Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 160

Episode Date: December 14, 2024

All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file.  Kash Patel: Trump's FBI Pick What Next for Syria? Luigi Mangione Was Radicalized By Pain The Moral Eco...nomy of Inflation or Why Trump Won You Already Know How to Organize 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: Kash Patel: Trump's FBI Pick https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/14/us/politics/kash-patel.html https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2024/10/kash-patel-trump-national-security-council/679566/ https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/01/us/politics/kash-patel-bravado-baggage-fbi.html  https://apnews.com/article/fbi-trump-patel-fisa-russia-2d215ded96ad8a08689b6f7f0b2d49ec https://www.mediamatters.org/truth-social/how-devin-nunes-and-kash-patel-appealed-qanon-extremists-build-truth-socials-user-base https://www.the-independent.com/news/world/americas/us-politics/kash-patel-fbi-trump-maga-merchandise-b2657380.html  What Next for Syria? Defendrojava.org https://docs.google.com/document/d/1tJgepOyOt9cjXRjLE4kHdOhoCesJx-l_S9hJ2foQxnI/edit?tab=t.0 https://youtu.be/kuj8zPLY_4E?si=D2SVT1KBQzXwrxEU The Moral Economy of Inflation or Why Trump Won https://strangematters.coop/supply-chain-theory-of-inflation/ https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/157973/1/bna-259_20090522_nb_casp_full_indexed.pdf https://www.jstor.org/stable/650244See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an I-Heart podcast. Guaranteed Human. A decade ago, I was on the trail of one of the country's most elusive serial killers, but it wasn't until 2023 when he was finally caught. The answers were there, hidden in plain sight. So why did it take so long to catch him? I'm Josh Zeman, and this is Monster, hunting the Long Island serial killer, the investigation into the most notorious killer in New York, since the son of Sam, available now.
Starting point is 00:00:27 Listen for free on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts. CallZone Media. Hey, everybody. Robert Evans here, and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode. So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want. If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing new here for you. but you can make your own decisions. Hi, everyone, it's me, James, and I'm coming at you today with one and these little requests that I make sometimes when there's something that we would like you to do, when it's very important to do so.
Starting point is 00:01:10 Today, I want to talk to you about Syria and specifically northeast Syria. So with the world's eyes fixed on Syria, many are rightly celebrating as the brutal dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad comes to an end. But for Kurdish and other minority communities, recent days have brought violent attacks, ethnic cleansing and occupation by Turkey's back jihadist groups. In an attempt to take advantage of the chaos by crushing the Rojava Revolution, Turkey and its mercenaries are openly committing war crimes against the region's autonomous communities. Many thousands have already been forcibly displaced and thousands more are in danger. To make matters worth, this remains largely absent from the mainstream media reporting on Syria. If you'd like to show your solidarity with the people of northern and eastern Syria, please call on Congress to take urgent action by passing in
Starting point is 00:01:55 agency legislation to stop the violence, hold Turkey accountable, and commit U.S. support to the Syrian Democratic forces and the diverse communities under their protection. If you want to take action today, you can go to defend rojava.org. That's d-E-F-E-F-E-N-D-R-J-A-V-A.org. If you are able to, the most effective action we can take right now is to call a couple of representatives, one representative and one senator. The representative would be Gregory Meeks. He's from New York. He's a Democrat. He is a ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. His phone number is 202-225-3461. Leavon will be Senator James Rish.
Starting point is 00:02:34 He's an Idaho Republican. He is a ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. His phone number would be 202-224-2752. If you'd like to have some talking points, you can find those on defendbrajaba.org. If you'd like to donate financially instead, especially to the humanitarian aid, effort for the tens of thousands of people who have been displaced by the SNA's advances. You can donate to two organizations that I would suggest. First would be Haviosaw, the Curtis Red Crescent.
Starting point is 00:03:06 That's H-E-Y-V-A-S-O-R dot com. You'll want to go slash E-N, if you want to see their website in English. You can donate there. The other one will be the Free Burma Rangers, who are currently working in Raka. I was talking to my friend Habat, who works with them. You can donate to them at www. free, F-R-E-E-B-U-R-M-A-R-M-A-R-M-A-R-R-M-A-R-R-M-A-R-R-Nes. We will put all of this in the show notes, all the URL, so if you're driving, you don't have to write them down.
Starting point is 00:03:36 Those are the concrete ways that we can help right now and what is unfolding as a very terrible situation in North Syria. Thanks. I hope you do the episode. Welcome back to It Could Happen here, a podcast about Garrison Davis, talking to me. Also, the world falling up. part. How do you feel about that, Gare? How you doing? I'm pretty used to it by now, honestly. Yeah. We've been doing this whole thing for quite a, quite a while. You sure have. Have you noticed that some of these, some of these cabinet picks are a little funny. They're a little bit odd. Mm-hmm. Have you noticed that yet? I don't know. I get kind of a funny feeling about some of these
Starting point is 00:04:16 guys. You heard about this? Are you hearing about this? Yeah. I don't love it either, Gare. They don't seem cool and good? I mean, not all of them are like sticking around, I guess, you know? Matt Gates is now out of the job. Tragic. Kind of like Icarus. He flew too close to an elementary school. Yeah. We've already
Starting point is 00:04:36 got our scaramucci. I was going to make a scaramucci joke, but your joke was much better. It was a really fast turnaround for Gates too. Yeah. And now we're all watching Pete to see if he if he is the top job at the Pentagon. But today we're talking about this other guy named Cash Patel. How do you feel about Cash Patel, Robert?
Starting point is 00:04:59 Not thrilled. Kind of worried. Not thrilled. Matt Gates really seemed like the kind of guy you used to make your sketchy secret police and Cash Patel is, I guess, you're back up to that guy. Totally.
Starting point is 00:05:11 Yeah. Or at least like, I don't know, Cash is different in a few ways. Like, he does a lot more kind of dirty work because he's not like important as a person. He just wants to like be seen by Daddy Trump. And this episode, we're going to get into a little bit of Cash's backstory, what his plans are for the FBI, as he is now nominated for the position of being director of the FBI, as well as kind of what Cash has been up to in the four years since Trump's been out of office. So let's just start all the way back to the beginning for background on Mr. Patel here.
Starting point is 00:05:44 Okay. So Cash Patel was born in New York. But after graduating law school in 2005, he worked as a public defender in Florida. for nine years before becoming a federal prosecutor in the National Security Division of the DOJ. He didn't really want to be a public defender. It's that he really couldn't get any other jobs because he wasn't like that skilled. So he ended up just working as a public defender, even though it wasn't really what he wanted to do out of law.
Starting point is 00:06:12 But once he got to the DOJ, he worked as a terrorism prosecutor. According to a DOD profile, Patel, quote, led investigations spanning multiple theaters of conflict and oversaw the successful prosecution of criminals aligned with al-Qaeda, ISIS, and other terror groups, unquote. Patel also worked with, quote, counterterrorism units to conduct collaborative global targeting operations against high-value terrorism targets, unquote. Great. Okay. I'm sure he was good at that job. I'm sure he doesn't have any really embarrassing failures during that period of time. No, no. I say that just for kind of his like more like surveillance background, but we will certainly get to his ability to complete these jobs on a
Starting point is 00:06:55 reliable basis. And like, although that info is directly from the DOD's website, Patel himself has exaggerated his career record, claiming in a YouTube podcast, to have been the quote-unquote lead prosecutor in the case against the 2012 Benghazi attackers. Patel actually was not even part of the trial team, was only a junior staff member at the DOJ at the time. And he was removed from this case for clashing with the U.S. Attorney's Office. But this incident kind of marks the start of a few unfortunate events in his career that really started to kind of turn Patel against the justice system. According to the New York Times, in 2016, Patel was thrown out of a courtroom for wearing, quote, rumpled khakis, boat shoes, and a too small borrowed jacket, unquote. I hate that he's got a my cousin Vinny in his record because that movie is great and it gets me on his side in a way I definitely shouldn't be.
Starting point is 00:07:55 Did he come in next wearing like a funeral director's tuxedo? Oh, no. Or a fucking band leader's tuxedo, whatever. I don't know how to describe the tuxedo Vinny wears in the scene after that. Anyway. No, he was just kicked out of the courtroom with the judge saying, quote, if you want to be a lawyer, dressed like a lawyer, unquote. Now, this judge was also like a racist asshole, not defending the judge here.
Starting point is 00:08:19 And to be clear, Cash Patel was not dating Marissa Tome. He could never pull. Marissa Tome. He could never pull. I mean, honestly, Joe Keshe. Who can? That's, yeah. But this incident is like an important part of his career trajectory.
Starting point is 00:08:37 A profile in the Atlantic details Patel as growing increasingly frustrated and disill by his failure to navigate and rise up in the justice system, just collecting more and more personal grievances that fuel an animosity towards the bureaucracy of the legal system based on people's apparent unwillingness to help him excel in his own career. But in 2018, Patel got his really first, like, big break with Republican representative, Devin Nunes, hiring Patel to be the House Intelligence Committee's lead investigator to disrupt the special counsel investigation into Russian interference. in the 2016 election.
Starting point is 00:09:13 Trump was impressed enough with Patel's work under Nunes that he gave Patel a job on the National Security Council and later served as chief of staff to acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller. Trump mused about having Patel as deputy director of the FBI or director of the CIA in late 2020 after the election, but this led to harsh resistance from within his own administration with A.G. Bill Barr saying that Patel would only become FBI director,
Starting point is 00:09:40 quote, dead body, unquote. So I don't know if we'll have any updates on that. Yeah, we'll see. But instead, back in 2020, Trump just put Patel on the Pentagon transition team. Trump basically tasked Patel with doing dirty work and awarded him with promotions for following orders. Patel advised on the Ukraine impeachment, spread conspiracy theories that Ukraine, not Russia, meddled in the 2016 election, created a list of intelligence agency. officials to fire in February of 2020 and helped manage the now dismissed, a classified documents case against Trump. The former deputy national advisor to Trump, Charles Cupperman, said in an interview,
Starting point is 00:10:24 quote, Trump wanted to make Cash a political executioner to root out and fire individuals on the White House staff who weren't being as loyal as he thought they should be, unquote. So that's kind of a good look at him as a person and like what Cash's role is. specifically for Trump. And with the possibility of the justice system becoming just more and more of like a tool to target Trump's political rivals, Cash is the exact guy that you would pick, especially for a job that has like an investigative focus like the FBI. But Cash isn't always good at his job necessarily. Well, who amongst us? We're going to talk about one specific incident here. That's one of like the wildest stories in like national security that I've ever like read.
Starting point is 00:11:09 in October of 2020, four days before the election, the Pentagon was planning an operation for SEAL Team 6 to rescue an American citizen, Philip Walton, who was kidnapped in Niger and being held in Nigeria. As the State Department was working to communicate with officials in Nigeria to clear airspace for the operation, Patel, who was not part of this operation, just called the Pentagon, saying that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had gotten approval from Nigeria and the airspace was deconflicted. So, as the seals were about to land in Nigeria,
Starting point is 00:11:44 defense officials couldn't verify that the flight actually had clearance, leaving the aircraft to circle over the target for hours as they scrambled to get approval from Nigeria. According to former defense secretary, Mark Esper, Patel was never in communication with Mike Pompeo about this mission, and defense officials concluded that Patel, quote, made the approval story up unquote cool guy
Starting point is 00:12:10 this is wild you almost got seal team six like shot out of the air because you made up a story about having flight clearance it's like it's crazy yeah i mean this is exactly the guy you want running
Starting point is 00:12:23 the FBI for sure a pentagon official yelled at cash quote you could have gotten those guys killed what the fuck were you thinking to which cash replied if nobody got hurt who the fuck cares?
Starting point is 00:12:37 Amazing stuff. Amazing stuff. Let him cook. Crazy stuff. Look, here's the thing, Garrison. If it had gone the worst possible way it could have gone, we'd have been saved at least four interminable books and at least three podcasts.
Starting point is 00:12:53 So, like, people interviewed in the Atlantic, and I think the author of The Profile on Cash kind of muses that, like, maybe Cash just wanted this operation done before the election to give Trump like an extra win leading up to the polls. I don't know. It's certainly odd. But like cash has a very like inflated sense of like personal worth. In an interview with Glenn Beck, he talked about how like people should should trust his
Starting point is 00:13:18 expertise because quote, I've read the entire JFK file. Well, I mean, geez, you and Oliver Stone. Right. He makes comments like that. It's like, no, no, no, like trust me, I know. Like, I've read all the classified stuff that you're not allowed to. I'm, like, the smartest guy in the room. I've read everything, right?
Starting point is 00:13:40 Like, he's, he uses this as, like, a way to, like, inflate his own personal worth and, like, flex to weird right-wing online podcast grifters. People have made this point, but it's guys like this that have convinced me that there's no, at least no, like, perfectly known to intelligence smoking gun about the Kennedy assassination that shit would elique so quickly. No. If not before Trump was in office, then certainly about the time he was. Yeah, because you have guys like Cash Patel reading these files, there is nothing in there.
Starting point is 00:14:10 No, no. Or at least if there is, it's the kind of thing. There may be a smoking gun that someone who is deeply knowledgeable at the time period would be like, oh, the fact that this guy was here at this time really means that this other thing happened. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But Cash Patel doesn't know shit, yeah. He's not smart enough to put any pieces together. Or maybe there's even still redacted and the versions that he's reading don't really have any, like, pertinent info.
Starting point is 00:14:31 Right. People are just like, let's not give this guy the real ones. No. No. This guy who like lied about prosecuting the Benghazi attackers and almost got SEAL Team 6 killed? No, no. Oh, man. And of all the SEAL teams to get killed, too, that's the one that would be the biggest newsday. Do you know who would never kill SEAL Team 6, Robert? I'm never going to say never about killing SEAL Team 6. Well, I mean, hopefully, allegedly, these products and services would never wish harm upon
Starting point is 00:15:01 on CLE Team 6. All right, we are back. I'd like to talk a little bit now about Patel's actual plans for the FBI. Now, this job does require a Senate confirmation, so we will see, you know, if he gets past that process or if he's going to get pushed in through recess appointments,
Starting point is 00:15:26 which we still don't really know if Trump will be able to pull off. But in terms of the FBI, we do have some idea about what cash has in mind because he spent the past two years just talking about it nonstop. in books and interviews. Yeah, because he, like all these guys, cannot shut up.
Starting point is 00:15:43 Can't stop talking. Yes. In an appearance on the Sean Ryan show this past September, Patel said, quote, I'd shut down the FBI Hoover building on day one and reopen it the next day as a museum of the deep state, unquote. Okay. Cool.
Starting point is 00:16:03 Sure. I do feel like you're underestimating the expense of office space and overestimating the availability of it, but sure, why not? Yeah, I don't think they can make a whole museum turnaround in one day, but I also think you are really, really underappreciating docents. It is not easy to get a docent up to speed.
Starting point is 00:16:22 For example, it's a much harder job than you currently have. No, like, Patel does talk about trying to, like, clear out, like, the bureaucracy and red tape of the FBI, and though he has criticized the wide footprint of the FBI and its surveillance operation, though really only the ones targeted against Trump and his campaign,
Starting point is 00:16:41 Cash's ideal FBI would not in fact have like a more limited presence out in the world, saying that after closing the Hoover Building, quote, then I'd take the 7,000 employees that work in that building and send them across America to chase down criminals. Go be cops. Your cops. Go be cops. Unquote.
Starting point is 00:17:00 So this is what? You give like a 7-year-old the keys to the FBI and this is this is the kind of stuff he's talking about. Yeah. It's like, I'm going to send all these administrative employees out into the world to chase down criminals. Now, you say that, Garrison, I absolutely would put a seven-year-old in charge of the FBI. You know why? That's a blockbuster movie.
Starting point is 00:17:19 Now, to be fair, that's a 1997 blockbuster. But, man, that could, oh, man, that could, oh, man. Can you imagine, like, young Morrow Wilson running the FBI? Fucking. Oh, perfect. You know, if we said it a little bit further, we could have, like, Will Whiten as, like, the villain. You know, like Will Wheaton as the evil kid heading the CIA. They also put, they also put, they put Will Wheaton in charge of the CIA.
Starting point is 00:17:42 Yes. Damn. All right. You know what, Garrison, this podcast is done. You and I are writing a screenplay tonight. With the power of AI, we can just generate this whole movie instantly. Perfect. With a truly ghoulish guest appearance by Robin Williams.
Starting point is 00:17:59 Just the worst taste imaginable. No. Sorry, President William. God damn. Oh dear. Nightmare. Nightmare fuel. Now, it's really unclear if, like, Cash's plans here are like rhetoric, right?
Starting point is 00:18:16 Like, you know, more vibes than like actual plan, you know, like expressing some kind of sentiment rather than like an actual practical like plan. But last year, Patel published a book titled Government Gangsters, the Deep State, the Truth and the Battle for Our Democracy, where he also proposed relocating the FBI headquarters. out of Washington, D.C. to, quote, prevent institutional capture and curb FBI leadership from engaging in political gamesmanship, unquote. Though the bulk of this book also details, like, why we must root out politicians, journalists, big tech, and, quote, unquote, members of the unelected bureaucracy that operate the deep state.
Starting point is 00:18:56 So, you know, like the FBI engaging in a little bit of political gamesmanship is okay. In the appendix of this book, it contains the names of six. 60 alleged members of the deep state. Most of them either like former Trump cabinet people who like turned on Trump or just like current Biden admin people. It's all pretty silly, but it's not like he actually plans to take out political prosecutions away from like the FBI's operational structure. Like come on, buddy, this is like your entire plan. In an interview with Steve Bannon last year, Patel reiterated the goal of targeted prosecutions against political enemies saying, quote, we will go out and find the conspirators, not just in the government, but in the media.
Starting point is 00:19:38 Yes, we're going to come after people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections. We're going to come after you, unquote. So that's cool, again. This is the basic stuff that Trump's been promising since, like, you know, the past four years, going after journalists, going after politicians. This quote specifically also just, like, reminded me that, like, there's like a real possibility that like the head of the FBI
Starting point is 00:20:04 legitimately thinks the 2020 election was stolen. And like, then I got to thinking, like, how many of like the people operating the highest levels of government now genuinely believe the election was stolen in 2020, which is like kind of, kind of threw me for a loop. I like didn't really like process that like
Starting point is 00:20:20 concept of like how just broken the reality structure will be with something like so like clear. Yep. That's his FBI plans. Yeah. Great. Well, uh, it seems like it's going to end well for everybody. I don't know. What do you think? Do you think he's going to get confirmed? Because he's one, I'm seeing people are focusing, now that Gates is out, people are focusing way more
Starting point is 00:20:41 on Hegg-Seth, which is probably the priority because, my God, that man should not be leading the Department of Defense. Because he's going to start a war, yeah. He's going to, he's going to, he's going to drunkenly and accidentally start a war. I'm not even worried about him, like, launching a conflict with China, right? Like, we're going to wind up fighting an insurgency against the Portuguese because he gets fucking hammered and mixes up a couple letters. I mean, I'm also, like, really concerned about Tulsi Gabbard. Gabbard is top of my list because she is, has just never met a dictator she doesn't like. And, yeah, that's a scary person having that job.
Starting point is 00:21:18 Patel is really bad, and we're going to get into some more of his, like, kind of cranked beliefs. But there is a level of base incompetence. The fact that Tulsi has been able to get into this position, despite very, very clearly having, like, Deep sympathetic ties to Assad and Russia is like super frightening. She's evil but smart and incredibly power hungry. That's all that matters to her is getting into power, and she has things that she believes. And what we know of the things that she believes is chilling. Like, yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:47 But that's, we don't, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we're talking about. besides Tulsi today. Yeah, yes. Now, since 2020, Cash Patel has served on the board of directors for the parent company of Truth Social called Trump Media Technology Group. So he's been part of the team operating, you know, Trump's version of Twitter. And back in 2022, Patel was openly talking about how, like, the truth social staff were trying to, quote, unquote, incorporate Q&ONN into our overall messaging scheme to capture audiences.
Starting point is 00:22:19 So this is the section where we're going to really get into Patel's super, super heavy Q ties, which is kind of like a throwback, right? We don't really talk about Q&N as much anymore. And I don't think Patel's interest in this is genuine. I think it is just to, like, grow both his own brand and help boost the stock of True Social. It's still, like, the closest that anyone in Trump's team has gotten to, like, openly endorsing Q&ON. And, like, repeatedly.
Starting point is 00:22:45 True social staff operate an account at Q. formed to piggyback off of Q&O's popularity and draw in popular Q&ONN influencers. In February 2022, Patel posted a photo of a beer pint and the arm of someone wearing a flannel shirt with text saying he was, quote, having a beer with Q right now, unquote. Patel continued to frequently interact with the Q&O account, make Q&N-related posts, and do reoccurring appearances on Q&on linked podcasts. Most notably, the X-22 report, the Matrix X-XXXXXXXX, Grove show and Red Pill 78.
Starting point is 00:23:24 It's been a while since I've listened to these types of shows, and it was, it was like a huge throwback. Oh, man. And they're like all chugging along, and now they're like chugging along better than ever, which is, you know, not ideal for me. On these shows, Cash has praised the Q&on fandom researchers saying both he and the president have been impressed. It's all like very pandering, but it really works for these people.
Starting point is 00:23:49 seeing on social meet on truth social how good these researchers are and I kind of wish I had some of them when I was doing Russiagate some of these other things. You know, Devin and I talk regularly and then, you know, I talk with the president all the time as well. And we're just blown away at the amount of acumen some of these people have and how quick they are to grab it and suss through it and sort of thin it down and make it presentable. Later in that interview, Patel openly said that he publishes government documents on his website, Fight Withcash.com, specifically so that QAnon researchers will dig through them to make Q&N content. He openly said that's why he posts these documents.
Starting point is 00:24:28 See, again, I'm sympathetic. Everything I do is for content, Garrison. That's just the way the world works now. The content must flow. You know, Patel also has books, just like you, although he's been signing copies of his with the QAnon phrase, where we go one, we go all. I mean, I do that too. And he has defended his use of the slogan on these Q&On podcasts, like in this clip from the Matrix XX Groo Show. Where we go on, where we go all is, as you said, from a great movie that I watched a long time ago,
Starting point is 00:24:59 and people took to it. And so what? You know, it doesn't mean everyone's a conspiracy theorist, and people keep asking me about all this Q stuff. I'm like, what does it matter? What I'm telling you is that there is truth in a lot of things that many people say, and what I'm putting out there is the truth.
Starting point is 00:25:16 And how about we have some fun along the way? There's so many people who subscribe to the where we go on. We go one all mantra. And it's a, it's what's wrong with it? I'm going to quote now from an article in Media Matters by Alex Kaplan, who's been reporting on Patel and his ties to Q&on since 2022. Quote, on yet another show in June of 2022, Patel went even further, saying of Q&on, quote,
Starting point is 00:25:39 we try to incorporate it into our overall messaging scheme to capture audiences because whoever that person is, is has certainly captured a widespread breadth of the mega and America first movement. And so what I try to do is, what I try to do with anything, Q or otherwise, is you can't ignore that group of people that has such a strong dominant following, unquote. In that interview, Patel also said of QAnon, there's a lot of good to a lot of it. And he agreed with the co-host who said, Q has been so right on so many things, saying, quote, I agree with you.
Starting point is 00:26:11 He should get credit for all the things he has accomplished, because it's a lot of hard to establish a movement. Let's call it that because that's what it is, unquote. Oh, boy, do you know what's also hard to establish, Robert? Uh, an alibi. An alibi. An alibi. And, you know, some people's alibis could be reading ads, like the one that we're about to do right now. That's right. That's always my alibi. That really is always your alibi. Yeah. All right. We are, we are back. Now, in these podcast guest appearances, he would often plug his book and advocate that listeners just join truth social. And engagement with these more niche online streaming shows and podcasts fortifies the right wing online media ecosystem and
Starting point is 00:27:02 draws people away from mainstream news. Like this is why he was going on those shows so much back in 2022. And Patel basically says as much on this episode of the X22 report. They will never trust the fake news media again. And for us, that's always been the championing cause to get our people and mainstream America listening to your show rather than CNN and reading the New York Post, or excuse me, the New York Times and the Washington Post. And I think part of why he's doing this and whether he was told to do it
Starting point is 00:27:31 or whether he just did it on his own volition, is that like having someone who's seen as being close to Trump, especially with national security experience, it helps keep Trump supporters politically engaged by making them feel like they are getting special access to like exclusive information. It's all a part of keeping the mega movement alive when their side is not in power,
Starting point is 00:27:51 while also building up a ground base of support in preparation for them to take power back. And that's what he did, like, a lot in 2022. Most of those podcasts were leading up to the midterms as well. So, like, it is part of this general political strategy to engage with these, like, much more niche, kind of smaller QAnon shows, which not only does, like, you know,
Starting point is 00:28:11 grow their audience over time as well. It does help their audience grow. It also just establishes, like, a completely siloed media ecosystem away from mainstream news. That is part of what they're doing. That's why Trump made Truth Social is to create more of these reality tunnels,
Starting point is 00:28:25 more of these information silos. Now, Patel kept busy in between 2020 and 2024 with a variety of kind of grifty ventures. I'm going to quote from the New York Times here, quote, Mr. Patel's company, Trishall,
Starting point is 00:28:41 collects consulting fees, including $130,000 last year from Mr. Trump's Truth Social site. He also made $300,000, $125,000 over two years for strategy consulting for the pro-Trump Save America Pack and $145,000 in 2021 for fundraising consulting from Friends of Matt Gates, the campaign committee for the now former House Republican from Florida, unquote. Now, last year, Patel's nonprofit charity, the Cash Foundation, received $1.3 million in revenue, mostly from donations, though it's reported
Starting point is 00:29:18 expenses totaled $674,000. Wow. Which is the majority of the money, and nearly half of that was spent on promotion and advertising. According to the New York Times, the charity spent more on ads than they actually gave away, which is fantastic charity work. Oh, fuck. Good work.
Starting point is 00:29:44 Through this foundation, he also sells cash, merchandise, which is spelled K money sign H. Yeah, that's, that guy's going to really FBI well. Including six packs of wine for 240 bucks and $50 golf polo shirts. Part of these polo shirts have this like, you know, like pro America branding. I want to read the description of one of them. Tired of seeing your money go overseas, support your fellow Americans by purchasing our T-shirt. Where do you think this T-shirt's made, Robert?
Starting point is 00:30:17 China? Well, it's made in Haiti. Oh, Haiti. Oh, okay. The America of the ocean. And South America. So, you know, you're still supporting Americans. Just South Americans.
Starting point is 00:30:30 Mm-hmm. Oh, my God. Now, this foundation has also funded defamation lawsuits for a Stop the Steel activist and his friend and former boss at National Intelligence. But Patel's grifting does go beyond his foundation. Just earlier this year, Patel was hawking anti-Veval vaccine supplement pills from the company Warrior Essentials. Wow.
Starting point is 00:30:52 Specifically, the pills that claim to reverse the effects of the COVID-19 vaccine. I love that. What if these pills just give you COVID? They're just COVID pills. Yeah, yeah. You just want to get COVID. Want to reverse the effects of the vacs? It's a performance enhancer.
Starting point is 00:31:09 You know, if we could convince, well, it's up to say, if we could convince Joe Rogan, COVID's a performance enhancer. I don't think we could get Joe Rogan's fans to spread any more disease than they already. I already do. Yeah. That's impossible. So this product that Fetell was selling is called no-covidom.
Starting point is 00:31:25 And it's allegedly formulated to, quote, destroy the toxic spike, unquote, caused by the mRNA vaccine. Now, we should have called the COVID vaccines no-COVID. It's a good name. That was just leaving money on the table. Or Novid. Novit's good. Novid would have been a great name. Nov it's good.
Starting point is 00:31:44 Nov it's good. Yeah. According to journalists. James Little, these no-COVIDum pills just contain basic supplement ingredients like turmeric extract, green tea extract, and vitamin D.
Starting point is 00:31:57 Great. Yeah. A subscription for a 30-day supply is for $49.98 cents. Jesus Christ. And a single order of pills is $59.98. They're really pushing the subscription because you got to keep doing
Starting point is 00:32:13 more pills every 30 days in order to really keep the Vax suppressed. In a post this past February on True Social, Patel truthed. Spike the Vax. Order this home run kit to rid your body of the harms of the Vax, unquote. My God. I just can't believe that a guy like this could be FBI director. It's just, it makes me.
Starting point is 00:32:36 It's, it's, I mean, it probably will wind up being much more dangerous, but there is a version of this where the FBI just pivots to selling supplements. All right. Like, where you get, where you get your estrogen and testosterone from the FBI. Look, as long as it's marketed as like a performance enhancer. I would love to believe that a guy like this will lead to just general incompetence, but I just can't let myself believe that.
Starting point is 00:33:02 Like, I think it's just going to become more and more targeted against, like, people who are good. Yeah. They're going to start with, yeah, with, I mean, it looks like, just based on his enemy list, they're going to start with Biden administration officials and people in the government. but like it won't in there. It's going to depend on what happens. Like it'll be a reactive, violent organization, which to a degree it always has been,
Starting point is 00:33:25 but there's always been like more of a sense of like predictability that will not be present. And specifically, like, you know, Patel has also been a recurring gray zone guest and is pretty close with that whole crew. That's, you know, not great for certain people. But he really is the gift that keeps on giving. in terms of like odd anecdotes, including his trilogy of books, which will be kind of the last thing I talk about here. So over the course of the past three years, Patel has written and
Starting point is 00:33:56 published a children's book trilogy titled The Plot Against the King, where Patel himself appears as a wizard to defend King Donald from enemy plots. Oh, God. The one thing we all used to be able to agree on is that we don't like kings here. No, but now we have the FBI director who fancies himself the wizard to protect the king. I am going to read the description from the first book here. Quote, a fantastical retelling of the terrible true story. Hillary Quentin and her Shifty Knight had spread lies that King Donald had cheated to become king.
Starting point is 00:34:38 They claimed he was working with the Russianians, but how could that be? Russianians? Russian Onions. It's bad. Okay. R-U-S-S-I-O-N-I-A-N-S. This is the kind of thing the FBI should be cracking down on. That's all I'll say about that.
Starting point is 00:35:02 Cash, the distinguished discoverer, join him as he uncovers the plot against the king, and who was really behind all the lies. Unquote. Now, Patel referred to this as, quote, the first ever children's Russia Gatebook. Great. unquote, which I got to give him to him. That's probably true. That's almost, well, no, because, okay, you know what?
Starting point is 00:35:22 I don't think it is. But it came from the opposite side. You remember when the fucking Krasenstein brothers put out that children's book about Robert Mueller? No. No. You're right. This is another lie. With Weave Bannon, because his hair was a weasel, I think.
Starting point is 00:35:39 Yeah. This was another lie. This was another lie from Cash. The Krasensteins beat you to this. This is truly the tier of man we're operating with. I'm going to start pulling every connection I have to somebody in Congress so that when he's being confirmed, I can get up and hit him on this. You claim to have written the first children's book
Starting point is 00:35:59 that I bring in the Krasenstein brothers. No. They're going to sell MTG on crypto. It's going to be amazing. Unfortunately, there's two other books in the series. Part two, quote, tells that, fantastic story of how two inquisitive minds, Dineshneesh and Debbie, search for the truth to uncover evidence of a terrible scheme. Dinesh, who has been forced by a court to announce in public that he
Starting point is 00:36:28 did not uncover any scheme. Part two is titled 2000 Mules. It is no longer available on Amazon due to like all the lawsuits around this just being fake. Because they broke a bunch of laws because it was criminal and lies, yes. Search for the truth to uncover evidence of a terrible scheme to elect sleepy Joe instead of King Donald on Choosing Day, unquote. Choosing day. Just called it an election, man. No, because it's a king.
Starting point is 00:36:54 It's when they choose their king. There are kings that are elected. Anyway. The back of the book reads, Come join Denesh and Debbie as they try to answer some troubling questions. Why did the counting stop in the middle of the night? Why were there more votes than people in the kingdom?
Starting point is 00:37:11 What is up with all the glowing poo? That is what it actually says. Now, why? I'm not... What is the glowing poo supposed to be? I don't know, because I can't scam Amazon to buy the book and return it because it's no longer available on Amazon. I don't know what the glowing poo is.
Starting point is 00:37:28 Sorry. Listeners, if one of you has a copy of this book. Oh my God. Then part three is titled Return of the King. Okay. It continues the silly yet important journey of the Maga King. as he returns to take down comma la la la la
Starting point is 00:37:48 and reclaim his throne, unquote. Okay. So yeah, that's Cash Patel, possible new FBI director. Oh, who also produced a song titled Justice for All, which is a version of the national anthem, but sung by all J6 defendants in prison
Starting point is 00:38:05 with proceeds going to the Cash Foundation. So he also released a song, which was not on my rap this year, unfortunately. That's a shame. and I'm just double-checking something. Yes, and he stole the name of his song from a Metallica album. One of the better Metallica albums.
Starting point is 00:38:22 This is the one that has one on it. Oh, my God. You son of a bitch. I mean, it's just so odd to have the FBI director making a song with imprisoned J6 defendants. You know, it really does just throw my head into a little bit of a spin. Yeah, it'll be interesting to see
Starting point is 00:38:38 the current, like, FBI agents react to that. But I guess we'll see. We're all going to learn lot about the FBI, one way or the other. Any closing thoughts here on Mr. Patel, now that we've done a very brief overview of his life story ending with this children's book. He seems like he's qualified to do something. That's what everyone's saying. That's what everyone's saying. No, like, every single person who's like announced, you know, you get a wave of headlines from people who work in government being like, this is the most unqualified person ever nominated
Starting point is 00:39:09 for this position. And like, it just keeps happening that I'm like, I don't even feel obligated to like quote or say any of these things because like we all know what's happening like yeah we all know why this is going on like that doesn't matter no and i think that's one of the things like i have no desire in focusing on like what trump is doing that's like he's breaking the law he's violating a norm like i i want to hear you know what are you going to do to stop it right what is actually being done to try to resist this right like otherwise it's at least when it comes to stuff from elected leaders, you know? I'm just not interested in like, oh, he broke another law. Yeah, that's what he does. What comes next? And he hires guys like Patel to clean up his messes
Starting point is 00:39:54 and do all his dirty work. And if they do it, they can slowly rise to the ranks and become director of the FBI. Yeah. And that's the political strategy that they are all working with and have run to success yet again in 2024. Well, I guess stay tuned for more happenings here as they continue for the rest of this week and for the next four years. Welcome back to It Could Happen Here, a podcast about the things that are happening all around us, including shockingly in the last week, something we did not expect two weeks ago, the fall of the Assad regime, which our official stance as a network is that, fuck him, this is pretty good, but a lot of people feel differently.
Starting point is 00:40:54 And to talk with me about that, another guy who's always angry about Syria, and also has been to Syria, James. And just as a note, I think a lot of the people podcasting about this right now are talking about a place they've never been, although James and I have not been to Idlib. So, you know, we're going to be fairly focused on our experiences in the Kurdish regions. But at least we're not just bullshitting about a place that we've read about on the internet. Yeah, claiming deep on the ground understanding of a place from Reddit. Yes. That is not us. Yeah, we, we, uh, and I briefly looked at regime held Syria. Yeah, yeah, yeah, over from a Camiselo where
Starting point is 00:41:32 is kind of the governance capital of Rojava, but is also a big chunk of it was held by the Assad regime. So you would just periodically, like, see that fucker's face on the wall as you were crossing the street. It's good times. But my fixer would come around like noon for whatever reason when I was in Rojava, and like, I hate just sitting in the hotel, so I'd just go out for walks around the market.
Starting point is 00:41:55 Yeah. Not advised by the old safety people, but... No. Oh, one of the sketchier cities I've been in. Yeah. Because of the presence of regime troops. Yes, yes. Everything else was lovely.
Starting point is 00:42:05 Yeah. People are lovely. Yeah. I'd be walking down the street and, like, I'd be looking around, seeing anything interesting to go and see. And then you can literally take one wrong turn down the street and walk into, to regime Syria, as you covered in in the women's war. Like, I was walking down one street.
Starting point is 00:42:20 This man walked up to me. My Kurdish is not very good. I tried to say hello, told him my name and stuff. And then he starts getting more agitated. And he just starts repeating a high. Iron Horror Volume, Assad bad man. Yeah, Assad bad man. Asad bad man, stay away, bro, stay away.
Starting point is 00:42:34 He's like, you're going to fucking die. Way to be a fucking Haval. Yeah, Gallag spars to that guy. Yeah, Barci, Barci. Yeah, it was a very strange situation. It is no longer a strange situation because in the last week, the Assad regime has crumbled. Statues of him have been torn down all over the country,
Starting point is 00:42:54 which we love to see. That's another of our stances at the network is fuck a statue. Yes. Yeah, fuck most statues. Most statues. There are probably some cool ones. Just the lady hitting the Nazi with a handbag in Sweden. That's a good statue.
Starting point is 00:43:06 But, yeah, most statues. Most statues of dudes in suits. Don't love them. No, very few dudes in suits I want to see a statue of. Yeah, can't think of any right now. Yeah, it's not coming to me. Yeah, I'm sure it will. So these statues have been torn down because the Assad regime has basically crumbled.
Starting point is 00:43:23 It failed to really put up any meaningful resistance to disadvent. by different rebel groups, right, by HTS, by SNA, by the Southern Front as well. And despite, I guess even what I would have said two weeks ago, right, even after they lost Aleppo, I assumed that they would regroup in Hama or Homs, and they did not. They completely failed to do so. Russian backers more or less abandoned them, focused on getting their stuff and their people,
Starting point is 00:43:53 those who survived out of the country. And as a result, there is no more Assad. regime, right? Assad fled the country at some point. It was initially speculated that Assad had fled on an aircraft on Saturday night as rebels were entering Damascus. That seems to be untrue, or perhaps it was true, but there's speculation that aircraft had crashed or been shut down, certainly. It does not seem to be. No. I made the call about two days before the regime fell, that I felt he was out of the country based on some reporting, including reporting from the Syrian regime that he'd gone to Iran first. I think he left days before it.
Starting point is 00:44:28 I don't think he's, yeah, he's got enough instinct for self-preservation that I think he got the fuck out of there. Yeah, he didn't want to be found in a hole in the ground like Saddam Hussein, right? Like he, or end up like Gaddafi, I guess. So he left. It's quite possible that he was doing a sort of final, please, please help me tour of Russia around, which turned, turned into his eventual exile. In breaking news, Robert, I don't know, I don't know if you've seen this telegram post. And obviously, we can't confirm it because we don't have a direct. to the Assad regime, but allegedly he is planning on setting up a specialized hospital in the
Starting point is 00:45:03 field of ophthalmology in Russia, Abkhazia, and Dubai. Yeah, great. Great place for him to be working. Yeah, wonderful. Cool stuff. Yeah, cool. Yeah, not at the Hague where he belongs. Yeah. Anyway, he's gone, and we have seen in response, like, some of the worst social media posting that I've seen, and I don't want this to be, like, like, Twitter review. I think that, Obviously, that's pointless and impure out. But I want to address, I guess, this kind of really disappointing response I've seen from a lot of people on the left that, oh, yeah, well, either, I mean, you have the grey zone tendency, right? The Assad was great, actually, and the protection of human rights in the region and then, like, Syria was socialism incarnate, which is obviously nonsense, right? Like this is a person who, as we have seen in the last week, whose regime prisons were holding thousands of people, killed tens of thousands of people, tortured people to death.
Starting point is 00:46:03 In some cases in Sednair prison, which is a big prison in Damascus, or near Damascus, I should say, it's towards the coast. It looks as if there were children in that prison who were possibly born in that prison and may have never been out of that prison, which is, it's a big. one of the most horrible things I've ever had to think about, you know, like a little child, four or five years old, never having seen the sky, it's just, it's heartbreaking. Like a lot of the things we are going to find, the things we're going to hear about in the next few weeks are heartbreaking. And anybody who's prepared to apologize for that or prepared to say that that was good, I think you really need to question if there's someone who's aligned with you. But in addition to that tendency, there's one that sort of holds that in Syria, like, what will come next is worse.
Starting point is 00:46:52 Yeah. Right? What will come next? Or we don't know. Of course, we don't know what will come next. None of us can see the future. But what will come next will make a sad look like it was a preferable option. And, like, I feel that we need to address that because I think it's one of the long legacies of authoritarian socialist.
Starting point is 00:47:11 How do I say this? Like, the authoritarian socialist media project. And that kind of colliding with the Iraq war anti-era anti-war movement. Yes. Yeah. All the whole hands-off Syria thing, the groups like the PSL, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, we're doing when the rebels started this offensive being like, we've got to stop, you know, these U.S.-backed rebels from taking Syria for the empire.
Starting point is 00:47:35 And it's like, man, it's not the U.S. that was primarily backing the rebels that did most of the fighting. Like, these guys are Turkish-backed, you know? Yeah, yeah. The extent that that even matters, right? Like, the, like, this is not a... The CIA did not orchestrate all of this. The guys the CIA were really trying to back in Syria basically all died.
Starting point is 00:47:56 Like... Yeah, they've gone. Yeah. Some of the weapons sure that the U.S. supplied in Timbersikamore are probably still in the hands of HTS. Yes, some of them. But, like, even, that's not the bulk of the weaponry that those fuckers are using. No, the entire weaponry of the Syrian Arab army is also in the hands of the HTS.
Starting point is 00:48:13 which we'll move on to, actually, because maybe we should address that now before we address a response is actually. Yeah. When we talk about international involvement in Syria, right, we talk about the United States who has supported the SDF, not as a project, and this is important, they don't support the Democratic Autonomous Administration in North and East Syria as a democratic project. What they support is the SDF as a partner force in the fight against ISIS. And that's been very clear when they have failed to defend the AANES against
Starting point is 00:48:43 genocidal violence, ethnic cleansing, and a frieen, right, what we're seeing again now in the Tau-Rafat area. I'll use that terminology because if you want to look it up on Google Maps, that's easier to find. The violence that we've seen repeatedly from the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army or Turkish Free Syrian Army is sometimes called, right? The United States hasn't defended the people of the A&ES against that, and it won't because that's not what it's there to do. And as much as we would like it to, I don't think. think that that's in the nature of the U.S. mission in Syria, and I don't think it's in the nature of the U.S. as a state either. To support a project which is seeking to build democracy without the
Starting point is 00:49:23 state, it's not in the nature of the state. We stumbled backwards accidentally into exactly once supporting the good guys in a conflict, you know, specifically in the conflict with ISIS. Yeah, like a broken clock. And we immediately, ever since we have been trying as hard as we can to pull back and, you know, betray them. Yes. To their deaths. Like that is the story of U.S. support of Rojava. Yeah, this is not a U.S. proxy state
Starting point is 00:49:50 as some people are trying to tell you. This is not a CIA revolution or some people are trying to tell you indeed. No, part of what gives fuel for that is there are a number of photos of like U.S. troops really viving with the YPG and YPJ. And they're viving with them, and you and I could both say this,
Starting point is 00:50:03 having been with those people, they're nice. Yeah, they're fun to be around. They're chill folks. Yeah. They have good music and they like to dance. Generally, cool people, yes. Yeah, I enjoy their company. I have vibed with the YPG.
Starting point is 00:50:18 You know, like, it's hard not to see a bunch of young women who, like, left ISIS captivity and immediately said, give me a gun. I'm going to learn how to use it and be like, yeah, that's pretty cool. Good for you. Yeah, it's one of the cooler things that's happened to the Middle East in the past century. Yeah. And, like, the United States does not have a plan for what has happened in the last two weeks. and it appears to be trying to think on the hoof right now.
Starting point is 00:50:42 Joe Biden's foreign policy has been dog shit, and it doesn't look like he's going to pull a 180 now. Yeah. We should not expect the United States to save Rajah. We should do everything we can to get the United States to continue supporting the people who gave more than 10,000 of their children in the battle against ISIS. The US didn't want to send ground troops, right?
Starting point is 00:51:03 Obama didn't want to have another ground war. Neither did Trump. And so they got people from the SDF to do the dying. and a lot of the killing, well, they maintained an aerial presence was a light ground footprint. We shouldn't expect the US to show up for the people who showed up for it. That's not in its nature. The only state that had a plan for what happened in the last two weeks appears to have been Israel, disappointingly.
Starting point is 00:51:29 Russia and Iran seemed to have largely scrambled, extracted their state assets. Russia got some of its people out. They took some of their aircraft out. Iran. Likewise, the US seems to be kind of scrambling. I'm sure there are still some ODAs, some special forces guys, embedded with the SDF. I'm sure that in the areas where ISIS has risen up,
Starting point is 00:51:51 because in some areas where the regime has pulled back, there has been an increasing presence of ISIS sleeper cells, trying to sort of once again control territory and attack the SDF. In those areas, I'm sure that there are U.S. special forces like directing airstrikes, but I don't think the U.S. is going to come and save Russia. but the only country that had a plan was Israel. And what Israel's plan was was to invade Syria in the Golan Heights, right, to increase their area of control,
Starting point is 00:52:18 and then to bomb almost all of the aircraft. And perhaps, I don't know if it also includes air defense systems, but from what the IDF are saying today, they have bombed all of the Syrian Air Force's aircraft that had fallen into rebel hands. This includes ammunition for the aircraft, It includes the ammunition dump at Kamislo Airport. About half an hour before Robert and I started recording here on Monday,
Starting point is 00:52:43 I saw a video from a friend in Kamislo of the ammunition dump at the airport, which had previously belonged to the regime, now belongs to the A&ES, exploding after it had been hit by an IDFS strike. So what they're trying to do, I guess, is deny any of those weapons to people who they perceive as a threat to their interests. Yep. And like there's been, I don't know if, if you're seeing this also, Robert, by a lot of, like, Israeli accounts being like,
Starting point is 00:53:11 oh, we stand with the Kurds, Israel, and the Kurds are one. And first of all, I want to warn you, I want to warn you that we have an advertising break coming, Robert, is what I want to warn you about. Oh, well, speaking of, well, actually not speaking of the IDF, thankfully, but speaking about maybe the California State Highway Patrol, here's some ads. We're back. Yeah, firstly, I think when you're seeing analysis about Syria, Anyone who talks about things in terms of these monolithic blocks,
Starting point is 00:53:50 these Israeli accounts are often like we will support the Kurds. I would be, sometimes I'll maybe use that to refer to A&ES or the SDF, but I really try not to because it's a multi-ethnic project, right? Like the areas that we'll talk about in a minute where the FDF is being attacked, those areas, the largest component of the FDF is Arab forces, right? And that is the case in the SDF as a whole, actually, the majority of the SDF is now Arab, not Kurdish. I would be very skeptical of the expertise of anyone who refers to things in these monolithic
Starting point is 00:54:22 absolutes, right? The Sunnis, the Shias, the Alawites, the Kurds. There are a lot of different groups in Syria, and those groups are comprised of individuals, and those individuals, shockingly, have different and distinct goals and experiences and desires. Like, there are absolutely Alawites who will have remained loyal to Assad. There are others who, like, demonstrably did not,
Starting point is 00:54:44 as we've seen in the last week, right? And so I would be skeptical of anyone who tries to paint things in those terms. And I would be skeptical to return to what we were talking about earlier, Robert, of people who tell you that, like, we should expect, the one I see most is Syria to turn into Lebanon, right? And like, you and I have been talking about this before we recorded, but that's not a useful example in my mind of what we're likely to see in Syria, right? And the reason for that is like in Lebanon, yes, there was like a U.S. air component as there is in Syria. That's true. But I don't understand why we would look at the example of Lebanon, a place thousands of miles away when we have at least two examples of governance in Syria, right? People who have been governing in one case for more than a decade, significant parts of Syria. Like they have a government project. In the case of the AANES,
Starting point is 00:55:44 I don't think it's fair to call it a state project. They would tell you that they're trying to build democracy without the state, which is something that, which might not be popular with states, evidently, which doesn't let them the support of many states, as we've seen. But we have, and with HTS in July and the Salvation Government, right? We have these two governance projects. They're extremely different, right? The Salvation Government under HDS is people have been arrested for playing music at their own weddings.
Starting point is 00:56:13 It is neither democratic nor particularly liberatory. And then we have the A&ES, which I would argue is the only democracy in the Middle East. Yeah. Certainly the only democracy where people have different, ethnicities and genders matter the same amount. Yeah, certainly the only like multi-ethnic democracy in the Middle East that's functional. Yeah. You know, you're just straining the definition of democracy if you're constraining it by ethnicity, right? Right.
Starting point is 00:56:38 So I think you can make a good case for it being the only democracy in the Middle East. I saw this really atrocious BBC interview this morning, right? I'm trying to network. Some networks now have reporters on the ground in Damascus, and I've been trying to watch those to see sort of what's going on. It can be very hard to just get your news from telegram. I would also caution people who are perhaps new to this, who are finding these telegram channels
Starting point is 00:57:01 to take everything you read on there with a pinch of salt. You'll see a lot of disinformation there. One of the BBC had an expert on, and he was like, oh, every time we see people pulling down statues of dictators, I'm a bit concerned. And like, I have to think about how to express this. It seems to me deeply Islamophobic or bigoted or racist. I don't quite know the white term.
Starting point is 00:57:23 To say, oh, the people of this country, and the places in the last 10, 20 years, where we've seen people pulling down statutes of dictators have largely been in the Middle East, right? To say that, oh, these people are incapable of self-governance, these people are incapable of living in peace with one another. But like, they're not. We've seen that in Rajavah, and I don't think that the right response now is to respond with skepticism to, like, the Syrian people's ability to live in peace.
Starting point is 00:57:51 They've been at war for 15 years, 14 years, 13, 13 years, 13 and a half years. But I think that there is not an appetite for more killing and more dying, certainly from what I've seen and what I've heard. No, exhaustion is a factor here. You really cannot emphasize enough how long. I mean, HTS and the SNA have been at this and how fucking tired, particularly like HTS has to be. Like, this has been more than a decade of constant terror and violence. So I do think that that's going to be a factor in like what happens next. I should hope it will be.
Starting point is 00:58:31 Yeah. I mean, some things, I don't know how to interpret. Right. HTS has asked the regime police and authorities in cities to stay on. Some of that is probably good, right? The people who ensure that the water gets pumped. I hope that they stay pumping the water. The people who were the police, the Assad regime, Syrian Arab Republic. I don't want those people to stay on. I want those people to fuck off and I want those people to be held accountable for the crimes they committed. But it doesn't point to sort of wild sectarian violence. We don't. We don't. don't have the situation we had in Iraq, right? We have a U.S. occupation which sits inside its bases and it only leaves, seemingly to kill people, right? From the perspective of the people living in Iraq, that's where the U.S. occupation look like for the most part, right? It's guys in big military vehicles who kill civilians by mistake. We don't have that here. There's not that resentment, generational resentment that allowed the Islamic State to grow there. Now, the Islamic State did
Starting point is 00:59:31 grow through capturing a lot of state institutions, which is what HTS has done. But I don't see that same resentment and I don't see that same desire for sort of redemptive violence that we saw that. I might be wrong, right? There might be more intercommunal violence. I have seen some videos of what look like summary executions in Damascus today. That's very concerning. Yeah, but also, I mean, look, there's some people who need to be summarily executed in the establishment, you know? Yeah, if you got to shoot someone, If you're looking at the photos of just like thousands of shoes and decomposed bodies, dissolved a deacet at Sednaia prison, like you're liberating those places.
Starting point is 01:00:10 You catch anyone who was working there. I'm not going to say that that's a bad thing to do. I might do the same thing in their circumstances. Yeah, I can't blame someone. I can understand someone doing that. What are you going to do? Yeah. I can understand that in the next few days, they will probably be more of that violence because we are literally,
Starting point is 01:00:29 in some cases opening their lid on some of the worst crimes against humanity of this century. Yes, yes. And they are going to be catching. There are a lot of Mukbarat, you know, secret police guys who didn't get out, who were throwing on. We've got videos of them leaving the palace throwing on civilian clothes. Yeah. And I'm not going to be shocked if a lot of the justice process of that is ugly. Now, I do suspect that Jolani is going to at least grab a chunk of those guys and do trials
Starting point is 01:00:54 because he is really looking for state legitimacy, you know? and that's one way you get it. Yeah, that's his project now. But that's not going to be how all these guys go down. No, some of these guys are going to die. Yeah, they're just going to get fucking God. Yeah, and they got a lot of people. They kind of had it coming to him.
Starting point is 01:01:12 I'm not particularly concerned about that. I'm more broadly concerned with, like, what are you doing on the left? If you see people in the streets, you see people tearing down statues of dictators, you see people celebrating the end of a regime that oppressed them for decades, and you immediately go to, oh, this is bad.
Starting point is 01:01:31 Like, why do you even bother if we don't believe that people can govern themselves? If we don't believe that the people in the street are normally the people who are right, and if we don't believe that the downfall of tyrannical regimes is a good thing. Yeah, what do you believe, you know, if you're just torturing it to be like, well, no, you know, you and I both read that there was a post earlier today with someone being like these leftists purity politics, you know, to be angry that Assad kept a loo. lit on radical Islam and ISIS and just didn't do it super cleanly. And it's, man, he was fucking gassing children.
Starting point is 01:02:04 Like, where are you here? Yeah. What is wrong with you? Come on, man. Yeah, this is a person who dropped chlorine gas on blocks of flats with little children and them, right? Like, fuck this guy. It's good that he's gone.
Starting point is 01:02:18 I wish he was dead. I'm sad that he gets to go and be an ophthalmologist. Like, he, of all people, needs to be held accountable for his crimes. Yeah, yeah. Something could have. We could have a song on Tilarian kind of situation, right? Yeah. Who's the Armenian who shot a member of the Turkish government in Berlin.
Starting point is 01:02:36 Yeah. We could have something like that go down. God willing. Yeah, yeah. You never know. Yeah, I guess people there. He's in Russia now. He's in Russia.
Starting point is 01:02:44 Someone will find him in his high-end eye clinic one day. Yeah, he's probably going to be going back and forth to Dubai. There's some Syrians who wound up in Dubai. Somebody might stab him. Yeah. Yeah, we can hope. But I want to take one more break. Talking of stabbing, maybe we will get an advert for knives, you know.
Starting point is 01:03:02 Yeah. I've never had a knife ever, have we? No, I don't know that we have, and I would sell the hell out of knives. Mm-hmm, yeah. Almost any knives, even crappy gas ditching. Like, if you make the ones that look like an oil slick, get in touch with the advertising department at IHeartMedia. We'll pimp them. All right, we're back.
Starting point is 01:03:28 The last thing I want to talk about, Robert, is how the rebels won, because there was not a lot of fighting after the collapse of Aleppo, but before there was fighting. And in part how that fighting went, I think, led to the downfall of the morale of the Syrian Arab army, right? So there are some things here that both Robert and I are somewhat nerdy about conflicts, right? Like it's something even when we're not attending wars, we like to read about them. And you and I both take a great interest in history. And I think we'd be unwise to not look at this and learn from it, especially with HTS, who massively professionalized since the ceasefire in 2020.
Starting point is 01:04:08 I think professionalized is probably the right word. Like, that command, their technology, the way they operated looked a lot more like a modern military than it did. You know, the militias, like, I'm sure you and I both remember the early Syrians of a war for people who were a bit younger than us, like some of the most incredible improvised weapons that I've seen. Oh, yeah, there was literally at one point they had an Ottoman-era black powder cannon on the back of a flatbed that they were using to hit regime positions.
Starting point is 01:04:40 That they had literally taken out of the museum in Aleppo to use. They had taken it out of the museum. Fucking amazing stuff. Like, incredible. I thought the top of like that sort of thing was when fucking insertion in Afghanistan would use 17th century Jazeals to shoot at U.S. troops. But the Ottoman canon is really a, that's a flex. Yeah, it was a huge flex.
Starting point is 01:05:04 They also fired propane cylinders out of huge tubes. These improvised mortars they call hell cannons. Like really incredible. And like it speaks to the ingenuity of people and their desire not to be oppressed, right? They desire to fight against state tyranny. But when we compare that to what we saw with HTS in 2024, a world of change, right? In particular, I think it was very interesting that they captured armored vehicles. and then they were able to combine armor and infantry very effectively, which is not easy to do, right?
Starting point is 01:05:41 That has alluded even some professional militaries. They also very effectively use drones, both drones to drop bombs and drones to adjust their artillery and mortifier, which I think is something that, again, like that modern militaries do, but it's not easy to do, right? And it's not like HTS could do massive exercises in the lead up to this operation. Like they seem to have professionalized very quickly. Another area that they were, you can see that they've learned a lot from the conflicts in Ukraine and perhaps in Myanmar to was their use of FPV drones. A first person view drone, how do you describe it? It's like your eyes are on the front of the drone.
Starting point is 01:06:25 Is that a good description, Robert? Yeah. It's like you're flying. Yeah. And there are videos of whole classrooms of HCS, I guess, soldiers, militants, whatever you want to call them, practicing flying drones or using the controllers to play like a computer game where you have to like go through checkpoints and follow a route and things. And they seem to have developed like a training course that then gave them this drone brigade, which they used incredibly effectively. They had these massive first person view drones that were almost like a sort of a Sats cruise missile.
Starting point is 01:06:55 And it was, I think, one of those that penetrated some kind of command headquarters in Aleppo in the early days of the battle there, killed several important officers and commanders and helped to then spread that panic, which they rode all the way to Damascus, right? So, like, this use of drones was extremely consequential. The other thing that they used, in which we've seen the SDF used a lot, is these pulsar thermal optics. So a thermal optic sees heat, right? I guess would be the easiest way to describe it, and it maps heat in a visual fashion for the user. And in this case, they put them on their rifles and they're able to see other people at night.
Starting point is 01:07:35 Our friend Carl, who we had on last week, a week before maybe, Carl made a really good video about thermal versus night vision on his in range TV channel. I'll link it in the notes, because I think it's worth people checking out if they're not familiar with this technology at all. The optics he used were not the optics they're using,
Starting point is 01:07:51 but these thermal optics, you've seen them a lot with the SDF, especially in a phreen, they'll do these night missions, right? And when you look at the recording from the thermal optic, it looks like people are glowing because they are the hottest things
Starting point is 01:08:06 in that area. And it makes it very easy to target people. And HTS used these a lot when they were attacking Aleppo, right? These thermal optics that they mount to on their rifles and that allowed them to pretty much,
Starting point is 01:08:20 the United States used to talk about owning the knight, right? because it had night vision when no one else does. Night vision is proliferated a long way now and that means that some of the ways that they used to use night vision, they can't anymore. Like, for instance, they used to send out lasers that were only visible under night vision
Starting point is 01:08:35 to aim weapons. If your adversary has night vision as well, you've now created a giant line that goes right back to you if you're using a laser aiming device. So you can't do that. But these thermal optics, especially when they're fighting against Assyrian Arab Army, who,
Starting point is 01:08:50 I mean, these conscripts are massively demoralized, right? they're underpaid, they're underfed. Did you meet any people who defected? Yes, yes. I met a number of people who had, and some who had also had to flee, like, from Aleppo and whatnot because they had been on, like, rebels fighting the Assad regime. And some had wound up in the SDF. Some were just civilians living in the area.
Starting point is 01:09:11 I also, there was also a number of folks who commuted, like, to and from regime-held territory just because, like, if you were someone that wasn't particularly wanted, you could do that. Yeah. It was a very confusing situation for a lot of people. Yeah, extremely. And I think when you meet the people who have been a regime of soldiers and come across, often they're like, they seem to be happy being waiters or working in the market in Roshava because their pay was so bad and their lives were so miserable as conscripts
Starting point is 01:09:39 that they'd rather just come and work, you know, any job they can get in A&ES. And I think when you've got those guys going up against well-trained people from HTS with these thermos, with these thermal optics, with these using drones, their communications were solid. You know, you can tell from their appearance that a lot of these guys are professionalized. They're almost indistinguishable from US troops. Like, I think you and I had both responded to this tweet
Starting point is 01:10:05 about some YouTube guy was shocked that people were wearing helmets and body armor, which that has been the aesthetic of violence, at least in places where the US has operated for, I don't know, half a decade. would you say, like the sort of U.S. Special Forces look. Yeah, I mean, and that's just the norm for dressing. If you're fighting in a war anywhere on the planet now,
Starting point is 01:10:29 like whether you're the Russian army or some militia in Syria, it's, you know, plate carrier, usually like some sort of fast helmet. You've got, you know, a belt with sidearm mag pouches and then usually either an AKM or some sort of AR-style weapon. Like everybody dresses that way. Everybody looks very similar. Now, because it's just the most kind of, I mean, number one, there's a lot of that gear lying around and it's cheap.
Starting point is 01:10:54 And number two, like it works. It's a load out that works. Yeah, it's very practical for what they're doing. I think number three as well, look, we should not understate the desire to look like your avatar on call of duty. Yes, yes. It also looks cool. It looks like being in a movie. And that matters a lot to the kind of young men who start fighting in wars.
Starting point is 01:11:14 Yeah, yeah. People, I think if you've not been, you won't realize how young a lot of these people are. This incredible professionalism, incredible professionalism I'm overstating it, but this dramatic change in the appearance and conduct of these rebels, particularly HTS, occurred over about three or four years from the ceasefire in 2020 to this offensive in 2024. And I think it gives us an insight into the way that war is changing, right? That access to information is easier than it ever has been.
Starting point is 01:11:50 and access to a lot of these technologies has proliferated massively. Because we've seen in Myanmar, right? Drones proliferate. People 3D print little night vision goggles in Myanmar. I spoke to Miaok about it about a year and a half ago. People remember Miaok from our Myanmar series about 3D printing little night vision goggles
Starting point is 01:12:11 that use the camera from those security cameras that can kind of see at night. They use those and then a tiny LCD screen. Of course, drones are. everywhere now, right? Things like plate carriers, even you see rebels in Myanmar wearing them, buying them from Ali Express. Like all of the technology, all of the tactics are also, like much easier to find on the internet. You know, Rob and I have both spoken to people who go, who have said they go on YouTube to learn about like military tactics and small arms even
Starting point is 01:12:40 and, you know, how to use different weapon systems when they capture them. I think it's a real change in the way that conflict is conducted. And it's one that we will probably continue to see as like, you know, the world isn't getting any more peaceful. Nope. And with a lot of, you know, Russia and Iran took a massive L in Syria. That doesn't mean that they're not gone as sort of global actors. We will continue to see, particularly Russia, obviously, fighting in Ukraine. And I think it's worth looking at what happened in Syria so that we can understand what
Starting point is 01:13:11 we're going to see in other parts of the world. Yep. One of the ways I like to think about it that is crucial for people to understand is that Syria has largely been the laboratory in which the 21st century was cooked up. Like, all of our futures have to some extent been built in Syria, both like, this is where we get a lot of the fuel behind the right wing surge that has been occurring over the last few years started because of the refugee crisis, you know, but also a lot of the tactics and weapons, shit that like Israel is doing right now in Gaza, like Syria was the lab to a significant
Starting point is 01:13:47 extent for how authoritarian regimes would crack down. And it was also the impetus behind a lot of the most significant things that have been happening over the last decade and change. And it might still be already, Germany and the Netherlands have stopped processing asylum applications from Syria, which is concerning. Yep. But yeah, I think it's worth continuing to keep an eye on. I will continue to post about it.
Starting point is 01:14:12 We will continue to inform you about it here. We will continue to bring on people who have. more expertise and insight than we do. So yeah, we hope you'll keep an eye on it. And I just want to end by saying that, like, the Democratic project in Rojava is under a great deal of threat. Yes. Currently, more than it has been for perhaps a decade.
Starting point is 01:14:30 Yep. They do not have an ally in the United States. They do not, as far as we know, have an ally in Israel. And from what we've seen, it's one thing what Israel says. It's another thing what Israel does. And what Israel has been doing today is bombing ammunition that they already have in the A&ES. And that means that, like, it's more important than ever that you do what you can to support them.
Starting point is 01:14:52 If you go to the emergency committee for Rajava, you can find them online, you find them on all different kinds of social media. They have a toolkit for supporting Rajava right now. I would urge you if you care about that project, if you care about building democracy without the state, you care about building a place where women and men are equal and the revolution was led by women. It's not a revolution that, like, include women, it's a revolution by women for women. I would encourage you to do what you can to support them. All right. Yep, that's all.
Starting point is 01:15:21 Hey, everyone. Robert Evans here. And this is, It Could Happen here. Obviously, one of the things that's been happening here, probably the biggest story of the last week or so at least, is the shooting of United Healthcare CEO, Brian Thompson, by an alleged shooter named Luigi Mangione. Mangione is, you know, an interesting character.
Starting point is 01:15:59 People have had a lot to say about him. And so I went through his arborchew. online footprint, everything I can find on his social media, and I wrote an article for my substack Shatterzone, and I'm going to be reading that in a slightly amended form for you now as today's episode. I've spent much of the last 10 years reading manifestos and being a fly on the wall in different little online boltholes where extremists plan and seek to incite mass shootings. When Luigi Mangione, the suspected shooter of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson, was arrested at a McDonald's, it didn't take long for digital sleuths to put together a comprehensive record of his
Starting point is 01:16:36 online activity. I will tell you now that nothing he read or posted explains why he gunned down an insurance executive better than this single image in the background of his Twitter profile. And the image is, of course, of an x-ray showing four screws in someone's lower base spine, apparently due to a lumbar spinal fusion surgery. The day after I wrote this article, the New York Times published a piece after finding Luigi's Reddit. The piece by Mike Baker, Mike Isaac, and my old boss at Bellingat, Eric Toller, confirms that he had a spinal fusion surgery,
Starting point is 01:17:09 that he had dealt with back pain for years, which had been minor and then gotten much worse after a surfing injury, and had grown even worse after slipping on a piece of paper, caused persistent problems, including pain when he sat down, twitching leg muscles, and numbness in his groin and bladder,
Starting point is 01:17:24 according to the New York Times. He had that spinal fusion surgery, which he had been deeply frightened of ahead of time, but which resolved those symptoms, and then he continued to have other symptoms, probably unrelated to the back pain. It's unclear if the back pain came back. But what is clear is that he wrote constantly online
Starting point is 01:17:42 about pain and about his struggles with various other health issues, including a persistent brain fog that he seemed unable to get care for. His friend RJ, who lived with him at an intentional community for digital workers in Honolulu starting in 2022, confirms that Luigi suffered an injury shortly after taking a basic surfing class after moving there. This laid him up in bed for about a week, unable to move. His friends had to seek a special bed to help him with the pain. In general, we have ample confirmation that he was someone who dealt with a series of escalating health issues
Starting point is 01:18:17 that changed him from an extremely active, physically fit young man into somebody who felt like they were no longer able to do or enjoy the things they had previously been able to do and enjoy. Now, this is most of what we know about the health history of Luigi Mangione as of December 10th now when I record this, 2024. As I write this, a purported manifesto is making the rounds online, which discusses health issues his mother-faced. It's still unclear if that manifesto is real. Ken Clippenstein has finally gotten access to what he claims is the draft of the manifesto that the shooter had on him when he was arrested by the police. I don't know if that's a manifesto or something he wrote while nervous because he largely addresses the cops in it and tells them, you know,
Starting point is 01:19:04 what to expect when searching him. But again, at the moment, this purported manifesto that was also posted on substack, very unclear as to whether or not that's real. So for this today, we're going to stick with what we can verify. And what we can verify is that Luigi Mangione suffered from chronic back pain. He had five different books in his good reads that he read about dealing with back pain and healing from back pain, as well as other chronic health issues. If he is the shooter, then, we can confirm he also chose to act out by targeting an insurance
Starting point is 01:19:35 CEO. The New York Times has stated that he was arrested with a 262-word manifesto, which has since been leaked, and in that manifesto, he describes the executives who run insurance companies as parasites who, quote, continue to abuse our country for immense profit because the American public has allowed them to get away with it. In addition to all this, we know that Louis Luigi came from a wealthy family. His grandfather made millions running a series of country clubs, nursing homes, and office buildings, and hospitals. One of his cousins is a Republican state legislator. It is unclear if Luigi had any access to the family money, but he was clearly financially comfortable enough to move to Hawaii and pay to join an intentional community. He had engineering
Starting point is 01:20:15 degrees and a promising early employment history. This is a man who had options. He could have been almost anything he wanted to be. And the thing that he ultimately chose to do with his life after suffering a debilitating series of health issues was to shoot the CEO of United Healthcare. Luigi Mangione was radicalized by pain. It's a well-known fact that most terrorists tend to be radicalized in communities. Much of my career was spent watching 8chan turned from an image board dedicated into Gamergate into a machine for generating white nationalist mass shooters.
Starting point is 01:21:00 These people often appeared as lone wolves to the untrained eye, but they were radicalized intentionally in and by a community. Much will be made in the coming days and months about Luigi's online footprint. I will go into some detail about where he spent his time and how we should characterize it, but I want to be clear at the outset that his intellectual diet does not seem to be what made him choose to take action, although it may have influenced the specific kind of action he took. Luigi followed a lot of accounts on Twitter that are wildly popular with young men, like Joe Rogan. He listened to Jordan Peterson and Tucker Carlson and agreed,
Starting point is 01:21:34 with them on certain things, but he also had cogent criticisms of their arguments and presentation. Here's what he said about Jordan Peterson on May 14th. This is why Jordan Peterson always bothers me. Overcomplicates everything he says aloud, wasting everyone's mental bandwidth and having to decipher it. The best teachers are the best communicators, clear, succinct, simple language, which does kind of gel with the fact that he wrote three words on the bullets he used to shoot that CEO. Luigi also expressed frustration with wokeness and expressed opinions common on the libertarian tech influenced right, like a belief in the social benefits of Christianity without expressing popular religious beliefs himself.
Starting point is 01:22:14 I've found one post where he talks about how nature abhors a vacuum and shares an article about how Christianity's decline has unleashed terrible new gods. Some of his posts took the form of memes typical to online discourse of this type. But I've also read an essay that he wrote when he was 15. years old, discussing how Christianity persevered over paganism in ancient Rome. And that essay exhibits a long-standing interest in this topic and a capacity to treat it with nuance. His paper is very well written, particularly for a 15-year-old. And while his conclusions are highly arguable, it's not the work of someone hopelessly brainwashed by culture war bullshit. Luigi liked to think and read and come to his own conclusions. He was interested in AI, in cryptocurrency, in life extension,
Starting point is 01:23:00 and in a constellation of tech-bro-adjacent attitudes and philosophies often described as the Gray Tribe. I found one post where he talks about a senior speech he gave on the future, quote, topics ranging from conscious artificial intelligence to human immortality. The term Gray Tribe was coined by an influential rationalist blogger and psychiatrist named Scott Alexander Siskind. He used it to refer to an intersection of nerd culture with Silicon Valley influenced ideology descending from the online rationalist movement.
Starting point is 01:23:31 This community existed outside of traditional right-left ideology. Now, I've not found any evidence that Luigi was a specific fan of Scott, but he expressed appreciation for several figures associated with this big tent movement, including Peter Thiel. If we describe Scott as representing the more liberal flank of the Grey Tribe, Luigi seemed to be drawn to folks closer to the right-wing side of things. The worst person to use this terminology would probably be Teal Associate Belaji Shrinivasan, who has used gray-tribe framework to describe his ideal big-tech takeover of San Francisco and purging of progressives.
Starting point is 01:24:06 However, I must stress that Luigi Mangione never expressed any support for this end of the ideology that I can find. He was a young man of libertarian inclinations who worked in big tech and had ties to San Francisco, but he was also clearly someone still making his mind up about the world. As information about him has come out, I have seen people on the left who initially saw his acts as heroic, lament that he was a bigoted tech bro. Scott Alexander has been credibly described as a eugenic supporter, as have many other people adjacent to the strains of rationalism and big tech ideology in which Mangione dabbled.
Starting point is 01:24:41 Luigi's Twitter account does indeed include weird posts from his time in Japan, where he theorizes on how to solve falling birth rates by banning pocket pussies and video game cafes. At other points, he complains about Japanese citizens acting like, quote-unquote, NPCs. But race science and eugenics don't seem to have been a focus for him, and I would caution anyone against being overly reductive about a 26-year-old's beliefs based purely on a handful of posts that bear no relation to his actions in the world.
Starting point is 01:25:10 The evidence that we have of his online footprint suggests someone who was not unmoved by certain arguments rooted in social justice. He expressed admiration for a quote from Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-5 about criminalization of poverty in the United States. quote, America is the wealthiest nation in the world, but its people are mainly poor, and poor Americans are urged to hate themselves. To quote the American humorist, Ken Hubbard, it ain't no disgrace to be poor, but it might as well be. It is in fact a crime for an American to be poor, even though America is a nation of the poor. Every other nation has folk traditions of men who were poor, but extremely wise and virtuous, and therefore more esteemable than anyone with power and gold. No such tales are told by the American poor. Now, Luigi is certainly not the idealized leftist icon some had hoped, but he doesn't easily fit into any other box we've got. His interest in gray tribe-adjacent thinkers and self-help books
Starting point is 01:26:02 written by productivity hackers like Tim Ferriss is incredibly common among young men. Much has been made of the four-star review he gave Industrial Society and its future, the manifesto of Ted Kaczynski. But as with the rest of his media diet, he did not view Ted through the simple lens of hero worship. Here's what he wrote. quote, quote, he was a violent individual, rightfully imprisoned, who maimed innocent people. While these actions tend to be characterized as those of a crazy Luddite, however, they are more accurately seen as those of an extreme political revolutionary.
Starting point is 01:26:34 Now, we know those words, his condemnation of Kaczynski maiming innocent people are not just words, because we have seen the attack he allegedly chose to carry out. Not a series of bombings that killed and maimed innocent people with no real power in our society, but a surgical strike against a man at the very top of the system he hated and one that caused no collateral damage. He was capable of appreciating some of Kaczynski's conclusions, but ultimately the quote he chose to highlight in his review came not from the manifesto but from a Reddit post made by a guy with the username Boss Potato Ness, who otherwise mostly commented on the Grateful Dead.
Starting point is 01:27:10 This post praises Kaczynski for having the balls to realize that peaceful protest has gotten us absolutely nowhere and complains economic protest isn't possible in the current system. As a result, violence against those who lead us to such destruction is justified as self-defense. Quote, these companies don't care about you or your kids or your grandkids. They have zero qualms about burning down the planet for a buck. So why should we have any qualms about burning them down to survive? This is not the kind of radicalization pathway. Our media is good at discussing or analyzing.
Starting point is 01:27:42 The things Luigi read and the people he interacted with online absolutely influenced what he did and how. But boss potatoness is not some Nazi on 8chan trying to provoke a shooting spree for the lulls. He's a random dude angry about the things 70% or more of the country is angry about, and he's expressing a lack of faith in a peaceful way forward. If you read this post in its entirety, as Luigi did, you can't miss the pain there, anxiety and horror at the inevitability of climate change and the looming knowledge that everything good and green on this earth is being fed into the bloody maw of an industry concerned only with Max maximizing profit. In more ways than one, Luigi Mangione was radicalized by pain.
Starting point is 01:28:33 I know many people who suffer with chronic pain and ongoing medical issues. I will tell you that it is not uncommon in dark moments after fruitless hours-long calls about dropped medications or receiving surprise bills for them to joke about what they'd like to do to the executives who run these companies. These are jokes made in moments of despair and pain. No one I know would ever act on them because they all have lives, people to care for and to whom they are responsible. They would never really do anything because the consequences to their own loved ones would be so severe. In the months before the shooting, Luigi had cut off all contact with his family. He admitted this in court.
Starting point is 01:29:11 His parents eventually filed a missing persons report in November of this year, and we have evidence that friends tried to contact him on his family's behalf via social media. As was first noted by a Twitter account, Luigi Mangione expressed interest in. in the works of Paul Scalus, a tech lawyer, writer, and prominent poster who writes about the Lindy effect, a concept that boils down to this. The only effective judge of things is time. Scalus is popular among the set of people Mangione found himself drawn towards, and writes about the wisdom of ideas from antiquity. It's not hard to grasp what a man with an academic interest
Starting point is 01:29:46 in ancient Rome might see in him. On December 4th, 2024, Paul made this post. Look, if you don't of many kids, and you're one of these guys just floating around the big cities. You got your education, but you never really used it to make money. You got a dead-end back-office job, and a future of just working somewhere until you're 75 and then dying. Go ahead and do something. It's been suggested that this may have influenced Luigi, and I think the timeline makes it clear that cannot be the case. Luigi cut off contact with his family and most of his friends months before this. The evidence suggests that he had planned this attack for quite some time. He arrived in New York City on November 24th on a bus bound from Atlanta, where he did not reside.
Starting point is 01:30:27 So I don't think this post represents a piece of his radicalization journey, nor was Scalus advocating for people to kill CEOs. But the situation and mindset Scalus described does speak to a lot of young men like Luigi, young and educated, but without intense responsibilities or much hope for the future. This subset of society has always overproduced terrorists, revolutionaries, and of course, mass shooters. The United States has a mass-shooter culture. Over the last several decades since Columbine, we have grown used to the idea that people who are angry
Starting point is 01:31:00 and no longer care if they live or die will sometimes choose to go down killing strangers. In most cases, these shootings are totally random, the victims chosen with no concern beyond maximum body count and maximum attention. More recently, especially since 2019, mass shootings had become increasingly politicized. Different extremists, mostly right-wing,
Starting point is 01:31:22 have used them to put theory into praxis and earn free PR for their causes. Most people abhor these actions, but we have grown used to the idea that other people will use such acts as a way to spread messages that might otherwise get ignored. It is not coincidental that the white genocide conspiracy theories from Brenton-Tarrant's Christchurch Manifesto are now mainstream talking points and conservative politics. Luigi Mangione grew up with all of this. He would have come to the same conclusions about the role shootings play in our society as any other reasonably aware person. What he did was, of course, not a mass shooting. But the assassination,
Starting point is 01:31:57 his actions afterwards, and his possession of a manifesto were all clearly plotted out by someone who knew the social script for how this kind of thing goes in the USA. In the wake of this shooting, every media organization commenting on it has had to grapple with the waves of public enthusiasm for Luigi's actions. Right-wing media figures condemning the left for celebrating this assassination have been criticized by their own readers and listeners. Insurance companies have pulled down lists of their executives from the internet. This is because they, too, understand the shooter culture of the United States. Like everyone else, they know that any mass shooting that meets with massive media coverage
Starting point is 01:32:34 and interest will spawn copycats. The assassination Luigi is believed to have carried out was new and exciting. It demanded the public's attention in a way that most mass shootings don't. At almost the same time, the United Healthcare CEO was gunned down, a gunman walked into a religious school near Oroville, California, and shot two young children before killing himself. This shooting drew almost no national attention. It was entirely drowned out by the execution of an insurance industry CEO.
Starting point is 01:33:03 The armed and disaffected young men who are most drawn to this sort of thing will not miss this fact. I believe Luigi Mangione was radicalized by pain. The shooters who follow him will all have their own reasons for what they do, for their own journeys to that violent end. but ultimately they'll do what they do because Luigi proved it's what gets attention for now. Welcome to It Could Happen here, a podcast where I, your host Mia Wong, talks about inflation. We have covered inflation on this show extensively, and now it is once again time to return to it as we head into a world
Starting point is 01:33:57 where concerns about inflation and the economy are the most cited justifications for people voting for one Donald Trump. but unlike our other oh god and so many episodes about inflation this one is going to be a bit different is going to start out somewhat similar in that i am going to lay out a brief explanation of the sort of material causes of the inflation cycle and talk a bit about inflation theories which is what we've been largely doing on this show for a while and then i'm going to explain why none of that shit mattered why none of what was actually causing inflation mattered a single bit because ultimately our experience of inflation and more importantly of price in general is based on a sense of justice or as the academics call it a moral economy and not on you know anything
Starting point is 01:34:44 that's sort of going on so let's begin with what is going on with inflation now as we've discussed before on this show most economists do not understand why inflation happens people will take theories. Those theories are usually quite bad. There is no mainstream consensus on what is going on. As both me and my friends at the magazine Strange Matters have pointed out, former Federal Reserve Governor Daniel Turullo said, quote, the substantive point is that we do not, at present, have a theory of inflation dynamics that works sufficiently well to be of use for the business of real-time monetary policymaking. So again, this is a guy who used to be a Federal Reserve Governor who has admitted that they have no idea what the fuck is going on with
Starting point is 01:35:34 inflation. Looking at the extent to which people don't know what's going on to inflation and how the various theories simply don't work is a large part of Steve Mann's notes towards a theory of inflation, which is a strange manners article that a lot of this will be pulled from. And we've had Steve on the show to talk about this before. So there are a lot of theories about inflation and none of them work very well. Inflation on a fundamental level is just prime. prices going up. People have this tendency to think about inflation in terms of the value of money going down. But on a pure level, all inflation says is that prices go up. Now, the most common theory of inflation is, you know, inflation is based on there being too much money in the economy.
Starting point is 01:36:18 And the thing about those theories is that they don't work outside of like a very few specific examples of hyperinflation that loomed large over our understanding of what inflation is, even though they have absolutely quantitatively and theoretically they have absolutely nothing to do with the inflation that we've seen over the past four years. So instead of talking about that shit anymore, man and the Strange Matters crew developed what they call the supply chain theory of inflation. So I'm going to read the quote from notes towards the theory of inflation. As economist JW Mason recently remarked on his website, inflation is just an increase in prices. So for every theory of price setting, there's a corresponding theory of inflation. If inflation theory is downstream of price
Starting point is 01:37:01 setting, this is still a quote from that article, but not the JW Manning quote. If inflation is downstream of price theory, then no account of inflation can begin with the macro economy at all, since prices are set at the micro level. Rather, you need to look at particular industrial sectors, their supply chains, and ultimately the pricing decisions of their firms. Only then are the true causes of inflation, both the internal failures of the industrial system and external shocks to it, which can cause price rises, revealed. Man's price theory is fairly simple, right? It flows from the basic observation that prices are set by guys in offices, not by something, you know, abstractness like market forces and
Starting point is 01:37:42 supply and demand. In economic terms, what this argument amounts to is the argument that corporations are price makers and not price takers, right? There's a bunch of guys. They sit in offices, and they develop a strategy about what prices are going to be, and that's how they're set. And what matters to the people who develop prices are things like Goodwill, which is to say not pissing off their customers by raising prices,
Starting point is 01:38:06 and things like their balance sheets, which reflect their incomes and costs. Price in this model is just cost plus markup. And we know this is how prices are actually set, because, as man points out, people have gone through and done surveys of pricing managers and asked them how they set prices, And the answer is costless workup.
Starting point is 01:38:26 So what would cause these guys in offices to increase their prices? Well, these are companies that are all part of a global supply chain, a very, very broad global supply chain and a very complicated global supply chain. This means that if the cost of the stuff they buy from other suppliers on the chain in order to produce what they're selling, if those prices go up because there is, to use a purely hypothetical example, a giant global pandemic, those costs increases eventually had to be passed down to the people paying the products so that the corporation can maintain its balance sheets and maintain its
Starting point is 01:39:03 sort of price plus markup as something that, you know, covers their costs, right? This is what set off the giant inflation spike in the U.S. and the Biden administration. You know, the cost side of cost plus markup exploded. But it doesn't really matter why the prices increased for our purposes. And our purposes are looking at sort of why Trump won the election. election. What was important, you know, about inflation wasn't even the price increases. It was the narratives around inflation and how we understand the economy at a moral level. And for that, we're going to turn to one of the most popular accounts of inflation, so-called greedflation. Now, as we've said,
Starting point is 01:39:42 price is cost plus markup, and you can raise prices because of cost. But you can also do this because you want to increase your markup. And this is something that happens. And this is something that happened during the inflation search. Companies realized that consumers were willing to accept higher prices without the usual goodwill hit because they thought the prices were, you know, going up because inflation was happening. And because they were willing to accept the higher prices and not, you know, try to shop somewhere else, corporations went, fuck it, let's just keep jacking the prices
Starting point is 01:40:11 up. And this really, really pissed people off. It still does. And this is something that was true across the entire political spectrum, right? People were very, very angry about this sort of re-inflation thing. And that rage is more important than the technical details of why inflation happens. Because the way we understand inflation is not through conventional economics, we understand it through the moral economy. And when we come back from a different kind of economy,
Starting point is 01:40:39 which is to say this ad break, we are going to examine what the moral economy is, how it differs from our sort of regular economy, where it came from, and why it's relevant to our situation now. and we are so back. All right, let's talk about the moral economy. The moral economy is a concept developed by the British historian E.P. Thompson in the early 1970s. Thompson was attempting to explain the previous century and a half of red riots by what he termed the English crowd by applying anthropological principles to their actions.
Starting point is 01:41:24 I'm just going to read from Thompson's The Moral Economy of the English crowd here. It is, of course, true, that right. riots were triggered off by soaring prices, by malpractice among dealers or by hunger. But these grievances operated within a popular consensus as to what were legitimate and what were illegitimate practices in marketing, milling, baking, etc. This in its turn was grounded upon a consistent traditional view of social norms and obligations, of the proper economic function of several parties within the community, which, when taken together, can be said to constitute the more,
Starting point is 01:42:00 economy of the poor, in outrage to these moral assumptions, quite as much as actual deprivation, was the usual occasion for direct action. Now, the moral economy of the English crowd in the 18th century is about a very specific period in British history, which is to say the 1700s, and about how people thought bread should be sold. Peasants and the new urban workers had very specific ideas about, you know, bread, about how bread should be produced, about who should be allowed to sell it, about where and when they should be allowed to sell it, about how it should be sold, how it should not be sold. And because of this, and, you know, because of their experience in sort of previous systems that before the sort of imposition of the free market system, or quote-unquote,
Starting point is 01:42:43 free market system, they have a very specific series of hatreds. They hate middlemen, they hate grain hoarders, they hate all of the aspects of the new, quote-unquote, free market that impose additional costs and burdens on them. And they also believed that elites have a kind of moral duty to the masses based on the norms and traditions of their society. And when they welch on that deal in a way that makes people's lives worse, people get extremely pissed off. These peasants and, you know, urban workers particularly hated price increases,
Starting point is 01:43:17 and they hated price increases so much that this frequently turned into riots. but the actual contents of these riots are very interesting. Instead of simply seizing all of the grain, they do something else entirely. Here's Thompson again, quote, the central action in this pattern is not the sack of granaries and grain or flour, but the action of, quote, setting the price, from a few lines later, they might then order the farmer to send, quote, convenient quantities to market to be sold, quote,
Starting point is 01:43:47 and add a, quote, reasonable price. the justices were further empowered to, quote, set down a certain price upon a bushel of every kind of grain. So if you follow this here, right, what's happening in these British bread riots is that the revolt isn't just about their, you know, being a price to grain. It's that people have a very, very specific moral understanding of what the price of grain should be. And they take direct actions that are designed to set the price of grain to the level they thought it should rest at. And this kind of action is extremely common sort of across Europe in this entire time period, right? It's also a hallmark of the French Revolution.
Starting point is 01:44:29 You can see in this, right, in this sort of rage over price, in the sense of justice, the outlines of our current moral economy. You have, you know, staggering outrage as price in Clarice's seen as unjust, which is re-inflation, or just inflation in general,
Starting point is 01:44:44 because people are just mad about the concept of the price going up, paired with rage at the elite, which manifests in sort of hatred of Joe Biden and the Democrats for being the people who presided over these price increases. We also have our own rage about price gouging. In immediate market terms,
Starting point is 01:45:00 and this is something that the most annoying libertarians and the defenders of the market love to point out, there's nothing actually wrong by market economics about, say, Martin Schrelli jacking the price of medicine up until you can't afford it anymore, or, you know, other things that we find extremely terrible, like people jacking the price of water, when people need water, like bottled water,
Starting point is 01:45:21 dream hurricanes, we are all outraged. So why do we feel morally strong about it? And that is the moral economy, baby. This is something that, you know, these reactions, right? The emotional reactions we have to this, the sense of injustice that we feel, are almost entirely outside of the realm of what you would call traditional economics, right?
Starting point is 01:45:41 And that's because we're functioning on something that is, in some senses, older than that kind of economics. But there's something else going on here at a fundamental level. And what's important about, you know, price and the reaction to inflation is that it's an outrage based on a sense of justice, right? This rage is not a measure of direct exploitation necessarily. I think it was the political scientist James C. Scott, who wrote his own book called The Moral Economy of the Peasant.
Starting point is 01:46:11 And Scott argues that, you know, and E.P. Thompson also argues this, that it's the moral angle that causes people to revolt, not the direct level of exploitation, you can in fact, you know, inflict hideous exploitation on people as long as they think that it's just. But when you violate these moral principles, that's when people really lose it. But it also means, right, the fact that the sort of sense of outrage is not necessarily directly tied to the exploitation level. It means that rich people can be bad about inflation, even though they're completely fine, because these people also still have this sort of sense of justice about what prices should be. Now, it's also worth noting here that it is possible to have high inflation rates and have everyone be fine.
Starting point is 01:46:56 In fact, we have discussed scenarios like that on this show. In my episodes about the rise of Lula, the current president of Brazil, we discussed how military dictatorship in Brazil produced an economy that was, you know, you had 20% year-on-year inflation, right? but also you had 40% yearly wage increases, and so everyone was like kind of fine with it because the amount of money you were making was going up every year, so nobody really cared about even things like the military dictatorship itself.
Starting point is 01:47:22 There was not an enormous amount of opposition to it. But then Brazil's trade unions figured out the government had been lying about inflation numbers, and this started off a series of protests that, you know, would send Lula like into the beginning of his political career, and eventually this is one of the sort of dominoes that leads to knocking down the military dictatorship.
Starting point is 01:47:40 and that's because, you know, the level of exploitation people were living under hadn't changed, but the deal that they had made, right, the sort of deal with the military government of like, we won't do anything, our wages will continue to go up and inflation will continue to work at a certain level such that we're still getting paid. That deal was violated and that sense of injustice was powerful enough to really kickstart an extremely powerful Brazilian labor movements and kickstart the fall of a dictatorship. Now, one of Thompson's arguments was that the success of Adam Smith and his cohort, and Smith is moving around and making his arguments about what the free market is in the period where we're dealing with all of these sort of grand crises. His argument is that the success of Smith was moving economics out of the domain of morality where it was born. Economics was originally an aspect of moral philosophy, right? It was a part of that discipline.
Starting point is 01:48:34 But, you know, Smith and his people move it out. And this is why liberal economists find the anger about influence. inflation so incomprehensible. They see it in purely statistical terms. It go like, look, the economy is great. Why is everyone mad? And, you know, I could get into here a bunch of arguments about whether or not this is actually true. I mean, I'm going to return to my sort of classic argument about like, well, yeah, okay, even if you believe all of the economic indicators are great for cis people, like, I'm trans. For me, the economy is, it has an unemployment rate of like 1936 U.S. Great Depression. So, you know, there are a lot of people for who the economic outlook is not good, people for whom, you know, even the wage increases that they got in this period still leave them in sort of hideous and crippling poverty. And none of that shit matters because the statistics that these people are trying to use to try to get everyone to calm down are not operating in the moral economy. They're operating outside of it because they're from a tradition that is specifically about not working inside the moral economy. And the people that are interacting with are in the moral economy. But why is it like this, right? Why? Why do you?
Starting point is 01:49:39 do we have a moral economy that functions this way? In the case of the peasants and, you know, the working people of the 1700s across Europe, and you know, this goes on through the 1800s too, right, we can trace the moral economy to a very, very specific set of conditions and traditions and traditions rooted in how people traditionally bought bread. But what are the conditions of the modern American moral economy? To understand that, we need to turn to the concept of price itself. But first, do you know what guarantees low price? Actually, I probably should not say the word guarantee. That is probably staggeringly illegal.
Starting point is 01:50:14 You know what probably has low prices. It's the products and services that support this podcast. We are back. So let us now turn to price. The political economist Shemshong Bickler and Jonathan Netson argue that price is the unit of what orders capitalist society. you know, Price is like the fundamental unit of political economy. It's the thing that orders and structures the entire society. If you want to know more about this, read their book Capitalist Power, it's quite good.
Starting point is 01:50:57 I am mentioning them because I'm about to misuse their argument completely in tandem with a quote from Marx that I am also about to misuse. And I am going to do this to make a different point. So I agree with Bickler and Neitzin that price is the unit that orders capitalist society. but what I'm interested in is price as what's called a social hieroglyphic. Now, social hieroglyphic is a term that's a one-off term that Marx used once to talk about how price mystifies the nature of value, whatever.
Starting point is 01:51:29 I don't care about that. I care about it because there's something very interesting about price itself, and there's something interesting about the notion of a hieroglyph. Now, Mark is using hieroglyph in the term of like it's something you have to be decoded, right? Because he's writing in the 1800s, this is, you know, everyone's obsessed with hieroglyphs.
Starting point is 01:51:45 I am using hieroglyphs because hieroglyphs are also a method of encoding complex information into a single character, right? Price as a social hieroglyph is important because price is the mechanism through which we understand and often through which we fail to understand the world. Our entire lives in the eyes of the people who rule this world, our entire lives are captured in a single number. Everything you do at work is ultimately just a price on a quarter. corporate spreadsheet. The entirety of the labor process of producing a good, every hour worked,
Starting point is 01:52:19 every drop of sweat, every tear, every broken body, and shattered city and trade union is lined up in front of a firing squad, appears in the end as a simple number. Price. To express it another way, feels Daniel Connett the painted bird from their song The Butcher's Share. Let's take a walk around the old bazaar where every little thing has treffered far. Every pair of pants and grain of rice contains this poorer story in its price. A story of the power people wield. A story about factories and fields.
Starting point is 01:52:51 A story of which you'll never have to be aware just as long as the butcher gets his share. Price, this single number, is how we understand the world. And it causes us to treat price and thus inflation as a matter of morality and not economic rationality, because price
Starting point is 01:53:12 is the way that our society causes us to interact with people. It's the way we interact with objects. It is the thing that structures the way we all behave and understands the world. But price has another function. It is the gatekeeper of
Starting point is 01:53:30 capitalist society. Because price and a man with a gun is what's standing between you and the ability to live your life. Outrage at the moral economics of price increases are similar but not identical to the impulses behind looting. Everything that you've ever need and have been unable to get is when you walk into a grocery store
Starting point is 01:53:54 just sitting there right in front of you. But between you and it is a number and a man with a gun. And the man with a gun fucking hates you. So the moment you're free, you just take it. Price and the entire economic system behind it is organized very specifically so you do. don't do this. E.P. Thompson argued that the moral economy was pre-political.
Starting point is 01:54:18 The movements that it produced could be extremely well-organized, but they fundamentally were not the real movement which abolishes the present state of things. In 2020, we, for a brief moment, saw the outlines of that movement. The uprising was brutally crushed. In its place, we saw the emergence of pre-political concerns about price, right? We saw, once again, a massive panic of the moment. that inflation. And this is not to say that, you know, inflation didn't hurt people. It did. It was in large extent a fiasco. But look at the politics for a moment that this has produced, right? What the media
Starting point is 01:54:54 understands is economic anxiety and what I think we can now better understand as the moral economy that is a result of the fact that our entire economic system is structured by price and that we encode all of the information in our life into prices that we sell ourselves for and that we in turn or sold things for. Those prices going up, the product of it was Trump, right? And there's, I think, a reason why these sort of pre-economic explanations are preferred to the answers and, you know, to the actions that people saw in 2020. Four years later, Portland, one of the centers of the uprising, now has almost every grocery
Starting point is 01:55:33 store at the exit of it is armed guards with guns. And these guards are there to maintain the price system. they're there because for a very brief moment, people started thinking something dangerous. They started thinking, what if this didn't have a price? It could happen here, the podcast that's happening right now. This is maybe the foremost of the putting things back together episodes.
Starting point is 01:56:18 I'm your host, Mia Wong. With me is James Stout. A guy who likes it to put things together. Yeah. And on the subject of putting things together, over the last, I don't even know, three, four weeks, The question I have been asked the most by everyone is, how do I start organizing? And, you know, the problem with how do I start organizing is that it's not a question that has clean or simple answers.
Starting point is 01:56:44 Now, the most common answer you get is just join an org, and the problem is that most of the people who you are hearing this from are already in an org and want you to join their org. Yeah. Also, the problem is a lot of the orgs that are currently dominating left to spaces in the, in the, in the, United States are trash. Yeah. And bad for people, bad for people in them, bad people who are not in them. Yeah. Here's a little test you can do. Is your org currently sad that Bashar al-Assad is no longer governing Syria? Because if that's the case, leave. Yep. And that's a lot of orgs. That's a lot of orgs. Yeah, that takes most of them right. Now, we'll come back to orgs in a bit. But what I'll say about orgs is that, okay, if you know an organization in your area that you like and you think does good work and most importantly spends their time actually doing work instead of either infighting or talking
Starting point is 01:57:37 about doing work, you join them, it'll be good. But the important thing about organizations, and this is something we'll come back to later, the important thing about organizations is they have a lot of people. Yeah. And the thing that makes organizing work is people. It's not organizations. It's not even necessarily ideological labels. It's there being a bunch of people who you can use and who want to do things. Yeah. But something I realized, the more I had these conversations, right?
Starting point is 01:58:01 You know, I'm having it with friends. I'm having them with strangers. I'm having them with other organizers. And the more I had these conversations, the more I realized something sort of startling, you, the person listening to this almost certainly already knows how to organize, but you don't know that that's called organizing?
Starting point is 01:58:18 Yeah, that's a very good point. I have encountered some of the most stunning I mean, organizing that, like, I can't discuss the specifics of, but like, some of the best organizing I've ever encountered I have ran into in the last three weeks from people who don't think that they're organizers and started talking to me about their stuff. And I was like, what? Like, people are winning victories that, like, the, like, hardcore committed organizers haven't been able to do in like 30 years. Yeah. And it's just by random people who don't think they know how to do anything. Yeah. Can I tell a little organizing story? Do we have time?
Starting point is 01:58:51 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Go for it. So I remember in like 2018. I am on a trip with a friend We're coming back and we see the arrival of the migrant caravan One of the migrant caravan Is the one that everyone decided to have a fucking cow about Right before the 2018 midterms And at that time they were corraling the people of the migrant caravan
Starting point is 01:59:09 In a baseball stadium in Tijuana And like it was raining every day So the baseball stadium ends up looking like the Battle of the Psalm After like a couple of days right You know kids in needy mud and it's shit And I didn't particularly know what to do but evidently there were people there who were hungry and thirsty. And so I get three of my friends at this time.
Starting point is 01:59:28 I was still making about half my money riding bicycles and the other half writing. So my friends and I was supposed to do a long bike ride. All of us are people who make a living riding bikes, right? We're not like expert organizers. And I was like, hey, guys, this is fucked, which we do. We called a friend who has a company who makes waffles. We obtained as many waffles as we could physically carry across the border. At that time, we weren't able to get in.
Starting point is 01:59:55 We found a way to get in. We began distributing the waffles. After that, we put something online. People sent us money, and we continued feeding people for months. None of us, I think, like, had a particular plan or a schedule. Yeah, it was a bit chaotic at times. But A, we were able to do that. And with a lot of other people, clearly it wasn't just us, right?
Starting point is 02:00:14 But we were able to process 10th of thousands of dollars and feed thousands of people. B, everyone there, and I've seen this countless times, especially working and organizing with refugees for the most part. People are so good at organizing each other in themselves. Like when we got there with bottles of water and food, there are a thousand people there who have not had sometimes a drink for days, let alone more than a thousand, I think, let alone something hot to eat, right?
Starting point is 02:00:41 Everybody made sure that the children and the sick people got what they needed first. Organizing is something that is very inherent in us as people. It just, we don't call it that. Yeah, and that's part of what I want to try to, the myth I want to try to puncture with this, because I think particularly in the U.S., but this is true in a lot of places, there's this way in which the organizer, sort of TM, capital T, capital O, the organizer gets held up as this sort of, I guess, even like particularly masculinist thing, which is, it's this guy with specialized knowledge. Yeah. And that's just not true. This brings us something that I think is actually really important, which is what, what, you know, is what, you know, even is organizing, right? And the answer is that most organizing is you get a group of people
Starting point is 02:01:27 together, you get them to show up to something, and then you do something, right? And the thing about this, right, that's something all of you know how to do. If you can organize a dinner party, right, if you can get eight people to show up to a place to eat dinner, you can do this. It is largely the same skill sets. And all of the skill sets that make people good organizing. are skill sets that you have to develop to, you know, work a job, right? You know, like one of the things that comes up a lot in this, which is less discussed and also kind of annoying, but, you know, you have to manage it is that organizing is about people. And sometimes you have to, you know, you have to do things like you have to manage people's
Starting point is 02:02:07 egos. But like, I don't know, almost all of you work jobs or have worked jobs, right? You have had to like deal with your boss being on one, right? Yeah. You have the skills to do this. You know how to do the interpersonal. relationship stuff, it's just that you don't think about that as organizing, even though that's, that's just what it is. Yeah, that's the core of it, is getting people to do stuff. Like, you do it every day.
Starting point is 02:02:35 Yeah, and the way you do this is by building relationships with people, right? And this isn't necessarily friendships, although that works. And like, one of the easiest ways to start organizing is by getting all of your friends together, because you're already friends, you have preexisting relationships, and being like, okay, motherfuckers. We gotta go, we gotta go do something. And actually, I love that the first thing that you brought up was, it admittedly sort of medium-ish scale lift version of this, but one of the very easiest things that you can do is you can just get food of some kind. You can either buy it or you can make it yourself. And you and a group of like eight people, not even eight people, you can do it with lower.
Starting point is 02:03:12 I know people who've done this just so low is that you can just go give food to people. Yeah, literally, it was this morning. So I'm tired yesterday morning. I have some house neighbours, right? And it was cold. And so I went out and gave them some hot breakfast or hot like coffee. It's super easy to do. If you are struggling socially wherever you are, maybe you're hiding hard to make friends.
Starting point is 02:03:33 I know that's the thing that people often struggle with, especially if you've moved to a new place or post-pandemic or you're still concerned with large gatherings or any of those things. Like if you start doing that, you will find other people who want to do it too. Like so many of my friends I organize with are people. like when we had the end of Title 42 and people were in between the fences there, a lot of the people who I organize with now or who help people with now, I didn't know. I just showed up with a giant solar generator that I happened to have
Starting point is 02:04:03 and some stuff that we had a whip around at Cool Zone for. And like people who care about the same things as you are generally cool. And it's a good way to make friends. And then you can go on from there. Yeah. And there's a second compounding thing here too, which is that, you know, feeding people, it's a way to build relationships with people. And also, it's a really good way for people to get to know you in general and know that you are someone who will help them with things.
Starting point is 02:04:31 Yeah. And from there, and this is a very common exception. I mean, this is, I literally had this conversation with one of my friends who's like an old school food not bombs organizer. Food Not Bombs is a very, very, it's a cool organization. You can just, like, found a food not bombs chapter. they have like a couple of principles or you can just do your own thing and I'm pretty sure it's still like
Starting point is 02:04:51 the largest anarchist project in the world because all it takes is you and like three other people and you just go feed people but the thing is from doing that right if there's other things that you're concerned about people will bring you their problems and you can help them doing it and this is a very good way to get into
Starting point is 02:05:06 other kinds of organizing because suddenly once you start building these relationships everything sort of cycles and cycles and you know you get involved in more and more things Yeah. And that's kind of a late stage thing that we're sort of jumping to a bit. But I want to go back to the beginnings of how. So how do you get a group of people together to do a thing? And the answer is you kind of already know how to because you presumably at some point in your life have like organized a group of friends to go do something. Right? Like you've gotten to group of people together to go accomplish a task. Yeah. It could literally be anything, right? Like, if you've got some people to go to a bar, you have the skills. One way I've been thinking about it recently in my project is thinking about it as like putting together a heist crew.
Starting point is 02:05:57 Okay, I could vouch for this, right? The feeling of walking up to eight people and telling them individually, I'm putting together a team and I want you. It feels you can just do it. There was nothing stopping you. Nothing in the world can stop you from just walking up to your friend and going, I'm putting together a team. And it feels exactly as good as you think it would from a heist movie. It rules.
Starting point is 02:06:24 It's so fun. Amazing. Yeah. But this gets into also what kinds of people you want to do, right? Because obviously, you know, there's two vectors of this. There's, on the one hand, you have the aspect of, okay, who do you know, right? And a lot of organizing is just about, here is a problem. And I know someone who has some sort of skill or resource that can help deal with it.
Starting point is 02:06:49 And you put people in touch with each other. And that's organizing. That's so much organizing is literally just, hey, like, I have like a broken part of my car. I know someone who's like a car mechanic, right? And you put them in touch. And you have successfully organized people and you have built relationships and you have made all of the sort of social web that creates organizing. You've made it stronger. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:07:11 It also just feels good because, you know, and that's an auxiliary benefit to all of this, is that it's a great way to sort of break, break the isolation we're all under. Yeah, I think the best solution for despair is, I'm thinking of a quotation here, something, the busy bee has no time for despair. But the thing that makes me feel better about the world
Starting point is 02:07:33 is that I have seen that people can fix massive problems with very few resources by, just showing up. And like, I think organizing is what gives me, what allows me to enter this period of time that we're entering into with a great deal more hope than I otherwise would have done. Yeah, and do you know what else will help you enter a situation
Starting point is 02:07:55 with more hope? Is it the products and services that support this podcast? I don't know if I'm allowed to say this, but we are not in control of the length of the ads. They just do it. We're sorry. here's a really long period of ads. I'm so sorry.
Starting point is 02:08:22 We are back. So I want to return to my heist career. I don't know, if you're a D&D person, the other way you can think about this is you're putting together like a Dungeons and Dragons party or like an RPG party. And the way you need to think about this is,
Starting point is 02:08:37 okay, so you've picked a thing that you want to do, right? You've seen something in the world that is bad and you figure it, you go, okay, I can do this thing to solve it. And maybe that's, you know, it's literally something. as simple as feeding people. Maybe that's, you know, I want to start, I want to start doing tenants organizing. I want to start because my rent is too high, right? People are getting evicted.
Starting point is 02:08:56 I want to start doing like immigration defense. Yeah. And from there, you make a list. And that list is, you know, what you're interested in doing and you try to match what things need to be done with people you know who have those skills. Yeah. And this is, you know, this is where you really shouldn't get to get into the heist things, right?
Starting point is 02:09:17 because everyone has their sort of like heist role. Now, obviously, part of this that you want is you want to create sort of balance teams, right? You want people who have overlapping strengths so you don't just have only one person who can do a thing. And part of the way the successful organization works over time and, I mean, just how successful organizing works is that eventually you are trying to organize yourself out of a job, which is to say you want your organization to function such that if you're not able to do it, you know, or just you're gone or you're cycle onto a next thing or, you know, any, any number of things that can happen. You want the organization to still be able to keep working without you. And you want, you're trying to get people to be able to replace you as the person who's like organizing the thing, right? Yeah. And at this point, we can start talking about the kinds of skills that people need for organizing.
Starting point is 02:10:06 And a lot of people, and this is unbelievably common when I talk to people and like, especially women and especially like a lot of binary people and trans people particularly have this, is that people don't believe that they have any skills. And then you talk to them for five seconds, and they're like, well, I'm good at carrying heavy objects, right? I'm good with kids, which is a huge one. We'll get you in a second, right? Or like, I don't know, I have a car.
Starting point is 02:10:31 That's a huge skill. There are so many different skills that are so useful for so many things. I'm just going to go over lots of things that are actually really useful to get people a sense of like the kinds of things that there are massive roles for. So one of the most important ones, and this is something you can, you deliberately look for, you know, this is one of the things you do at the beginning of any union organizing campaign. Someone who's good at talking to other people and making friends, that is a staggeringly useful person. Because again, most organizing is just talking to people and building relationships. And, you know, one of the things you do when you're doing your sort of, they call it power mapping.
Starting point is 02:11:08 But when you, when you're figuring out how you're going to organize a workplace is you find the person who everyone likes and talks to. and respects, and you talk to that person. Yeah. Because that person can, you know, can sort of like organize people down the chain because they have, they have their relationships already. And also they're good, they'll be good at, you know, talking to new people and spreading the organization that way. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 02:11:29 And so, like, you know, if you're just someone who's social or, and this is also very useful, if you have a friend who is very social, because I know a lot of us are not very social, but you probably have a friend that you're thinking of right now who is very good at conversations and is charming and is good at making friendships. That person, unbelievably useful, incredibly useful and compelling skill. Yeah. There are also things like research, people who are good at, and I think people are much better at research than they think to take like a tenets organizing example, right?
Starting point is 02:11:57 One of the common things you have to do is find out stuff about a landlord, right? Yeah. And there's the higher difficulty version of that, which isn't that hard also. I want to mention this, but like going to a courthouse and finding records about who owns property companies, not that hard. It's not that hard. It's like you could just do it, right? It's not as hard as you think it is from someone saying it.
Starting point is 02:12:19 But there's also even just easier things than that, right, that all of you probably already know how to do, which is just looking at someone's social media profiles and finding out information about them. Yeah. And this is very useful, yeah, for like union campaigns, you know, bosses. If you've ever been a person who uses dating apps, especially if you're a woman, then you know how to OSIN, actually.
Starting point is 02:12:40 Maybe you don't credit yourself with that skill. But 100% that you've developed that skill to keep yourself safe and you can use it for good. Do you want to explain what Ocent is and how that process works? Yeah, sure. So open source intelligence is an acronym doesn't really need to exist. It's gathering information of open sources, things that are openly accessible, right, as opposed to like Humeant, which is like being a spy or SIGINT, which is capturing signals. Open source information is you're creeping someone's Instagram, creeping their Facebook,
Starting point is 02:13:11 looking at the weird fucking shit that they put on good reads, right? All the data that is out there largely on the internet about us. A lot of people put a lot of information on the internet, and it's very easy. And I would imagine if you're under 50 and maybe if you're over 52, you just know how to do this because it's what you do anyway when you want to find out about someone. Especially if you are a person who goes on dates with people who you haven't met before and haven't been introduced to by a mutual friend, but you meet on the internet, you probably already do this to keep yourself safe.
Starting point is 02:13:44 Yeah, and this is something that's very useful for, I mean, there's so many use cases for this, right? There's, you know, there's the very obvious ones where you're dealing with the local Nazi and you're trying to organize around, like, running them out, people safe from them, and you can find information about them. But, I mean, it's useful for, I mean, cops who are beating people. It's useful for, like, politicians, particularly. Yeah. It can be very useful for.
Starting point is 02:14:05 It's useful for landlords. This happens all the time. It can be very, very useful for bosses in union. campaigns, unions have, like, teams of researchers usually to, like, do this kind of stuff. But the thing is, also, and this is something I don't think people understand. Those guys, the, like, the people they're hiring to be researchers are just you, but they got a job being a researcher for a union. Like, they have the same skills as you. They know how to, like, Google stuff, and they know how to look through people's, like, dating profiles and, like, look through their,
Starting point is 02:14:33 their Facebooks and their Instagrams and, like, a big one, a big one, that the rich people, especially do not think about is like cash app and Venmo particularly cash app because yeah yeah because people people will just leave public transactions up there like that that's how they got what's his name the congressional
Starting point is 02:14:52 Magate's. Can I legally call him the congressional pedophile? I guess I call him the accused pedophile. Yeah, yeah. The man credibly accused of sleeping with an underage woman lots of times. You know and one of the ways they found that was that and also like paying for that right? Yes. Yes.
Starting point is 02:15:08 Which is rape, by the way. I want to be very clear about that. Like, having sex with someone who is underage is rape. It is always rape. And the way people found that was that they just looked through like his cash app history and they found all of these money transfers to people. This is all very, very simple stuff. That's very useful organizing wise that you already know how to do.
Starting point is 02:15:31 Yeah. Pinterest is another absolute bank. Yeah. Yeah. So much Pinterest. People are pinning. They be pinning. You know, if you're hearing some of these things and you think that you can figure out how to do this, that's also a huge skill.
Starting point is 02:15:46 Finding people who are willing to learn things and willing to learn new skills is a huge benefit to organizers because, you know, this gives you a flexible person, right? It gives you someone you can like flex into any of a bunch of roles that you need and also can, you know, pick up skills to learn things. Having a car and being able to drive, and I know a lot of. if you don't do this, but if you do do this, this is you immediately, even if you literally cannot contribute anything else to a project, being able to just drive a bunch of water to a place, oh yeah, huge. Staggeringly useful. The amount of things that people can't access because they can't get there is vast, especially
Starting point is 02:16:25 when I talk to migrants, right, have recently arrived in the US. They don't have a US cell phone. They can't Uber. Oftentimes nowadays, you can't even pay for mass transit with cash. You have to have a special card. And you have to get to the place to get the card, right? The problems you can solve by being able to drive someone five miles are enormous, especially in the US where everything is designed around everyone owning a motor car at all times.
Starting point is 02:16:51 Yeah, and like transport-based skills are also very useful. I mean, if you hike a lot, that's a very, very useful skill. There's a lot of, there's a lot of, you know, I mean, even things like, like setting up summer camps is a thing that like leftist groups do, right? And being able to hike, very good for that. It's good for things like Wilderness Rescue. There's a lot of, you know, James, like the work you do that has to do with, like, going and helping migrants.
Starting point is 02:17:15 Like, being able to hike is staggeringly useful skill. Yeah. Yeah. It's very, like, it's useful. It's important. It's okay if that's not something you can physically do or, you know, that works for the way you like to live your life. Like, another thing I was thinking of, which can be massively important and people don't
Starting point is 02:17:32 realize is if you know how to take off a taillight and replace the bowl, in it. Yes. Like, we're entering a time when people with DACA, people with TPS, people who are undocumented, people on temporary migration statuses are going to be deathly afraid of any interaction with law enforcement. Yeah. If you can change the bulb on someone's tail light or their turn signal indicator for those of us in the UK, then you can meaningfully protect that person in a really important way. And it can literally take 10 minutes. And this is something that, you know, can scale up depending on how much. skill you have, right? There's even just very basic auto maintenance stuff is very useful for stuff like this. But, you know, like if you're a carpenter, right, if you're an electrician, you do some kind of trade work, right? You do plumbing, right? That is the thing that is massively useful to a lot of people. There's a lot of other kind of just skills that you have from your job. That can be very useful. I mean, having someone to manage a spreadsheet. Oh, yeah. Yeah, is staggeringly useful. And another one that I think people don't understand that they really have, but like being able to set up a meeting and
Starting point is 02:18:42 like having a thing that lets you be like, okay, here's when everyone is free. Like, you probably have to do this for your job or just for, you know, trying to get your friends to go even just like be on a call together or like go have food or like just do anything. That is literally genuinely one of the most important skills you can possibly have as an organizer is the ability to just sort of like go talk to people and be like, hey, can you show up to this thing here? Yeah. And that is, that is so much of just what organizing is. Can you be here at this time and then trying to figure out a time? Yeah. So we're going to close
Starting point is 02:19:22 out the sort of skills section with some, I think just sort of like domestic-y skills that I don't think people realize are super useful. If you have a button maker, you are instantly the single most useful person in any organization. I love that, yeah. Or you can obtain a button maker. They're very easy to use, but if you have one or you know the person who has the button maker and suddenly you can just crank out buttons for every single event, they rule, everyone loves them. It helps enormously. It's awesome.
Starting point is 02:19:50 That's a badge for those else in the Commonwealth. Also, if you have a sewing machine. Yeah, I was about to mention that. Yeah. You're a hero. Yeah, one of my friends recently made me a little patch, and it's really cool, and I like it, I'm putting it on my stuff. But if you can sew, like, that's a skill that I do not have.
Starting point is 02:20:11 And it's so great when people can, like, fix stuff for someone or, you know, make stuff fit someone. You know, if you're a person who finds it hard to get clothes that you like to wear, that make you feel good. And someone, one of my friends could do that. And one of my friends was making clothes for another friend for, like, a Renaissance fair. And like it was a nicest thing I've seen someone do for someone else in a very long time. It really made her like feel like nice and cared for. And like you might think that like this is just a weird little thing that you like to do with your sewing machine.
Starting point is 02:20:46 But you can meaningfully really make someone feel cared for using that. Yeah. And that's a huge part of what organizing is. Right. And that goes into one of the things that is also an appreciable skill that's very useful is, I mean, just like being nice to people, being kind to people and having people around who are good at, like, keeping groups together. Yeah. And that's its own distinct kind of person.
Starting point is 02:21:10 Is someone who can, you know, keep all of the people who are involved in a thing, enjoying being around each other. That's a kind of person who's very valuable. And it's something that you can look for, you know, and if that's not you, like, you can, that's something you can, you know, find in your friends. You can find in the sort of the people around you. Yeah, definitely. There's also something that I think you can tell when an organization,
Starting point is 02:21:33 is collapsing because this is like the first thing where the quality drops. Drawing and graphic design are very, very useful because a big part of what you do organizing is like you make a flyer and you put a flyer on a bunch of telephone poles to tell people that there's a thing happening. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:21:48 And yeah, you know, and this is also something, you know, later on you might be making a social media presence, but just having good artists and having good graphic design people is enormously useful for this kind of stuff. Yeah. And along this line, there's things like making music. And there's a bunch of different ways this can go.
Starting point is 02:22:07 This can be an immediate thing where, you know, like you have people on a picket line, right? And everyone's singing songs. And this is great. We love this. Also, and this is another thing that you can be thinking about in terms of what skills you have and what things you can create. Benefit shows. Oh, yes. This has been a huge part of a lot of how some of the union stuff up here has been getting funded is by just having like punk benefit shows.
Starting point is 02:22:27 And if that's the thing that you can do, well, you know people in bands. you know people who make music, you know people who just make stuff who are willing to contribute it to the cause. That's great. I remember one of, we had one night last September, it was so cold. We were in the desert and I'm like a thousand people, right? And we were at that point we were really struggling to feed everyone even, you know, because there was so few of us. But my friend bought out their guitar and some bongo drums they had. And I think I had my harmonica in my truck.
Starting point is 02:22:55 And like we were sitting around with these, we had some Sikh guys, had some. had some Uyghur folks come from China and some Kurdish people and they were all displaying their different music and it was so nice. Like that taking people out of a shitty situation for a moment with music again, like don't underestimate how important that it.
Starting point is 02:23:14 Don't feel like if you have that skill, it's not a useful one. No, and this is something I've been starting to say more and more. If you need a theory-brained way to say this to someone who like is like a crumbudgy Marxist who hates fun, Moral is a terrain of struggle. There's a reason why morale is one of the most important factors of military campaigns.
Starting point is 02:23:37 You can't get people to do things if they're too depressed to do it. And being able to raise people's morale, it's this massive, if you want to get, I want to go into technical language, just a massive force multiplier, right? It makes everyone you have enormously more effective, the better they feel about themselves and the better they feel about the situation they're in. And things like music, things like art. I mean, things like pulling pranks. This is a, yeah.
Starting point is 02:24:02 If you were a good practical jokester, this is a staggeringly useful skill. Both like in terms of, you know, you need to be careful about whether you're playing your pranks on like other people in the org. But like, you know, if you know how to just like pull pranks, this is a really, really useful thing in like union campaigns, in tenants organizing. There are a lot of people who you can prank and it's very funny and it lowers their morale and it raises you. your morale? Yeah. And I come back to your music as a, like, morale is a terrain of struggle. Like the other memory I have last year of playing guitars is in Rojava being inside at night
Starting point is 02:24:40 because everyone was getting drone struck all the time. And it was dangerous to be driving around, sitting around with some Azidi friends. And like we spent all night playing the Ood, which is like a, what's like a guitar with a gourd on the bottom? I don't know how to describe it. It's a stringed instrument. It's a string instrument is what it is. And that made everyone so happy.
Starting point is 02:25:02 We had such a nice evening. Everyone was able to get through this relatively difficult thing. It sucks that people have been killed and just for driving around or existing and they're bombing all the civilian infrastructure and the power keeps going out and all these things. But there's a reason that those people have kept Ood around after 15, 13 years of war. And it's because it is important. And so don't overlook that. And resisting fear is another huge aspect of this, right?
Starting point is 02:25:32 A lot of the ways that people, like a lot of the ways that you demobilize people, this is why regimes like this spend a lot of effort trying to make people afraid, is that it makes it harder for you to act. And things that, you know, the things that make you less afraid, even if they sort of seem silly are very, very important. And, you know, on sort of this note, one of the things that, you know, as you've assembled your group of people, right, one of the things that that's important to be able to have a grasp on is that you can't
Starting point is 02:26:03 just do organizing by having it only be the capital, the serious thing, the capitality organizing thing all the time. Your organization will not hold together. There has to be actual bonds formed between you and the people you're organizing with and the people you're trying to help. I don't want to call out any organization in particular. There is an organization that perceives organizing to exist solely in the realm of wearing a high-vis vest and carrying a clipboard and getting people to write their email addresses down and then telling them to attend things. And like, maybe there are several organizations like that. I don't know. I've perceived one locally. If you don't have those bonds, those interpersonal relationships, like, these things won't hang
Starting point is 02:26:49 together. Like, so many of my happiest organizing memories, like, again, going down James' memory lane, I guess. I have a memory of like Christmas Eve last year, 2023. Me and my friends have been out. I know some of them listen, because some of them have come across from different states to help us over their Christmas holidays, which is nice. And it was cold. And we had been feeding people all day. And then we'd heard some people in another location that we'd gone to find. And then we got to the end of the day. And like, rather than just going home, I had a bunch of, we had some MRIs left, the refugee emmeries that are vegan. Lots of us are vegan. So we were like, oh,
Starting point is 02:27:24 I'm not going to find any other vegan food in the middle of nowhere out here. So we all sat around eating our little vegan MREs and like just talking and like sharing some thoughts and things we experience over the last months of doing this. And like it's those moments that make your organizing group so much stronger. Don't want to telling anyone to do anything. You know, like those genuine bonds and the love and friendship we build up between each other doing things that are very important. Don't overlook the value of those because it's a.
Starting point is 02:27:54 it's extremely valuable. And this is something that I think you can understand in your own life pretty easily where, okay, if a random person on this street walks up to you and tells you to go do something, are you going to do it? And it's like, no, why? What? No, probably not. Like, I don't know, maybe it's something like really sort of, hey, there's children in a burning building, we're going to run it and grab them. But like, the odds are, no, you're going to ignore them. But if your friend goes and tells you to do the same thing, And, you know, you've been friends with them for a long time and you really care about them. The odds of you doing it are much, much higher.
Starting point is 02:28:31 And that's all organizing is. It's finding ways to, you have a thing to do and you go talk to people and you ask if they want to help you do it. Yeah. And the stronger your relationships are, the more likely that is to happen. And that's why it's very important to do things like, you know, just like having potlucks, like bringing snacks to meetings. Oh, yeah. And like, you know, even if you're doing a potluck, it's good to, you know, you do like one. capital O capital T organizing thing, right?
Starting point is 02:28:57 You get like a little bit of work done. Yeah. But mostly everyone's just sort of relaxing and eating chili or whatever. Yeah. If you're a baker, you know, you can bake people. That's a wonderful thing to share.
Starting point is 02:29:08 Yes. Yeah, just knowing how to cook, I realize I forgot to mention this one, knowing how to cook is a staggeringly useful skill. It's useful in literally every, literally any kind of organizing you can possibly be in. It is a thing, it is a skill that is useful in like, it's useful in war zones.
Starting point is 02:29:24 It's useful, like, literally no matter what organization you are in, if you can cook for people. Oh, yeah. And you don't even, and you don't have to be like a good cook. It's just like you can show up with food that you have made. You have instantly made this whole thing more successful. Yeah, definitely. Like, I've had some wonderful meals in wars. I'm sort of deeply appreciated those people.
Starting point is 02:29:45 More broadly, though, those ties, like the way we organize without the state, the reason I believe that that is the way we should organize and where we should organize and way we will continue to organize in a way that we can make the state irrelevant is because we understand each other as people and care about each other as people. And then we approach our organizing holistically, right, with everyone in it knowing this person is good at this, but they're struggling with this right now. And I care about them, so I'm not going to make them do that right now. That is how we can build sustainable communities in a way that state cannot and in a way that capitalism cannot, right? Because
Starting point is 02:30:20 fucking hurts renter car doesn't care or know about its employees in a way that we who organize with people and care and love one another do. And like, that's where our organizations will always be stronger than those
Starting point is 02:30:37 created by capitalism on the state. Yeah. Unfortunately, speaking of capitalism of the state, we're taking our last ad break. Would you win it? Yeah. Hopefully it's hurts rent a car. We are back. So I want to wrap things up by doing a couple of, doing a few things. One, I want to talk about some kind of basic organizing things that you're going to have to do that are not very difficult but are extremely important.
Starting point is 02:31:10 And second, I want to talk a bit about how we did the first organizing project that I ever was involved in, which was tenants organizing. Because it's really not that hard. Right. If you just go do the thing, it will happen. Yeah. And suddenly it ceases to be this like, oh, this domain of actually. expert knowledge or this like, oh, this is really difficult thing. If you just, I don't know, you go give food
Starting point is 02:31:32 to someone and suddenly you've done that. And it's happened. So there are things that are important to like basic organizing stuff. Knowing how to book rooms from like churches, from libraries, from whatever meeting spaces. And also knowing how to book rooms in places that
Starting point is 02:31:52 like accommodate disabilities is a huge thing because a lot of people book meetings in place. places in a wheelchair accessible and it's a fucking fiasco. And you can avoid that very easily, but you have to put a little tiny bit of work into it. Yeah. Literally, I reached out to a friend to book a room last night because I knew they were good at that stuff. Yeah, you know, there's a ranging people's schedules, getting people's trouble for stuff. Things you can do to prepare if what you're doing is basically, all the things we've been describing, right,
Starting point is 02:32:20 getting together a bunch of people to do a thing that is technically forming an organization. Yeah. Now, how formal, informant you want it to be, just, you know, maybe it's just your organizing project or whatever. There's things you usually want. You want some kind of email so people can contact you. In tandem with the email, something that's very helpful that I think younger people tend not to think about is getting Google voice. Yes. When Google Voice lets you set up a voicemail account so people can call you and leave phone messages, I mean, everyone should just do this because this is the way that a lot of older people communicate, right? They won't send you an email, but they will leave you a voice message.
Starting point is 02:32:53 And it's very, very useful for this. Child care is something that's important. I did, I mean, a lot is probably too strong of a word, but like, I did child care when I was organizing and it wound up being really helpful because there's a lot of people with kids. And so, you know, there's a couple of ways that this could work. One is that, you know, you have everyone bring their kids, you have like a little space, you bring them like coloring stuff, you bring them toys, you bring them games, and you just sort of watch everyone for a while. And as an organizing thing, again, if you're good with kids, that's very useful,
Starting point is 02:33:23 staggeringly useful organizing skill. Yeah. Another way this stuff happens is, you know, everyone. one pulls together 10 bucks and you hire a babysitter for a bunch of kids. And that's a very useful organizing a thing. Yeah, I organize with people who have kids. I remember four years ago, fuck me, 2020, a long time ago and also yesterday. But like, we were organizing to feed and housed people and we were having a big Thanksgiving dinner. And like some of my friends have very young children and they bought them. And I think that's actually really cool to do that. A, like,
Starting point is 02:33:57 For those kids, it is normal that, like, we look after people in our community. This is what we do. And ever since I've been little, this is what we did. And, like, it's also very nice for people. Like, a lot of my friends also bought their children down to the border, especially last year when we had, because there were children there anyway, right? Yeah. Some of my friends who bring their children down, and their kids would play with the other kids.
Starting point is 02:34:21 And, like, it doesn't matter that some of the kids are Kurdish and some of the kids are from China and some of them are from Colombia or whatever. but they'll get along just fine when they're four or five years old. They don't care. They just want to kick a ball or see a teddy bear or something. And I think it's really good for your children to, you know, you're bringing them into a world which is cruel and at times unequal. And like your kids seeing that like we can make a difference and we can do this,
Starting point is 02:34:47 I think it's one of the best educations you can give your children. Yeah. And it's something that's good for everyone involved. Yeah, exactly. And it's also very, I think one of the things, I see a lot when people are organising with refugees with the unhoused is like, they're just people. Like, you don't need to be afraid of them. Like, they don't want to hurt your children.
Starting point is 02:35:07 And having your children around shows that, like, you have grasped, but they're just people and that you feel safe. And your children are safe around them. And I think that that's valuable too. You're giving both parties some dignity in that moment. Yeah. There are some other very basic things that I think are very important, if you've never done this before. I'm going to talk a little bit about how you run a meeting. Yeah. And you would think that this doesn't matter until you watch a group of 100 people who don't know how to do this attempt to get anything done and they, it just is a fiasco. And this is even true of sort of smaller groups. Yeah. So I'm going to give you how to run a meeting 101. Okay. A very common way to organize meetings that people use all over the world and it's very effective is you have two things. You have an agenda and you have a stack. And those are like the technical terms for them. The agenda, I mean, it's an agenda, right? You know what an agenda is. You know what an agenda is. You
Starting point is 02:35:57 put the things that you need to do on it. Another thing that's very helpful with these is, you know, you're going to be operating under time constraints because people don't have 45 hours to be in meetings. And my God, you don't want to be in a meeting for that long. Yeah. You know, knowing how long roughly you want to talk about these things is very, very useful and making sure that you're sort of moving the conversation through the stuff on the agenda because you have more stuff that you need to talk about.
Starting point is 02:36:21 Yeah. All of this, again, like, this all sounds very obvious. And again, you know how to do it. But until you've been in a room where people have not realized they need to do this, you don't understand how important stuff is. Yeah, the pain of it not happening. God, I have watched rooms full of like science. These are like professional scientists, right?
Starting point is 02:36:40 This is an entire room of 150 people with physics PhDs who don't know how to run a meeting. And it's a shit show. And all of this stuff could have been avoided with some very, very simple things. Yes. The other thing, and this is genuinely a piece of social technology, right, is the stack. It is very simple, right? You have one person who is the stack keeper, and what someone wants to talk,
Starting point is 02:37:00 you have one person talking at a time, and what someone wants to talk, they raise their hand, or they make some kind of signal to the stack keeper, and that person writes their name down. And so you now have a list of who gets to talk in what order.
Starting point is 02:37:12 And so you go down the list, and people get to say things. And again, you know how to do this. This is not like a complicated thing. But again, I have watched people who collectively have, like, more PhDs than like, I earn money in a week
Starting point is 02:37:26 who cannot be able to make this out. And you do. I believe in you. I believe in you, dear listener, but you can do this. There's a very common, sometimes this is one person,
Starting point is 02:37:38 sometimes this is two people. A very common way to do it is to have a stack taker and then have someone who's the facilitator. And the facilitator's job is to like call on the people and to try to like move the conversation forward and get, and make sure, make sure everyone's involved. And also another important part of this.
Starting point is 02:37:54 And this is again, something you'll know from your stupid work meetings is you have to get people like me to shut up. Your meetings can't just be one person giving a speech. You have to cut them the fuck off and you have to get to the next person. Yeah, and doing that courteously is a skill. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:38:11 And finally, on this note, there's a lot of, if you want to go into more technical stuff, part of the things the facilitators use and part of, you know, the formal name for this is like the progressive stack, but it's just a thing that's very useful in organizing is you want to make sure everyone in a room
Starting point is 02:38:28 is engaged and talking and that it's not just three people who talk all the time. And so the idea of the progressive stack, right, is you're trying to find the most marginalized people in the group of people who are least likely to speak and you're trying to get them in first. And sometimes this is literally just like,
Starting point is 02:38:44 hey, someone hasn't been talking in a meeting this whole time and you can ask them what they think about something or ask if they have anything to say. And a lot of times they will, but they just don't feel confident enough to say it and this is this is a very very important skill for a facilitator or just even you can just do this in a meeting too right like you you can be the person who goes like hey do you have this this person have anything to contribute and that is an enormous thing sometimes it can be you know sometimes
Starting point is 02:39:08 it can be a little bit awkward but it's a very important thing because you're just losing out on people who have really really valuable ideas and contributions and plans and if you just let the same three people give speeches, you can't get to the stuff that's actually useful. Yeah, definitely. If you've been a teacher or in any way, you know, you probably have, you have this skill. You might not consider it a skill, but even if you've been a TA in grad school, something like that, you probably know how to do this. Yeah. So I'm going to put all of this together briefly, and I'm going to run through basically how we started the first organization project I every day, which was a tenants union in Chicago. Okay. So, and this is based on my memory, it's been a long time since I did this, but my, my basic memory of what we did was, okay, so one of my friends is an experienced organizer. I was like a tiny baby, right? This was my first offline organizing project ever, right? I had no idea I was doing. I still thought I was a guy, which, like, that's how much of a fiasco, like, little tiny baby, Mia, who doesn't know anything this was, you know, and so my friend talked to some people that he knew, and he knew that I, you know, I was interested in getting involved in tenants, organized. and we went to a cafe.
Starting point is 02:40:21 And we sat down and we ate and we just talked about what we wanted to do, what our plans were, what things we needed to do to get this organization set up. We talked about ideological stuff. And that's actually something that's important too, is part of organizing is getting people to think intentionally about their actions and think politically about their actions. Yeah. And that's something that's very useful.
Starting point is 02:40:43 You also have to make sure that you're not forming a book club. Like book clubs are fine, but you need to make sure you're organizing. group if you're trying to do a thing hasn't just become a book club yeah but that that's you know that's something that was very useful to us and you know we started making a plan and our plan was okay we made a bunch of flyers and then we went out and I did this and I walked around through a bunch of streets we put them on light post or whatever and then we put them like we hung them up in the buildings of tenants you know because you can just like walk up the stairs right and you just put them on the walls and you know we had this flyer this flyer had information this flyer said okay
Starting point is 02:41:14 we're we're starting a tenants union if you have tenant if you have issues with your landlord or you talk about tenant stuff, like come here at this time. We had an email. You can send us stuff. We had a phone number that you could call. Yeah. You know, and so, okay, and so parallel to this, we, like, I forget if it was a church or if it was some building, some center or something. We booked a room. We were kind of lucky in that we had, like, local press people. Nice. Who we sort of knew. And this is another useful. Like, knowing a journalist can be a very useful skill, because one way to get a project off the ground, if you're trying to get to a bunch of
Starting point is 02:41:48 people is by finding a journalist who is willing to cover it because, you know, we're finding, we're founding, like, the first tenants union in this place, right? Yeah. And, you know, so we had media coverage. And we got kind of screwed when this event eventually came together because there was, like, three feet of snow that night. But people still came. Like, people still came in the blizzard. Like, a lot of people showed up for this. But what are our things to be doing? We also, like, you know, we just, we just started talking to people, right? We started talking to tenants about their problems. We just, you know, we talked to our friends. We talked to the people they knew. we ended up talking to someone, you know,
Starting point is 02:42:18 and this is the thing that just happens as this spreads by word of mouth, right? People start contacting you. We ran into a really long time tenants organizer in the city who had a bunch of incredible stories about how our corrupt politicians got their jobs by betraying
Starting point is 02:42:32 the old tenants organizers, right? And like that's the other thing is, you know, another thing that happens in projects is you'll, sometimes you'll just pick up someone who's, you know, has been doing this since like the 60s. Yeah. And it rules because they have a wealth of experience
Starting point is 02:42:44 and they want to go, they want to do stuff. we plotted out what we were going to do at our meeting. You know, we were going to do some political education. We were going to have a bunch of time for people to talk about stuff. And we were going to, you know, get people to understand what we were doing, how they could start organizing. And then we did it. And I, unfortunately, don't remember much of what we talked about because I was often in another room taking care of a bunch of people's kids, which was very nice. But I don't remember what we talked about.
Starting point is 02:43:09 But like, you know, but like all of those things, right, all of those steps from the start of you get five of your friends. to go eat dinner and you talk about what you want to do through someone makes a flyer in like Microsoft or whatever you make it in like PowerPoint. M.S. Publisher. What's the one I'm blaking? I haven't used it in so long.
Starting point is 02:43:30 The one you make greeting cards in I really was called. There's like an actual program and I forgot what it is. You used to use it to make Christmas cards. But like, you know, okay, so we made a flyer and then we walked around and put the flyers up and we made an email. You know,
Starting point is 02:43:46 we got a space together, we figured out what we wanted to do, and then we did it. And, you know, and there's a bunch of organizing from there, right? But like, we had started a thing.
Starting point is 02:43:55 And you can do every single one of those steps. And if you can't personally do one of those steps, you can think of a person who you know, who you can bring in to help you do these things.
Starting point is 02:44:04 Because organizing, you already fucking know how to do it. Yeah. You just have to go out there and do it. Yeah. You can have faith.
Starting point is 02:44:12 Yeah. And this has been it could happen here. Go organize. Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of the universe. It Could Happen Here is a production of Cool Zone Media. For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com, or check us out on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can now find sources for It Could Happen here listed directly in episode descriptions. Thanks for listening.
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