Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 176
Episode Date: April 5, 2025All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. The Library Funding Cliff Anarchism In Uruguay feat. Andrew, Pt. 2 RFK Jr. Breaks the Medical System Ho...w ICE Is Targeting Students for Deportation Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #10 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/Links: RFK Jr. Breaks the Medical System https://www.medpagetoday.com/neurology/autism/114853 https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/28/health/fda-vaccine-peter-marks-resigns/index.html https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/31/trump-administration-hiv-research-grant-cuts https://www.cbsnews.com/news/rfk-jr-to-gut-vaccine-promotion-and-hiv-prevention-office-sources-say/ https://archive.ph/z2Fyx https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC1839225/ https://www.axios.com/2025/03/29/rfk-jr-body-shames-west-virginia-governor https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/hhs-taps-anti-vaccine-activist-look-debunked-links-autism-vaccines-sou-rcna198214 https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/31/health/vaccine-grants-cancelled-pediatricians/index.html https://taggs.hhs.gov/Content/Data/HHS_Grants_Terminated.pdf https://archive.ph/48Ua1 https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/rfk-jr-wants-to-let-bird-flu-spread-on-poultry-farms-why-experts-are/ How ICE Is Targeting Students for Deportation https://apnews.com/article/columbia-university-mahmoud-khalil-ice-15014bcbb921f21a9f704d5acdcae7a8 https://archive.ph/20250316111414/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/16/nyregion/mahmoud-khalil-columbia-university.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/15/nyregion/columbia-student-kristi-noem-video.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/25/nyregion/columbia-university-protester-chung-deportation.html https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/25/columbia-gaza-protester-yunseo-chung-lawsuit https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/24/nyregion/columbia-student-ice-suit-yunseo-chung.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/01/us/politics/cornell-student-momodou-taal.html https://apnews.com/article/social-media-immigration-applicants-handles-dhs-f67b480abebff7e451056be17572593d https://www.kenklippenstein.com/p/exclusive-trump-admin-spies-on-social?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=7677&post_id=160081190&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=1aiy5i&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email https://apnews.com/article/georgetown-trump-deportation-immigration-homeland-security-21fc205cebbbbba2ed260050df04702a https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/29/us/rumeysa-ozturk-tufts-student-detained.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/01/us/israel-gaza-student-protests-canary-mission.html https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/14/israel-betar-deportation-list-trump https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/trump-administration-takes-aim-immigrant-students-rcna198346 https://apnews.com/article/immigration-detainees-students-ozturk-khalil-78f544fb2c8b593c88a0c1f0e0ad9c5f https://x.com/janashortal/status/1905759411248734353 https://dailyegyptian.com/120974/news/international-siu-student-has-visa-revoked-confirms-university-admin/ https://drive.google.com/file/d/1SGz224raVR8mHMzC6q-6EUiNcBKD6BSK/view Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #10 https://www.reuters.com/world/trump-stokes-trade-war-world-reels-tariff-shock-2025-04-03/ https://www.theverge.com/news/642620/trump-tariffs-formula-ai-chatgpt-gemini-claude-grok https://www.reuters.com/markets/frances-macron-calls-suspension-investment-us-after-tariffs-2025-04-03/ https://x.com/USBPChief/status/1907398210064437404 https://x.com/ReichlinMelnick/status/1907488012239302953 https://x.com/ReichlinMelnick/status/1907411257927311619 https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.mdd.578815/gov.uscourts.mdd.578815.11.0.pdf https://x.com/JDVance/status/1906934067607556440 https://t.co/dFXNSbOyiy https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/04/01/us/elections/results-wisconsin-supreme-court.html https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/02/business/tesla-sales/index.htmlSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi everyone and welcome to the podcast. It's just me, James, today, and I'm joined by Jamie, who is a librarian, and we are here to discuss the pending federal cuts on library funding and, I guess, years of attacks on library funding. So welcome to the show, Jamie. Thanks for joining us.
Hi, thanks for having me.
Yeah, this is really great for me
because I have been trying to find a librarian for a very long time
to talk to us on the podcast.
I understand that lots of people have been really concerned
that we covered this, but also very afraid for their jobs,
which is a rough position to be in.
So thank you for coming on.
I thought we'd start with, like,
there was an executive order on the 14th of March.
I think it was called something like furthered something,
the federal bureaucracy, cutting, slashing, diminishing,
whatever, you know, I don't really care.
One of the outcomes of this was, I believe,
the Trump administration moving towards a complete closure of IMLS.
Is that right?
So it depends upon how much Joge and Trump and company
are going to listen to Congress,
because Congress has already funded IMLS,
which is the Institute of Museum and Library Services,
for this year.
So that money already exists.
It's already been allocated.
And so in theory, they should be good for at least a year.
And then next year when the budget comes up, again, it should be up to Congress because Congress created this institution and Congress funds it.
But the executive order and the commentary on it does say that they would like to dissolve it kind of as soon as possible, definitely next year.
So it's really up in the air about how fast things would move, what exactly would happen.
And if it would be this year, if it would be next year, whether anyone's going to listen to Congress.
Yeah, we will find out, I guess.
So can you explain for listeners who aren't familiar what IMLS is and what it does?
Yeah, so it's, as I said, the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
And so basically they are allocated money by Congress every year.
And then they hand it out to states, especially then who kind of break it down into other grants.
They give grants to states and libraries and institutions for things that museums and libraries do.
So that includes things like on the museum side, maybe, you know, putting together programming or doing big digitization projects.
I used to work at an institution where we had a grant that did a lot of digitization of historic documents.
And on the library side, they do all sorts of stuff, especially for public libraries.
They end up funding things like summer reading programs, equipment, especially for internet access,
all this stuff related to job training and those services that libraries offer.
And interlibrary loan is a big one so that people can access materials if their library doesn't hold,
but it's held by other libraries.
And rural libraries and tribal libraries especially really, really benefit from this.
Every single state and territory in the country gets these funds.
Okay, yeah.
I was wondering about who funded interlibrary loan.
So they're the ones who facilitate the transporting of the books.
Yeah, well, you know, depending on your library, some libraries will fund it from their operations budget.
But if, you know, especially for small rural or public libraries where that might be very expensive,
that is one thing that these grants go to is interlibrary loan.
Okay.
Yeah.
So there are lots of very important services.
And what would it mean if we didn't have that IMLS budget at all?
Like what would it mean?
Especially for like, like you said, those kind of libraries that are financially, I guess, more marginalized in tribal libraries.
and rural areas and stuff.
So I first want to mention that the entire budget of IMLS for 2024 was something like
$266 million.
We're not talking about huge sums of money in terms of the federal government.
It comes out to about 75% per person in the country.
So we're not going to be saving on our taxes if this goes away.
But that money makes a really big difference.
So even smaller states that maybe have a million people in it might see a couple million
of these grants per year.
And so what that would mean is that the things that, maybe not all of them, but most of
the thing that these grants cover would not be there.
So that means that there wouldn't be summer reading in some places.
That means that they wouldn't be able to buy the hotspots that they lend out to people
who don't have internet at home.
That means that maybe there wouldn't be the class that teaches your grandma how to not get
caught in a fishing scam. So all sorts of things, those things just wouldn't be there because there's
probably not, especially in red states, other funds that are going to come to cover that.
Yeah, like I think I was looking online and the budget is something like it's something like
0.003% of the federal budget is going to. It's trivial. It's so small, right? Yeah. You could like
take the, I don't know, the gold toilets away from the Navy and cover it in a day, right? Like it's so
small. Yeah, yeah. And yet it has this.
enormous outsized impact, you know, the statistics say that every dollar spent on IMLS returns
$2 to the economy. So it's actually, if you're going to measure it that way, highly beneficial,
especially to these more marginalized areas. Yeah, maybe we should talk about that because I think
if people, like, maybe they just don't happen to go to the library, maybe they don't realize
that they have services they need, or maybe they don't live in the U.S. The library is not just a place
where you can go and borrow the books, right?
Like, can you explain some of the services that libraries provide?
Like, you mentioned some, but they really help people.
Yeah.
So for better or for worse, public libraries in the United States
have become the social safety net of last resort
because they already exist almost everywhere,
and it's so hard to get, you know, not right now,
but even in the past couple decades,
other social programs started in many parts of the U.S.,
that things kind of just get lumped into the library.
So now you get your tax forms there.
Maybe they have a social worker on staff.
It's the place that homeless folks can sit when it's snowing.
Yeah.
So that kind of is like a little bit of side from what we're talking about right here.
But I really do want to point out that public libraries have become the social safety net in many, many places.
So that aside, you know, offerings of, aside from books and other media, including e-books, audiobooks,
movies and lots of formats, magazines, newspapers.
there are tons of classes about all sorts of things, especially technology classes.
It's a place that a lot of people, it's their only reliable internet access.
So, you know, in 2025, you can't do mostly anything without the internet.
You can't get a job without the internet.
You can't maybe pay your bills without the internet.
So that's a reliable place that people who don't have internet for various reasons.
Maybe they live so far out in the country that just doesn't go there unless you have satellite, right?
Even now.
Or maybe you can't afford.
it or whatever. Or there's one computer in your house and there's six kids and someone has to do
their homework. So what's everyone else going to do? So then the computers themselves. And then also
the other thing that IMLS also does is those grants will sometimes purchase research databases.
So if kids especially are trying to do their homework. Again, like children's and teens programming
is another thing between homework help, social things, clubs. So in a lot of places where there's not
much going on, it's one of the places where young people can go in the afternoon or on the
weekend and not be getting in trouble either because they're making trouble or the adults think
they are because there's somewhere productive to be. There's somewhere that's inside, supervised,
there's something to do. And so that's the kind of stuff we talk about in normal times when we're
trying to fight for like weekend service or later hours. But if we're looking at it in the lens
of IMLS, the building might be open maybe because maybe they have the foundational operational
but it, but then there won't be these programs. There won't be these resources. It'll just be a bunch
books on the shelves. Yeah, it's like, I don't know. I'm amazed how many of my friends and neighbors
don't understand how my celebrity does. Like I'm forever, like San Diego, our housing prices are
ridiculous and no one seems to want them to not be ridiculous. Um, lots of us too, but we don't
get to choose. And so like, we have a large unhouse population. And I'm always like, uh, helping my
house neighbors go to the library, like giving them a ride or whatever so they can, uh, yeah,
like you say, access internet services. Apply for benefits. Yeah. Yeah.
Or just like sit and read the paper and know what's going on in the world.
Yeah, and like not get harassed by the cops just for existing.
Right.
Which is the rest of their existence here, sadly.
Yeah, these are massively important.
I think most people, like, have, no one, because there's not really a big, like, fuck the libraries movement.
You know, like, I think people.
I mean, these things are.
Yeah, I guess.
Yeah, I guess there's a whole, like, people should only read stories if they conform to a certain gender stereotype.
Yeah, well, fuck those people.
Absolutely fuck those people.
Talking of fuck those people, we unfortunately have to pivot to ads.
So, you know, here is some unfortunate advertisements.
All right, we're back.
Talking of people I dislike, actually, San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria,
who was elected in 2020 and then re-elected, shamefully, this year,
which is very disappointing.
One of his first actions was to propose a budget,
which increased funding to the police surprise,
and decreased the funding to the libraries
that would lead to them closing,
for an extra day, right?
And this is our, like, quote-unquote, progressive mayor,
you know, has been anything but.
But this isn't a particularly uncommon scenario, right?
I've spoken since then to librarians around the country
who, for the last at least half decade, have faced funding cuts.
Can you explain, like, why doesn't the state see value in these services?
I mean, I don't want you to, like, speak for, you know,
like the Democrats defunding the libraries to give the cops more money,
But can you explain why there has been this ongoing assault on library budgets?
So, you know, you're talking about the last decade to half decade.
I think we can really trace it back much farther, at least 30 years to the Clinton administration, actually.
Okay.
I want to talk about the Democrats.
But even, you know, the roots farther back than that, because we have a neoliberal problem, right?
Yeah.
So it's basically the idea that all activity should generate obvious immediate monetary profit,
that everything should be run by a business, that everything should be subject to the market,
Quote unquote.
Yeah.
And so that's where we are with libraries is that even though I can sit here and say,
every dollar that the IMLS spends generates $2 with economic activity,
that somehow isn't even good enough because when the powers at B look at libraries,
they just see money being flushed down the toilet,
and that's the only way they can measure anything.
So if you look at it and you're just saying,
well, this is a place we spend money.
This doesn't create money.
This doesn't make more money happen.
the idea that everything should be run by a business and everything should be subject to market logics,
that would say, well, if we're going to subject everything to market logics, libraries have no value
because we're only measuring it. And can this make the balance sheet? Can this make number go up?
Yeah. And even though libraries do make number go up, it's not obvious. You can't make it obvious.
There's no direct line between what libraries do and number go up, even though there actually is.
with IMLS. So, you know, starting during the Clinton administration when the federal government
changed and how the federal government worked changed very much under the guise of increasing
service quality, what they actually did was lay off a quarter million workers and, you know,
turn everything into contract work instead of regular labor. And that, I think, filtered down from
the federal level into states and municipalities so that those
levels of government too also started to look at how they ran their government things, and in many
places, public libraries are arms of local government, that those two should also be run like a
business and be subject to market logics, and therefore number does not go up, we don't value
this. And that's basically it, is that, you know, it's hard now that we've had 30 years of overt
neoliberalism in our government system and a couple of decades,
more of less obvious versions of it, to make government, which is now being run like a business,
even in the best of times, value things that aren't valued strictly monetarily.
So there's no cultural value.
And even if the monetary value isn't extremely obvious, it somehow doesn't count.
Yeah, yeah.
I guess it kind of, I used to lecture.
I still do lecture at university, actually, starting again next month.
But we pivoted towards like everything has to be STEM in education generally,
because that'll make money or something.
Yeah, I don't know why, because like Bill Gates make the line go up.
And yeah, we lost so much that has not just intangible money, like you say, but actual
tangible value, very, very obvious value.
But nonetheless, like you say, it's not easy to put on a graph.
So it disappears.
Right.
And then, you know, even though cops also don't make money in a direct sense, somehow we can still fund that.
So it really shows that, like, in the case of where you are, but the carceral solution is now
the only solution we have.
And when we sit here as abolitionists and we say, well, let's get rid of all that stuff
and people say, well, what are you going to do instead?
Our answer is often, it would be so different that it wouldn't be necessary.
So we'd have prevention of the entire situation.
That's one of the things that libraries offer is prevention of the entire situation,
making vast laws of the partial state unnecessary.
So there's a conscious choice there, especially when money is being taken out of the
balance sheets of a city government from the libraries and put into the cops of this
carceral choice of saying we'd rather everyone life is shit so we can throw them in jail
than everyone have a nice life and no one would have to go to jail. Yeah, and then they can come
read a book instead and yeah, it would be nice. It reminds me of one of the big projects of the
anarchists in Spain in the 1930s was to create popular education centers which included libraries,
right? And they funded these entirely, they were not funded by the state. The state was not
interested in making libraries in 1920s, 9030s in Spain and they funded them from popular
subscription and from people's union Jews.
And they built these Atenneos, which are now really beautiful places.
So one of the places I did my PhD in Barcelona.
And like, I wonder if there is, I guess it's, it's very hard for us to conceive of like
a library without the state in the United States, right?
And it like rich people putting little libraries in their middle class neighborhoods is
not not the same thing.
Right.
As much as they'd like to think it is, like, yeah, your little phone box library is not
replacing these services. So, like, is there a model for, like, recreating this in a way that
isn't reliant on the state, which seems increasingly hostile to it? I think there's, there's a
couple models, and it depends upon how far down the revelation you go. So the example you gave
of Spain, we have contemporary with that and slightly more recent versions of that in the US.
So the workman circle, now the workers circle, they funded really wonderful cultural programs,
including libraries. Unions often had libraries, especially back when they used to have more
buildings, like my union. I'm part of my union. And aside from just like being where I work,
we don't necessarily have a building per se. So those things have always existed, especially in
like the workman circle, in ethnic communities who are trying to preserve a culture. And that's
something that fit into 20th century capitalism. And so if we go farther than the revolution,
I read a really great pamphlet recently from the 70s, actually, that was from the UK. And it kind of
discussed libraries, you know, if we make it through the revolution a little bit as being
operated under a syndicalist model, where workers and patrons, which is what we call them now,
that wouldn't be quite that split then, would be able to govern and run these libraries.
There was a really great diagram. So there's definitely been ideas for a long time about what
this could look like. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I guess in the collectivized economy of revolutionary
in Barcelona, libraries still existed.
Atheneos existed, and I'm sure it was along
a syndicless model because everything was.
So, yeah, I think that's a, like,
a good thing for people to
look towards. I want to
stop and take one more I break, and then I want to
talk about what people can do to
protect libraries.
All right, we are back.
So currently, like,
I mean, this is like a funding cliff
for the library system, right? I suppose
it's hard to say, but like, how long would it take before
people stop seeing these services if Doge
was to start doging tomorrow. I honestly can't tell. I think that people
depend. It's hard to say now, right? Because we do have the funding there. It's just,
will it actually happen? Will the thing happen? Yeah. That has already been allocated.
I think we have a little bit of time, but I would expect if that congressional umph isn't expressed
that, especially when summer reading rolls around, we'll really start to see it because that's
something that a lot of people depend on to keep their kids occupied during the summer.
Yeah. And especially out, you know, in red states and rural areas, it's going to be very much
like the, I never thought the leopards were going to eat my face. Yeah, yeah. Kind of situation.
Which is sad, like, because it's someone's kid who doesn't get to go to the library very often,
right? Right, right. That's, that sucks, you know, because it's going to be a lot of, a lot of kids,
especially without those resources. Yeah. I think about, like, how,
I wouldn't have survived my undergraduate without libraries.
All my grad school books are super expensive, especially academic books,
and I relied very heavily on interlibrary loan.
Yeah, and this is at the university level, to be sure,
where books are very expensive.
But at the public and school library level,
this is exactly why this is happening,
is because there is this ongoing narrative from the last few decades
where people, especially like queer kids,
say that the library save their lives,
young people of color saying, like, this is the only place I could see myself in culture by reading
these books. So, of course, of course this is happening because that, you know, they want to take
that away. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, because it's a place where people can kind of exist. Yeah.
Without that. Yeah. So let's talk about, like, how can people engage to protect their libraries?
What can they do? What are like some action items they can take?
I unfortunately don't have great news. I don't think, you know, because of the way this is working and
it is so much about just like
raw brute power that
no one at the federal government
or even state governments for the most part
seems to be able to counter. It's just like not
something they can conceive of.
Yeah. Because they already are doing things
that supposedly shouldn't be allowed, right?
We've already had a congressional funding. This should have a
congressional, you know, this is passed by Congress
and yet an executive order and Elon Musk
can undo it, right? If things were working,
this wouldn't be happening.
Right. So we are really kind of down
down the line a little bit
in what we can do
and how effective it's going to be.
That said,
there are things we can do.
A lot of them are the
things that liberals usually do,
which is like calling your senator
over and over and over again
every day and your representatives
and your state government too
to make sure that your state government
is paying attention to what they're going to lose.
There is certainly, you know,
things one can sign on to for major library organizations.
The ALA has been writing a lot,
and less formal organizations than that.
I think one thing that we can always be doing,
not just in this situation,
but if you want to be supporting libraries,
one of the best things and easiest things you can do
is go get a library card if you don't already have one
and use your damn library.
There's probably something there that you want.
Yeah.
And that actually really does help because libraries,
whether it's with something like IMLS,
or whether it's grants from foundations
or local funders,
you know, their local government,
are better able to make their argument for why they should be given money if they have good statistics to say,
we had 10% more readers this year. You know, the number of books we loan this year is higher than it's ever been.
People that are coming to our events and droves. That kind of, you know, success breeds success.
If they can show that to potential funders, they're more likely to get money. So go, don't go bother the book.
Just check the book out, keep it for we can give it back if you don't have time to read.
Make those numbers go up.
Yeah, yeah. And you can even, like, let's say you're not inclined to go to the library for whatever reason and you didn't like going out or worried about COVID or something. Like you can do most of this online, right? Like if you have Libby, you can borrow e-books. You can borrow e-books and audiobooks from Libby. Some libraries have streaming movies. A lot of libraries have still either all online or hybrid events that you can watch rather than having to go to the event at the library. You know, the one thing about about something.
some of those streaming services and Libby that I will caution about is that your data is less
secure. If that's something you're concerned about, then it would be borrowing paper books.
Okay, that's good to me. Because most libraries, even in the kind of tech dystopian future we live in,
do a decent job or at least try to be good about your borrowing data when you borrow hard copies.
But because things like Libby and the streaming services are third-party integrations,
those collect some amount of use data.
So it's absolutely great to use those, but I would caution that if you are a person who has a very high threat model and you want to be careful about your data, go for the paper.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
It's kind of nicer experience to read a paper book as well.
What about like if people, I know lots of people who are librarians listening to email me.
Like, is there a way that they can organize, which is the way that people are organizing, either to prevent this or like as a way of harm read out?
right? Like, as a way of reducing the damage at the state can do to people's access to learning.
Yeah. So there are a few more radical organizations that I think are worth paying attention to. My favorite is Library Freedom Project. They're really wonderful.
Okay. And more willing to say the thing without bullshit. The thing that, you know, I would obviously urge every worker to do this. But if your, if your workplace is not unionized, start working on that.
Yeah. That will always give you more power. So you should, you should start.
trying to organize your workplace.
Yeah, definitely.
Hopefully,
hopefully there's still time for people to do that.
Yeah.
Who knows where that's going to go?
But you can at least try it.
It's still legal now.
Yeah, right.
Why not start?
And regardless of what happens,
like we're stronger in this together
than we are apart.
And the unions have done a lot
to prevent fascism in the past.
And similarly,
there are,
depending upon what state you live in,
there might be a state library organization
that is active.
And that would be just a good way
to make connections with other libraries near you and their librarians.
And maybe if you do lose some of your funding,
you can put your heads together and use each other's resources
and have joint programming and things like that.
That makes sense.
Are people like attempting,
so I know some of the stuff IMLS have is like online archives,
are people attempting to somehow like download that
in order to preserve it in the event that it goes away?
I don't know that that's really...
Is that not what's a threat?
That's not really what we...
Yeah, I think that there are other kind of data rescue projects with the federal government
that have better data than that.
IMLS doesn't have that much data.
So I wouldn't be too concerned with that.
Okay.
So it's more like along the workplace organizing side.
Yeah.
It's definitely like trying to figure out to make how to make your and the libraries around
you keep going and offering their things to your communities that they've been offering.
Yeah, definitely.
It would be pretty tragic.
Like there's a library not so far from my house.
I can rub my bike to it and I go there all the time.
And it would be really tragic to be without that.
Yeah.
So yeah, please continue to organise your libraries.
Is there anything else that you'd like to plug or suggest people?
Like, it's a pretty bleak time generally.
And I think a lot of us take refuge, especially in reading, actually.
It's a way you can escape terrible things.
Is there anything else you'd like to kind of suggest for people as we dive deeper into fascism
every day at the moment?
I think in libraries and elsewhere, it's just being able to offer a counter-narrative,
like not buying into the idea that the library is a money hole, you know,
that they can only be valued monetarily.
So when you hear that, maybe start going to your library's board meetings.
And when you hear those kinds of things said, get online for the comments and offer a different narrative.
And you can do that all over your life in different ways.
is when you hear that narrative that is monetary and neoliberal and harmful,
offer a different one.
Yeah, I think it's so sad to think that we should have to quantify the value of everything
monetarily, but especially something like a library, like so many people have had such
positive engagements with them, which have nothing to do with the cash next.
They're sort of like generating revenue, and that's what makes them valuable and what makes
them special sometimes.
So, yeah, hopefully people can advocate.
for that. How would you find your library's board meeting if you wanted to? Like if you,
uh, your library, if you have a public library near you, they should have a website and the website
should have an events page that includes board meetings. Hopefully other information about your
library's board as well. And if you can't find it, maybe call up the library and ask. They'll probably
just tell you. They're really good at information there. Yeah, yeah, that is the thing that they do.
All right. Well, thank you so much for joining us, Jamie. That was, that was great. It was really, really helpful.
Thanks for having me.
Hey and welcome to It Could Happen here.
Today we'll continue on our journey through Latin American anarchism,
where we last left off with a look at the anarchist history of Uruguay.
We talked about Uruguay's general history, its radical influences,
anarchism's period of popularity in the early 20th century,
its radical experiments, and its cultural influence.
So today, James and I, because James is here.
Hello, James.
Hi, Andrew.
Today we're going to look at what Uruguay and anarchist
have been up to from the 50s
onward, paying special attention to the
activity of the Federation Anarchista
Uruguaya and the idea
of Especifismo.
By the way, as James just indicated,
I am Andrew, Andrew Sage. You can find me
on YouTube as Andrewism.
But all that aside,
let's get into it.
The Federation Anarchista
Uruguaya, or FAU,
was founded in Montevideo,
Uruguay in 1956.
According to Paul Sharkey,
in the Federation and Acista Uruguaya,
the FAU had very strong working class roots,
as many the militants came from labor-heavy districts like Ersero,
which definitely shapes their outlook.
The FAU was also very much emphasizing direct action
over electoral strategies.
It favored armed struggle as a necessity
in reaction to safe repression and economic exploitation.
And the FAU had a very strong,
stance against Marxist Leninism. Although some members sympathized with aspects of Marxism,
many of them resisted the bureaucratic and authoritarian tendencies that influence that milieu.
Unlike in many other Latin American countries, as you may have recalled us covering in the past,
anarchism persisted in mainstream relevance even after the rise of the Bolsheviks and their influence globally,
and of course the coincide and fall of the anarchists in Spain.
According to Oliver Zenzko's 65 years of revolution, the FAU came about in a time when
Uruguay's prosperity coming out of World War II had come to an end, as its agricultural exports
were no longer needed to feed the Allies' massive standing armies.
This economic downturn triggered major social unrest, which the anarchist's presence
was able to spring upon. One such instance of unrest involved 150,000 workers going
on strike in solidarity with their fellow workers in a tire factory.
During the strike and after, the FAU involved students, unionists, intellectuals, community organizers,
and even a few exiles from the Spanish Civil War to build up a more united labor movement.
So rather than having unions split along political, ideological affiliations like moderates, socialists, anarchists, right populists, and so on,
there will be one big tent just focused on labor.
Now, I personally think a big tent has its benefits and its drawbacks, as with any other strategy.
I think the benefit is obviously that it has the ability to mobilize a large number of people,
but I think the difficulty in the drawback is that having so many affiliations under that big tent
can mean that there's not really much of a shared goal left behind.
Like, yeah, the anarchists want anarchy.
The right populists might just want to secure some benefits and protect.
and the socialists will be interested in launched a party.
Sure, they all proclaim to have some interest on the side of the workers,
but how that manifests looks different from group to group.
But we'll see how that big tent approach turned out for the FAU.
So they formed the National Confederation of Workers, or C&T,
as that big tent in 1964.
But even before that, there was a split.
not too much of a surprise.
After the Cuban Revolution, the FAU was actually divided between those who were opposed to Castro
and those who critically supported the revolution.
Those who opposed to Castro eventually broke away from the FAU in 1963,
as Castro entrenched himself in the Soviet bloc,
while those who remained in the FAU were critical of Castro and his government,
but still supported the fall of Batista.
Of course, with the Cuban Revolution came that very noticeable shift in American foreign policy.
They saw that with all that happening right in their backyard, they'd need to take a very different approach if they wanted to win the Cold War.
So Zayenko actually describes how in 1961, JFK changed the approach of the now infamous school of the Americas from preparing for Soviet invasion to preparing for anti-communist counter-insurgency.
against homegrown revolutions.
So as a result, militaries across Latin America
became more right-wing and seized power for themselves
to protect civilians from the danger of their rights.
In 1964, it was Brazil.
In 1968, it was Peru.
In 1973, was Chile and Uruguay fell.
And in 1976, Argentina fell.
As I was then noted, in just over a decade,
Uruguayan anarchists would become surrounded by right-wing dictatorships,
which collaborated to round up and exterminate left-wing dissidents of all flavors.
Not to mention, the economic situation wasn't exactly getting better.
According to Paul Sharkey, between 1955 and 1959, the cost of living doubled,
and wages did not keep peace.
By 1965, inflation was running at 100%.
and by 1967 at 140% madness.
Yeah.
Well, just wait and see, Andrew.
Well, yeah, yeah, we are living in some interesting times.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You never know.
So the president that preceded the military dictator imposed a wage freeze and devalued the currency.
That was his bright idea, his solution to the crisis.
So people's lives were obviously getting worse
And the time had come for some decisive action
So the CNT aided in strikes across sectors
And even tried to call for a general strike
As Hesenko writes
The FAU decided that they were going to take on a strategy
Of urban guerrilla warfare
So they tapped into a coalition of leftist groups
To robin hood food from the corporations
To give to the poor
Awesome
left us hit.
Yeah, but sadly the coalition couldn't last very long.
Differences in strategy would lead to the FAU doing its thing by building defense councils,
similar to those organized in the Spanish Civil War.
Yeah, yeah, interesting.
While the other groups copied a Che Guevara-Stylea-style guerrilla army approach,
forming the National Liberation Movement to Pomeros, or the MLNT.
The existential debate among, like, anarchists in arms, is this that you've just like,
highlighted, right? It's need we form authoritarian structures similar to those using, for example,
the Cuban Revolution, the Russian Revolution, these kind of statist revolutions, which characterised
the left in the 20th century in some ways, or is it possible for us to go from our community
defense and the defense committees, like the six-person groups at the CNT organized in Spain,
to a more egalitarian large formation, like a like a, like a, like a, a,
truly revolutionary army.
And like, the split that you're talking about is a split that almost every movement has.
Yeah.
Although the MLNT was necessarily anarchist.
Right.
They were, like, following the Castro model.
Is that right?
Like the Che Guevara kind of guerrilla warfare doctrine.
Pretty much the Guevara sort of model.
Yeah.
Although, I'm glad that you bring up this point because it's actually something that I was
writing about earlier today in preparation for a video.
I think there's a conflation that anarchists need to be careful with between leadership in the sense of authority, as in the right to command and control and that kind of thing, versus leadership in the sense of guidance, advice, coordination, expertise.
Yeah.
I think that just as you might have an anarchist construction collective, right, and they're building a house.
You might have something like a foreman who is coordinating all the actions that all the different builders and all the different
treatment are engaged in to ensure that the different parts of the house come together cohesively and seamlessly that nobody's like
stepping on anybody's toes that everything is being done in a proper time in.
That is an instance where there will be coordination without necessarily having authority.
it's just really a division of labor
to ensure that the task that everybody is there
to accomplish can be accomplished.
And the person who is given that particular task
within that division of labor
is doing so by taking on that responsibility,
but just as they have the responsibility,
others will also have the responsibilities,
and that does not elevate them above the other people
in that association.
Right, yeah.
And so kind of in the same way
that you have that in a construction site,
I think that that is the kind of approach we need to take in a military formation
where the person who is, you know, respected for their knowledge of military strategy
or has the information or the expertise to be able to handle the planning of that approach
because we're all here to win, right?
Yeah.
We're all here to defend our freedom and to defend the freedom of the people we love.
So there's no sense in splitting off into a bunch of different groups and failing at our task
when we can come together where necessary to engage in the coordination of our strategy,
to improve the chances of our success.
And of course, there is a vulnerability in times of warfare that we do have to acknowledge
because warfare historically is one of the times that is the most ripe for authoritarian seizure and control.
But because that vulnerability exists in those times is when I think we have to be
extra vigilant of how that could potentially manifest.
You know, we don't sacrifice our course and defense of the cause, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah, definitely.
Like, because it's easy to do that.
It's easy to be persuaded that this situation is unique and different,
and therefore we need to accept some kind of compromise of the very essence of what we're doing.
The method that, like, the people I have spoken to, both those within formations today
and in Rojava, and in most in Rojava, but also in Myanmar, and those, for instance,
in the iron collar.
which was a phi column in the Spanish Civil War.
They're probably most famous for leaving the front line to attack the cops
because they felt like they didn't have enough weapons
and the cops had too many.
And what they did was they created a concept of the minimum necessary discipline.
Discipline being something that one has for oneself,
not the hunting that comes from above.
And they had leaders who would lead in times of combat right
when we needed to make swift and decisive action.
There wasn't time to obtain consensus.
They used consensus to arrive at those leaders.
Those leaders were able in times of urgency to make urgent decisions,
but that didn't confer to power or status outside of that moment.
Yeah, yeah.
It's just like in an emergency scenario, you know,
if somebody is, you know, leading a surgery, for example,
or leading a rescue operation,
that doesn't mean that they're elevated above everybody else.
it just means that they have the knowledge and the skills to accomplish that particular task.
And the others of their own free will respect that knowledge enough to go out with what the person is recommending.
Exactly, yeah.
And that doesn't mean that that person is inherently capable of bossing you around.
Exactly.
And I like the mention of discipline in particular because that really is the distinction.
Because he will talk about, oh, you need to have military discipline.
how you're supposed to have military discipline
without blind obedience to authority?
And sure, we're not going to have,
we're never going to have discipline
to the extent that soldiers are dehumanized
and treated like cannon fodder,
as you would find in a traditional authoritarian military,
but the discipline is derived from solidarity.
It's derived from the responsibility
people have for each other,
the care people have for each other
within their formation,
and the responsibility they have for their own actions.
as being part of that formation and for how their actions will affect those around them.
Yeah, exactly.
And I think that's something like, you see it again and again when you read the column,
the Derutti column newspaper, right?
They talk about discipline and how we have to have,
our discipline comes from our commitment to our cause and to each other,
not from any fear of repercussions or like quote-unquote disciplinary action.
But from like the fact that we don't want to let our comrades down,
nor do we want to let our course down.
And like when people do do that, right,
there are, it doesn't mean there aren't disciplinary actions, but it means that those are like,
like you said before, you don't break away from the core of what you're doing. So they agree by
consensus to include with the person who has done the thing that is considered to be wrong,
what a suitable punishment would be, or a suitable set of repercussions would be, so that it
reinforces the idea of like consensus and a like discipline coming from oneself rather than from fear of
punishment. Yeah, I think there is, of course,
the potential for
processes
to potentially become
how do I want to put this?
What I will say is I think it's necessary
but even in engaging
with
those who have
broken trust
or who have
seemingly split from the
association or have
jeopardized the safety or security
of the association that you find ways
to deal with those situations on a case by
key species, you know, that you're responsive to the particular circumstances that cause that
action or that particular outcome, rather than, as we would find in modern militaries,
where you have like a very clear, this action has this consequence, this action has this consequence,
this action, like a lot more flexibility is required because we understand that, you know, we don't
have this matrix of crime that authorities do. You know, we're dealing with calm, they're dealing with crime,
right and so in dealing with harm we have to approach each of those situations in the context of
their situations rather than in some sort of cold like distant calculation you know and i think
in approaching it in that way people are more willing i think to fess up or to take accountability
for their harm because they know that there's that relationship there that you're going to try to
work through it. That's, well, there may be many potential consequences to their actions.
There's an openness to dialogue there rather than a rigidity of, this is what you did.
So this is the outcome automatically. Yeah. I mean, that is, the latter is like a system that
looks not at people, but at quote, unquote, crimes, right? And like, this is the opposite of a restorative
justice system, which looks at people in the situations they are in and not just the worst thing that
they happen to have done. Yep. We should return.
to South America,
and we've once again diverted it.
Yes, yes.
Although I feel like these digressions always get to something essential
and brings out a little something extra to what I would have, you know,
prepared in advance.
So we had this split, right?
We had the FAU and then you had the MLNT.
They did collaborate where there was common cause,
but it wasn't a permanent collaboration.
You know, and while this was taking place in the urban guerrilla warfare sphere,
you had different things taken place in the Labour movement.
The FAU was dealing with the consequences of Big Tent organizing,
as they found that the Uruguayan Communist Party, or PCU,
had pretty successfully claimed significant influence in the CNT.
So in response, according to Sozenko,
the FAU created a rank-and-frile alliance called the combative tendency,
which pushed for more militancy and less bureaucracy in the union movement.
through that alliance, the FAU was able to accomplish a lot more outreach and action,
but in return, the president of Fideluguay introduced imbigency laws
executed by the military to counter the unrest.
The revolutionary left continued to fight against the military's involvement in civilian life
and also formed a daily paper called Ipaca.
When the government was like, stop, don't do that, that's illegal.
And when the government says stop, don't do that, that's illegal.
That means they put boots on the ground and, you know, raided their offices.
And so the people fell apart and the groups involved went underground.
And like I said, the military raided their bases.
But then when the FAU was like, let's get the band back together,
unfortunately, the other groups were too scared to resurface, understandably.
And so because of that fare, the PCU,
kind of had a fall from Greece.
You know, for a while, they were
the big boys on campus
in the C&T,
but after the FAU
kind of came to the forefront
again in a vehicle, it's bravery
and stuff, they kind of end up
falling back.
And you see, the PCU had chosen
to appease the military because
they believed that a leftist faction within
the ranks of the army might support
their bid for power.
Kind of like what happened in the Russian Revolution.
Yeah.
And so, you know, they really thought they were cooking sometime, but as a saying goes,
the stove was not even on.
I haven't heard that one.
That's good.
Yeah, the military saw them as pretty much insignificant.
So much so that while other leftist groups were facing severe oppression,
the PCU was actually pretty much left alone.
And so when the Union Rankin Files saw that and turning their backs on the PCU,
they ended up turning their focus toward the combative tendency, because at least they were doing radical and serious stuff.
And the unions were under attack from all sides, the police, the military, and even neo-fascist gangs.
And the FAU-led combative tendency was focused on defending these workers' movements from those threats.
According to Zazenko, the FAU held a secret Congress and formed their own armed wing, the OPR 33, which, unlike other guerrilla groups in the region,
wasn't a top-down organization.
Instead, individual cells had the freedom to decide how they carried out missions
and which actions they took part in.
The FAU still set the overall strategy,
but it wasn't about becoming some kind of vanguard.
Some of their actions, by the way, according to Sharkey,
included bank robberies and factory owner kidnappings.
It's like old school Spanish anarchism.
Yeah.
Well, there were some old-school Spanish anarchists within their ranks.
Yeah. So he really can't be surprised.
Yeah, yeah, true. There's this wonderful line in Abel Paz's book about Derruti that
Derruti was very fond of children, so he risked his life robbing banks to fund their education.
Oh, that's beautiful.
Yeah, it's such a wonderful, like...
That is beautiful.
Yeah, I don't know, I just enjoy it very much, the whole, like, you never know what direction
that sentence is going to go in.
That is a quintessential example of that, I think.
Yeah, so you know, you do what you have to do pretty much.
Yeah, yeah.
And like, I think it's really like he wasn't maximalist for the sake of maximalism.
He was maximalist for the sake of like educating children.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It wasn't, he didn't see the violence as an end in itself.
Exactly, exactly.
It had a cause and a reasoning behind it.
Yeah.
And the FAU was the same way.
You know, their reasoning was just that if the capitalist class was going to use force to protect their interests,
then the workers should be able to use force to defend it.
there's.
Yeah, yeah.
Franz Fanon and stuff.
And so they did what they had to do.
Meanwhile, the PCU was stuck to their policy of appeasement,
which actually had a detrimental effect in the broader movement,
as the military kept growing in strength.
And so the very anti-communist military's involvement
in breaking up all the work activities,
emboldened their role in politics,
and then once they defeated the MLNT,
with the FAU struggling to resist,
isolated by the PCU's in,
action, the military succumbed their opportunity to coup the government, leading to the rise of
Juan Maria Porreiberi, the first president of the civic military dictatorship in 1973. In the aftermath,
the FAU made the tough call to move their operations to Argentina, which hadn't yet fallen to
military dictatorship. From there, they worked within the CNT to organize a massive 15-day general
strike. It shut the country down for a time, but it was a very important.
wasn't enough. And the efforts to keep up the fight were constantly undermined by the PCU,
which still insisted on negotiating instead of taking real action. Meanwhile, the people was suffering.
According to Sharkey between 1971 and 1976, there was a 35% fall in real wages, and by 1979,
inflation was running at 80%, with wages limping behind at 45%.
So until 1976, the FAU continued to work between Argentina and Uruguay.
But after Argentina's coup, that was it.
To Code Zenko directly, during the U.S.'s Operation Condo,
dictatorships across Latin America continued coordinated to kidnap, torture, and murder leftists.
Across the continent, between 60,000,
and 80,000 leftists were killed and more than 400,000 were placed in political prisons.
End quote.
Jesus.
And I think we need to sit with those numbers because it's very easy to hear numbers like that and just think, you know, that's just a statistic, pretty much.
We hear big numbers.
Our mind kind of goes statistic.
Yeah.
But to like think about the impact that would have for tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of people to be just taken out.
whether killed or imprisoned,
leaving like a gaping hole of knowledge,
of experience,
of education,
of radicalism.
Yeah.
A country may take decades to recover
from something like that.
It's a cultural death in a sense.
You know,
obviously this is the political movement,
but it's kind of similar to how
during colonialism,
elders would be wiped out
and with them,
all of their knowledge,
all of their oral histories, all of their languages,
just wiped out in an instant.
Yeah.
This is different, of course,
as a political ideology as opposed to an entire culture and ethnicity,
but it's still just a massive loss of all that history,
all that experience,
all that radicalism and information just gone.
Right, yeah, it's hard for a movement to recover from that.
Yeah, it's not like a genocide or like these colonial kind of,
you could call it like a decap- well it's like a decapitation of a movement i suppose well i would say it's
more than a decapitation because it's not just like notable figures that were taken out or particularly
influential thought leaders or anything it's almost everybody yeah anybody who had that fight in them
or had that radical knowledge or consciousness yeah anyone with any lived experience all the things
they'd learned or the mistakes they'd made and learned from like a gun the movement has to begin
almost from like a blank slate.
Yeah, the history is basically
raised in a sense. All this left is
really what they might have written down.
Yeah.
Which is obviously only a small portion of what they might have had to share
with the rest of the will.
Yeah, especially in a movement that's being criminalized
and pursued by the state, right? Like, what they write
down is what they risk the state discovering, so that they're only
going to risk writing something down. Yeah, yeah.
And then, you know, when you look at this,
this didn't just happen, you're required, that's happened all over the
world in some cases, this massive wipeout of the anarchist movement took place even earlier,
you know, in the 1900s, 1910s, 1920s.
But in all these cases, that loss is something that we are still, in a sense, recovering from.
We kind of had to slowly build back.
But we still haven't ever reached in many places.
The height that anarchism was at at certain points in its history in certain parts of the world.
in certain parts of the world.
Yeah.
I mean, look at even like Spain
still has very strong
anarchist socialist movement, right?
But like the best of the anarchists
died in
in Aragon, in Madrid,
and in concentration camps
afterwards or fighting in the Second World War.
And like it took decades
for that movement to recover.
And it's still not as strong as it was.
That this was one of like high points.
Especially when the legacy is so much erased.
You know,
When you look at how histories are taught everywhere in the world, you're barely going to get a mention of anarchism, despite the massive role it played in sheep in the 20th century, 19th and 20th century is.
Yeah, this has been one of my constant things as a historian, is that like, when people write histories today, they write them from the perspective of the inevitability of the state.
And like, I'm not alone in making this analysis, David Graber does it.
Jim Scott did it too.
The idea is that people who exist outside of the state are behind
and that they have failed or chosen not to advance
to the more advanced human existence that is a state.
And Jim Scott does this in the art of not being governed, right?
Like, if we look instead as people who have chosen to refuse the state,
then we understand anarchism as a choice
that people would make knowing the options available to them
rather than a step backwards or failure to advance.
to the state. And we can look at the whole of history from that perspective and see it very
differently, but most historians don't. Exactly. I'm sure you've even commented this, where people
just kind of assume, oh, well, the anarchist lost, so that means they're destined to lose.
Yeah. They lost that particular fight that has been in the war that's already lost, and
additionally, states have lost too. Yeah, states continue to lose.
States, state projects have lost, continue to lose.
You know, the capitalist project, capitalist businesses, they lose, they fail.
That doesn't mean that the project is destined to lose or destined to fail.
It just means that particular iteration or that particular attempt was not able to succeed in all its ambitions.
Yeah, and like, as historians, we shouldn't be making that judgment, right?
We should be attempting to learn from a document the past rather than to sort of categorize it.
into like failed and successful.
Yeah, that too.
Because the standards,
the standards of failure and success
are often dictated
by the standpoint of the status quo.
Yes, very much so, yeah.
It's kind of like how
the Haitian revolution is spoken of
as the only successful slave revolt
or one of the only successful slave revolts.
and the standard for success in that case
is that they were able to establish an independent state
whereas other slave revolt in other parts of the world
including within the Caribbean would have taken different paths
the maroons for example
their former revolt was a withdrawal
from the system that surrounded them
creating a pocket of resistance isolating themselves
same thing in Brazil
we had the kilombo um kilomboes
these settlements that extracted themselves from the surrounding oppressive structure
and try to survive to the extent that they could.
Not all of them lasted, but nothing lasts forever, you know?
Countries rise and fall.
And so I think if we limit ourselves to just the example of Haiti,
particularly in the context of success in a slave revolution,
I think we miss out on a lot of those other examples
and opportunities for inspiration and guidance.
Yeah, I think you're right.
I think, like, it's applies to lots of places.
I think about it, like, you know,
I'm fortunate to have this, like, background in history,
but also to be with people in their moments of revolution
and to, like, spend time with revolutionaries in Myanmar.
And, like, one of the analyses that you'll always see is that, like,
this creation of liberated spaces is, A, not enough,
or B, like, there are also places within the non-government,
though, and where there is still very strong control from a pseudo-state, right?
But I think that overlooks the fact that, yeah, there are not like libertarian states.
But people are living their lives without gods and masters.
That they are experiencing freedom in every moment.
And they are liberated in their own lives as they continue to struggle to liberate territory and other people.
That might be what success looks like.
Yeah.
Like they are able to be self-realized.
Yeah.
just the psychological experience in itself
it kind of be under-estated or underrated.
Even if it's on that small scale of the individual,
that's still valuable.
Yeah, and like if we acknowledge that,
it's much harder to go back.
Like, those people can't go back
because they've existed in liberation, right?
Like, they've lived in a free way.
Yeah.
And, like, they will always know that that freedom is possible,
that they can live with,
that authority, live without state power, that liberation is a thing that can exist, not just
in our mind, but in physical space. And like, they will always know that, like, that's available.
And if we can tell those stories, so will other people. Exactly, exactly. Because that is something I
speak about so often. It's the need in the process of social revolution to develop people's
powers, drives, and consciousness. You do that by giving people both, of course, theoretical,
education and, you know, share a knowledge in that sense, but also through experience.
Because I've used this phrase before, you can't put the gene back in the bottle.
You can't go from experiencing freedom to a situation of unfriedom and then shrug your shoulders
and think, oh, that's all there could ever be.
After you've experienced an alternative to the status quo, you're not going to go back to thinking
the status quo is all there is and all that could ever exist.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
We have to remember that when we're looking at these things.
It's easy to look from where something ended and project that back,
but we have to understand how it felt when people were doing it too.
Exactly.
So we're kind of, we kind of left on a somber chapter in Uruguay's anarchist history.
Because unfortunately, it was only after the fall of Uruguay's dictatorship in 1985,
the anarchist militants were able to return to Uruguay and reestablish the,
the FAU in a fractured, political and social landscape with greatly reduced numbers.
Some of the former anarchists involved in the FAU created the People's Victory Party, or PVP, in exile,
which had attempted to reorganize resistance efforts, but also fell into some Leninist tendencies.
But the mainline FAU continued to focus on grassroots organizing, worker struggles, and political education.
It continues to be engaged in Latin American anarchist networks, particularly with Brazilian and Argentine groups, like the Ferrechao Anarchista Caucha, the Ferrechao Arachista Cabocla, the Ferrechao Anacista de Janeiro, and the Argentine Organization Aouca.
Despite its past radicalism, the FAU has shifted towards a broader approach, integrating mass movements while retaining its commitment to anti-authoritarian socialism.
Since then and up to today, their approach has aligned with the practice of Especifismo,
which has developed to rebuild their strength in Uruguayan political movements.
That approach has since been influential across Latin America and beyond,
including North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceania.
I've actually spoken about Especismo on this podcast before and on my channel,
but to give a quick summary,
Especismo is an organizational approach guided by three key concepts.
The first is the need for specifically anarchist organization built around a unity of ideas and
practice. The second is the use of the specifically anarchist organization to theorize and develop
strategic, political, and organizing work, and the third is active involvement in and shaping of
autonomous and popular social movement, which is described as the process of social insushia.
A specificists reject the left unity idea of a synthesis organization of revolutionaries,
or even multiple currents of anarchists loosely united,
because they feel it boils down to a lowest common denominator politics.
They feel that when this unity is preferred at any cost,
it leaves little room for united action or developed political discussion.
It can be described, in a sense, as an affinity group
with the shared interest in the advancement of a very specific politic,
but they aren't just internally focused.
United Specismo is focused in building popular power
as a means of revolutionary transformation,
rejecting both electoral and vanguardist approaches.
So they are specific fees more distinguishes
between specifically anarchist political organizations
or affinity groups and broader mass movements.
And they advocate for anarchists creating the former
and inserting themselves in the latter,
building up anarchist presence and the presence of anarchist ideas,
in unions, in student groups, and in community struggles.
So if you want a more index,
depth exploration of Especifismo, I suggest
reading the discussion between Felipe
Correa and Juan Carlos
Mecoso, called the strategy of
Especifismo on the Anarchist Library.
And they talk about how the fragmentation
of the working class under neoliberalism
has created some very
distinct challenges that require
fresh organizational strategies
and less dog-batter critiquity to
simplistic class analysis.
But they also speak for the need to coordinate
and discipline and strategically
engage anarchist groups within social
movements, retaining their independence, but engaging in their struggle.
And they also end up in that interview discussing the FAU's long-term strategy as a process of
resistance, rupture, and reconstruction. Resistance meaning that they're strengthening
grassroots organizations, direct action, and ideological development. Ropter meaning that
they're breaking away from capitalist institutions through revolutionary action, and reconstruction
means they establish a new social relations based on self-management and mutual aid.
It's kind of similar to the way that I break down social revolution conceptually
as an approach that incorporates both opposition and the proposal of alternatives.
So I have been thinking about a specificism lately.
I've made that video many years ago and my anarchist understanding has shifted a lot, especially recently,
in going back and looking at how I would have analyzed things previously,
I think there's some different directions that I might take certain things in.
I think, for example, the idea of affinity groups engaging in social intuition is extremely
valuable in shifting the conversation within these mass movements.
But I also think that there's a risk in the ways in which a specifies more,
if not properly understood or conceptualized, could end up opening ground
for co-operation towards some rather un-anarchist outcomes.
You know, what I mean by that is I think it's important,
when discussing Especismore,
to be very careful against the interpretation of it
as some kind of vanguard a strategy
or way to dictate a vision of anarchy.
I think that even if somebody's taken,
the Especist approach in creating an affinity group
organized around a very specific form of anarchism,
that group should still be in conversation with different tendencies and engaging in an ongoing
process of critique and convergence of ideas. I believe this was the sort of motivation between
Malatesta's idea of synthesis and the synthesis federation in anarchist history. I'll still wait
and a bit about that. But anyway, I'd love to hear about, you know, what the FU and other anarchist
New York while up to here now.
They can feel free to reach out to me.
I have website now, Andrewsage.org.
And I wish them all power to all the people.
That's it for me today.
You can find me on YouTube and Patreon.
And this has been A Kidapin here.
Peace.
Welcome to Kidapin here, a podcast where I last left RFK Jr.
On the proclamation that if he was able to take off,
his millions will die.
And all evidence suggests.
that I am going to be right about this.
I am your host, Mia Wong, with me, is Gare.
Hello.
He's making the meme come true.
He's making the millions, millions must die.
We're really, really,
really, truly only the white man could make real unlimited genocide in the first world.
It's great.
It's great stuff.
So this is going to be a recap episode of,
not even all,
like some of the stuff RFK Jr. has done since he's gotten confirmed.
as the
fucking United States
is Secretary
of Health and Human Services
a organization
which includes
so many things
but like for example
the NIH, the CDC
FDA
I believe.
Yeah, many, many things.
So, okay, there are lots
and lots and lots
of different rounds
of budget cuts
that are happening
and grant cuts
from a whole bunch
of different
departments
and agencies, we're going to start with National
Institutes of Health,
cutting a whole bunch
of studies for vaccines for new diseases.
So, RFK Jr.'s thing was, well, we're not
going to fund any COVID research because
COVID is over. So,
no more research into COVID vaccine
treatments. We're not going to fund that.
Now, obviously, COVID is, like, not
over. Trivially,
obviously, you catch it,
and it makes you sick, and sometimes you
die, and sometimes you get debilitary
long-term negative health outcomes.
But this is the logic that they're using to just be like,
no, fuck it, fuck it.
We'll cut all of the funding that we can find that does the stuff.
Now, the problem again, and so these cuts look a lot like
the very beginning of the Trump administration
where they were just going through and like you'd get a giant list of grants that got cut
in the sense that they're like control effing programs, right?
And they're like searching for keywords and then just killing all the block grants
that do that. We'll get more into this at the end of the episode with like a different set of cuts.
But one of the, one of the big issues with this is that it's, it's killing coronavirus research in general.
Like, all of it is getting like massive cuts. And so this includes, I think it was CNBC as you're putting on this, killing a bunch of fairly like late stage research on things like, you know, like actually having vaccines that could work across like the broad category of coronaviruses.
because, like, obviously, there are a whole bunch of different kinds of coronaviruses,
and there are certain sort of vaccine techniques that can work to suppress, like, the families of them,
and fucking, I don't know, maybe maybe the Europeans or the Chinese will figure out how to do that,
because it sure as fuck isn't going to be us after we cut all this fucking funding.
It's great.
So, all right, we're starting sort of, I guess, on the vaccine beat here,
because there's so many different kinds of bullshit.
one of the other really big things that happened is Dr. Mark Peters who was the guy who like did
Operation Warp Speed which was Trump's like big push to get a COVID vaccine now and this is something
I think is worth highlighting it again this guy like worked under Trump right a lot and some of these
programs we're talking about later were Trump programs but Trump won I mean like Trump did
do some anti-vax shit and say some anti-vax shit but he wasn't like a hardline anti-vaxer
Definitely not, no.
Yeah.
At many points, he tried to take credit himself for the fast response of the code vaccine, which, hey, as long as we get the vaccine, do whatever you want, buddy.
And the amount that that's been, like, memory hold and, like, they're trying to, like, just alter, alter history regarding the COVID vaccine is a little, a little head scratching.
It gives me that, like, just slow growing headache that I'm experiencing every day, nearly.
all the time, just not due to COVID, because I've actually, to my knowledge, never gotten it,
but it is a headache of political origin.
Yeah, and I think one of the interesting elements of this is something the thing I talked about
more like in the wake of like the immediate wake of 2020, like 2012 and 2012 and 2022,
is there used to be a big split in the Republican Party between like the lab leakers
and the anti-vaxxers. Because the thing about being a lab leak person is that like you can't be a
trying to release a bioweapon person who also
thinks that the vaccine
is evil, or at least you shouldn't be able
to, that those are like mutually...
It took years. It legitimately, this
is enough cognitive dissidents that even like the
Alex Jones types, it took years for them to
sort of like develop a level of cognitive
dissonance that allowed them to do this. They did do it
eventually. And what we're seeing right now, right, is
like Trump as a way of sort of shuring
up his anti-vaccine flank has just like
handed control over all public health policy
to these just like
hideous anti-vaccine, like,
Franks. And so Peter Marks, who was like one of the big guys from Trump won and who stayed on
through Biden, who was like, yeah, okay, I'm going to fucking get this vaccine to work. He has been
forced to resign. And Marx also was the guy who was in charge of vaccine safety in the U.S., right?
And he's forced out and he said in a statement for CNN, I mean, you can read the whole thing
somewhere. But, quote, it has become clear that truth and transparency are not desired by the
secretary, this is RFK Jr.
But rather he wishes subservient
confirmation of his misinformation and lies.
So that's good.
That's the guy who used to be in charge of our country's vaccine
safety going like, yeah, this guy wanted me to just
fucking lie about vaccines constantly.
So that's great.
That's fun.
So before we get into the people who he's
also, he's bringing in to do his like
unbelievably fake hack, bullshit
vaccine study stuff, we should talk a bit about
the measles outbreak in Texas.
Now, the reason that this isn't getting more coverage
is that this is going to get
a really significant amount of coverage
on this show in the near future
when those episodes are done,
this is going to get significant coverage.
For now, what I think is sort of important about this
is that, so there has been an outbreak of measles,
which, like, there should not be outbreaks in measles.
We have defeated measles.
We have the vaccine.
You can take it.
It's part of the MMR vaccine.
You take it, and then you don't get measles.
But there are massive, you know, like,
communities who are
fucking not vaccinating
and as
like in large part
because of the fucking
anti-vaccine shit
that's being spread by people
like RFK Jr.
And faced with this,
RFK Jr. has done a bunch
of unbelievably mealy-mouthed bullshit
about personal choice
to do vaccines,
blah, blah, blah, blah.
And then also did a whole thing
about how he was going to have
the government sends vitamin A
to like combat measles
which is just nonsense, right?
like so so this is obviously just a complete fucking fiasco we're going to cover this more as it goes on
yeah so stay stay tuned for more measles horrors yeah uh what the other thing we're not going to cover
because it's going to be covered by these products and services are these advertisements
i would love to talk more about them well we're still trying to get that hymns and eventually
that them's a sponsorship but we're getting closer we're getting closer getting closer
We are back.
Now, what we are not coming closer to is finding a connection between vaccines and autism because there isn't one.
It's all fake.
However, comma.
People who I don't believe this include RFK Jr.
So RFK Jr. has been doing something.
Okay, it's genuinely a little bit unclear who exactly is running this, whether this is like the Department of Health and Human Services is like a broader organization or just the CDC.
but he's trying to set up
a bunch of people to like
basically cook the books
and try to publish some shit that shows a link
between Vexe's and autism
it's genuinely deeply murky and unclear
as to who's doing what right now but one of the people
who's been brought in to do this
is David Geer who is
oh God oh boy
I mean even by the standards of
guy whose job it is to like
cook evidence to make it look like
there's a connection between vaccines and autism.
Even by their standards, gear is like an absolutely
fucking hack. So we talked about
Angie Wakefield on this show, and there is weirdly
a Wakefield connection here too. So Wakefield's
the doctor who originally cooked up
like a connection between the
MMR vaccine and
autism. Gear is
from like a slightly different
faction of these cranks.
And this is the faction that's like the most
closely aligned with RFK Jr. and this is the
faction that thinks that like
weird methylmercury or
whatever the fuck in some older vaccines was causing autism, which like, no, it wasn't.
But he, you know, he and his dad, Mark Gear, like, did a whole bunch of work to try to sort of establish his evidence.
I'm going to read this from NBC just describing their work, quote,
The Gears conducted research from a makeshift laboratory in their carpeted wood-paneled suburban Maryland basement.
So, again, they're doing this shit from their basement.
published several studies, many of which were retracted,
and promoted an unproven treatment for autism
that cost families tens of thousands of dollars
and included injections of Lupron,
a drug used for prostate cancer in early puberty?
In children, it's only approved for precocious puberty
and comes with side effects, including bone damage, heart issues, and seizures.
They diagnose kids with precocious puberty without proper testing
and misled parents into thinking they were signing up for an approved
autism therapy.
A 2011 Maryland
Board of Physicians Investigation found the
Grizzan violated standards of care.
So, to back up for a second, right?
A, they claimed that
mercury in vaccines is causing autism.
B, they claimed to be able to treat it
with puberty blockers?
Like, they cure autism with a
puberty blocker? Yes.
Which is an awesome, extremely funny, given
like, you know, all of the
these people are like, you know what?
Trying to ban puberty blockers now. I'll give it to them.
That's fine. We're going to cure autism by giving all these autistic kids,
pubity blockers and making them trans.
Sure.
Sure. Let's go for it. Let's give that a shot.
I'm sure that won't create a whole new problem for them.
Yeah.
Yeah, that bone damage thing isn't real, but that's fine.
Yeah, unfortunately, this is one of the other problems with this is like,
you get a lot of sources that are just fucking making shit up about these fucking diseases.
To be fair, I also am probably
I'm unfamiliar with this exact
puberty suppresses. Yeah, I don't think
Lebrons like... In general, yeah, in general,
the bone damage thing is... The bone density loss
of a puny blockers
is mostly
negligible. Yeah, so again,
again, this guy is like, I found
the cure for autism and it's
puberty blocks. Very funny.
You know,
I do know a lot of autistic people that have
gotten... How do I say this?
they've seemed more comfortable
once they've transitioned. I guess I'll say it like that.
Look,
being on the right
puberty blocker is better for an autistic
kid than going through puberty if you
are trans. But
this also shows how
the attack on puberty blockers
for, you know, quote unquote transminers
is completely nonsense because
these drugs have been used for cis children
to cease early onset puberty.
These are fully reversible
these are used for cis children
it's used by these like hacks and weirdos
to quote unquote cure autism
yeah by these same people as an autism
cure for the vaccines
oh my god
even though these the same like drugs
these quote unquote like chemical castration drugs
as Matt Walsh would put it
are you know now trying to be banned
for for trans children
so
you know hypocrisy
always always always matters
it's always it's always important to point out their hypocrisy
because that's how we win.
So here, this is one more step
towards victory.
Garrison, Garrison, listen,
pointing out hypocrisy is important
because morale is a terrain of struggle.
It makes you feel good,
and that's a little bit important.
Average John Stewart post,
but okay, let's continue.
So his father, Mark Gehr,
who he was doing a bunch of this research wish,
was stripped of his medical license.
Now, David Gehr actually, amazingly,
amazingly was not stripped of his medical license.
license. And Garrison, do you want to guess why he wasn't strict of his medical license?
He didn't have one. He didn't fucking have one. So instead, instead, he was prosecuted for doing this shit without a medical license. He also doesn't have a medical degree. He has like a liberal arts degree. Okay, okay. That rules. These, these liberal arts students are giving our kids transgender hormones many such cases.
he's like the only person
I've ever seen
who actually genuinely
did do
like dangerous and unauthorized
like fucking like
medical
like unauthorized medical experiments
on children with puberty blockers
like he's the only one
yeah this is the first instance
I've like heard of like mass
unethical use of puberty suppressing
drugs
it's a fucking anti-vacor
this is the guy they're bringing in
to like to cook up a connection between vaccines and autism using like fucking bears data or whatever.
So investigative journalist Brian Deere, who is, I think probably most famous to people who've watched like an H-bomber guy video as the guy who brought down distraced ex-doctor to Angie Wakefield.
Deere like also wrote about this guy like in his like unbelievably dog shit study about.
So he publishes like an unbelievably dog shit study about like the mercury and vaccines causes autism, whatever the.
the fuck and it gets basically like immediately obliterated the moment autism like activists discover
it and they're like holy fucking shit like these people are evil i'm going to read a quote from
brian deers article about it one of miss sedales that that's the person who uh like the the autism
like advocate activist who like discovered this stuff uh one of her complaints concerning the
gear is apparent institutional review the seven member irb institutional review board consists of
Mark and Dave Greer, Dr. Gear's
wife, two of his business associates
and two mothers of autistic children,
one of whom has publicly acknowledged
that her son is the patient
slash subject of Dr. Gear and the other
whom is a plaintiff in three pending
vaccine injury claims.
So the IRB,
right, this is like an ethical
sort of review board thing that you're supposed to go
through to get your studies
approved. So the IRB for the study,
again, is these two guys,
his dad's fucking wife,
two of the business associates and the mothers of two autistic children who think that
vaccines cause autism and are like one of whom is in a lawsuit about it and the other one is
taking the fucking puberty blockers to try to cure the autism. So this is the guy who is being
brought in to do the book cooking is a guy with no medical license, no medical degree
who had to retract his papers because they were bullshit. Yeah, also, and this is something
that's common between him and RFK juniors, all these people, they think that like, I mean,
this is going to be relevant when we get to the sort of HIV AIDS.
Part of this is that these people think that diseases are caused by malnutrition and not by,
you know, like diseases.
And they think that you can treat them with just being healthy instead of like vaccines.
And, you know, this is, this is their worldview, right?
These people are sort of eugenesis.
This is also why they, like, one of the reasons why they fucking hate autism so much is that
they're just, you know, just on a sort of political level.
Like, that's just, that's just sort of, that's just what their ideology is.
Imagine how many skilled drone pilots they're going to lose.
It's really going to backfire on them.
Whomp, womp, womp.
We will see.
Speaking of wamp, wamp, here's some ads.
All right, we're back.
Let's hear more about Robert F. Kennedy Jr.,
the second Kennedy to have a hole in his head.
But this one's from a worm.
Whoa!
Okay, so let's let's,
talk about the last
group of things
here, which is
another series of massive budget
cuts that they're doing. This is
another thing where they have a giant list of
grants that they're fucking cutting.
This is another like anti-D-EI.
And so, you know, there's a lot of the things that
I guess you would expect from one of these
like you can only study white people
ones. So like there are
a whole bunch of programs in this list of like grants that they're cutting that are
like studying, you know, racism and medicine.
and like the differing medical outcomes between people of different races
because they're getting different levels of medical care
and because of the environments that they're in.
And this is all stuff that like, you know,
these people do not want there to be research demonstrating
that racism exists in the medical system
because it's just extremely bad for there just to be objective evidence
that there is racism and that it's bad and that it kills people.
So another very bleak thing that I haven't seen much coverage of
is that a lot of these grants were funding research into trans health care and also the effects of, like, violence against trans people, things like mental health.
There's, you know, and this is also something that's devastating because, like, like, the state of trans medicine, it's like, we know things that are safe and we know things that work, which is just letting people transition, but also there's so much more stuff that we need in terms of, like, hormone regimes that, like, work better, right?
and things like that, and also like,
you know, I'm just sort of like basic health outcome stuff.
And yeah, these people do not want anyone to know exactly how bad
their fucking transphobia is affecting the people that they're inflicting it on.
And so, yeah, they're like, fuck it.
We'll just get rid of all these people's funding.
There's also a whole bunch of stuff that has to do with COVID.
I'm just going to read the description of one of the fucking grants they cut
to give you a sense of like the shit that they're cutting.
development of a handheld rapid air sensing system to monitor and quantify SARS COVID-2 and aerosols in real-time,
which actually would be an unbelievably useful thing, right?
Like a system that could detect fucking COVID, like aerosols, like in real time and tell you that there's fucking COVID in the air?
Staggeringly useful.
They don't fucking want it.
One of the big things that they cut is like, you know, we're talking about this with sort of like cutting my programs to study structural racism and medicine.
they basically went on a like a county by county basis and found every single grant
like state by state county city by city every single grant that talks about studying the effects
of COVID on non-white people you know and they're doing this I think people have forgotten about
this but one of the things that RFK Jr said like I think this is during the campaign
was he had this giant rant about how COVID was like specifically targeted to leave Chinese
people in Jews alive,
which is great. That is how he put it.
Someone should probably report that to Trump's
anti-Semitism task force.
Yeah, yeah.
You know,
Hall monitor, whatever.
No one cares anymore.
Yeah, I mean, they're just, you know, so they're just trying to destroy
all this stuff. They've also just, like,
in blocks, just, like,
got rid of every single fucking thing that was funding, like, any
program that was, like, mental health care
as a block thing. They're just,
cutting all of it. So that's going to make everyone
even more normal than we already
fucking are. See, actually, I
agree with this because
this is the one thing where I think the lifestyle choice
thing does matter, because I just
read Yowie when I'm sad and it fixes
me. And if everyone does that, I think
we don't need any of these
other mental health services. What are you doing?
You're manic, though.
Read more, YOWI.
You can read a lot
more. Because
famously, the Yau...
The Yowie reading demographic, the most mentally stable and normal population.
God.
One of the other ones that's unbelievably concerning is, again, like, county by county going through and cutting funding for, like, things that promote child vaccination.
They are systematically trying to cut off kids from getting vaccines, and they're trying to get rid of anything that opposes, like, their efforts to try to convince everyone to, like, all,
parents to fucking not have your kids get vaccines.
They also cut
a whole bunch of grants for rapid disease response,
which is great.
We'll get to the exact reason why that's so
fucking terrifying in a second in the
very, very immediate term.
They also have killed an
like 145 grants
for HIV, and this is
a whole bunch of different
HIV programs.
They are killing funding for
distributing and getting people to use prep,
which is a pill that like massively helps prevent
HIV infections, especially if you were a trans woman and you were having sex, like, you should get on prep.
Or a twink, I will say. Thank you.
Yeah, the uptake rates for trans women are specifically lower, which is the thing that we know, because we have these fucking funding and we're not going to have that shit anymore because they're cutting all the fucking funding for these fucking research programs.
I sometimes do forget that there are trans women with different, like, lived, like, sexual backgrounds than me.
because coming out of
Twink culture
it's like ingrained
like your co-host
who who permanently
has only ever come out of lesbian culture
yes
no because in
in Twink culture
getting on prep is
ingrained pretty hard at this point
yeah well it's ingrained in a lot
of places but there's places where it
isn't and those places are
where things go very very bad very quickly
which is why obviously they're
eliminating the fucking research for this because they want
fucking kill queer people.
Like, they think,
they think that HIV is a fucking lifestyle
choice.
RFK Jr.,
particular things is because of Poppers.
Which is now leading to the
Poppers raids.
Yeah.
Red Alert, everybody.
Red Alert.
Yeah.
It's getting pretty scary out there.
So it's really
fucking bleak.
I mean, they've cut,
you know,
I mean, they're trying to just
fucking get rid of this
because these people are just
fucking unhinged virulent homophobes
and transphobes.
And yeah,
they want to
fucking cut these programs because they think it'll hurt us.
They've also laid off
the entire office of infectious
diseases and HIV AIDS policy
staff. Is that bad?
Oh, it's bad. Here's the
first CBS. Yeah, so they do
they're one of the other groups that is childhood
vaccination efforts. They also
run the fucking national vaccine program
which nobody knows what's going to happen to it now because
again, the thing that was supposed to run it, it's just fucking gone.
So who the fuck knows what's happening with that
now? They are probably going to just completely
destroy Trump's like giant
Trump actually in his first term had a giant program
to like end HIV that like kind of
did stuff because it was someone else's
program that Trump just kind of implemented
We're getting so close to the
HIV vaccine
Yeah
Yeah
And you know and so
Who fucking knows it's
probably just completely fucked
Yeah this is going to have
just unbelievably hideous consequences on millions
and millions of people and they
It's not even that they don't give a shit
is that they think it's cool and funny and based
when people like us fucking die.
Now, on the other hands,
the rest of the U.S. population is about to run
into the same fucking thing that all of these stupid
ass bankers thought, which is that, oh, Trump will just
fuck with the queries and leave us alone.
No, we're going to close in the same place that I closed
the last time I talked about fucking RFK Jr.,
which is the fucking bird flu, which is that he wants
the solution to the bird flu is he wants to
fucking let it rip, and he just wants to just like
be like, oh, we can just like
take the birds and survive the bird flu,
and we'll just let it spread and just use
those ones and those ones will be healthy. Now, so the thing about this bird flu, right, is that it kills
within three to four days. I mean, just Matt Kossey in Scientific America describes how this thing,
again, within three to four days has a 90 to 100 percent kill rate. So, you know, you can't just
do this, right, because it'll just, it just fucking kills all the birds. He doesn't want to
fucking vaccinate the birds, which is the thing that, like, if you want to stop this,
but this fucking pandemic from spreading, you need to do it. Right. And once again, I, I, I, I,
need to emphasize enough that when I
when I talked to viral just about this, they said
that letting the bird flu rip through all the
fucking bird populations, right? Just letting you
fucking spread, letting it kill everything until you only have the ones
that, like, didn't die, is
if you were like trying to cook up conditions
like feel conditions
specifically to try to get it, to develop
a mutation to spread to humans, this is what you would
do. Is you would just
let it fucking spread uncontrolled and kill everything.
So this is what we're doing
at the same time as again, anti-vaxers
are fucking running
running our fucking vaccine services
as we are cutting the staff
of or cutting, cutting grant funding
for people who do response
to, like rapid response to immersion diseases
as we are cutting the fucking
entire policy staff for the office
of infectious diseases, they are building
a fucking pandemic. And
all these fucking people think that COVID was
fucking cooked up in a lab and what they are
doing is like they are now doing
the thing they are accusing everyone else are doing, which is
they are fucking attempting to gamble a policy
to cook up a fucking play in a lab.
Except it's not going to be in America's fucking factory farms, and we are all going to suffer the consequences of it.
Well, I assume you saw the statement from Cantor analysts on Monday, the Wall Street investment firm.
this founder was a really was a really big Trump donor was on the inauguration committee
but two of two of their analysts put out a statement today calling to re-evaluate RFK Jr.
As Secretary of Health and Human Services calling out his quote unquote apparent anti-science
and libertarian agenda saying it will put people's lives in jeopardy to advance a discredited theory on vaccines.
Look, I will say this like there are a lot of riffs in the Trump coalition.
coalition, RFK Jr. and his people cannot
fucking be allowed to run these institutions. They need to be
fucking run out now. If we do not do this now, millions of
people are going to die. I have been saying this. I am going to continue
to say this because you can see in real time all of the
things that are going to lead to all of these people fucking dying.
And, you know, his position is not incredibly
secure in this coalition, right?
Like, there are lots of sectors of capital who don't want the
entire fucking population of the United States die in a plague.
Yeah, after Carl's grandson's resignation,
tourist analysts also put out a statement advocating for vaccine use
and specifically against RFK Jr. and his vaccine rhetoric,
biotech investors also spread similar anti-RFK Jr. rhetoric over the weekend
following Mark's resignation.
So, yeah, go fucking, I don't know.
I don't know exactly which public official you pressure
or who you go scream at to try to get rid of this guy before you fucking gets us all killed.
but go do that.
I don't know.
Go harass or like legislator or whatever
or like find
the nearest person who can be yelled at
who will convey this.
Stand outside your local CDC office
with a sign and protest the CDC.
The hospitals are empty.
It's fake.
Oh, God.
And on that note,
getting us yet another fucking one of those
actually, do they even do the misinformation labels anymore
on like Spotify and shit?
Like YouTube?
Oh, of course not.
Oh, God.
We lost the election.
It's not happening.
Wow.
Truth and reasonable list lost the election.
Sorry, not we.
So, all right.
Yeah, this is the spitting could happen here.
Get this guy out of office before we all fucking die in a plague.
Again.
This is It Could Happen here.
I'm Garrison Davis.
Today I'm joined by James Stout.
This episode is going to be about.
ICE actions against students, scholars, and professors around the country, and this wave of deportations
targeting people engaged in pro-Palestine speech, protest, as well as some individuals who have
been roped up in this new wave of deportations, who have not publicly engaged in Palestine activism.
Let's start on the evening of Saturday, March 8th.
Mahmood Khalil and his wife were returning home from dinner when plain-close ice agents followed the
couple into their campus apartment building at Columbia University. A man wearing a Marvel graphic
tea arrested Khalil for then unknown reasons and threatened to arrest Khalil's wife, who is
eight months pregnant and an American citizen. When Khalil's wife brought his green card from their
apartment, she says one of the ICE agents placed a phone call, informing someone Kalil was a permanent
resident, to which the person on the phone replied, let's bring him in anyway. You're going to be under arrest.
Turn around, turn around, turn around, stop resisting.
Okay, okay, he's not resisting.
He's not resisting. He's not, I have to him.
He's not resisting.
There's no need to put this.
Don't worry.
You're going to have to come with us.
I'm going with you.
Don't worry.
You guys really don't need to be doing all of that.
How do you keep?
How do you keep?
I'll send speak.
Okay.
the arrest, Khalil's lawyer, Amy Greer, spoke on the thumb with one of the ICE agents,
who said that they were acting on State Department orders to revoke Khalil's student visa.
Greer reiterated to the agents that Khalil was in fact a permanent resident with a green card,
but the ICE agent just responded by saying they were revoking the green card instead.
Khalil's a graduate student who has been studying at Columbia for over two years.
Last year, Khalil emerged as a visible figure in the college encampment protests.
becoming a public spokesperson and a lead negotiator on behalf of Columbia University apartheid divest.
Though never being arrested, Khalil faced harassment from right-wing Zionist doxing campaigns
calling for his deportation. And when ICE did come for Kliol, disappearing him to a detention facility
in Louisiana and cutting him off from communication with his wife and lawyer, throughout all of this,
he was not charged with any crime. Instead, ICE and the State Department are using a rarely used
Cold War era immigration statute that gives the Secretary of State the power to exclude or
deport any non-citizen of the United States if there are, quote, reasonable grounds to believe
that an individual's entry, proposed activities, presence, or activities in the United States
would have, quote, potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences.
Yeah, that was the one that, like, I remember at the time you and I were discussing this
like in our group chat and we were trying to work out like how the secretary of state could be revoking
a green card like yeah and i think you found this or you found it somewhere in it the the trump
administration has been very very good at finding very obscure pieces of law that it can
wield against migrants right like no one in 2016 would have foreseen what they did with title 42
which is a public health law and they're doing something similar here i mean they may have
spent the last four years looking for these things,
especially when the campus protest began.
But this is entirely unprecedented, as far as I'm aware.
And right after this happened,
we discussed how this case was probably going to be used
as a testing ground for employing these tactics
on a more widespread scale, creating legal precedent.
And sure enough, Khalil's case was not an outlier.
This was just the first public instance of the Trump administration's
directed targeting of students.
they believed to be associated with protests against Israel and its actions in Gaza.
And this wave of actions by ICE had actually already begun before Khalil's arrest.
The day before Khalil was arrested, ICE agents knocked on the door of PhD student Rajani Shrinivasa,
who a few days prior was suddenly notified that her student visa had been revoked.
When ICE agents knocked, she did not answer the door.
The next day, ICE showed up again to her Columbia University apartment.
Trina Vosin was not home, but upon hearing of Khalil's arrest just a few hours later,
she decided to quickly collect some belongings and flee to Canada.
Five days later, when ICE returned to her residence, but this time with a warrant,
Trina Vosin was already gone.
Homeland Security Secretary Christy Noem praised this as quote-unquote self-deportation.
Yeah, they talk about this a lot.
Like, self-deportation is definitely one of their goals.
They talked about it before Trump even came into power.
But, like, that's what we're seeing a lot of these spectacle raids and, like, spectacle deportations.
Scare tactics.
Yeah, exactly.
The desire is that people leave.
Is she a Canadian citizen or, like...
I don't believe so, no.
Okay.
It was just the fastest flight from LaGuardia.
Out of the country.
Out of, like, you know, the closest she could be.
Yeah.
I wonder what her immigration status is in Canada now.
She is currently figuring this whole situation out still navigating her legal options,
both in Canada and the state.
Yeah, that would be interesting too to see what Canada can offer her.
And like, I don't think the Trump administration would go after like having her extradited back
because as you say, she's not accused of a crime and then they've kind of got what they wanted.
A bit of be interesting to follow that.
There is no need for extradition because none of the people that were talking about today were accused of any crime.
Yeah.
With the other cases of quote unquote like self deportation, one of the issues is people have had their passport seized and held,
like lots of Venezuelan migrants, so like they actually can't or it would be very difficult.
for them to just get on a flight and leave.
Which I think is in part why she made the decision to get out when she could.
Right.
DHS claimed in a statement that Trinnavasen advocated violence and was, quote,
involved in activities supporting Hamas, a terrorist organization, unquote.
Isis targeting her seemingly stems from being mass arrested while trying to return to her apartment
from a picnic with friends on the same day as the Hamilton Hill occupation.
Jesus.
She couldn't get home and was caught up in the crowd and was arrested among a hundred other people.
She received two summons for obstructing traffic and failure to disperse, but her case was quickly dismissed.
Homeland Security claims that failing to declare these two summons is what caused her visa to be revoked.
Okay. Interesting.
That same week, ICE went after another green card holder at Columbia, a 21-year-old student named Jung Sao Chung, a permanent resident,
who immigrated to the United States from South Korea
with her family when she was seven.
On March 9th, ICE agents visited her parents' home
looking for Chung.
In that day, she received an odd text message reading,
Hi, Yun-Sao.
This is Audrey from the police.
My job is to reach out to you
and see if you have any questions
about your recent arrest and the process going forward.
When are you available for a phone call?
Unquote.
This recent arrest was allegedly in reference
to being detained, among others,
at a sit-in protest at Bernard College
on March 5th.
Chung was charged and then released with misdemeanor obstruction.
After receiving that sketchy text message,
Chung got an email from Columbia Public Safety reading,
quote,
the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York
has asked us to inform you that Homeland Security Investigation agents
are seeking to make contact with you in connection
with an administrative warrant for your arrest.
Consistent with university's practice,
we wanted to share this information and their request with you.
If you are represented by counsel,
it may make sense for your lawyer to speak directly with DHS, unquote.
Chung's lawyer decided to call, quote unquote, to Audrey from the police,
who revealed that she was actually an HSI agent,
and that the State Department was revoking Ms. Chung's residency status.
Now, rather than opting for self-deportation
or turning herself into immigration authorities,
Chung decided to go into hiding and fight the deportation in the courts
while trying to evade ICE detention.
When ICE failed to locate her,
they enlisted the help of federal prosecutors.
To quote from the New York Times,
quote, on March 10th,
Perry Corbony, a high-ranking lawyer
in the federal prosecutor's office,
told Ms. Amad, Ms. Chung's attorney,
that the Secretary of State, Mr. Rubio,
had revoked Ms. Chung's visa.
Ms. Ahmad responded that Ms. Chung
was not in the country on a visa
and was a permanent resident.
According to the lawsuit,
Mr. Kobone responded
that Mr. Rubio had, quote,
revoked that as well, unquote.
Yeah.
So this is the exact same language.
we saw with Khalil. And it displays a general uncaring towards who they are actually targeting
and what their actual legal status is in the United States. They think they're going after people
student visas, but when it turns out they have green cards, that doesn't stop them, they still
continue to do it anyway. On March 13th, ICE searched two residences on campus with warrants,
citing a statute for harboring non-citizens, but Chung was nowhere to be found. Like Khalil,
the Trump administration is arguing that her presence of the United States,
hinders the administration's foreign policy agenda.
But her lawyers note that Chung was not by any means a quote-unquote movement leader.
She was simply one of hundreds of students who joined in nationwide protests
against Israel's actions in Gaza.
Her lawyers write, quote,
Ms. Chung has not made public statements to the press
or otherwise assumed a high-profile role in these protests.
She was, rather, one of a large group of college students
raising, expressing, and discussing shared concerns.
unquote. Chung had previously faced a university disciplinary process, which found she was not
in violation of any university policy related to protests last year.
Chung's lawyers filed a lawsuit to prevent her deportation, claiming that ICE's actions against
Chung are illegal and unconstitutional. This lawsuit reads, quote, officials at the highest
echelons government are attempting to use immigration enforcement as a bludgeon to suppress speech
that they dislike, including Ms. Chung's speech.
ICE's shocking actions against Ms. Chung form a part of a larger pattern of attempted U.S.
government repression of constitutionally protected protest activity and other forms of speech, unquote.
On March 25th, a federal judge granted a temporary restraining order halting efforts from ICE to detain or relocate Chung.
The judge said that the government produced, quote, nothing in the record to indicate Chung is a danger to the community or a quote unquote foreign
policy risk, or that she was in any communication with terrorist organizations.
The judge said that there would be, quote, no trip to Louisiana here, unquote.
This is in reference to the big ICE detention facility in Louisiana.
We'll be right back after this ad break.
Okay, we're back.
Now, although Chung has at least temporarily halted ICE's efforts to detain or deport her,
not all legal recourses have proven successful.
This week, a U.S. District judge declined a request to block the deportation of Cornell student,
Mamadu Tall, after the State Department revoked his visa.
On March 31st, Tall released a statement, quote,
given what we have seen across the United States,
I have lost faith that a favorable ruling from the courts would guarantee my personal safety
and ability to express my beliefs.
I have lost faith I could walk the streets without being a
abducted. Waying these options, I took the decision to leave on my own terms. Yeah, it's pretty bleak.
So, Tall has elected for the quote-unquote self-deportation option, at least for now. I believe his
case is going to continue, but he's not going to remain in the United States. Yeah. I think he returned
to the UK, right? I believe so, yeah. He's a British citizen. Now, interestingly, last September,
Cornell University itself tried to revoke Tall's student visa for involvement.
in student protests.
But he successfully appealed
and was able to continue
his African studies PhD remotely.
Yeah, I spoke to him a little bit back then
just via direct message.
But I think at that time,
whatever his agreement was,
it seems like there was a component of it
that at least he didn't want to talk about it in public,
which is fine.
Everyone has the right to do that,
and he should do it as best for himself.
But maybe I'll try and follow up with him again now,
see if he wanted to speak.
Because he seems to have, like,
he's been of all of these people
like the one who's been able to make the most statements and control his narrative to some degree.
Yeah, no, he entered this period of like radio silence after he won his appeal last fall
and then only started speaking publicly again once he began getting targeted by the Trump administration
like the past month and a half.
I think he proactively filed that suit, right?
Yes.
Yeah.
Now, the scale that Mark Rubio and ICE are seeking for in regards to deportations,
is seemingly going to be increasingly large.
On March 27th, Secretary of State Mark Rubio claimed that he has revoked over 300 student visas
so far, saying at a press conference, quote, we do it every day.
Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visas, unquote.
Now, there are a few ways the government is currently trying to find these, quote-unquote,
lunatics.
ICE seems to be targeting non-citizens who have been arrested or detained at Palestine protests.
even if their charges were subsequently dropped.
This is the case for Chung and Shrinivasa,
as well as former student Leka Cordia,
a Palestinian who was arrested at Columbia campus protests
in April of 2024.
She is currently being held in an ICE detention facility in Texas.
Now, beyond arrest records,
the government is utilizing the World Wide Web and social media
to identify new and returning visa applicants
and possibly current visa holders
that, quote, support terrorist organizations, unquote.
Social media screening of immigrants and visa holders
has been slowly ramping up since 2014
and accelerated during Trump's first term.
But a new directive from Secretary of State Mark Rubio
titled Enhanced Screening and Social Media Vetting for Visa Applicants
was sent out on March 25th and leaked by journalist Ken Clippenstein.
The directive cites two executive orders from Trump,
measures to combat anti-Semitism, and, quote,
protecting the United States from foreign terrorists and other national security and public safety threats, unquote.
The State Department is now requiring consular officers to conduct a, quote-unquote, mandatory social media review with screenshoting for students and student exchange visitors,
with the intent of looking for evidence of, quote, advocating for, sympathizing with or persuading others to endorse or espouse terrorist activities or support a designated foreign terrorist organization, unquote.
Now, this applies to FMNJ visas, so student exchange visas, academic visas, and vocational visas.
The directive also instructs officers to search social media for, quote, conduct that bears a hostile attitude towards U.S. citizens or U.S. culture, including government, institutions, or founding principles, unquote.
Which is kind of the most incredibly broad thing I've ever seen.
Yeah, I mean, it's leaving it at the complete discretion of the officer, right?
There's already been an instance of U.S. Customs agents denying entry to someone who had, quote-unquote, anti-Trump sentiments found on their phone.
Now, though this new directive is focused on denying or revoking student visas,
the Department of Homeland Security is seeking to expand its social media data collection to U.S. citizenship, green card, and asylum applicants.
basically anyone and everyone in the U.S. immigration system, no matter their current status or what previous vetting they might have already gone through.
On March 5th, DHS issued a 60-day notice for public comment on a proposal for, quote, uniform vetting standards and national security screening, unquote, that includes the collection of social media information for all non-citizens applying for immigration benefits like citizenship or permanent residency.
A statement from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service reads,
these efforts ensure that those seeking immigration benefits to live and work in the United States
do not threaten public safety, undermine national security,
or promote harmful anti-American ideologies, unquote.
Yeah, like the anti-American ideologies, again, it's just vastly broad, right?
It's like crazy red scare level stuff.
Yeah.
And I'm guessing this will be either like a literal control F of whatever they can find of your public social media or
AI even. Some kind of AI
system. That's what it seems to be, right?
Former immigration agents have suggested
that they're probably going to use some AI
system for this as they've already kind of used
more primitive versions. But ramping
up to this scale and with like this increased
focus and like attention on
quote unquote AI is going to affect
the way that they do this vetting process. Absolutely.
Yeah. Great.
So though the government is trying to increase
their social media screening,
so far, they actually
haven't had to do that much of
their own research to identify targets for removal. On March 17th, a Georgetown scholar named
Bdar Khan Suri was arrested by Homeland Security outside his home in Virginia, where he lives with
his wife, who's a U.S. citizen, and their three kids. According to Surrey's lawyer, masked agents,
quote, refused to tell him the basis for the arrest, handcuffed him, and forced him into an
unmarked black SUV, unquote. Later, his wife was informed that her husband's visa was revoked,
on social media posts, and that Surrey was sent to ICE detention in Louisiana.
Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Trisha McLaughlin posted on X that Surrey was, quote,
actively spreading Hamas propaganda and promoting anti-Semitism on social media.
The Secretary of State issued a determination that Surrey's activities and presence in the United States
rendered him deportable, unquote.
Of course, any single post in support of Palestine is,
is going to be seen as, quote, unquote, promoting anti-Semitism, according to Mark Rubio.
Surrey's lawyer wrote in a court filing, quote,
Dr. Surrey is an academic, not an activist, but he spoke out on social media about his views on the
Israel-Ghazzo war. Even more so, his wife is an outspoken critic of the Israeli government
and the violence it has perpetuated against Palestinians, unquote.
Yeah, it seems like he was identified through his wife, right?
Correct. And we'll get to that. Okay.
Surrey has no criminal record, and according to a colleague, he did not attend campus protests.
However, Surrey's lawyer writes that his family have been victims of a doxing campaign,
with his wife stating that a website had, quote, claimed falsely that my husband and I have, quote, ties to Hamas, unquote.
The Homeland Security Assistant Secretary referenced that claim in a public statement on Twitter,
and this harassment stems in part from Suri's father-in-law being Ahmad Yusuf, a former advisor to Hamas.
A federal judge blocked serious deportation as immigration court proceedings continue,
but he still remains in ICE detention.
What kind of visa was he on?
He's not a green card holder.
He received his visa to continue doctoral research on peace building in Iraq and Afghanistan.
It's some kind of academic or exchange visa.
I don't think we know the exact type that he has.
Okay. Yeah.
It would be interesting to know if are they searching just through F or
one visa databases or are they so, I mean, obviously not if they're finding these green card people,
but like...
Well, I think specifically in this case, they're searching social media.
They're not searching through their own databases.
They don't care what kind of visa he has.
They're looking at this doxing campaign that's been targeted at him and his family for, like,
over a year and using that as the basis to deport him.
Right.
And then being like, can we deport?
He's not a citizen, so yes, basically.
Even though his wife is a citizen.
Yeah, his children, presumably.
therefore also citizens.
His wife, whose father is Ahmad Yusuf.
They can't deport her because she's a citizen,
or at least they can't deport her right now.
Who knows if they'll try to denaturalize in the future?
Yeah.
But this is the easiest person to target.
Yeah.
And I think that's kind of what they're going for.
Like a lot of this is,
it's like the politics of owning the libs, right?
It's like the politics of being angry at your niece and nephew on Facebook
and wanting to humiliate them.
like it's not a particularly like coherent policy other than like the Palestine protest made a lot of people on the right mad and they don't like migrants and that now they're using this obscure legal provision as a as a cudgel against everything they dislike.
Yeah and using social media to identify people who have never been arrested, never been charged with anything.
Yeah.
We're going to finish our discussion on these doxing campaigns and ICE action starting students after this ad break.
All right, we're back. So right now, the two main vectors for iced attention, whether you have a green card or a visa, seems to be previous arrests or these mass doxing campaigns.
Now, someone like Mahmood Khalil was never arrested or charged with a crime, but instead has been the target of harassment from both a local campus doxing account run by Columbia professors and fellow students, as well as larger right-wing Zionist organizations like Canary.
Mission. A few days before being arrested by ICE, Canary Mission posted a video naming Khalil as a, quote-unquote,
siren emoji, suspected foreign national alert. So what is Canary Mission? If you're lucky enough to be
unaware, since 2015, Canary Mission has been collecting and publishing personal information of people
they accuse of promoting, quote, hatred of the United States, Israel, and Jews on a North American
college campuses, and beyond, unquote. Now,
They have profiles for a few legitimate, like American neo-Nazis,
but many profiles only cite criticism of the Israeli government
and its actions in Gaza as proof of alleged anti-Semitism.
And now there is increasing evidence that the government is using websites
like Canary Mission to target students, professors, and scholars for ICE deportation,
essentially outsourcing intel gathering from these pro-Israel non-government organizations.
A few weeks ago, Canary Mission,
uploaded a profile for Rumeza Azturk, a Turkish graduate student at Tufts University.
They included a picture, her resume, and linked to an op-ed she co-wrote last year for her
student paper, criticizing the university for its ties to Israel amidst the war in Gaza.
For this, the Canary Mission claimed Oz Turk, quote, engaged in anti-Israel activism, unquote.
Two weeks later, while walking alone to Iftar dinner for Ramadan, a place,
close ICE agent approached Oz Turk on the sidewalk. As he grabbed her arms and wrestled away
her phone, five more agents surrounded her and pulled up their gator masks as neighbors began
filming the arrest. Within 24 hours, she was moved to ICE detention in Louisiana. A statement from Homeland
Security claimed that HSI, Homeland Security investigation, had determined that Oz Turk,
quote, engaged in activities in support of Hamas, a foreign terrorist organization that relishes the
killing of Americans, unquote. And Secretary of State Mark Rubio said, quote, we gave you a visa to come
and study and get a degree, not to become a social activist that tears up our university campuses, unquote.
Yeah, I mean, again, like, writing an op-ed is like as central to the First Amendment as things
can be, right? Yeah, there's no evidence she was even attending campus protests, let alone
tearing up the university. She co-wrote an op-ed. And,
you should not be deported for engaging in protest on a university campus at all, right?
This is blatantly unconstitutional, extremely worrying.
The fact that this person just got a profile in the Canary Mission website for writing an op-ed,
and then this is used as justification for her deportation, is still an even greater escalation.
Yeah, like, if we're talking about, like, this is sort of, like, liberal idea of the marketplace of ideas, right?
the way that ideas enter the marketplace,
you will find nothing more amenable to liberalism
than writing an op-ed in your campus newspaper, right?
That is the most well-behaved, straight down the middle,
constitutionally protected thing,
way to engage in anti-genocide activism,
pro-Palestine activism.
So, like, in a sense, this one is particularly disturbing.
Like, it's a frontal assault on First Amendment rights for non-citizens is what it is.
Yes.
On March 24th, Canary Mission published a new section of their website titled Uncovering Foreign
Nationals, which lists the profiles of non-citizens who they believe qualify for deportation.
Jesus.
Another far-right pro-Israel doxing group called Bitar, which even the ADL lists as an extremist group.
Damn.
Which is wild.
Batar says that they have given the Trump administration a deportation list.
of thousands of names, including citizens that they expect to be denaturalized.
People like Mamadu Tal and Mahmoud Khalil have been targeted by both of these organizations.
People will be familiar with, I don't know if it's Bitar or Bitar, but like you probably have
seen videos of them on campus trying to hand pages to people.
Pagers.
Yeah, like.
Making light of the pager attack Israel did.
I mean, making a threat.
Like, sure, sure.
Like, if you're going to come onto a campus and make a fucking bomb threat and accuse someone else of terrorism, I mean, the hypocrisy is kind of the point.
Or even just like, you know, quote unquote, celebrating the deaths of people, right?
Yeah, right. Like mocking this attack which killed children, which, you know, crippled people. It's just disgusting. It's like just abhorrent.
They seem to get a lot of attention online because they do the thing where they go up to people and say deliberately provocative things.
and then film their reactions, right?
They're kind of IRL trolling.
The past week, ICE actions against students
have seemingly accelerated.
Ali Reza Derrudi,
a doctoral student from Iran
studying at the University of Alabama,
was arrested by ICE on March 25th
in the middle of the night
at his off-campus apartment.
Derrude's entry visa expired,
but he was allowed to stay in the States
as he still maintained his student's status.
Yeah.
It's unknown why exactly he was tariff.
targeted, he has no ties to protests or any notable online footprint.
It could be his ethnic origin, right?
Yeah, it could be his name, right?
Yeah, but we should explain the status thing a bit more for people who aren't familiar.
Sure.
Your status is when you're in good standing with a university,
so normally that means you need to be enrolled in 12 credits per,
you might be on semesters, you might be on quarters.
I don't think it's hugely matters.
But there's a minimum course load.
It may be different for different systems.
I don't know. You'd also need to be in good standing in terms of like not late on your fees,
right, your tuition fees, that kind of stuff, right? Not in any, you haven't been expelled or
excluded from the university for any actions that you've taken, that kind of thing. It means you are
currently a student at the university, basically. The only time this normally affects international
students I'm aware of, like as a person who now teaches students, it's like they can't drop below
a certain course load when otherwise they may wish to drop below a certain course load.
to either focus on, they might have like a research position,
they might be doing other stuff on campus like TAing, right?
Sometimes that TA and counts towards their course load.
Sometimes it doesn't, but it can affect things like that.
But generally, it would be the university that would update that status, right?
That would notify U.S. customs and immigration if somebody fell out of compliance with that.
If I'm hearing right, that doesn't seem like that's what happened here, right?
No. Simply his entry visa expired. So if he left the country, he then would have to get another visa to get back in. But he can stay as long as he still has his valid student status. So not only is I was trying to revoke these visas, but they're trying to essentially say that by revoking these visas, they are also attempting to strip them of their student status, which is like a separate step. These things can get kind of very blurry, though.
Yeah, like I don't quite know how that works in terms of like are ICE supposed to be able to. I don't think it hugely matters at this point. Technically the State Department does have that ability, but it's under the same like foreign policy risk designation. Okay. And they'll justify it by saying, well, his visa already expired. So we're just removing him because his visa expired, even though that's not really how this works. Yeah, and they don't have to remove him for that reason. But yeah, in this case, I guess they're going for something else.
No, because the University of Alabama did not elect to rescind his student status.
He was a student in good standing.
Yeah.
And thus legally allowed in the United States.
Yeah, yeah.
Like everyone else here, he hadn't done anything that would, under normal circumstances,
lead to him having any interactions with USCIS.
Just this last week, I detained a University of Minnesota grad student at their off-campus housing.
The university released a statement saying that they had no prior.
knowledge of this incident and had not shared any information with federal authorities.
This person's name is still not released.
Last week, a student at the Southern Illinois University had their visa revoked.
The school administration told their college paper that the university has no role in the visa
revocation process.
The Illinois governor's office is working with schools across the state to, quote,
ensure they are being vigilant about what's happening on their respective campuses.
The governor's team has asked universities to communicate.
with international students about the general resources available to them through the institution.
In addition, we have suggested that they connect impacted students with legal resources that have
been in place for several years, unquote, according to a statement sent to the university paper,
the Daily Egyptian.
Tina Sickinger, which is a very cool name, the school's director of international student
and scholar services, sent an email to the international student body of Southern Illinois.
Illinois University, advising them to carry photocopies of immigration documents with them at all
times, as well as proof of enrollment and records of U.S. residences.
The email recommended that students, quote, use caution on social media and exercise discretion
when participating in political demonstrations or protests, unquote.
Warning that though protests should be protected speech, quote, such activities can sometimes
be misinterpreted and may carry risks to your immigration status, unquote.
Unfortunately, I think this is the university trying to look out for these students.
Yeah, that's the best you could expect from them, really.
And they are providing legal resources to these students,
but they're essentially saying,
you shouldn't post anything or do any protests because then ICE might come
kidnap you.
Yeah.
Which is just a fucked up situation to be in.
And they don't have any other ability to stop this right now.
I am curious what Prisker is going to continue to do here, though.
Yeah, I mean...
none of what they've said is, like, wrong.
It's kind of what you can expect from the university,
the best you can expect from the university, really.
It's like, hey, we've noticed it's happening.
So that is the situation as it currently stands.
I do have one final tidbit here
just that highlights the absurdity of this whole situation.
On March 24th, a lawsuit on behalf of Israeli Columbia students
and relatives of Israeli October 7th victims
was filed against Colombia Jewish Voice for Peace
and Students for Justice in Palestine,
Columbia University apartheid divest,
and individual Columbia students, including Mahmoud Khalil.
The lawsuit alleges that these Columbia groups and students
are the domestic propaganda arm of Hamas,
and even claims that these groups had advanced notice
that the October 7th attack was going to take place.
Oh, come on.
So, the plan was kept secret among Hamas' own political allies in the region.
But they gave an Ivy League university in the New York City a heads up.
Tip off. They just let them know what was coming.
Completely absurd.
Yeah, absolutely. Like the IDF completely failed to see this coming, right?
But they're not the folks at the Ivy League universities who were ready and waiting.
Hamas didn't tell the Houthis. They didn't tell Iran. They didn't tell Hezbollah.
Didn't do Helsbollah.
But they told student activist groups in New York.
York City at the Columbia University campus. Yeah, absolutely ludicrous. Like, I eagerly await
this, this court case, I guess, to see what evidence they have of this. The evidence is going to be
like someone had a Palestinian flag. Some of the quote-unquote evidence that they that they allege
is that some of these, like, activist accounts had renewed activity in October of 2023, like,
before the attack happened. But this is just a simple coincidence. Obviously, he's
people did not have a heads up that the October 7th attack was going to take place.
Yeah.
The lawsuit also argues that protest activity is not First Amendment protected speech, but in fact,
quote, substantial assistance in the form of propaganda and recruiting services and in coordination
with a designated foreign terrorist organization. Again, alleging there's some kind of
communication between Hubmas and student activists in New York City.
Yeah, this is ludicrous. Like,
One of the reasons that maybe we're seeing this so much over the Palestine advocacy is that
Hamas is a listed foreign terrorist organization.
Many other groups on, lots of groups in that part of the world are, but like it's just a
bigger stick to waive, I guess, material aid, or that no one has been actually accused
to material aid to a foreign terrorist organization as far as I'm aware.
But like, that is kind of the sort of stick that they're waving, right?
That is the thing that they're alleging.
I will end us with just this kind of final note.
Now, while there are little signs that this would happen at a scale this large and this focused under a Democratic president,
a degree of consent for this type of targeting was manufactured the past year as it relates to Palestine protests,
with some liberals and Democratic politicians associating activists as pro-Hamas terrorists.
And this is the consequence of that public perception building and the consent being manufactured for that framing.
And now that the even more evil side is in charge, they can take that justification and run with it way further than what a Joe Biden or Kamala Harris would have done.
So it is far worse, but it's not in a political bubble.
This has been like a growing project for the past few years.
There was no point at which the Biden administration really like effusively said, this is protected First Amendment speech.
Yeah.
We may not like it, but it is central to the Bill of Rights.
central to what America is supposed to be about.
They never defended the constitutionality of this speech.
Yeah.
Nor would they have intervened to stop the deportation of someone like Tall
if Cornell decided to revoke his status, right?
Right, yeah.
I don't think the Biden administration or a Kamala Harris administration
would be directing these universities to take that action themselves,
nor would they be, I think, revoking student visas at scale like this.
No.
But they would have let ICE do the stuff that ICE does
if universities themselves elect to remove student visas or unenroll these students.
And like a degree of the complacency here is placed on the actual university administrations,
the university staff who have been vilifying these protesters for the past two years.
Yeah, and I mean in some cases, right, like I'm thinking of one of Colombia,
like professors have got away with things which are absolutely unacceptable.
And like a hundred percent in some violation of your agreement with the university as a member of the faculty.
Like doxing your students, photographing students without their consent, following students around.
Like absolutely unacceptable.
Like in any other context that you would be immediately shit-can for that.
Like really, really, the only reason you can lose tenure seemingly is being a fucking creep to students or stealing a lot of money.
And like universities did allow that for.
more than a year under the Biden administration. And like, we're seeing the consequences of that now.
It's also worth noting that since I've had to quote from so many government statements this episode,
the Trump admin is continuing to correlate any expression of sympathy or solidarity with Palestine
as explicit support for Hamas. Basically, anything you say that's critical of the Israeli government,
its actions in Gaza are being interpreted by the Trump administration as anti-Semitism.
and support for the October 7th massacre.
This is a false equivalency.
What the government alleges
should not be automatically taken as the truth.
These tactics have been used for years
to broadly smear pro-Palestine activists
while also hurting anti-Zionist Jews.
And I guess, like, finally,
we are not necessarily endorsing
every single thing that every single one of these students has said.
Yeah.
We do not necessarily agree
with the framing of every single sentence
that they have said.
I mean, we don't know everything that they've said.
Yeah, exactly.
This is like completely separate to that.
Yeah, it doesn't matter.
Like, we are defending their right to engage in constitutionally protected speech.
Correct.
No matter what they're saying, no matter if they have opinions on Hamas that differ from ours,
no matter what they are saying at a campus protest,
it should not result in ICE targeting them and hunting them down
and forcing students to attend sit-in protests into hiding to defend their own rights
and to keep their green cards.
This is like a completely absurd
and blatantly fascist
to use the now overused word, frankly.
But this is, like this is what that is.
If this was happening in China,
this was happening in Russia,
in other countries,
people would be very, very quick to call out.
I mean, it does happen in Russia, right?
Exactly.
And people are quick to call it out.
Yeah, yeah.
And the State Department of this country
has called it out, right?
Like, rightly, I don't agree with everything.
the State Department does, but I do agree with them on that.
Like, yeah, and I think this is like, I know, if you find yourself having a discussion about
this, I think almost everyone in America can find something that they disagree with the government
on or have disagreed with the government on.
And like, this hurts every single one of us, right?
Like, everyone's right to freedom of speech is challenged when someone's right to freedom
of speech is challenged.
And, like, I think that is the way to approach this.
It doesn't really matter.
if the people whose speech is being challenged right now,
if it's odious to us, if it's something that we don't agree with,
that isn't what's at stake.
What's at stake is everyone's right to say everything without government consequences.
Well, I think that doesn't, for us today, at it could happen here.
We will continue to report on the targeting of students, scholars, and professors,
and immigrants in general, as the Trump administration ramps up its deportation efforts.
Yeah.
If you would like to contact us about these topics, we have an encrypted email address at
CoolZone Tips at proton.me.
It is end-to-end encrypted.
So if you use another encrypted email service or another proton mail account to send the email,
only then is it encrypted.
This is, it could happen here, executive disorder, our weekly newscast covering what's happening
in the White House, the crumbling economic world, and what this means.
for you. I'm Garrison Davis. I'm joined by Robert Evans, James Stout, and Mia Wong. It is Liberation Day in America, everyone. How do you feel? I feel liberated.
Free at last. Free at last. Thank God Almighty. We are free at last for being able to afford things. I am so, so liberated right now.
Unchained from the burden of having money. Yes, yes. Well, as the Buddhists say, you know, freeing yourself from attachment is really the path to nirvana.
Trump really is our first Buddhist president.
He is.
One thing they say about him.
That's right.
He may be the new Dalai Lama.
Who can say?
The Dalai Lama.
And he hasn't.
Yeah.
And the priests who look for him after he dies when he comes back.
This guys.
Unfortunately, they're probably on a fucking travel ban list now.
Oh, my God.
I mean, pretty good chance they're in ICE custody at the moment.
If I understand Buddhism.
Well, I think we should just get right to the most pressing news, which is line go down.
Line is on its way down.
Line in free fall currently.
Yeah.
It's funny because they chose, they were supposed to initially, I think it was like going to be
3 p.m. or something, E.S.T.
Two or three was the initial time they wanted to announce this, which would have given the stock market
couple of hours.
On April 2nd, right?
Yeah, on April 2nd.
It would have given...
Liberation Day.
On Liberation Day.
There would have been a couple hours for it to take effect.
And they attempted to mitigate this.
I guess in the hope that we would all get over it overnight.
We would forget.
Some other shit would happen.
Before the new prices even came,
we'd be like, ah, no, I'm on in the next thing.
But the Dow and the NASDAs, all plunged.
Because it's clear if the president is like deliberative...
shifting an event to not hurt the stock market, that's going to hurt the stock market,
you know?
It's good when you see a 90-degree angle on the old stock market graph.
That's when you know someone's really crushing it, the economic department.
And so far, we're recording this a little afternoon on Thursday, the April the 3rd.
So just in the course of today, major stock indexes have dropped by about 5.6%, which means
about $2.7 trillion in market value, which will be the largest decline.
since March of 2020.
Sick.
So we are, it is looking like this is going to be at the very least a stock market decline
in line with the one that came as a result of the global pandemic.
With the noted caveat that there's really no reason to believe it will get better
at any point.
Yeah, you can't really vaccinate against stupid.
Now, I'm not qualified to get financial advice, but I think everyone should pull out your
401k right now, go to the bank, withdraw all your money, all of it.
All of your accounts right now.
Every bit of it.
Put it into the world.
Worst tasting survival foods.
And you're going to want to buy Keltex.
Lots of Keltex.
In a caliber no one else has.
5-7.
Yeah, 5-7, 380.
32 ACP.
I won the 32 ACP.
That's it.
That's it.
James, everyone buy 32 ACP handguns.
It succeeded in ending one world war and it won't let us down.
We call that doing a Hitler, but in a good way.
Someone here has to be vaguely responsible and say, don't fucking do that.
Do none of those things.
Zero.
Zero of those things.
Empty your accounts.
Get hard cash.
Mark Cuban told people to do that.
Absolutely not.
Mayor endorses Reagan coin as the exclusive safe source of
retirement savings.
You're going to want to put every dime you've got in pressed latinum.
Now, I know that that's the currency from Star Trek and does not exist.
Nevertheless, cancel your accounts.
Put it all in Latin.
I mean, it's going to exist in like what, like 40 years per.
the start-term line.
If it's not already a meme coin, 10 minutes after this comes down.
More stable than your 401k right now.
You can be rich just in time for money to stop being a thing.
There you go.
There you go.
This is why we're launching Cool Zone coin, guys.
I've been saying this for years.
It's redeemable for whatever money the Ferengi use when they exist.
We should probably talk about why the stock market is doing poorly.
So I think, Robert, you can handle this segue.
Well, you know, wait, what is that?
Oh my God?
Is that Mia Wong's theme music by God?
Oh, God.
That was a great purchase, you guys.
I mean, can we all agree?
Worth every penny.
It really was.
The best financial purchase we've made is the tariff talk theme song,
because we're going to get so much mileage out of that thing.
It's an unbelievable steal.
We're going to be using this fucker for years.
Yeah, at least something good came of this.
When you're struggling to get by with your family, just remember the song.
Yeah, yeah, this will keep you warm as you huddle around a barrel waiting for the new police,
which are just called murder police, to reach your shanty down.
Anyway.
Let us talk tariffs.
Power, sections of the left have long argued, is in logistics.
It was logistics that allowed the capitalists of the 1970s and 80s to crush the labor movement.
by enacting the so-called spatial fix to the crisis of capitalism.
By shifting production from countries where workers' movements were strong
to countries where violence against workers was easier,
and workers were thus poorer and more exploited,
CEOs could pit workers against each other in an endless race to the bottom.
These practices became known as offshoring,
infused with the international attack on unions
and the power of workers heralded in the U.S. by Reagan.
Together, they crushed the workers' movement
and implemented neoliberal austerity throughout the globe,
through a regime that is colloquially known as free trade.
Now, there was, of course, resistance to this.
Maybe most famously, the uprising of the Zapatistas and Chiapas in 1994
on the day the NAFTA went into effect.
But for all of the victories and all of the spaces that were carved out,
it is still the CEOs, the bosses, and the capitalists to rule the world.
However, in the wake of their defeat,
sections of the working class came to see their own power
as a product of the nation, of masculinity,
of American jobs for American workers.
In this view, you didn't need to form a union.
You didn't need to organize.
You didn't need to fight the bosses who exploit you.
All you needed to do for the high-paying blue-collar jobs of the 1960s to return
was getting rid of the immigrants and bring jobs back home.
This American nationalist ideology was extremely useful to the ruling class.
It allowed them to turn the rhetoric of the old base of the workers' movement
into a fascist movement,
which they could then use to smash any genuine worker's strong.
and then ride to power to impose more brutal austerity and more pro-capitalist reforms
to, in their view, make it impossible for their power ever to be challenged again.
But a strange thing happened.
In the nationalism bred by the defeat of the workers' movement,
the human personifications of the capitalist bubble economy in Donald Trump and Elon Musk
have come to see their own victory as defeat.
They became convinced that the trade deficits,
which from a capitalist perspective simply do not map.
as long as companies are making money.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Yes.
They don't matter for shit.
Yeah.
Who's the fuck?
What you are calling a trade deficit is us getting things we want from people.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's buying stuff.
Like, I saw a good post.
It was like you don't have a trade deficit with your dentist.
You just pay them to fix your teeth.
Yeah.
I was told at one point in this nation's greatest living previous moment of crisis that what we
needed to do was go buy things to make it better.
Not anymore, buddy. Nope. Nope. Because because these people, Donald Trump and Elon Musk and the
cadre of weird white nationalist fanatics that surround them have absolutely convinced themselves
that if you have a trade deficit, you are being ripped off by foreigners. Yep. Yep. And so
they concluded that we needed to put tariffs on fucking all of the rest of the world in order
to bring American jobs back to Americans.
A new national autarky for a fascist world.
Now, the ruling class, all the capitalists,
all of these fucking goddamn Goldman Sachs motherfucker,
financial analyst, all of these CMBC dipshits,
all of these fucking, all these motherfuckers at BlackRock
and all of the global hedge funds,
and all of these motherfuckers, all of the tech dipshits,
all of the people who back Trump to a hilt
simply assumed that none of these terrorists would ever happen,
that it was all campaign bluster,
that he was lying out of his ass,
and, you know, Obama, again,
I've said this before, ran an abolishing NAFTA.
So there was, you know, and what the fuck ever came from that?
Right.
We, of course, fucking tried to tell them otherwise.
We tried to tell them that they could not fucking control the fascist beast,
that one day it would rise to consume them all along with us.
They didn't care.
They backed Trump anyways because they thought they would get fucking tax breaks.
And now, Liberation Day is here.
Don't forget Crypto.
They were really bullish on that.
Crypto.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All of these motherfuckers, they really thought that Trump was going to fucking,
that literally all Trump was going to do
was punish the transgenders, get rid of woke
and give them tax cuts.
Yep. Yep.
And now the tariff walls have gone up.
The old world is dead.
The new world struggles to be born.
Now is the time of monsters.
Now we're in what I'm referring to
as the Chinese century. I came up with this
this week on my own.
Oh, wow. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. Okay.
Yeah. Good.
Now, that's of course named after
Chinatown in San Francisco,
which Garrison is very bullish about.
positive, positive real estate developments there.
You're big into real estate.
People don't know that.
Chinese real estate, absolutely where you want to be right now, both in Chinatown and
in actual China.
You put all your money into Chinese real estate.
The bubble can't pop a second time.
It can only go back up.
It does.
There were so many, like, enemies on the verge of defeat in, like, the traditional U.S. geopolitical
sense, like, China's economy was doing great.
Russia could have been easily pushed to collapse.
And we were just like.
No, no, no, no, you know what's better.
We're going to shoot ourselves right in the dick.
We've snatched defeat from the jewels of victory.
We're going to shoot ourselves in a dick with a bullet that Vimmo's both of you guys.
It's great.
We dug up the Cold War, resurrected it, and then lost.
Yeah, just to lose.
Yeah, it's beautiful.
You can't.
Yeah, it's sort of like Michael Jackson coming back for Space Jam.
If he had immediately, like, fucking thrown a basketball so hard into Bugs Bunny's skull that it put him in traction.
I'm sorry,
wait,
did you just say Michael Jackson?
No,
Jordan.
Didn't I?
That's the Jordan?
You just said Jackson.
Oh,
well.
You definitely just said Michael Jackson.
You know, leave it in.
Different,
different movie may be better,
you know?
He always,
he always performed well around kids,
so.
Good God.
Yeah.
I love a space jam.
It's a good movie.
Not anymore,
Garra said it's forever tainted now.
So let's talk about the nature of,
like,
what's actually going down with these tariffs.
Yeah,
let's get to the tariffs.
Terrible.
Terrifable.
Terrifable.
That's right.
Right, Gairs. Nope.
Yeah. So, okay. So let me let me just read off some of the ones that are going to fuck everyone.
Great.
54% tariff on all goods from China. This is a 34% tariff that is being added on to the 20%
tariff that was already on. There is a 20% tariff on all goods from the EU.
46% on Vietnam, which is fucking devastating because it's a huge amount of capital from China.
Also, speaking of the China panic, our strongest geopolitical ally in the region.
It's Vietnam.
Like, in terms of having a military, right?
Yeah, a country that we'd been discussing going to warful quite recently.
Yeah.
Like, we just, we have literally, and this is the funny thing about all of these.
Vicki Oswald pointed this out.
The more closely allied with the U.S., the more fucked you got by these.
It's such a weird move, yeah.
Yeah.
24% tariff on Japan.
What is it?
Like 80 or 90% on fucking Cambodia?
Why?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we'll get to why in a second
I want to also cover
So there's a 37%
Tariff on Bangladesh
Which is going to be devastating for
I mean a lot of textile imports
25% on South Korea
So fucking rip you ever getting a phone again
32% on Taiwan
So rip the entire tech industry
I fucking rip Taiwan too
These tariffs are going to devastate
The International Economy
Okay I have been angry about this
Since the fucking election
people have been calling these tariffs a tax
that is just no
it is not what's happening here
this is like calling it a tax
is to completely underplay
how serious this is this is not a fucking tax
this is the wholesale destruction of entire industries
and some of these industries like fast fashion
which you know was always been undergirded by the exploitation
of workers in China to Bangladesh and also like
in the US too but like you know
fuck those things whatever they never needed to exist
fuck them but like you know like you're probably not to be able to
fucking buy board games anymore
more because they're going to be too expensive to produce.
Oh, it's going to shatter games.
Like, tabletop gaming? Yeah.
Yeah, it's done. Like, the economy as we knew it does not exist as of like this morning, right?
Everything that we've known about how this thing works is fucking done.
And some of these are just, you know, like unbelievably hideously cruel.
So there's, for example, a 44% tariff on Myanmar.
Yeah.
Which, you know, is a country, yeah, devastated by a horrific war wage for a brutal dictatorship
and also fucking suffering from a catastrophic earthquake.
And we're like, fuck you, eat shit, 44% tariff.
Also embargoed, no, like, we've seized their government assets in the United States.
Yep.
There's one on, like, Diego Garcia, for instance.
Yes, there's, well, it's on the British Indian Ocean territory, which collective population is primarily U.S. soldiers.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, Christmas Island is on there.
Yeah.
You know, and there's one more that I want to talk about, which is that, so Sri Lanka has been suffering from an unbelievably devastating series of economic crises, and they're going to be.
hit with a 44% fucking tariff
in a moment when like they already
haven't had enough dollars to fucking
import fuel for their economy to function
so this is going to be
devastating not just for us
but for a whole bunch of people across
the world and so this
is the other aspect of this too that's really
fucking brutal is that for the US
right we don't need other
countries money yeah we don't need
to have piles of any other country's money
around right we can just buy things in
American dollars but if you
are Sri Lanka, you need American dollars to buy oil.
Yes.
There are so many fucking things that you could only buy in American dollars.
And when these tariffs go up, when the prices increase and when they can't fucking sell
their stuff, that means that they don't have dollars.
And that means that they can't get access to a whole bunch of the vital commodities
that they need to survive.
And this is just going to fucking devastate them.
And I think that's been an angle that I really wanted to make sure we talked about because
it's been, I haven't seen any fucking mention of it at all, even though those are the people
who are going to suffer the most in this, or people who are people who are
completely on the fucking edge whose economies have already been collapsed,
who've already been so brutally exploited by these same fucking people,
and they're just fucked.
Yep.
You know, we always say we know like Tarifes,
but we do like these ads.
We're back.
I don't feel great about that, but...
Now, there is a funny part of all of this.
There is some fun here.
Oh, good.
Which is, okay, so what if the big question?
questions about the tariffs was how were they going to calculate the tariffs on all of these countries, right? Because
they were saying that their tariffs were going to be a projection of like currency manipulation and like value added taxes and like all of these like subsidies to vital industries.
And you know, and the question again was like literally how can they possibly calculate the tariff rates of hundreds of different countries and taking into account all of these things, right?
Now, the news that had been leaking a couple of weeks ago was that they were going to do brackets. What they actually appear to have done is ask.
Chat GPT?
Oh no!
No, it's entirely, people have like reverse engineered the prompts.
It's almost directly just the chatG, probably shit.
There's a couple different engines that gave almost identical responses, but it's probably
Chachachy.
It's amazing that they're doing the same shit as like my undergraduates and the people are doing
the same shit in the response.
I'm sure your undergraduates spent a little more time trying to hide it at James.
Most of them are smart enough to like pad it a little bit so that you can't put the prompt
into chat GPT and find it.
Yeah.
And so my lowest effort undergrads.
I want to give a lot of credit to the economist, James Sirorecki, who's the guy who figured out their formula.
So their formula, and this is drawing of stuff in the front.
I mean, I saw it from James first.
But like, so their formula is literally just, you take a country's trade deficit with the U.S.
And it's also important to note here that they're not counting services.
They're only counting goods, right?
When again, if you're missing the products and just getting in services, that's,
half the economy, as I understand it.
Yeah. Yeah.
Especially for the U.S., which provides an enormous number of services,
you know, but these people are fucking fascists.
And so they don't think that like services are fucking real, right?
It's the same ideology that undergirds the whole thing about like service workers not
being fucking real workers.
Literally the only real job is that one video of a guy wrestling with an oil, Derek.
Yes, that is the only job.
That is the only job.
He was actually a manager and was just doing that for a video.
And was doing it very wrong.
You got to rub some mud on you.
You gotta take some pieces of metal
and move them around to where they're not supposed to go.
That's when you're a real laborer.
That's working.
Only jobs are things where you wear safety toe boots and anything else.
And that's the thing though, because their image of the world
is the fascist image of the world.
And the fascist image of the world,
labor is just masculinity.
Yeah.
And that's why they're fucking doing it like this.
And so the fascists have asked chat GPT
how to do tariffs.
And what they got is, again, so they take the country's trade deficit and divide it by their total exports to the U.S.
Now, this is nothing, right?
Like, in economic terms.
No, that's not how you do anything.
This is, this is not a real thing.
Like, this is, like, trying to measure someone's height by, like, dividing their favorite number by the average radius of an apple.
Like, it's literally nothing.
You know, what are we?
What are you coming after me here?
Look, just because I have math a little differently.
Okay.
There is no scientific basis, Robert, for measuring height.
by dividing favorite number by Apple radius,
we simply must accept the truth of science.
That's what you say, Joe Rogan and I feel differently.
The dictatorship of ChatGPT
is just...
It's so bleak.
Yeah. Yeah. It's just...
They ask ChatGPT.
It's a mix of they don't actually care
or think this will affect them,
and also they legitimately think
it's the smartest person in the world.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's smarter than them.
Yeah.
It would just make me a good thing.
But not in this instance.
Well, and you can tell the extent to which they were relying on this and didn't calculate themselves because so after after it started to spread that this is just how they were doing it, after James Surrawecki like calculated it, the White House said, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, that's not right. We use an actual complex formula. And so they released a fake formula. But the thing about the formula, right, is that the formula is just, it is literally just trade deficit divided by total exports, but they threw in two random variables as Greek letters. But there's one on the top, and there's one.
one of the numerator, one of the denominator, and they're the same, so they can't
let each other out?
That sounds right to me.
See, that's how you know they're smart is because they're using Greek letters.
Mm-hmm.
Yep.
Which Greek letters do they use, and which person's fraternity does it represent?
I don't even speak Greek letters, so they are.
They must be smarter than me.
You know what?
I rescind my complaints.
This is how the economy dies not through tragedy, but through farce.
It's both.
It's both.
Yeah.
Tragedy farce.
I think here's what Mark's called.
A lot of people are going to die.
No, and I mean, like, my actual serious line on this is that this is the great double bind of capitalism,
is that we are all reliant simultaneously.
We are reliant for our survival on the same economy that will make us all homeless, right?
It is the same economy that we need to fucking eat every single day,
that even in good times, this economy fucking strips from us the value of the labor we produce
and hands us back a bunch of fucking scraps that pay for not enough of anything that we need.
so even as our enemies
tear apart the system that exploits us
we are the fucking ones who's going to suffer
neoliberalism finally has in Trump
produce its own grave digger and our fucking job
and the job of every single one of us and every single person
listening to this show is to make sure
that we also aren't the ones thrown into this fucking grave
and this is going to require a kind of organizing
that is in some ways like
but in some ways unlike anything we've done before
we're about to experience a level
of unbelievable economic chaos
that we sort of saw
during 2020 but during 2020
there was as bad as everything got
the state stepped in and decided to do welfare reforms
right like they gave people a bunch of fucking money
and it wasn't enough but they did it
now none of that shit
we are the only people who are going to be able to keep each other alive
and that's that's what we have to be doing right now
is we have to be keeping each other alive until
we are organized enough and we are powerful enough
to fucking run these people out so they can't ever
fuck us again like this. We can resurrect neoliberal
globalism. We can restore free trade.
That's right. That's right. Bring it back
to the Clinton era. Oh, God.
One last thing we should mention is that, like,
this has already united the entire world against us.
Oh, yeah. People, countries who have never worked together
before in their entire existence are working together.
And unfortunately, polls also show Americans can distrust
or the tendency to view like Canadians and the EU
as enemies is rising both for Republicans and Democrats.
Yeah.
So that's great.
That's great.
Cool, cool, cool, cool, cool, cool, cool.
Yeah, and also, you know, and like the thing, the other thing that we have to do here,
and this is literally our responsibility on this podcast and also the responsibility of, like,
fucking everyone who is having conversations with another person is that this is entirely
Trump's fault.
He fucking did this.
Like, oh, yeah.
This is not fucking the EU or whatever the fuck, whoever's doing retaliatory show.
Yeah, this is no one else ever wanted this.
Yeah.
No, like, the people who put Trump in power didn't want this.
This is just him.
And so, yeah, the, the actual solution to this is all of us running this fucker out and not us getting drawn into his fucking bullshit wars with Canada or Greenland or whatever the fuck country.
He decides to invade in the next, like, year.
Is that all for tariff talk?
Yeah, that's all we got on the tariffs.
I don't know what else to say.
I mean, I'm just looking at the numbers right now where the Dow Industrial is down to 1,500 points since the start of the day.
So it's, things are looking very good.
All of the lines, like, if you look at the way in which the line went down, there's like, it's just this direct vertical drop on the third.
Yep.
It's shocking.
No, it is a 90 degree angle.
It is legitimately, if you set the Google stock.
fewer thing to a one-day view, the drop is so shocking that it looks like it just started down.
It prompts you to turn your phone in the other direction.
I've never seen anything like it, but I guess no one has.
Yeah.
No, I mean, some of us, I guess people still alive in the 1930s.
Yeah, I guess.
Woody Guthrie has.
A fucking grandma, I guess.
Yeah, it's great.
We did it in the 1930s.
It was bad then, and it's bad now.
Well, now that we got those pesky tariffs out of the way, let's talk about the actual most important thing to happen this week in the news.
New Jersey Senator Cory Booker has broken the record for the longest speech at 25 hours and five minutes.
Yeah, that's horrible.
Beating Strom Thurman's filibuster of the 1957 Civil Rights Bill by 46 minutes.
We did it, folks.
Excellent.
Outstanding.
Good.
I'm just checking on our Wall Street bets.
having a real one today.
That's pretty funny.
I will say,
I will say,
the thing about the Booker one,
so if you were writing
a parody of the Democratic Party,
you would write that Corey Bicker
did this and like did this
filibuster and then immediately turned around
and voted yes for a cloture vote to allow Trump
to appoint another nominee.
And that's exactly what they did.
Yeah.
We can't even pair, you can't parry to them.
It's beyond parody.
It's astonishing.
It's not even a filibuster.
He's not a filibuster.
He's not filibustering anything.
No, he didn't actively stop anything happening
other than people not paying attention to him.
I got a response from someone being like,
well, you know, they didn't get to do anything on Monday.
And I was like, yeah, they weren't really planning on it.
And things continued as normal Tuesday.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And here's the thing about that, right?
Like, do you know how many Democrats there are in the Senate?
Do you know how many hours you could filibuster them for
if you were actually determined to fucking do this
and on how many different things?
If we had a rotating series of,
Democrats. Yeah, sure. If you tank teamed it. Yeah, but they're not. They're not willing to
fucking do it. No, and they'd be stopped eventually. The Republicans would do something fucked up
to stop it, but at least you'd have tried. Yeah, yeah, and people would maybe take some
fucking energy from that. And even if you were going to do this as a fucking show vote thing,
you could have voted no on the cloture motion to like fucking do the, to like appoint the next
nominee. They're just like, no, fuck you. The fact that Chuck Schumer caved on the Republican
budget from a few weeks ago.
Yeah.
And secretly got a number of Democratic senators to switch their votes to make it pass.
Yeah.
And no one did this for that, which previously Democrats were talking about this budget bill,
like it's the worst thing to ever happen because it is a bad bill.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, it's really bad.
And then they just caved last minute, or specifically Schumer and the people he talked to
caved.
And Schumer definitely would not have been in support of Booker doing something like this
for that bill.
But now Schumer gets to applaud along as Booker delivers a,
of a 25-hour, maybe like, well-orated speech, but...
No, it was a very well-written speech.
Like, technically, it was good, but that didn't matter.
It's just this pure show of, like, symbolic theater.
Yeah, what's the point?
It's like if a congressperson got out and conducted, like,
a perfect rendition of the Nutcracker, like, symphony
of, like, the ballet portion of that on their own
in front of, like, the Capitol building, like, well, that's impressive.
Yeah, it's spectacle.
Like, you're clearly very good at what you're doing,
but it didn't change anything.
Like it had no impact on the problems.
Right?
Yeah, yeah.
Like, you're good.
I'll give you that.
Cory Booker can deliver a fucking speech,
but that was really not what I was looking for.
Fiddling impressively while Rome burns.
Thanks, Corey.
Yeah, and every single moment that Trump is in power,
the way that they fucking just rolled over for him looks worse and worse.
He acknowledged it in the speech.
He said,
I failed, and so did we.
We didn't rise to the moment, and we let this horrible thing happen.
Which I, even I got a little briefly, oh shit, maybe he actually recognizes like, no, okay.
Although, because it took him like 20 hours to like break emotionally to the point where he could like admit that to himself.
Acknowledge his deep, deep, deep failure.
Yeah, but like it took having your brain be be shattered by this like pretty impressive physical act that like destroys your body, soul and spirit.
Anyway, I think that's all we have to say about that.
Let's go on an ad break and come back to discuss more sad and actually also possibly good news.
Or at least bad for Elon Musk, which is good for us.
All right, we are back.
I think let's pivot to James Stout for an update on Venezuela.
No, El Salvador.
Well, no.
El Salvador, yeah.
Al Salvador, the torture, labor, prison, James.
Of course, we have to begin my segment today by saying
Godotubuna Taperosbe to Abdullah Ojulan, whose birthday it is on the day that you're hearing this.
So if you want to plant a tree for Apo, get out there and plant your tree.
Unfortunately, that is the only good news we have today.
Border Patrol has spent most of this week touting the, quote, lowest number of border crossings
in history.
It will shocklessness to hear that this is not historically accurate.
border encounters are way down.
If there's one thing that I have ever taught you,
it is that border encounters are not the same as unique individuals
because people are being sent directly back to Mexico
and will tend to return attempting a different route crossing the border, right?
Those are way down.
And they're the lowest since they began publishing monthly data in 2000.
But numbers were way lower in the 50s and 60s and before then.
It's relatively immaterial.
It's just sort of a nitpicky point, I guess.
Today what I really want to talk about is the case of Mr. Kilmar Abrago-Garcia.
He was removed by the Trump administration to El Salvador to Secoldor to Secold, in a way that they have admitted was a mistake.
So we have to go back a little bit to understand Mr. Abrago-Garcia's story and how we got here.
He was arrested in mid-March due to the United States government claim that he played a, quote, prominent role in MS-13, MS-13 being the Salvadorian gang, right?
he'd come to the United States in 2011. He was fleeing gang violence. He was allegedly arrested in
2019 outside a home depot where he was standing with other men looking for work. However,
the incident report for that particular incident gives other names, but not his. At that point,
a Prince George's County Police Department detective filled out a, quote, gang worksheet
and claimed that Mr. Abrago Garcia was associated with or a member of MS.
The evidence he cited for this was a Chicago Bulls hoodie and the claim of a confidential informant.
The confidential informant claimed that he was part of a group within this gang that was set up in a state that Mr. Abrago Garcia had never lived in.
The United States in 2019, ICE argued that he shouldn't be given bond because of this alleged gang membership, right?
And so he wasn't given bond, but through an asylum claim, although he didn't get asylum,
he was protected from removal, right?
So a judge ruled that he couldn't be removed back to El Salvador,
where he would presumably face violence.
When Mr. Abrago-Garcia's lawyers tried to interview the police detective
who had filed this report accusing him of gang membership,
they found no record of his arrest and that the detective has been suspended since then.
The department in question also settled a lawsuit with its own cops over racism in the department.
J.D. Vance, who has a law degree, right?
The JD is, I guess, before and after his name.
He has a law degree from Harvard
has claimed that Mr. Abrago Garcia is a convicted member of MS-13.
This is not true.
I can't find any evidence, so he has any conviction of any kind.
I'm going to quote here from a filing by the United States government,
On the 15th of March, although ICE was aware of his protection from removal to El Salvador,
Abrago Garcia was removed to El Salvador because of an administrative error.
So the government there has admitted in a court filing that they accidentally
They sent this guy to the prison labor camp in El Salvador, right?
According to ICE acting field officer Robert Serner, quote,
he was an alternate, as others were removed from the flight for various reasons.
He moved up the list and was assigned to the flight.
So it appears that they had a large list of people they wanted to put on this flight.
This is interesting, right?
It's an insight into their process fulfilling that first flight that they,
some people really didn't feel they had enough evidence for,
but somehow this guy who again has never been convicted of having any membership of any gang
they put on this flight, right? His wife and child are both US citizens and they have sued in court.
That's why we're seeing this, right? They've sued for the United States government to stop
paying El Salvador for his detention and for the United States government to demand he return.
Vance has advanced a kind of unique legal theory in response, claiming that withholding of removal
only prevents someone being deported back to the home state.
I mean, you could technically, that that is what the withholding is, right?
Like, it's like he can't go back to El Salvador because he will be at risk in El Salvador.
So they can deport him to a third state, but they deported him to El Salvador or renditioned him
to El Salvador, right?
I want to read J.D. Vance's post here.
I'm not going to read the whole thing, but I'll start with the second paragraph.
In 2019, an immigration judge, parentheses under the Biden administration, for those of you who are
familiar with dates.
It's 2019 was under the first Trump administration.
That was the Trump administration.
Yeah.
Kate, moving on.
Determined that the deported man was, in fact, a member of the MS-13 gang.
He also apparently had multiple traffic violations for which he failed to appear in court.
A real winner.
It is telling that the entire American media is going to run a propaganda operation
today, making you think that an innocent, quote, father of three was apprehended by a
gulag.
Father of three is in quotes here, by the way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And Goolag's generally not capable of doing the apprehensions themselves.
If we think of a Gulag as a place, it is the police who apprehend the person, send them to the Gulag.
Moving on.
Here are the relevant facts, I'm still quoting.
The man is an illegal immigrant with no right to be in our country.
Obviously, the judge determined that he was protected from removal.
Quoting again, an immigration judge during the Biden admin determined he was a member of the MS-13
gang. Again, that's not the case. It's staggering the extent to which they can say a sentence where
every single individual word is a lie. Like, stunning. Yeah, yeah. The fact that so many members of
the modern Republican Party have, like, memory hold 2019 and 2020 as being under the Biden administration
is just insane. Yeah, it's bizarre. I think what they're referring to is that the initial hearing,
right, where he was denied bomb was in 2019 and then he filed his asylum claim and later was protected
from removal. But that's not what they're saying here.
But like, even the way they talk about like the COVID response, they talk about 2020.
They talk about it as if Joe Biden was the president.
They're not going to lock us down again. But you locked us down. Yeah, who did that?
And then the last one, I think it's most revelatory. Because he's not a citizen, he does not
get full jury trial by peers. In other words, whatever due process he was entitled to, he received.
The immigration court doesn't generally present the opportunity for jury trial, right?
once again hold to J.D.E. He presumably knows this. What's more disturbing is a claim made by the
United States government in its filing in this lawsuit that the Abrago Garcia family filed.
Quote, because plaintiffs concede that Abrago Garcia is not in the United States custody,
this court cannot hear these claims. So they're claiming that no U.S. court has jurisdiction
over the question of these people who are in El Salvador because they're not in U.S. custody, right?
which obviously if they stick the landing on this,
it suggests that like it is a one-way ticket
to the prison labor camp, right?
That you cannot challenge that in US court.
And you ain't going to get very far in court in El Salvador, right?
So what they're suggesting here is this is a forever detention
that there is no habeas, right?
That was they were asking for habeas corpus.
Can you explain what habeas corpus actually is for the listeners?
Yeah, it means bring me the body, right?
In this case, it is...
Yeah, you'll have to present evidence.
in order to convict people of things.
It's like the scenic one non of having a justice system, a criminal justice system, right?
You have to like show something.
Yeah, you can't just be like bad man and then put the guy in jail.
The most basic thing is that like, yeah, in literal terms it means you have to like actually
take somebody in front of a court in order to determine if they're like being detained
for a reason, right?
Like a judge has to see them and say like, yes, this is not an unlawful imprisonment.
There is a charge.
There is some degree of evidence that somebody did something.
Right, which they have not provided here, right?
Not that, like, you can prove they did it, but, like, something was done, and you are here for that for a reason.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So in this case, we don't have any of that.
Mr. Abrago Garcia is still, the way his family found out he was in Secod was that his wife identified him by scars on his head when they shaved it and a tattoo they saw.
Jesus Christ.
they had no idea. It presumably doesn't come up on the ICE detainee locator, you know,
that you're going to look up your family members or if your family members are detained by ICE,
it doesn't have El Salvador as an option. So, yeah, this is where we're at. This is a case
I will be following, right, because I say it's pretty pivotal. If they can argue that the court
doesn't have jurisdiction, obviously I'm sure at that point that ruling will be challenged
and it'll run up the courts. Currently, it seems like the only court they're going to listen to
is the Supreme Court, but evidently that this is what they're going for.
Like, this is their argument here, that once you're in El Salvador, you're out of their hands
and they can't do anything. So, sorry, even though it was a mistake, you're stuck there forever,
which is pretty disturbing.
Yesterday, me and James did an episode on ISIS targeting of students, scholars and professors
that they believe are associated with pro-Palestine protests.
So we did an update on that story that I did a piece on or a saying,
segment on last week on executive disorder. So for a follow-up on that, you can look to yesterday's
episode. But we are going to close with, I guess, kind of a feel-good story because it makes Elon Musk
sad. He has had a bit of a rough week for Mr. Musk's businesses and his political projects, I guess.
Elon Musk's efforts to buy the Wisconsin Supreme Court have failed as the Democratic-backed candidate
swept the election, maintaining 4-3 liberal control of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin.
Yeah, I mean, the gist of it is, like, three or four days ago,
all of my friends who are Scani's got furious because Elon Musk wore a cheesehead,
you know, like the ones for the Packers that people from Wisconsin wear when they're at games.
While he got up on stage and gave a million dollars, basically immediately before,
like about a little less than a week ago,
a higher court ruled that it was not bribery
for him to offer people a million dollars at random
if they, like, voted or showed up at like,
you know, different rallies and stuff,
which is like what he's been doing, right?
Is making these basically fake offers of a million dollars
because these two went to members of the local Republican Party.
Like, it was clearly set up.
Yeah.
The head of the college Republicans of Wisconsin?
Amazing.
Must fit $25 million.
on this race.
He danced around on stage, wearing a cheesehead, and he gave out million-dollar novelty checks
to, quote-unquote, voters who won a contest by signing his petition against activist judges,
which has been the new rallying cry on the right, is that everything that's going wrong,
everything that's stopping Trump is from these activist judges that we have to unseat.
He also gave $100 each to every person who signed that petition, and on election day,
Musk offered voters $50 if they posted a picture of a Wisconsin resident outside of a polling place.
How is that allowed?
These are the same people who scream about like election interference, rigging elections, buying elections,
stealing elections.
And like, this is insane stuff.
You can go to jail for giving people a water bottle in line at polling places in multiple states.
And Musk is allowed to give people $50 for pictures posted.
outside of polling places.
What the fuck is happening?
But luckily, the
negative polarization against
Musk and Tesla that's been increasing
the past few months has resulted
in Judge Suven
Crawford beating the mega
Republican judge who
last year went as Donald Trump
for Halloween, beating
this guy by 10%.
This was a massive,
a massive reversal of
the 2024 presidential
election results in Wisconsin.
There was a record
high turnout for this spring election,
40% higher than the last
Wisconsin Supreme Court election, which was
in 2023.
Which, by the way, that was also a high turner
election too, right? Yeah, yeah. Yeah.
Like that previous one, then this one just
fucking obliterated it. Like, this was like
just under the results of like what you would expect
out of like a midterm election. Yeah,
yeah. They shifted every
single county in the state blue
compared to the 2024 presidential election
and on average by about 10 to 12 points.
Massive, massive chefs.
And this was before the tariffs, by the way.
Like, this was before the tariffs were announced.
No, this was pure personal dislike of Elon Musk meddling in Wisconsin politics.
Well, like, and everything else has happened since January.
But like, it does seem like Elon Musk's personal presence was a net negative.
and all the money he spent.
Luckily, the next day, there was a Tesla sales report,
which was one of the worst in the history of their company,
50% fewer vehicles being delivered in the first three months
compared to last year with Tesla stock continuing to plunge the past week,
although with reports that Musk might exit the inner circle of the Trump administration,
those stocks are kind of flipping back and forth as he's expected to return to his
Yeah, yeah. And who know, like a lot of that's clearly the tariffs.
Well, yes, and then with the tariffs, this is a whole other issue.
Real double whammy for Tesla. The reporting is that people around Trump have largely soured on Musk.
Who knows how true that is? There's always a lot of like reports from the Trump inner circle that are like, I don't know.
Yeah, he's always had a very leaky.
Yeah. But, and I can see it being multi-causal, like Musk has failed badly in Wisconsin.
the kind of suspicion right now
was that Schibble or whatever's name is
was down about five points
relative to other MAGA candidates
in the same election,
which people are attributing largely
to Musk's intervention.
Well, and like they were testing out
if he was like a stable,
consistent, reliable political operator
or if what he did in 2024
was kind of like a one-off event,
if he's like a one-trick pony there.
And this complete,
like, devastating loss
demonstrated that maybe this
unstable drug addict
no offense to drug addict
specifically for Elon Musk
who's railing ketamine all the time
and trying to run the entire world
luckily my friends
who might indulge in ketamine
don't try to run the entire world
You say that now but you'll get older
at some point
they'll have midlife crises too
but he was shown in like a very public way
to be like an unstable
political force
And yeah, that's going to turn some of some of the people in the Trump admin against him.
Yep.
Anyway, I think that's all I have to say about this Wisconsin race.
Wisconsin race, sorry.
All right.
Well, I think that's probably an episode.
Wait, shit.
Hold on.
I just found the funniest fucking thing about this tariff I think I've seen yet from fucking VFX.
Oh, wait, wait, wait.
One sec.
One sec.
Okay, we're back.
Apparently, the tariffs are not broken down.
by country. This is his quote
from this guy of VFX on Twitter. They're not broken
down by country. They're broken down by top level
internet domain. No!
It's why the island is populated entirely by
penguins, the dot HM domain, and why
the Diego Garcia military base are listed.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, like fucking McDonald's Island.
Yeah, yeah, and why Reunion and Gibraltar
are listed separately from France? I wonder how Gibraltar
made it on that. Yeah, and like, yeah, La
La Reunion is part of France. Why are we hitting
these guys? Yeah, it's
because they used it all at the yellow,
Okay, that makes sense.
That is what a 19-year-old who never went to college.
My God.
But thinks he understands all of reality would do.
Okay, great.
Dictatorship of Chad GPT.
Fucking phenomenal.
My fucking God.
Unbelievable.
Look, look, okay.
The note I want to close on is that, so, podcaster Mike Duncan, the creator of the
Revolutions podcast, a man who has spent literally tens of thousands of hours writing about
like every revolution
that's ever happened
at the end of the original run
of the series revolutions
he makes this point
which is that
all revolutions
work because they encounter
you encounter one of the great idiots
of history
a man who is blessed
with the inalienable
ability to make the wrong decision
at every single time
and my God
if we can't beat these motherfuckers
like if that shit's entirely on us
because we have been handed
one of the greatest idiots of history
that has ever existed
in the history of humanity
and our fucking job now is to turn that
into fucking a better world.
Do something.
Yeah, there's something.
Yeah, we'll see.
The problem is that there's a lot of greater idiots out there
and they all do still have guns.
And money.
One of the great tragedies of the world is that very,
very stupid people can still fire guns.
We made them too easy, folks.
Yeah, I've seen that happen a couple times.
Yeah.
In the old conduct of my work.
Anyway.
All right.
Well, we reported the news.
We reported the news.
Now, you go out there and you know what?
Find someone who lives on the aisle of McDonald near the Arctic and kick their ass today.
Fuck them up.
Fuck that island.
Do trade with a penguin.
Pay 10% more.
Yeah, send us a picture of you fighting a penguin and we'll make sure you get a hat or something.
Yeah, yeah.
We'll send you some merch.
We reported the news.
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,
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You can now find sources for It Could Happen here listed directly in episode descriptions.
Thanks for listening.
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