I'm most concerned about.
It's queer kids, it's trans kids who do not have those networks, do not have those communities. And that's the people I'm most concerned about.
It's queer kids, it's trans kids who do not have those networks, do not have those communities, people who are isolated.
Like that is who I am most concerned about.
And I understand the impulse to kind of isolate and just go online because that's safer than having to go out into the real world.
Or at least it feels safer. But I don't think that's actually real.
the utility of those as well. wants to say something. Oh, and I don't actually disagree with anything that you're saying. I think that's absolutely crucial.
I wanted to just say that like, I think there's actually a weird blurriness in the lines between
an organization and a friend group, right?
And the problem isn't necessarily subculture.
The problem is a sort of, if we have this idea that there's a hegemonic subculture,
like in order to be a radical, you have to be part of our clique, right?
And that's a problem. demonic subculture, like in order to be a radical, you have to be part of our click, right?
And that's a problem.
Whereas if whatever click you're already part of or any subculture you're already part of,
you turn that radical.
I think that is, you know, it's what Sophie was talking about.
But then, yes, there's a lot of people who have no access to any of that.
And some of it, as I think you're saying, is, well, if you only hang out with your friends
on Discord, like maybe it's time to start meeting up in person.
And even if that's very complicated to do.
But I also think that there's a huge importance to open door organizing and organizing.
Like when I say orgs, I don't mean like go join PSL or any authoritarian cult, right?
Or that there should never be one organization that says this is the strategy that we have
to use to fight this.
But instead, if you get together with the people
that you want to get together with and say,
this is the problem we're dealing with,
how do we deal with it?
And that is how you can create an organization.
And if you do that, many of those organizations,
I would hope, would have open door policies and be public
because there are so many isolated people
who want to be involved,
who don't have any kind of like cultural cache with which to get into a more subcultural
group.
I think this is why churches are very good at recruiting, unfortunately, depending on
the church.
But like, because you can just show up and they'll be like, okay, you have a community
now, right?
And that is what people desperately want, I think, right now.
And we have to be careful.
We don't wanna just be like,
oh, therefore we should replicate what they do.
But I think that overall,
what our movement needs is instead of gatekeepers,
we need ushers.
We need people to help people find their way
into the movement, to help bring them in and figure out like,
hey, what are you good at?
Or what are you interested in being good at?
Here's how you can apply it.
And I wanna really quickly use a case study that happened from the last Trump election
that I think was actually fairly useful.
I was living in a small town, a small city with a fairly vibrant anarchist community.
And when Trump was elected, we called for anarchist assemblies and they were open door
and they were places where you don't get together to plan crime. But all of these
different mutual aid groups would come and bring representation. People would say, this
is what we're working on. This is what we can use help with. And they weren't decision
making bodies. They were information sharing bodies. And a lot of different groups spun
up out of it that are still around, like herbal clinics and different mutual aid organizations because we just said, Hey, everyone who cares about this, let's get together and
talk about what we want to do.
And I found that to be an incredibly useful thing.
And it's like the kind of thing I would pitch to people is not necessarily.
And if you're not an anarchist, don't do it as the anarchist thing.
Yeah.
That's what I'm, that's what I care about.
That's what I'm excited about.
Yeah.
I just wanted to offer like, first of all, like, get outside if you can, like,
touch grass. I know touch grass can be very condescending, and I don't mean it like that.
I just, like, I was feeling stressed last week, and I went off, and I climbed to the top of a
mountain, and I sat there by myself for a while, and it was nice, and it was so quiet. I could hear,
like, this little hawk's wings beating beating and that was really good for me.
That's what I like to hear.
It would not have changed the outcome one bit if I had stayed and sat on
Twitter.com for four hours instead of doing that.
So I want you to all take time for yourselves and do things that
kind of make you feel hopeful.
I want to build off what Margaret said.
There are so many skills that all of you have that you could share with someone.
I want to build off what Margaret said, there are so many skills that all of you have that you could share with someone.
I think when I started being an anarchist, it was largely because I was going to a bike
co-op and like people shared their skills with me and I shared my skills with them and
we all shared our stuff with each other.
And I worked out that we could just rely on other people for that shit and they didn't
need to be hierarchical or based on some transfer of material goods. People just want to help each other.
A lot of people have messaged me saying that they know that I participate in mutual aid and they
want you to. If you can't see it, then you have to start it and that's okay. You can
change the world if you make a cooler full of sandwiches and give them to people who are hungry.
I guarantee if you start doing that shit, you will find other people and they will say hey, what are you doing?
Oh, I'm feeding people why because they're hungry. Can I help? Yes, it's that easy and
Like we can build from there. We don't have to agree with them on everything first of all
But we can build from there and I think
It can be really scary. But like now is the time to start.
Not once things get worse.
You know, four, eight years ago was the time to start, but we can't go back.
And I want to kind of finish up with that, that like, we can't go back.
I don't care where someone was yesterday.
I don't care where they were last week.
I don't care where they were last year.
Like all the madness is where they are now.
Yeah.
And we can build forward from here.
We cannot go back and change things.
And it is not worth doing endless recriminations.
It doesn't matter.
It's happened.
It's on us to decide how we react now.
And you can react in a way that strengthens our communities
and that builds ways of taking
care of each other which aren't ways of controlling each other.
That's all that you need to do to make this so much less despairing, so much less terrible
and so much less deadly for some people.
And I know that we're doing that here.
Check in on my friends at Mainland Daly and Gap.
I'm checking in on my friends I made in the Dalyan Gap, I'm checking in on
my mutual aid friends. And if you don't have that, I want you to build that. And I promise
it's not something that's out of reach. You can do it.
Yeah, I want to add one last thing. I think a lot of people think they don't have skills.
You do have skills. The thing that I did when I started organizing was I moved chairs around
so that people could have meetings by moving chairs and I helped take care of people's
kids and I like helped put posters up, right?
People can do things, you have things that you can do.
And it's time to lock in.
That's what we have from here.
It is time to lock in, it's time to organize,
and it's time to get prepared to fight.
Yeah.
Yeah, this is just the first episode after the election
in the coming weeks, coming days, coming months.
We're going to go into very specific detail on things.
We are going to provide different information and resources and continue to defend against disinformation and misinformation.
And this is a fucking daily show.
We will be getting into all of all of these topics, especially in these next 75 days to help prepare. This is a fucking daily show. Welcome, I'm Danny Thrill.
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And part of that is understanding what is going to happen and how it is going to happen
and absorbing that knowledge and what you can do with it. So today, James is going to tell us about Trump's plans for migrants.
Yep. Yeah.
I guess in terms of what's going to happen, we don't know, right?
Trump said a lot of stuff in his first term and kind of didn't stick the landing on a lot of it.
He tried, but they're more experienced now.
And I think crucially, they have a much more favorable Supreme Court and
then probably will have an even more favorable Supreme Court by the end of this term.
So a plan to deport up to a million people this year was one of the very few concrete
and tangible promises that the Trump campaign made, right?
They, they had a lot of vibes, nasty vibes.
But like in terms of like, we will do X by Y.
This was one of the very few.
Now, Trump tried to deport a lot of people in his first term, right?
The one consistent part of his policy ever since he rode sideways down an escalator in 2015,
and then shit-talked Mexican people, has been anti-migrant policy.
He didn't really stick the landing on mass deportations in his first term.
In fact, Biden deported more people in 2023 than Trump did in any year of his first term.
In fact, Trump also fell behind Obama in terms of deportations per year.
None of that means that he won't be able to do that this time, right?
I'm just trying to put some numbers on, on his promises last time.
So I want to look first at how he could go about his promise in the second term.
Right.
One thing that he said he will do is use Title 42 again.
So if people have not listened to the series I did last May or June on Title 42,
I would like to direct them there.
Title 42 is a reminder.
It's a public health law.
And it's public health law that in this interpretation
allowed CBP, specifically border patrol,
to immediately return people to Mexico
without processing them first.
Sometimes they call it catch and release, right?
What it resulted in was,
these are not technically deportations,
but when Trump says something, I don't think he's
considering the exact meanings of what he's saying, right? So if we look at Title 42 expulsions,
if he's going to bring back Title 42, reaching that 1 million per year number is pretty easy.
In fact, that happened in 2022 again under Biden, right? So if he considers those to be deportations,
so that's within his 1 million per year goal,
it's reasonable that he will reach,
to say that he will be able to reach that,
and he'll be able to do that
with the current infrastructure, right?
Without massively upgrading CBP, ICE, ICE detention facilities,
immigration judges, all those things.
Yeah.
So like, if we consider those to be deportations, then
one million a year is very much something that we might well see.
Do you know where we're at this year? Or it hasn't been released yet?
I don't know. 2022 was the last stats I could find. I linked to the CBP. If people want
to look at the the Title 42 and Title, so Title 8, eight is the immigration law under which people are normally received,
right? Title 42 ended in May of 2023, May 11th, 2023 with the end of the COVID-19 emergency,
because the reason they were using public health law as immigration law was because
of this health emergency, right? Now, obviously it was used extremely cynically, for instance,
there weren't exemptions for vaccinated people, but nonetheless, that's why they were using
it. And when the federal emergency for COVID-19 ended, so did Biden's
excuse for using Title 42. Then I will link to the CBP data center in the notes so people can see
Title 42 versus Title 8 over the last few years. As I pointed out last week, the US can also fund
deportations of migrants further south. And it's done this in Panama. I had a series from there
last week. If people hadn't listened to it.
I would love them to do so.
But the numbers that they've been able to achieve,
they're pretty low.
And I don't think that's really gonna
meaningfully impact his target.
So let's talk about what everyone is most afraid of,
which is mass deportations of people who are already living
in the United States, right?
That is definitely what his right-wing trolls have been sort of hyping up, certainly over
the last few weeks, right?
The idea that they are going to come to your house and find you if you're an undocumented
person in the United States.
So to talk about this, I want to talk about, first of all, like the real nuts and bolts
of how he would be able, or if he would be able to do this, right?
And I draw very heavily here on a report by the American Immigration Council, who did some calculations on the cost of a single ICE
detention, the cost of a single raid, the amount of agents that would be required to meet this kind
of capacity. There are two models that they use, and those are the models I think are most relevant.
If we look at people who are in the United States without permanent legal status, There are two models that they use and those are the models I think are most relevant.
If we look at people who are in the United States without permanent legal status, we
make an estimate for numbers.
We're looking at about 11 million undocumented people.
That's not going to be perfect, but if we use that as a ballpark.
And then 2.3 million people who have entered since the end of Title 42, and they're on various forms of
bail or parole or bond, and they don't have a permanent status here either. So we're looking
at somewhere in the region of 13 million if Trump wanted to deport all of those people.
To do that, he would need to massively expand ICE detention facilities.
About half of ICE's staff aren't, contrary to what you might believe about ICE,
kicking in people's doors and deporting them.
Half of ICE's staff work for something called Homeland Security Investigations.
It's not that those people don't do deportations, they do, but they mostly
focus on human trafficking, drug trafficking, transnational crime. Now, sometimes those people also do deportations, they do, but they mostly focus on human trafficking, drug trafficking, transnational crime.
Now sometimes as people also do deportations, people might be familiar with the big HSI
raids on certain employers who are employing a lot of undocumented people.
Those still result in deportations, but that's not their primary tasking.
And HSI has historically preferred not to do the deportation work because they feel that that makes it
very hard for them to do the other work of like monitoring human and drug trafficking
because evidently migrants are going to be scared to go anywhere near HSI if they know
that HSI could deport them, right?
So they're not going to talk to them.
Now it would be very easy for Trump to retask those agents, right?
That would obviously undermine what is done
to prevent drug trafficking and human trafficking, whether or not he cares is a question that's
I think I probably have an answer for that. But I guess I'm for debate somewhat. So Trump
has already called in addition to potentially re equipping those HSI agents, he said he wants to employ 10,000 more border
patrol agents, right? Now, BP agents can do deportations, but it's not BP agents who are
coming to your door in Chicago and coming after you, right? That's ICE, Immigration and Customs
Enforcement. He's also said he wants to give border patrol agents a $10,000 retention bonus
and a 10% raise, just to put it in their perspective, there
are 20,000 BP agents right now. So that would be about a 50% increase, right? This is not something
he can do quickly. They need to go through the academy, they need to be recruited, trained,
background check, etc. Border Patrol has a lot of waivers right now. So like you can waive
requirements other law enforcement agencies
would have for you to work for them if that makes sense right be it a GED or a college degree or
another language or whatever they are offering waivers a lot right now they can increase that
number of waivers to recruit more people right but that would still take a long time. So the
estimate the American immigration council has is that to remove all of those 13 million people
in that sort of in the one mass deportation as opposed to the million people a year scenario
would require between 220 and 409,000 staff.
Jesus Christ. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That is a lot of people.
So, I mean, like for comparison as to how many that actually is, the United States
military active duty is about a million people.
Yes, that was a comparison.
Not the army, not the Navy, the military.
Yeah.
All of it.
This would put DHS at like substantially more personnel than like the Marine Corps.
Right.
Like, yeah, not that people don't want to do.
It's just like it is actually, we've talked a lot about there are not guardrails on Trump like there were last time.
That is true. And that is a very realistic thing to like be worried about and scared about.
But we're not just talking about guardrails.
We are talking about a logistical hurdle.
It is not a simple or necessarily possible thing to make an agency like that that much larger and have it actually function.
Like, like just this is just physics we're talking about here.
Yeah.
It's the same with anything.
If CoolZone suddenly received a hundred billion dollars from Jeff Bezos and he said, do anything
you want with it.
We could not scale up to half a million employees.
We have absolutely no capacity to handle that.
Yeah, like I think what people have to
remember is that every door kicking
ice agent needs enablers, right?
They need paid, they need health
insurance, they need human resources,
they need training.
This would take a very long time.
Sorry, it's it's one point three
million or so.
OK, I think it's a little less.
That's twenty seventeen data.
So it's probably it's probably as
closer to a million now, but
yeah, slightly over a million.
So but this is close to that's
close to half.
Right. Yeah.
That's in addition to what they
already have. Yeah.
It is four hundred and nine plus
whatever they have.
It would also, of course, mean like
substantially increasing their
investigative capacity because most
deportations right now
when ICE arrest someone happen
when someone else has already
arrested that person.
So that the person is in detention federally or on a state level for something else that they did and they're undocumented.
And that's when ice can take them and deport them.
Right. So they'd have to also increase their ability to search out and find people not saying they can't, but you can't take, you know, fucking Tim Pool, bring him into ice.
He's not going to instantly know how to find people, where to find people, right?
So like this, this will take time.
There is a practical constraint on him doing this, even if there aren't other constraints
within the balance of powers.
So Stephen Miller, dude with the giant head.
I'm sorry, but you're going to have to be more specific when we talk about conservatives
who are about to come into power who have like a weirdly huge head. I'm sorry, but you're going to have to be more specific when we talk about conservatives who are about to come into power, who have like a weirdly huge head.
Yeah. Okay.
That's like, find me a Californian who has strong opinions on gluten.
Yeah, that's me.
I am a pro gluten.
Yeah. Yeah. So Stephen Miller is he is the guy who's crafted a lot of Trump's
nefarious border policies, right?
It was Miller who who took out Title 42. He is the guy who's crafted a lot of Trump's nefarious border policies, right?
It was Miller who, who took out Title 42.
And I want to talk about this a bit later.
One thing that Miller did effectively, I don't want to say well, because it was objectively
horrible, but one thing that Miller was good at was finding this obscure piece of public
health law and mobilizing it against migrants, right?
I think if you'd spoken to me in 2015 and
said, what do you think Trump's going to do against migrants? I wouldn't have said, I'll be Title 42
of the United States Code, you know, that regulates public health. He or people within his team were
very effective at finding that and using that effective enough that the Biden administration
kept it for three years after the Trump administration did it for one year, right? And so Miller could find some niche
kind of law. What he wants to do is use the National Guard from cooperative states, right?
Yeah. And to use a National Guard from cooperative states in states that are not cooperative and
where local law enforcement would not cooperate, right? So some quote unquote sanctuary states,
I think that's probably an overstatement,
they don't in theory refer undocumented people,
they arrest to ICE for deportation, right?
Now, what federal fusion centers do is allow for that,
even if it is a sanctuary state actually,
but in theoretical terms, a sanctuary state would not
at least contact ICE about every undocumented person
they arrested, right?
So Miller's plan is to use the national guard again, like that's not what
the national guard does right now.
They're not really trained up for doing that either.
Right.
I've seen plenty of national guard folks on the border.
I fuck what I'd say.
It's a bunch of scared 18 year olds, right.
Who are trying to get money for Robert Robert and I have met Texas National Guard soldiers
on the border.
They're kids, they're kids.
Now, to be fair, that's not saying they're like innocent
or inherent, like every group of soldiers
who has done any good or bad thing,
and often, but usually both at the same time,
is a bunch of scared 18 year old kids.
That's been the case for 10,000 years.
Yeah, that's true.
Anytime you have conflict reporting,
it's always shocking how young people are.
It's always just like, oh, okay,
all wars are fought by children.
There's no non-child soldiers with the exception of,
I mean, that is the weird thing about the Ukraine war, right?
Yeah.
Like I remember the first time I wound up at the front there,
it was like, oh, this is actually,
it is actually old men fighting this war.
Old men who repeatedly told me it's either me or my kid shows up here and I
already fucking lost my soul in Afghanistan.
Yes. Like I literally had that interview with people. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. It's crazy to me.
People who fought in Afghanistan and are fighting again. Yeah.
I mean, I think those guys are probably out now.
This I'm talking about in 2015, 2024, it's 40 later sure. I'm sure they're too old now, but Robert talking of being too old
I am fortunate. I'm not too old to be obliged to transition to advertisement
So that's what we're gonna do. You're never too old for that James
In fact the older you get it's kind of like how if you reread Moby Dick at different points in your life
It's a completely different novel.
Every 10 years, different book.
Same thing is true with Ulysses.
And the same thing is true with these advertisements.
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In the event of a grid down scenario, you could have a whole library of those to listen
to.
So, talking of obscure legislations we did, Trump and his team have mentioned this thing
called the Alien Enemies Act.
It sounds like Alien Ant Farm, but it's not in any way related, sadly.
Not nearly as good as Alien.
For one thing, its cover of Smooth Criminal?
Terrible.
Terrible, yeah.
Nowhere near the same standard.
That's a joke for people who are over 30.
Yes, anyone who tries to dance to that Alien Ant Farm song today not only has to think
about the fact that Michael Jackson was
Definitely a pedophile, but also their knees no longer work
Just sadly shuffling along
Moonwalking while crying
Taking ibuprofen. I was at a street light show in Portland that was all millennials.
And every time, like the pit was crazy, but also it sounded like a cement mixer
when everybody's knees got going.
They're doling out ibuprofen on the way out.
So you're going to need this tomorrow, Sandra.
So the Alien Enemies Act hasn't been used
since the United States used it in the Second World War for internment camps,
right? Which, at least for many of us is a part of national shame, I guess, like a
pretty terrible fucking thing that United States did. Obviously, for some
folks in Trump administration, this is something that they're kind of aspiring
to, I guess. Trump has said that he would like to use this to deport gang members.
That's not really what it's for.
And like even sources within DHS have pointed out that they would have to prove that these
migrants were sent by a foreign government, right?
Or someone that the US is at war with.
This is going to be hard because like if we look at Venezuela, who are representing a
larger and larger proportion of migrants since the elections there, they will actively shit talk the government
of their country at the first opportunity. I have met hundreds, if not thousands of Venezuelan
migrants in California and in the Darien Gap. And yes, you're not going to find people who
you can plausibly say were sent by Maduro that way.
But Miller's pretty good at finding these obscure laws and ways of doing things.
So we would be foolish to write this off entirely, but I don't think that will make up the bulk
of these mass deportations.
So I want to go to that American Immigration Council report, which I'll link in the show
notes, right?
Assuming a million deportations a year, which is what JD Vance said to the New York Times, that's the sort of steady deportation
scenario as opposed to the mass deportation of 13 million people
scenario, which a steady one is more realistic in terms of
practicality, right? The cost of that, assuming that 20% of
undocumented people decided to leave on their own, would be about
88 billion a year,
which is a large amount of money. We'll talk a little bit about what you could get with that
money. A one-off mass deportation would cost about $315 billion. The detention costs alone
for that one-off mass deportation of 11 to 13 million people would be $167.8 billion,
would be $167.8 billion, which is probably why private prison group, GEO group, stock soared this week. If Trump wants to deport people, the average deportee is detained for
59 days before they're deported. And so they are going to massively have to increase their
capacity. Right now, their current detention contract includes a minimum of 29,790
beds between like increases and other facilities they have access to. In early 2024, according to
the American immigration council, they detained 39,000 people. Astute listeners will notice that
11 million and 39,000 are quite quite disparate as numbers go. So yeah, I mean, you're talking about a huge
percentage of like, we'll get into this later. But in California, Texas and Florida, it's between
five and 6% of the population are undocumented, right? You're talking about building prison cities,
if you if you were to detain that many people in one fell swoop, again, that takes time. But in this
case, it's private sector
actors like GeoGroup, they can tend to move a little bit faster, right? So, to put that cost
in terms of things that the government could do with the money instead, right? A decade of 1 million
deportations a year means forgoing 40,450 elementary schools or 2.9 million new homes or funding the Head Start program for 79 years.
A single year of mass deportation would cost nearly twice the National Institute of Health's
annual budget or 18 times the global annual expenditure on cancer research.
So I guess that's shit that we could have instead, but that's not all because undocumented households, contrary to what you might have
heard, pay taxes. And if we deported every undocumented person in the United States,
we look at 2022 numbers, undocumented households paid 46.8 billion in federal taxes and 29.3
billion in state and local taxes. That's a huge amount of tax revenue for gone, right?
Absolutely. Yeah.
That, again, that won't be the end of it because some industries like construction and agriculture
rely heavily on undocumented labor.
And if you're worried about the cost of your groceries now, if people voted for Donald
Trump because their eggs cost more, shit will cost an awful lot more if we deport the undocumented
people working in agriculture, right?
Sectors of that industry do not function economically without underpaid migrant labor.
And this is something that migrants are very aware of, actually.
I broadcast an interview with one of them last week where they know that they will be underpaid because they're undocumented.
But they still think that that's worth it for them to be safe, right? So forgoing
that, I don't think Trump has not proposed a solution to this, right? Like these sort of,
this long form thinking is not what he does certainly in his speeches, but that would have
a massive impact on the economy. What he would also need to do is persuade the countries that
these migrants come from to take them back. And that is historically been something that has been extremely difficult.
The State Department doesn't see the sort of process of persuading people to accept
migrants as really within its remit.
And it certainly sort of bristled having to do this.
The last Trump administration, I think, a mass deportation like this, it
would trigger some nations refusing to take people back. For instance, Venezuela, right?
Venezuela is already not taking people back from Panama. The US funds deportations for
Panama, Venezuela and Panama ceased relations after the election in Venezuela and Panama,
rightly claiming that that was a fraudulent election. And as a result, Panama is now looking
for a third country to deport these people to. If the US attempted to deport potentially millions
of people to Venezuela, again, there's no guarantee that Maduro has to accept them back.
Right?
I can hear a lot of people saying, how is that allowed?
To not accept to take them back?
Yeah.
I mean, international law is like, it's a unicorn.
Like, you know, if everyone agrees that they see it, then they see it, but it's not real.
Right.
So like, who is going to make them?
I guess like, whether it's allowed or not is kind of immaterial.
Maduro is not allowed to steal the election, right?
You're not allowed to abuse human rights.
Migrants are allowed to cross any country they want and claim asylum anywhere that they
feel safe.
But like, here we are.
So yeah, in theory, the country should accept its citizens back in practice.
Will it? I don't know.
Certainly it becomes like a bigger issue when you have millions of people, right?
And if we have millions of people deported back, then like,
if we can't deport them, where are we going to detain them?
That gets back to the cost of detentions, right? Talking of costs, you should probably cover the costs of our podcasting set up here by pivoting to adverts again.
Yeah.
We are back. And for the final segment here, I want to talk about who Trump could pursue with these deportations, right? There's two major groups. The obvious starting point would
be the 2.3 million people who crossed between January of 2023 and April of this year before Biden signed his asylum ban. To be precise, that's 2,264,830.
Those people don't have permanent immigration status.
Those are the people who you've heard from on this podcast,
who were in Hacumba,
the people who we've interviewed for the last year and a bit now.
They have various immigration status, but none of them are permanent.
None of them have permanent residency.
All of them are obviously registered, right?
They normally have a notice to appear in court, which would make them easy to find and potentially
easy to deport.
The other group of people are the undocumented migrants who have been here for longer than
that.
Many of them have most have been in the country for more than a decade.
They're working. They often have citizen children, right, because of birthright citizenship.
Most of them pay taxes.
Most of these people have some form of revocable legal status.
So that might be something called a temporary protected status.
We talked about a temporary protected status last week as well.
But it applies to people who are already in the country when it's granted, and it allows
them to stay for a designated period of time. while it's not safe to deport them to their home
country.
Let's say there's been a war or a natural disaster, right?
It's not safe to deport them, but it gets renewed two months before the end of that
period.
As I say, it renews every 18 months, and you find out two months before the end of that
period if it's not going to be renewed.
If they didn't renew those TPSs, those people could either change
status or would become undocumented. The TPS has existed since 1990 and there are about 860,000
people on TPS right now. The other major category that people will probably be more familiar with
are dreamers, people who came to the United States as children and are undocumented, but they benefit
from something called DACA, Deferred Action
for Childhood Arrivals, and about 834,000 young people benefit from this, which allows
them to receive a renewable two-year period of deferred action from deportation.
Trump did try and go after this in his previous term in 2018.
He ended up in a two-year court battle, which sort of finished up with NAACP versus Trump.
And that ran out the clock on his term and Biden reinstated DACA. But again, because people have
to register for DACA, their whereabouts are easier for someone like ICE to potentially find.
Then after that, we have people who entered without being detected. We have people who overstayed
their visas. Those people might be harder to find, right?
The model of the undocumented migrant people having their head is that comes across the
border with carpet shoes, sneaks past a BP checkpoint and then lives in the United States
without ever encountering migration authorities.
That's actually not the majority model, but those people do exist and they would be harder
for ICE to
find potentially.
Trump has also vowed to end parole programs that allow Ukrainians and Afghans to enter
the USA and work.
I would think that some of those would be pretty unpopular.
People have been much more broadly in solidarity with Ukrainian migrants than they have with
other migrants from other parts of the world, they'll say, but it would be an easy one again
for him to end. Right. The last thing he's really said he wanted to do is to end birthright citizenship.
Yep.
That is, I spoke about this before in our, in our, um, agenda 47 episodes.
It that's pretty clear in the 14th amendment, they have some kind of
fringes on the flag legal theory around this, but like, I would think that that
would require a constitutional amendment, but who knows, because he might have both houses and
the Supreme Court on his side. So he might just be able to get away with doing that.
This obviously wouldn't rescind citizenship from people who have previously have said children who
are citizens. Talking of people who have children citizens, there are about 4 million mixed status
families in the United States. So this deportation plan could potentially separate parents from children, children from
parents, children from their older parents who they take care of. It could destroy these
families, right? Deportations always destroy families. I've seen this happening myself and
it's horrible. The states where this would most likely happen, the states with the highest
documented population are California, Texas and Florida.
California thus far retains its sanctuary policies, Texas and Florida very much do not.
And so those would be the states where there will be the highest risk of this happening.
That's between five and six percent of their population.
And that's kind of where I want to finish up today.
I've got some more stuff I wanted to say about his border policy, but I think I'm going to say that for another episode, because the border and immigration are different things.
And I think sometimes this is something that a lot of legacy media doesn't understand. They have immigration reporters who report on immigration law, the stuff I've spoken about today.
But the border is not somewhere that they go and it's not something that they cover very well. If you've been listening for a while,
you'll know that I've spent a lot of time at the border,
on the ground, in the mountains, in the deserts.
And that's something that we've covered in great depth here
and I'm really happy that listeners
have a really complete understanding of it.
Would California actually be able to enforce
being a sanctuary state or no?
Yes, its law enforcement doesn't have to call ICE, right?
The federal government cannot compel local law enforcement, state law enforcement to do its work.
That is very well established. Again, nothing's off the cards when you have both
houses of Congress and the Supreme Court. But again, that would take time and it would take a court battle.
Supreme Court. But again, that would take time and it would take a court battle.
So what they can do now is not report those people, right? Not say, Hey,
we got someone here. He came in because we found him with a bag of weed.
He's undocumented. You know, he was driving 35 and a 30.
He's undocumented.
These are things that people who are undocumented have to worry about, right? Like for those of you who don't have undocumented folks in your life, like it's a speeding ticket. It's the most minor, it's not paying a parking
ticket and ending up in court, right? Like this shit is so minor to so many people, but it could
tear someone's life apart. And so I want to like finish up by saying that yeah, Texas and Florida are going to
be the places where we see this.
Yeah.
5% of the population is a large amount of your population.
If he even attempts half of that, people are going to see this.
It's going to happen in your community.
Now I'm not saying he will, but if it does like the time to start organizing, to
protect people you care about is now
Be that with donations to groups like a lot of who have successfully sued the Trump and Biden administrations for migrants rights
Be that with organizing such that your undocumented friends don't end up in court because they couldn't pay a parking ticket
Right, even if that means you paying someone giving someone 50 bucks for a parking ticket so that it doesn't ruin the rest of their life
you paying someone giving someone 50 bucks for a parking ticket so that it doesn't ruin the rest of their life. Whatever it is, the way that we prevent this is through strong
communities. We have to start putting those now. I know we've said this a lot this week,
but we're probably going to say a lot for the next three months. Like a lot of people
have reached out to me since the Trump election, which was two days, but also like seven years
ago, because that's how time works.
Saying that they want to participate in mutual aid at the border.
I would love for you to come and join us, of course I would.
And like, I think people have heard a lot about our mutual aid setup because it's something I do a lot.
But that, I don't want you to come here and do mutual aid tourism.
Like I want you to come here and understand and learn what we do and then do it yourself.
Or just do it yourself.
Like, there was a time when this didn't exist and people started it, right?
And you can start it too.
And like, I'm not going to tell you like the specifics of what I think you should do because
I don't know.
I don't know what the legal environment will be.
I don't know what the legal environment will be in your state.
But whatever the legal environment is, it will be better if we have strong and
cohesive communities to look after one another, right?
If you're looking to donate your money, I've said it before, alo trolado, where I would
suggest it, it's alotrolado.org.
They've done really valuable work in defending migrants' rights in court.
Haitian Bridge Alliance would be another great example of that.
Will you link that?
Yep. I'll put them both in the show notes, yeah.
But the way we confront this is together.
And it's super important that now, in the next three months,
if there are undocumented people in your life,
so you check in with them, right,
that you talk with them about what the best plan is.
We don't know what's going to happen.
I've outlined some scenarios here.
None of them may happen.
Right.
We don't know yet, but we have these three months and we'd be foolish not to use them.
Yep.
Yeah.
Talk to your friends, begin organizing.
The solution is not despair.
The solution is community.
And I know it can be really to despair.
And if you're listening and you are undocumented, I understand how petrifying this is.
And just know that we're all thinking of you
and hopefully there are people in your life
who are there to help you and help you get through a difficult time.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now
until the heat death of the universe.
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