Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 185
Episode Date: June 7, 2025All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. The FDA Wants to Take Away Your Covid Vaccine, ft. Dr. Kaveh Hoda Tiananmen Remastered, Part 1 Tiananmen ...Remastered, Part 2 Governing Fertility: How Pronatalist Policies Kill Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #19 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: The FDA Wants to Take Away Your Covid Vaccine, ft. Dr. Kaveh Hoda https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMsb2506929 https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/fda-panel-says-covid-vaccines-can-stay-fall-access-concerns-rcna208492 Tiananmen Remastered https://lausancollective.com/2021/communists-crushed-international-workers-movement/ https://chuangcn.org/journal/two/red-dust/sinosphere/ http://www.tsquare.tv/links/Walder.html https://chuangcn.org/2019/06/tiananmen-square-the-march-into-the-institutions/ https://www.marxists.org/archive/brinton/1970/workers-control/ https://endnotes.org.uk/issues/4 https://libcom.org/article/utopia-rules-technology-stupidity-and-secret-joys-bureaucracy-david-graeber Governing Fertility: How Pronatalist Policies Kill https://www.vscw.ca/en/node/119 https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9780203059913-9/pronatalism-motherhood-franco-spain-mary-nash https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781438402062/html?lang=en https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-15335899 https://www.researchgate.net/publication/237296749_Marriage_squeeze_and_changes_in_family_formation_historical_comparative_evidence_in_Spain_France_and_the_United_States_in_the_twentieth_century https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5ypdy05jl9o https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/21/us/politics/trump-birthrate-proposals.html https://www.heritage.org/marriage-and-family/report/treating-infertility-the-new-frontier-reproductive-medicine https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2023/3/2/2155893/-Texas-Republican-channels-Stalin-and-Putin-to-glorify-motherhood https://www.huffpost.com/entry/dot-memo-funds-communities-marriage-birth-rates_n_679bf8d8e4b0e1faebeef9c8 Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #19 https://www.kpbs.org/news/public-safety/2025/05/19/san-diegos-highest-paid-city-employees-cops-racking-up-overtime-and-earning-over-400-000 https://www.nilc.org/resources/how-calif-dl-records-shared-with-dhs/ https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-for-detained-buona-forchetta-employees https://www.americanimmigrationcouncil.org/research/expedited-removal https://www.npr.org/2025/06/04/nx-s1-5422248/trump-steel-aluminum-50-tariffs-double-prices https://finance.yahoo.com/news/live/trump-tariffs-live-updates-trump-and-chinas-xi-jinping-speak-at-last-agree-to-more-talks-191201181.html https://www.forbes.com/sites/stuartanderson/2025/06/02/immigration-restrictions-pile-up-on-international-students/ https://apnews.com/article/international-students-visas-trump-guidance-social-media-a1f5180ce83560aff66dd65534906697 https://apnews.com/article/international-students-visas-trump-guidance-social-media-a1f5180ce83560aff66dd65534906697 https://sahanjournal.com/public-safety/minneapolis-lake-street-law-enforcement-ice-homeland-security/ https://www.axios.com/2025/06/03/elon-musk-trump-white-house-relationship https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/elon-musk-privately-expresses-frustration-range-recent-moves/story?id=122485920 https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/28/us/politics/elon-musk-trump-doge.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/30/technology/trump-palantir-data-americans.html See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey everybody. Robert Evans here, and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode.
So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat
less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want.
If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing
new here for you, but you can make your own decisions.
Welcome to It Could Happen here a show about things falling apart this week.
The Thing Falling Apart is the U.S. healthcare system, science in general, but specifically the health care system.
I'm Garrison Davis, and today I'm joined by a very special returning guest, Dr. Caffa Hote.
Hello.
Hey, yes, the thing falling apart is you, the listener.
So it's very important that you listen up.
you were going to anyways, but in particular, you should be paying attention here because this is
important stuff. So in mid-May, we got some news in the FDA, CDC, human health and services front,
as there's been, there's been a lot of news in the health front, but specifically you're going to be
talking about the new guidelines for COVID vaccines that the FDA is trying to push through
in the United States. So the new FDA commissioner, Marty McCarray,
and the top vaccine regulator of Venei Prasad have published a quote-unquote study.
You pushed back on the use of the word study in the New England Journal of Medicine
about the COVID vaccine booster shots and are going to be changing the guidelines
for how these are going to be administered and who has access to them,
particularly those under the age of 65 might have a harder time.
getting the COVID booster that they have, like the past few years, requiring certain pre-existing
conditions to qualify.
And they have a whole bunch of arguments for this.
They say they're trying to make this more in line with the vaccine guidelines in other
countries.
They're proposing further studies on the necessity of COVID vaccines for those under 65.
Yeah.
And for someone like me who tries to keep up with COVID boosters and, you know, doesn't like
getting infected with COVID, some of this can seem a little bit, both confusing and worrying.
considering like the anti-vaccine takeover of the FDA and like the federal health services in
general, it's a frightening move, I guess. Yeah, I think you're right to feel concerned. It is
something I am a little concerned about for a couple of reasons. One, I mean, I just don't
flatly agree with limiting the use of the vaccines, the people they're planning to limit it to.
I mean, this is coming from the medical freedom crowd. I feel like people should at least have the
bodily autonomy to have the vaccine if they want it.
That's a part of it.
But I'm actually even more concerned about the bigger sense of what this represents.
You know, on the surface, making some changes is not totally unreasonable to our vaccine policy.
And we generally reassess our COVID vaccine policy annually.
So that's not too abnormal.
But the thing is, we have this whole system set in place to do it in a efficient, smart way.
that is public and there's a process to it.
If I can give you a little bit of a sense of how it normally runs and what's going to happen now,
I think it'll explain why I might have my concerns.
Yeah, that would be very useful to hear.
So normally there are some clinical trials, there's some studies that happen, some real-world data,
some points that can be looked at.
And then the FDA uses this advisory committee.
Again, these advisory committees are not career politicians, they're scientists,
their public health officials, their doctors, people volunteering their time. I don't think they
get paid other than maybe food and their expenses. But other than that, they're not paid for just
this job. And what that, this group, the first group is called the VRBPAC, and they determine
if it's a safe and effective vaccine. If it is determined that way, then the FDA grants a license
and approval. From there, there's another group, the ACIP, and that's an advisory committee
on immunization practices.
And it's the same sort of thing.
It's a group made up of scientists,
healthcare professionals,
public health professionals,
and people will come together.
They'll determine who should get it.
And then the CDC director signs off
and then it gets out there to the world.
Now, basically what we have
is two political pointees,
both of which have these massive axes
to grind on the subject,
have some severe chips on their shoulder
about what's happened so far to them in this conversation and this dialogue
who are going to bypass this whole scientific system,
who aren't going to be looking at these questions,
like what is our growing immunity?
Is annual boosts are still warranted?
And they're going to take this outside of that and basically make the decision.
And I find that to be very concerning.
Even past like this basic premise of like, you know,
does this mean that my friends or myself,
I won't be able to get the vaccine that I want to get.
So I find it to be very concerning.
And you alluded to that article in the New England Journal of Medicine.
It did not alleviate my concerns.
One of the guys here, the guy who's heading up the vaccine regulations,
has compared the U.S. COVID response to Nazi Germany.
He has boosted anti-vax claims from Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
And he blocked me on Twitter.
Come on.
And truly his most heinous offense.
How could you block me?
I'm lovable.
No, me and this guy, Robert Evans, were joking yesterday.
Never heard of it.
About how some of your personal nemesies have been put into positions of, like, government
power and how you're upset about that.
And I remarked, oh, first time?
Because this has unfortunately been the trend of our work the past few years,
these weird online figures who we've developed personal grievances.
against for being bad people suddenly now are like in the upper echelons of power in the
US government. Hey, I like them. They just don't like me. I don't know if that's true.
But regardless, do you have any other notes on Makari and Prasad like specifically?
You know what I'll say. So a big thing about this article that they put in there and what
they talk about a lot is trying to get more farm companies to do large studies, which, you know,
on the surface, totally reasonable. But the thing about it is not every problem can be solved
with what's considered the quote unquote golden standard of studies, the double blind,
randomized control study. Some studies just can't. They want to see that these companies are
doing these studies to say that it's good and safe and beneficial for younger people.
But there's a couple of problems with this. Okay, one, I'm not entirely sure that's ethical.
Like, if we have something that works, if we know this vaccine helps and we do, CDC studies
have shown that these boosters help for at least four to six months. Possibly life-saving
medication. Exactly. Is it ethical to deny somebody that? Like, would I want to be a part of
that study? I wouldn't. I wouldn't want to get potentially the placebo. So,
that's part of it. But even beyond that, to do these studies, it's lengthy. They're long
studies. If you want to do it and you want to do it right, it takes a while. So by the time they do
this, by the time they do the study, even if I'm being very generous in how long it takes
them, by the time we get the results, we'll be onto a different mutation. We know that this
thing mutates. We know it's going to change into a different virus. And we won't even know if that
study that we just spent all the time doing works on it. So we have other options for studying
these things. They're not double blind, randomized, controlled studies, but we have other
studies that work. And there are plenty of epidemiologists out there, vaccineologists,
people who know way more about this than me. And to be fair, know more about this than
Prasad and Makari. They're the ones saying this is not a good idea. So I'm like saying,
let's listen to them. Let's listen. They know what they're talking about. They're smart people. I've
met some of them. They're great. And it doesn't make sense to me on an ethical or practical
level to do it that way. Do you know what doesn't make sense to me, Fave? I know. I do. I do. I do. Can I say? Can I
guess? You can guess. I'm guessing that commercials don't make sense to you, but really at this point
in your career, they should make sense. I should know by now, but still the concept is a little bizarre.
Here they are. Okay, we are back. I guess let's get into more how this will affect the average listener.
like what what these things could mean like both in i guess the short term and then like the long
term if you're trying to plan out your you know your health journey what kind of like risks you
have if you're you know compromised what that means for you versus if you're magical perfectly healthy
you know 25 year olds yeah uh prancing around with with no issues prancing as the kids do kids love to
France. So in the short term, it's not clear. In a month, that advisory committee I mentioned,
the ACIP, is going to meet or they're supposed to meet. I don't know if it's still going to happen.
And they're supposed to determine who should get this. So first things first,
they could disagree. It would be the first time I've seen it. I've never seen the FDA and the
ACIP not be in lockstep in this regard. And maybe it's happened, but I can't think of it. And like,
I don't know. I don't know what will happen. That'll be a little bit of chaos and it'll be interesting to see what happens at that point. But if it goes as the FDA now plans, it will limit who can potentially get these vaccines if you're not over 65. If you don't have a what's considered a risk for serious disease like asthma, cancer, kidney disease, certain types of liver, lung disease, diabetes. If you don't have any of these things, then it's not clear to me, will the pharmacist not.
give it to you? Will the pharmacist check if you tell them you have one of these things? Will
insurance cover it? I don't know. And that's really concerning. I think the price is going to go up.
And that does relate to the bigger concern, the long-term problem than this, which is, I mean,
Kennedy has said he's not taking away vaccines. Great. He doesn't actually need to take away vaccines.
He just needs to do things like this so that nobody wants to pay for it. Nobody wants to go through the
process of studying it. Nobody's going to make them. Insurance companies are going to pay for.
it, people aren't going to end up being able to afford it. They're going to be lesser and fewer of them, and they will go away naturally on their own because of this. That's really the long-term concern that I have with this. The short-term concern, I mean, I don't know. It's going to be interesting, you know? Like, there's certain things on this list that the CDC has. Like, for example, physical inactivity is on this list. I mean, who could argue with you on that? Like, you know, if you tell the pharmacist,
You're having physical inactivity.
Like, will they, I don't know, will they check that?
How will they check that?
So I don't know what will happen in the short term.
In the long term, definitely big concerns.
It seems like part of their strategy here is just putting as many roadblocks in between you
and vaccines that could save your life as possible to further whatever like conspiracy-driven
worldview that the people at the top have.
And just like the inhumane side effects that's going to have across the entire population.
Absolutely.
I mean, to also put this into context, COVID, we're in a better situation than we were years ago.
That's certainly true.
But at least from the CDC records alone, 47,000 Americans died from COVID-related diseases last year.
At least two-thirds of that number were directly due to COVID.
And amongst that, there are about 230 deaths from kids.
That is a significant number.
And at least, you can say at least 130 of those kids were directly related to COVID and not from some other problems.
So this is significant stuff that we're still dealing with.
And long COVID can affect people.
Long COVID can affect all groups.
It can affect young and old.
So it is concerning and it bothers me in particular that the group doing this, as I said in the beginning, is the medical freedom group.
And this is sort of the exact opposite of this.
I think this demonstrates how much medical freedom has actually just been a dog whistle for, like, this conspiracy theory-driven belief this entire time.
Like, people clamoring for medical freedom don't actually believe in it.
They're against trans health care.
They're against vaccines in general.
They want to put autistic kids into, like, behavioral, like, therapy programs to try to make them not autistic.
Yeah.
Like, it's not actually about medical freedom.
It's about, it's about advancing a very specific conservative and conspiratorial worldview.
that actually controls what other people are allowed to do with their bodies.
This is like a massive part of their project.
And like, I don't know how else you can like interpret moves like this,
which are just going to jeopardize people and put them even in more danger.
Yeah.
And it's going to get worse.
We can see the effects already.
Just today, Moderna withdrew their application for a COVID flu combo vaccine,
a one-shot vaccine that would have both.
And the studies on that so far were really good.
Actually, they showed, they look really promising.
And they're just doing this because, you know, okay, now do we have to have these double blind
control studies for this?
And they know it's going to be a hostile environment.
And now it's withdrawn.
And there's going to be more and more of that.
Like way, way before your time or my time, there used to be more pharmaceutical companies
making vaccines.
There used to be a lot more than there are now.
There's only a handful now.
But there used to be a lot.
And then there was like this CBS show about the,
pertussis vaccine, and it was called like Russian roulette. This could give you, like, this could
end your life. And there was like one like made for TV like show about it. It wasn't a movie,
but it was like a special they did. And it raised such concerns that letters started pouring
into the network and they then started pouring into Congress. And there was a whole hearing.
And after that, we had a significant drop off in regards to the companies that made.
these vaccines. And we have a few now. And I am worried that this could be another sort of inflection
point in that, in that history, in that arc of vaccines. And we're going to get even fewer now.
I mean, it's been devastating watching the like advancement of the HIV vaccine, which
seemed like it was near completion. Yeah. It gets stalled for a number of reasons, including, like,
DEI policies getting pushed across these health departments. Right. Because the HIV vaccine research
uses, you know, terms like gay and trans and it mentions...
Gender.
Yeah, you know, all that kind of stuff, which is which people focused on in the first
few months.
I'm super nervous about the COVID nasal vaccine getting basically shelved.
Yeah.
And every, every, like, new thing we see come under the FDA just makes those fears heightened.
Yeah.
It's pretty rad.
Not to be too depressing, but that is kind of the...
That is the mood of the show.
In some ways.
Yeah.
Like people can still, you know, wash hands, mask up.
At this point, people can still get the vaccine.
But like the way that we've been like treating like the widespread health of this country has already been pretty bad the past few years.
Yeah.
And this is like trying to intentionally make it worse.
Yeah.
It does feel like that sometimes.
Yeah.
I am concerned about it all.
But you're right.
We still have.
as of now, I mean, there's still some options going forward in terms of vaccines, and hopefully
we'll continue to have them.
Totally.
And we'll see how this plays out.
I am really curious, the next month will be very telling when we have that ACIP advisory
committee, again, if it's allowed to happen, and they allow people like Paul Offit, people
who are real vaccinologists, people who know about vaccines, not just appointed political people,
but people who actually study this and know it, if they come on and they, if they come on and they,
can provide enough pressure, if people can support them, then I do think that there is,
there is some hope that the pushback will help us alleviate some of this restriction, I hope.
Would the people on the, like, a CIP panel be, like, political appointees?
Do they have the same, like, risk of all these other people put in under RFK Jr., where they're
very clearly politically there versus, like, careerists?
who are actually actual experts in the field?
Well, unless they change it, the ACIP is not set up like that.
The ACIP is just, you know, these really great group of independent doctors and scientists,
public health experts that are using real world data.
They're looking at how the immunity shifts over time.
They're looking at the virus and seeing if it's changing.
But really volunteers that come from the world of science to do so.
So as of now, that's not how the group works.
I don't know if that'll hold.
I mean, I don't see any reason why they couldn't if they wanted to scrap the ACIP, get rid of the people on it.
You know, people who are vaccinologists who are great significance to the community like, you know, Peter Hottes or your Paul Offitz, these scientists who really study and look at these things and put in just people who are already in line.
I mean, unless I'm missing something about it, I don't see why they couldn't do that.
I hope they don't.
I think there's enough scientific background in Prasad and Makari that they would recognize the importance of an independent council.
But, yeah, I'm not sure.
Well, that's good to know.
We don't need to be fully doomer-pilled on that, but it's a good thing to watch out for.
Do you know what I'm going to be watching out for, Kava?
I do.
I certainly do.
You're going to be listening more than watching, but you're going to be listening.
for some really great ads.
Okay, Kave, I guess I'd also like to touch on this actual piece in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Yeah.
They're quote unquote evidence-based approach to COVID-19 vaccination, which is more of a blog post, right?
It is not a study. It is a blog post.
And specifically, they talk about how the United States has a much more, like, severe,
severe vaccine strategy than other countries in Europe. And they try to use this to justify their
own beliefs, saying that they're trying to bring things in line with the vaccine policies in
other countries. Is this real? Is this true? I don't live in Europe. I'm not super familiar
with the European vaccine guidelines. I don't expect you to be an expert either.
No, it's really funny, though, that you mentioned it because it's so funny what they decide to
endorse about your European policy. Like, will socialize medicine? Most of these European countries
have socialized medicine, they will have nothing to do with that. And then they'll nitpick
certain things. So there is some truth to the fact that we are doing things differently. And again,
I'm not opposed to looking at that and being like, okay, what are other countries doing? Does it
work? And could we do that? So there is a difference. Are currently until now in the U.S.
It was generally recommended for anyone over six months.
People weren't being made to have this, by the way.
Again, medical freedom, you know?
No, I was pretty sure that Joe Biden will send a SWAT team to your house and shoot you,
unless you get the COVID vaccine.
That's what I was told on the RFK Jr. podcast.
I mean, he is somehow simultaneously a decrepit old man who's certainly confused,
but somehow able to orchestrate an incredible from the depth, darkness,
deep state espionage. So I guess it's possible. And that's how we do it. It's how Canada does it.
The UK, they do do it a little differently. They do it for people greater than 65.
They do it for residents and care homes. They do it for people greater than six months and high
risk and people who are greater than 12 years of age, but are in a house where someone's immemocompromised.
They do it for anyone who's over 16 who helps care for someone who's vulnerable. And they do it for
all social and health care workers.
I mean, they have a different system in place.
They have, as I mentioned, socialize health care.
In general, they're very good about their vaccines.
So it's hard to tell.
It's a little bit of apples and oranges,
but it's funny what they decided to pick and not pick about that.
And it's also funny why some groups are missing under our care.
Like a lot of places will vaccinate anyone who's overweight.
here, they don't consider being overweight a risk for COVID.
So it is funny how they're choosing,
they're nitpicking certain things that are recommendations,
common recommendations in other countries and not using them here.
So they do it a little differently in Europe.
That is true.
And again, this is the kind of stuff that they're going to evaluate every year.
The ACIP will evaluate.
They'll look at the emerging data.
They'll look at the other countries.
They'll look at what's being done.
And they'll discuss it.
So it is true, and it does seem reasonable on the surface when they say it like that.
Hey, we're just trying to get, and they mentioned this in the New England Journal of Medicine article,
we're just trying to get more in line with the rest of the world.
And that's not really true.
It's like they're just picking certain things that they want to agree with and ignoring all the other stuff
about their health care system that we could benefit from.
One of the more wild aspects of this, again, glorified blog post, is talking about how
the COVID vaccine booster program has actually.
actually undermined public trust in vaccinations.
Which is like, again, this is like, we're all looking for the guy who did this moment,
wearing the hot dog costume.
Quote, even healthcare workers remain hesitant with less than one third participating in 2020-203 to 2024 fall booster program.
There may even be a ripple effect.
Public trust in vaccination in general has declined, resulting in reluctance to vaccinate.
That is affecting even vital immunization programs such as,
That for measles, mumps, and rubella.
Oh, so weird.
I wonder if it's the people that have been talking about how corrupt and terrible the FDA and CDC are for like the last five, six years.
It's insane that they're that they're like able to like do this.
Like it's.
Yeah.
I mean, it is an ongoing inside joke amongst people in the medical community.
The hot dog meme guy.
That's a very common like attribute to these to these characters who talk about.
you know, how how they're clearly sowing the seeds and mistrust and then capitalizing off of it.
I don't know if they even mean to or not. And people ask me a lot. They're like, you know,
why, why do they do this? And I, that's a tough one for me. That's your friend Robert Evans.
I ask him that every time I'm on his podcast guy, there's a point in the podcast where I
earnestly, I don't do this on purpose, where I just don't understand. And I need to understand
why it's being done. And in these cases, it's hard. You know, previously, Vinay Prasad had a podcast
that people really liked called the Plenary Podcast in the medical community. I never listened to it
because I don't listen to medical podcasts. Why would I? And what it did basically was it would
break down like studies and go over them in a very sort of skeptical way. And I think it's good
as a doctor to be skeptical. I think that's a good attribute for us to have. And it was useful
in many ways. But then I don't know if it's audience capture. I don't know. I don't know.
if it's true belief.
I don't know what shifted,
but it does seem that it was a steady growth
into this contrarian perspective
from the medical community.
That doesn't totally make sense to me.
They all kind of feel like they're Galileo
or Samalais, that they had this rare contrarian opinion
that made them special and they were attacked for.
But in my mind, it's not so much that as it is,
you know, there is a scientific problem.
process that we have. Galileo followed a scientific process, and that's how he came to
those conclusions. These people, I don't feel, are following that. And they are strict to their method
idolatry to what they feel needs to be done. And I don't feel like they're listening to the
experts in the field explain to them why that's not the case. That's how every hero probably feels
in every situation, but they have somehow become the victims in this
story and I am very curious to see now that they're in power how that shifts and if they maintain
this sort of victim mentality. Well, how can you be a victim when we have beef tallow back at stake
and shake everyone? We did it. Beef tallow. We did it, Joe. We're back. We sure did. Maga-coated
coconut oil. Now I'll be completely healthy again. Yeah. Yeah. That is so funny to me that be,
I mean, like, we could talk about seed oils.
We could talk about the quote unquote hateful eight.
We could talk about all that stuff.
But it's pretty clear that oils are better than tallow for your health.
And beef tallow, there's very little, like, there's a little proof to prove that it's good for you.
And a lot of proof to say that animal products are bad for your heart.
Yeah.
So it's absurd that that's an argument that we're still having in 2025.
No, instead of frying in beef tallow oil,
Instead, I just drink a full eight ounces of grape seed oil every morning to wake up.
It does wonders for me.
It just gets the whole body up and running.
Lubricates the whole system.
That's right.
I know you can't give medical advice, but do you have any advice to give listeners before we close?
At least people who are like, you know, afraid of what these changes from RFK's FDA will mean for them in their community?
Yeah.
I think it's okay to be concerned about it.
but I do think there is some time to go.
There's going to be a lot of people from the medical community fighting to try and fight these restrictions on the vaccine.
So we'll see how that goes.
You will probably be able to find ways to do it.
You should talk to your doctor about it because your doctor probably can see a risk factor that you don't.
If you don't see one that automatically fits that list from the CDC, your doctor might be able to find one that is.
And I'm not talking about fraud.
I'm talking about like real things.
Your doctor may be able to look through your chart,
look through your history, talk to you,
and find a risk factor that you didn't think was a risk factor.
Like, for example, physical inactivity or, you know, smoking.
So there are things that we can look for.
And as they shift those goalposts,
which I'm sure they will,
we'll also be trying to find ways around that as well.
And, you know, when the ACIP comes out,
there's going to be a lot of pressure on them.
and I think we can pressure our Congress and we can pressure our representatives to support them,
at least nominally to discuss it, if nothing else.
Because I don't think this is getting talked about that much.
So I think if we can bring it to the public attention, I think we can shift the narrative on vaccines.
I do believe the narrative has shifted on COVID and vaccines in this terrible way, this revisionist way,
where everyone pretends it's not,
it wasn't a big deal
and that we didn't lose millions of people.
And I think if we can keep that in the public discourse,
I think that alone will help.
I think that's important for us to do.
And that's what people, you know, on Reddit
and people on the internet and Facebook
and all that stuff can do
is they can help keep this in the public eye
in fight that incipient,
I don't know if that's the right word.
Insidious is probably the right word.
It's this really subtle sort of,
of reconstructing of the narrative of what COVID was and how important these vaccines are.
So that's how people can help in the immediate future.
And then, you know, stay tuned, talk to your doctor about vaccines and when you can get them
and get them as soon as you can.
I do think that's a good idea for both flu and for COVID boosters when available.
Kave, lovely talking with you as always.
Where can people hear you talk more on the internet?
I am on a podcast called The House of Pod
and it is a humor adjacent,
fun-ish medical podcast.
I would say it's not adjacent to humor.
I would say it is on target.
We're next door to humor.
Next door to humor.
We speak a little humor, not a ton,
but you will like the show if you like this.
I think you're going to recognize a lot of the same people.
Gere, for example, has just recently been on an episode
and, you know, we'll get Geroon again, I hope.
And you'll find people that you like there,
a lot of the same sorts of people.
We take a skeptical look at medical grifters
and the wellness community.
So a lot of the same stuff you love from these shows
in the extended behind the bastard universe,
you'll also get into, I think,
our podcast, The House of Pod,
and finding it anywhere.
The House of Pod.
The House of Pod.
The first time I met you online,
I was invited onto the show
and, you know, it was a pretty busy year, 2020.
There was a lot going on for me with the, you know, riots and such and the, you know, whatever damage was done to my brain via all that tear gas.
And for some reason, and I don't quite know why.
I wonder if I was just conflating two messages.
But I thought I agreed to go onto a medieval history podcast, not a medical podcast.
So as things started, I was a little bit confused.
And then I went back to reread the message.
And you're like, oh, no, it definitely says medical.
And I still don't quite know how I did that.
Like I said, a lot going on that year.
You did great, whatever it was.
Whatever you thought you were doing, you did it well.
But whenever I think of your podcast, I now also think about medieval history.
So there you go.
Yeah.
Hey, okay, that's cool.
I'll take it.
I'll think we did do an episode.
I mean, not every episode is strictly like medical stuff.
Like, I did an episode with these guys who wrote this book on Sparrow.
And the battle with the Persians and how the story has been sort of turned into something grossly that's not partially because of 300 and partially because of other reasons.
Yeah.
And so there's a little bit of that.
Yeah, yeah. It makes sense.
Yeah, yeah.
You would like that episode.
How often do you think about the Roman Empire?
I don't.
I think about how the Persians killed a lot of them over them thermophily.
That brings me a little spark of joy.
Okay.
Good to know.
I'm just kidding, listeners.
I don't I don't approve of people being murdered.
I don't.
They don't, even if they're jerks.
Good to say this day and age.
Yeah.
Thank you so much, Kaffa.
Thank you.
Thank you for having me.
Welcome to Ikadapen here.
I'm your host, Mia Wong.
Today is the day before the 36th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
We're doing something a little bit different.
Three years ago, I wrote a pair of episodes about Tiananmen, Democracy, and the International Workers Movement,
expanding off a piece I'd written for Laosan a year before that.
That was a long time ago.
The world is a fundamentally different place than it was in 2021.
Europe has been consumed by war.
Whole revolutions rose and fell.
The fascist threat we defeated in the streets,
returned to power in a new and more terrifying form.
in this new,
uglier and more brutal world
I wanted to return to Tiananmen
to return to one of the great horrors of another age
to see if we can take anything new
from the wreckage of the death of hope
I'm no longer the same person I was
when I originally wrote these episodes
and so today and tomorrow
our Tiananmen remastered
there were really three Tiananmen's
The first and most famous Tiananmen
was the student protest inside Tiananmen Square itself.
If you've heard the word Tiananmen before,
this is a story you know.
The second Tiananmen was the Tiananmen
of the blocks of Beijing around the square.
Block seized and transformed by Beijing's working class.
If you've heard about this Tiananmen, at all,
it's probably in the context of the tanks rolling through them
on their way to the square.
And then there was the third Tiananmen, the protests in other cities, of which we still, years after I wrote the original piece, no distressingly little about.
Our focus today is on the first two.
The students of the student protests were a weird ideological grabback that cannot simply be reduced down to the simplistic pro-democracy label they've been saddled with in the three and a half decades since Tiananmen.
The short version is this.
The students were pissed off about what's called reform and opening,
not going fast enough.
And we should talk about what reform and opening actually was.
On the one hand, you had some steps to ease restrictions on free speech,
free habilited intellectuals,
and other people with so-called bad class backgrounds,
and allow for a broader public discourse.
This was paired with market reforms that started to bring capitalism back to change.
China. This was a shit show in a lot of ways. If you want to hear about the CCP reinventing
what's essentially debt-pionage about five years into this process, go listen to my Behind the
Bastards episode about the poison milk scandal. But reform and opening is remembered as a kind of golden
age of free expression, a golden age of hope and possibility, where things really seem like
they could be different. This is not entirely accurate.
Reform and opening also saw a bunch of absolutely draconian crackdowns on the social sphere.
There was the one-child policy, a hideous expansion of the state into the sphere of social reproduction,
replete with forced sterilizations and the reimposition of patriarchal power.
It saw the tightening of one-man rule in the factory,
the destruction of any form of workers' decision-making,
and control over the process of their own labor.
In these horrors, you can see the beginning of the fragmentation of Tiananmen, and Chinese politics more broadly, already forming.
The students wanted market reform to go faster. They wanted more freedom of speech. They sort of wanted democracy, but mostly they wanted to be in charge of the party, so they could crush the bureaucracy that was holding market reforms back.
It's worth noting, of course, that many of these students were involved in what became known as neo-authoritarianism,
which holds that the strong central parties should take full control of society and destroy factions in the bureaucracy.
It was an ideology that survived the death of the protests and went on to become a major faction of the CCP itself in the 90s and 2000s.
And this is where some of the truly weird shit at Tiananmen comes from.
The students were in many ways
an incredibly hierarchical movement,
which escalated to the point
where student leaders were kidnapping each other
for control over stages and microphones.
And these protests,
in terms of their nominally stated goal
of influencing the factual fights inside the party,
were stunningly ineffectual.
The guy they were trying to defend
inside the party wound up getting ousted
and put under house arrest for the rest of his life,
and the changes they demanded failed to occur.
But Tiananmen, as I mentioned earlier, was also the workers.
And for most of the protests, the students absolutely hated them.
Students barred workers from entering the square itself until the final hours of the protests,
tried to stop workers from carrying out a general strike,
and relations were, in general, extremely bad.
This raises the question, what were the workers doing there in the first place?
There's a few answers.
The simplest and most immediate one is that the workers were pissed off,
at how badly the party was treating students in the square.
But there were other things going on, too.
The late 1980s in China saw rampant and skyrocketing inflation.
The rapid price increases threaten the supply of cheap grain
that composed a huge supply of welfare services provided to urban workers.
Meanwhile, marketization was accelerating,
and suddenly you had CCP princelings racing down the street in imported sports cars,
driving past workers on their bikes,
and spending a year's salary.
gambling at the racetrack, and this pissed people off, so they started organizing.
I'm going to read a section from a piece by Yaron Zhang about what the workers were doing.
During the struggle to obstruct the military, workers started to realize the power of their spontaneous
organization and action. This was self-liberation on an unprecedented level. A huge wave of
self-organization ensued. The workers' autonomous Federation membership grew exponentially,
and other workers' organizations, both within and across the workplace, mushroomed.
The development of organization led to a radicalization of action.
Workers started organizing self-armed quasi-malishas,
such as, quote, picket corps and, quote, dare-to-die brigades
to monitor and broadcast the military's whereabouts.
These quasi-malishas were also responsible for maintaining public order,
so as not to provide any pretext for military intervention.
In a sense, Beijing became a city self-managed,
by workers. It was reminiscent of Petrograd's self-armed workers organized in a month between
Russia's February and October revolutions. At the same time, Beijing workers built many more
barricades and fortifications on the street. In many factories that organized strikes and slowdowns,
a possible general strike was put on the table as well. Many workers started to build connections
between factories to prepare for a general strike. This was unacceptable to the party.
and so, for the third time in 70 years,
the CCP fed its own working class to the machine guns.
On the night of June 3rd, the army began to slaughter its way
through the workers defending the square.
It was the workers who bore the brunt of the massacre.
Most of the casualty and later political repression
were against members of the workers' faction.
The army soon reached the square itself,
where the Western Press Corps bore witness
to what became known as the Tiananmen Square massacre.
this is where you get Tankman
and the most famous accounts of the massacre.
But by that point, it was almost all over.
The protest were crushed,
and the Chinese working class died with it.
But before the last bullet had even been fired,
every faction under the sun
began to construct their own narratives
about what had just happened.
The most common narrative
is that Tiananmen was a clash between democracy
and authoritarianism,
and to some extent,
it's not exactly wrong.
There were a lot of other pro-democracy movements in this period.
You see them in Taiwan and Korea.
They swept across huge swaths of Latin America
and eventually spread to places like the Philippines.
But the real question of the pro-democracy movements
was what kind of democracy?
The students at Tiananmen,
to the extent that their democratic principles were sincere
and not simply cover for a deeply authoritarian version of liberalism
that demanded rule of law by a new class of intellectuals,
to oversee market reforms, believed in a narrow conception of political democracy.
This political democracy operates at the level of the state.
It's based on free citizens, equal before the law,
participating in elections to choose representatives,
who pass laws and generally oversee and manage the state bureaucracy.
This model of political democracy relegates the workplace to a separate economic sphere
into which democracy does not extend.
The capitalist firm, or its state-owned equivalent,
remained the absolute dictatorship of the capitalists
and their managerial flunkies.
Even the progressive wings of the pro-democracy movements
in Taiwan and South Korea
maintained this private dictatorship.
Workers would be given rights under the progressive regimes,
permission to form unions, access to the welfare state,
limited protections from the worst physical
and psychological abuses their bosses could inflict.
But no matter how progressive the pro-democracy movement,
the legitimacy of the dictatorship of the bosses
was not up for dispute.
To them, democracy meant a democratic state,
not a democratic workplace.
The workers of Tiananmen alone disagreed.
They stood against not only the rest of the world's pro-democracy movements,
but the tide of history itself.
By applying the principles of the pro-democracy movement
to their own concerns, skyrocketing inflation, mounting debt, rampant corruption by government
officials, spiraling inequality, and petty bureaucratic oppression, Beijing's working class
reinvented an old and now largely forgotten traditional democracy in the factory.
Democratic Workers' Self-Management
This is, to a large extent, what Tiananmen was actually about.
It was the culmination of a century-and-a-half-long war between the democratic wing of the
classical workers' movement, and essentially every other ideological movement on Earth,
the workers' movement would fight capitalists and communists, liberals and fascists,
monarchies and republics, social democracies and theocracies.
And at Tiananmen, they would lose one final time.
That defeat is the origin of the modern world.
One man ruled in the factory in its thousand, thousand forms, is the author of the hell.
of the 21st century. And when we come back, we're going to look at the international
part of the struggle that ended the Tiananmen. To fully understand the magnitude of Tiananmen,
we need to go back to the revolutions of 1848. If you want to detailed accounting of 1848,
go listen to the Revolutions podcast. It's great. It's also many, many, many, many, many episodes.
The short version is that there were a bunch of revolution,
across Europe in 1848, collectively known as a springtime of the peoples.
It was the first wave of revolutions where socialists were a real political faction.
Frederick Engels, yeah, that Engels of Marx and Engels fame,
was on the barricades with a rifle fighting in Prussia.
There was a huge revolution in France where they deposed the king,
and the question of how far democracy was going to go
came for the first time to the forefront.
inside of the democratic movement itself, you had a split between the sort of French radicals
who'd done the original French Revolution, who wanted electoral democracy but to catererhip
in the workplace, and the new socialists who wanted to question property relations and the
question of class itself, and most importantly for our purposes, whether democracy would extend
past the political sphere and directly into economics. This prefigures a split inside the
socialist movement itself. For the most radical factions, control over the means of production
meant that workers would control the production process directly through free associations of workers,
direct democratic unions, opposition later known as syndicalism, or workers' councils. But more
conservative factions of the socialists became enamored with the bureaucratic technologies of the
state. They watched with envy as the industrializing powers of the 1860s and 1870s
engage in increasingly elaborate planning schemes,
first of roads, canals, and railroads,
then of entire cities, complex electrical grids,
gas lines, plumbing systems,
and began to believe that centralized state planning,
not the Democratic Association of Workers,
could bring about the long-sought-after
cooperative Commonwealth of socialism,
and that planning-obsessed faction began to encompass more and more of the left.
In Germany, home to the power,
German Social Democratic Party, Socialists became divided between two camps. The revisionists,
led by Edward Bernstein, who renounced Marxism and revolution entirely in favor of reforming
capitalism in the state from within, and Karl Akoski's Orthodox Marxists. Basically, the only two
things, these factions, who otherwise despised each other, agreed on was supremacy of state bureaucratic
planning over workplace democracy. This led to the Social Democratic Party disastrously
working to break the workplace autonomy of many of its own workers.
But worse still, the person who became most obsessed with the potential of bureaucratic state planning
was one Vladimir Iliitch Lennon.
As the anthropologist David Graber pointed out,
Lenin's obsession with the German Postal Service was such
that he included this passage about the future socialist state
in his famous state in revolution,
a text written between the February and October revolutions of 1917.
A witty German Social Democrat of the 70s of the last century
called the Postal Service an example of the socialist economic system.
This is very true.
At present, the Postal Service is a business organized on the lines of a state capitalist monopoly.
Imperialism is gradually transforming all trusts into organizations of a similar type.
To organize the whole national economy on the line,
lines of the Postal Service, so that the technicians, foreman, bookkeepers, as well as all
officials, so receive salaries no higher than a, quote, workman's wage, all under the leadership
and control of the armed proletariat, this is our immediate aim. Lenin's idealized form of socialism
would thus take the form of a total state bureaucracy tasked with planning the entire economy.
This would set off a massive series of confrontations with the part of the workers' movement who wanted
workers' control over the means of production to mean workers making decisions overworked themselves
and not just working for a different set of bureaucrats. The struggle between bureaucracy and democracy
in the workers' movement mirror the struggle between the workers' movements and the capitalist state.
By the 1880s, the workers' movement had created variable states within a state in countries like
Germany and Italy. These quote-unquote states were vast networks of workers' institutions,
ranging from, as Grapewere described, free schools, workers associations, friendly societies, libraries, and theaters, end quote, to unions, co-ops, neighborhood associations, tennis unions, mutual aid societies, and political parties ran democratically by workers themselves, which provided vital services to workers and their families and served, so the workers hoped, as the basis for a new socialist society.
fearing the popularity of these democratic workers' institutions,
Otto von Bismarck created bureaucratic state-run versions
of the libraries, theaters, and welfare services to replace them,
telling an American observer, quote,
my idea was to bribe the working class,
or shall I say, to win them over,
to regard the state as a social institution existing
for their sake and interested in their welfare.
And this works.
It was enormously successful.
Socialists themselves came
to confuse Bismarck's welfare state bribe with socialism itself. And when they took power,
they replicated the bureaucratic nature of many of Bismarck's programs, eliminating the democratic
aspects of the older workers' institutions entirely. But where they're leaders, I've forgotten
the democratic core of their own ideology, workers themselves never did. As the 19th century drew
to a close and the 20th century began, workers who engaged in spontaneous uprisings, instinct,
began to form democratic institutions, particularly workers' councils. The most famous of these
councils, of course, were formed between the spontaneous Russian revolutions of 1905 in 1917.
These councils, called Soviets, were originally formed in 1905 out of ad hoc strike committees
that became formalized, elected bodies of representatives in the various factions who worked
to coordinate the general strike. The revolution of 1905 was crushed by the Tsar,
but in 1917, the Russian working class would once again form workers' councils as another revolution commenced.
This time, the councils would take control of production directly,
coordinating between various factories and industries as well as serving as a workers' counterpower to the new revolutionary government.
The Russian Revolution kicked off a period of open warfare that stretched from Italy to Argentina,
between the forces of democracy and the factory,
and the newly formed anti-democratic alliance of social democrats, Bolsheviks, capitalists.
Between 1917 and 1920, workers' councils formed in Germany, Poland, Austria, Ukraine, and Ireland,
and were matched by revolts of syndicists unions in Brazil and Argentina.
These uprisings were all crushed.
In Italy, which saw some of the most intense conflict between syndicalists and the Italian state,
the famous occupation of the factories was ended not by the Italian government,
but by the Italian Socialist Party in their union, the General Confederation of Labor.
This, in large part, was how fascism won in Italy and in Germany, faced with workers' movements
on the verge of seizing power, social Democrats turned on the working class and slaughtered their own comrades,
propelling the fascists into power in their wake.
Ironically, the worst defeat of the democratic workers' movements will come not at the hands of the
capitalist or social democrats, but from Lenten,
and the Bolsheviks, the very party that the workers' councils had put in power.
Lenin began to undermine the power of the Soviets almost immediately.
Published mere days after the October Revolution,
his draft decrees on workers' control stated in no uncertain terms
that real power and authority lay with the new state and the Bolshevik-dominated trade unions.
In the face of massive and unexpected resistance from the workers' councils,
the decree is needed to be modified before they could be implemented.
But while publicly declaring his support for the workers' councils,
the Bolshevik's slogan was, after all, all power to the Soviets,
Lenin continued to chip away at their power until he finally admitted his real position
of democracy in the factory in 1918,
in the horrifying the immediate tasks of the Soviet government.
Quote,
unquestioning submission to a single will
is absolutely necessary for the success of labor processes that are based on large-scale machine industry.
Today, the revolution demands, in the interest of socialism,
that the masses unquestioningly obey the single will of the leaders of the labor process.
This is obviously one of the most disturbing things I've ever read.
But to be clear, while Lenin is more candid about what one-man rule in the factory actually entail,
The system he's describing isn't actually different from one-man rule in any other political system.
Bolshevik rule in the factory would be no different than capitalist, social democratic,
or even fascist rule.
The movement for democracy in the factory now faced four implacable enemies,
willing to put aside their ideological differences to ensure that workers would not run their workplaces directly.
And as the 1920s bled into the 1930s, the movement seemed to have all but disappeared.
in a hail of bullets and blood.
But they didn't.
In next episode, our heroes,
the collective hero,
the world's working class,
will be back.
They will do many, many more revolutions.
And we're going to talk about why those revolutions happened,
what the ruling class did to stop them,
and then return to the lead-up to Tiananmen Square,
to see the final stand of the Chinese working class.
Welcome to Akhenapen,
I'm your host, Mia Wong.
When we last left the story of Tiananmen,
one Vladimir Ilius Lenin had, in theory,
crushed the last remnants of the faction of the workers' movement
that actually wanted democracy to extend into the factories.
Unfortunately for the Leninists,
no matter how many workers they killed,
the demand for democracy in the factory simply refused to die.
For over a hundred years,
the development of the mass factory system and a logistical infrastructure necessary to support it,
perhaps most importantly coal mines and the railroads used to transport that coal,
generated an especially militant working class that saw democratic control over the workplace
as a fundamental aspect of its liberation.
Ideologically, as the journal End Notes pointed out,
this manifested in a series of interlocking beliefs about the nature of the working class and class society.
all of which were necessary for the instinctive formation of workers' councils to manifest themselves
in moments of revolutionary crisis.
In the midst of the rapid technological expansions of the second and third industrial revolutions,
workers came to see themselves as the creators of the new world.
This produced the second belief that drove the classical workers' movement.
The producers of this new world should also be its inheritors.
Thus, the goal of the workers' movement was a time.
take control of production in itself, and manage it for the common benefit of workers themselves.
These two beliefs, in and of themselves, were not unique to the democratic wing of the
workers' movement. They broadly comprised the ideology of the movement as a whole. And by this point,
the workers' movement was extremely broad, stretching from social democratic trade unionists to
the intellectual heads of the Leninist vanguard parties. What made the democratic wing unique
was its concern with the fundamental alienation of factory life,
with the condition of being reduced to an object by bosses
who simply used workers as human tools.
For the Leninists and Social Democrats,
alienation was simply a product of ownership or distribution.
The liberation of the working class would be found in its productive capacity,
not in its innate humanity and creativity.
But for the democratic wing of the workers' movement,
this solved nothing, as long as the fundamental reduction from human to object that characterized one-man-rule in the factory persisted,
changes in ownership structure and health benefits missed the entire point.
That degradation could only be solved by returning agency and autonomy to the working class,
by giving the class itself control over the production process that for so long had controlled them.
In 1936, Spanish workers decided to take matters into their own hands
and seized control over their workplaces en masse.
The Spanish Revolution, as it later became known,
would become the largest and most extensive experiment
in democratic workers' self-management before or since.
Everything from public utilities to bakeries to hospitals to shoe factories
fell under the control of the direct democratic unions.
And once their former bosses had been chased,
from the premises, the workers set about transforming the entirety of Spanish society,
along democratic lines, pulling their resources collectively, and allocating them democratically
for the benefits of everyone. For a brief moment, the triumphant experiment in democratic self-management
delivered on its promises. Output increased dramatically, social services were expanded,
and the workers of Spain, by their own self-organization, developed a universal health care system
that dramatically expanded service into rural areas
where care was previously inaccessible.
But the revolution had begun
amidst a violent civil war in Spain,
and under the guise of an anti-fascist alliance,
liberal, socialist, and Stalinist forces brutally stamped out
any attempt at democratic self-management
and returned the factories to their owners
before losing the war to the fascist armies of Francisco Franco.
Undeterred by the mounting casualty tolls of pro-managerial massacre,
revolutionary workers formed workers' councils
and mass factory assemblies once again in Hungary in 1956
and then again in Italy, France, and Czechoslovakia in 1968.
Hungary in particular is an interesting revolution
because over the years it has been subjected to so much
of the same liberal mythologization you get with Tiananmen,
but this time even worse.
The Hungarian revolution is remembered as a liberal democratic revolution
but if you talk to the actual people who did the revolution,
they were saying things like,
and this is a direct quote from a member of a Hungarian workers council,
quote,
The time when the boss decided our fate is over?
In reality,
far from simply instituting liberal democratic democracy,
Hungarian workers seized control of their factories and workplaces,
forward workers' councils,
and overthrew the government before Russian tanks slaughtered them.
this was not a liberal democratic revolution at all.
Almost identical revolts broke out across the capitalist world as well.
In Italy, in France, in Chile, communes broke out and colonized Vietnam.
They spread everywhere.
And to the dismay of capitalists and communists alike,
the development and implementation of the democratic solution to alienation,
these revolts provided, was largely instinctual,
and it often emerged in places without established workers' movements,
and their political education effects.
Typical of such movements was the course of the revolution in Algeria.
The political education in Algerian workers had received
was from the nationalist vanguardist National Liberation Front, FLN,
which had prosecuted the war against the French colonizers.
The FLN's ideology emphasized the decisive role of the state in national development.
Upon taking power, however, Ahmed Benbella, Algeria's first president,
discovered the question of the economic structure of Algeria
had already been answered for him.
Production would be managed by Democratic Workers' councils
built on the properties seized by Algerian workers
after the mass exodus of French settlers
who fled the country following independence,
left much of their property uninhabited.
Then Bella's administration took a page out of Lenin's book
and publicly supported the councils while privately undermining them.
But the whole dispute was made irrelevant
by a military coup two years later.
that dismantled the councils completely and reimposed one-man rule in the factory.
Still, even by the late 70s, it was by no means clear
that one-man rule in the factory would triumph as a political system.
Workers and students almost took Italy in 1977,
and the C&T, the anarchist union that had led so much of the Spanish Revolution,
reappeared after the death of Franco.
For a brief fleeting moment in the late 1970s,
it really looked like they were going to do it.
The persistence of these revolts in the face of pure military repression
caused capitalist managerial elites to look for ways to dismantle the systemic structures
that produced the democratic revolts without giving up their power.
As author and friend of the show Vicky Austroil points out,
the instinctive embrace of democracy in the factory
was only possible so long as the factory remained a point of encounter.
A kind of dark agora that at once both exploited workers
and facilitated the interactions
that allowed them to identify with each other as a class
and find and produce collective meaning.
Thus, the fundamental thrust of the attack
against democratic self-management
would take the form of an attack on the shop floor
as a site of collective identity formation
and as a space that could be seen in any way as liberatory.
This assault took a number of forms.
Most famously, deindustrialization itself,
as well as the spatial relocation of factories from urban centers into the suburbs,
where workers could be isolated from each other and turned into homeowners,
bought off with the combination of cheap credit,
and the promise that the new homes would also function as assets.
The quote-unquote democratization of finance replaced the democratization of the factory
as the capitalist class funneled union pensions into the stock market,
thus tying what remained of organized labor to the fate of capitalism itself.
corporations began to turn the workplace into an immense propaganda apparatus, replete with mass ideological programming designed to promote identification with the corporation itself and not the working class as a whole.
Worst of all, the mobility of capital and the immobility of workers combined with the new logistics networks and technological advances in containerized shipping to create a world where if workers ever began to get the upper hand, capitalists could simply move elsewhere.
As the total size of the industrial working class contracted,
capitalists increasingly took that option and left,
spitting vast populations out of the traditional workforce entirely.
These developments would eventually destroy the classical workers' movement,
but in order for the anti-democratic counter-revolution to succeed,
it needed somewhere to move their production to,
somewhere with a large, exploitable labor supply.
The capitalist class found that answer in China.
In the wake of the CCP's victory in the Chinese Civil War in 1949,
the Chinese factory system was extremely different from the system
that existed anywhere else in the world.
Chinese state-owned firms virtually lacked the ability to fireworkers.
People's entire social sphere was built around their work units,
which provided everything from their health care to their retirement,
to their food, to often their entertainment.
The CCP also eliminated the peace rate system,
a system in which people were paid per unit they produced,
which is, for example, how the USSR worked.
This meant that in order to get people to work, bosses had very little leverage.
They were thus forced to allow a degree of participation in the labor process
and the ability to criticize bosses,
because otherwise it was virtually impossible to get anyone to do anything.
Chinese bosses solved this problem
through a combination of mass ideological work
and a parentalistic, semi-democratic system
for determining the heads of work team.
that, while rigged by the party, ensured that managers would at least be somewhat popular.
So the process was strictly managed, workers had the ability to criticize the cadre who governed
them and combined the work units' system of folding home and social life into the factory system.
The product of this system was that because there was already a greater degree of workers' participation
in Chinese factories than workers elsewhere, and because of some of the structural elements
of Maoism, demands for democracy became delinked from the workbook.
place. And it meant that the system, at least in the cities, worked sort of okay until the
Cultural Revolution. This means that it is time for me to do the Cultural Revolution rant.
Everyone gets the Cultural Revolution completely wrong. The initial targets of the Cultural
Revolution were kids with quote-unquote black blood, the children of people who had, quote,
bad class backgrounds. These people were heavily persecuted. And you can make arguments about
what you do with, you know, a Shanghai oligarch who collaborates with the Japanese imperialists,
but this extends to the children of people from quote-unquote bad class backgrounds.
And that term is extremely loose. I know people whose families were declared of black class
background who had quote-unquote black blood and weren't allowed to hold government positions
because her family had made bird feeders before the revolution. It was, as a system,
absolutely nonsense. So what the early phases of the Cultural Revolution amounted to was a bunch of
privileged kids from Red Class backgrounds in a new system attacking a bunch of kids who were being
persecuted for stuff that was literally not their fault at all. They had no way to control who
their parents were. Now, the initial stages of the Cultural Revolution were largely driven by Mao
attempting to play power games inside the party. But as things became more and more chaotic,
and the attacks on CCP
Beart Gratz and Codra escalated
it spiraled nearly out of Mao's control
entirely and produced what's called the January storm
where rebel workers seized control of Shanghai
and drove out the CCP.
And this caused what I would describe
as a oh fuck moment for Mao
because now, despite all his rhetoric
about bombarding the headquarters,
he had to actually deal with a worker-controlled city.
And I found this incredible line
from Jo-N-Lai in a meeting with Mao
where they were attempting to figure out
what to do with, you know,
this new revolutionary Shanghai.
Quote, when asked whether the new leadership
should be elected from the bottom up,
Joe-in-Lai bluntly replied that, quote,
anarchism is bound to develop
if we immediately implement direct election
of the Paris commune style.
And this was obviously
a problem for Mao because
there was no way for the party
to maintain its long-term control
if, you know,
actually implemented the direct elections in the style of the Paris Commium.
And so instead, we saw a full-on-counter revolution.
By about 1968, rebel workers and students were getting slaughtered everywhere.
The initial uprisings, the stuff that everyone remembers with the dunce caps and the placards,
was, staggeringly, by far the least violent parts of the Cultural Revolution.
Here's from Walder, an academic who spent a significant amount of time studying the actual death record,
city by city and province by province in the Chinese archives.
Quote,
more than three-fourths of all documented deaths and local annals
are due to the actions of authorities in this third phase
in more than 90% of those persecuted for alleged political crimes.
This third phase, 1968 onward,
is where most of the people in the Cultural Revolution gets killed.
And this is the opposite of the way that the Cultural Revolution is understood.
most of the killing wasn't the product of student radicalism gone out of control.
It was the state slaughtering its ways through the various rebel factions that did most of the killing and the political persecution.
And this has enormous effects on subsequent Chinese history.
It creates a ruling class that's incredibly paranoid about anything that even smells like organizing happening outside the party,
and the most radical students and workers were simply butchered by the state.
and by the late 1970s radical politics in China
that could have produced anything even remotely
like democratic control of the workplace
had collapsed almost entirely in the face of state repression.
In their wake, politics moved towards more intellectual-driven liberal democratic politics
that broadly ignored the working class entirely,
as Deng Xiaoping unleashed the horrific one-child policy
and a draconian and ultimately successful attempt
to re-establish the state's patriarchal control over the household
and strip hundreds of millions of women of even the limited autonomy they had clawed out of the cultural revolution.
But the beginning of marketization, the gradual dismantling of the socialist welfare state,
and a wave of inflation produced a series of economic changes that turned Chinese society into a pattern keg.
By 1989, the classical workers movement globally was on its last legs.
Unable to spark its own uprisings, it latched onto a series of other social and political movements.
most notably a pro-democracy movement in China,
but democratic self-management and his critique of one-man rule in the factory
was utterly alien to the pro-democracy movement,
which meant that its development by the workers of Tiananmen
was a spontaneous product of the application of the principles of democracy to their own situation.
This led to formulations that would have been unfamiliar to previous incarnations of the workers' movement.
One worker interviewed by Walder said this about democracy in the factory.
Why do a lot of workers agree with democracy and freedom?
In the workshop, does what the workers say count or what the leader says?
We later talked about it.
In the factory, the director is a dictator.
What one man says goes.
If you view the state through the factory, it's about the same.
One man rule.
Our objective was not very high.
We just wanted workers to have their own independent organization.
In work units, it's personal rule.
For example, if I want to change jobs, the bus company foreman won't let me go.
I ought to go home at five, but he tells me to work overtime for two hours, and if I don't, he'll cut my bonuses.
This is personal rule.
A factory should have a system.
If a worker wants to change jobs, they ought to have a system of rules to decide how to do it.
Also, these rules should be decided upon by everyone, and then afterwards anyone who violates them will be punished according to the rules.
This is ruled by law.
Now, we don't have this kind of legal system.
Now, this is obviously an extremely conservative framing of the classical critique of one-man rule in the factory,
couched in the dominant political rhetoric of the rule of law,
but any attempt to actually implement a system by which workers controlled the factories they work in,
how long they work, and what the bonus rate was democratically to an independent organization
could only end in democratic self-managed workplaces.
As Walder and Zhang have pointed out,
the workers at the Beijing Workers' Autonomous Federation were uniformly uneducated.
it had little or no connection to any of the various liberal intellectual circles.
This was as pure a worker as we've meant as any in Chinese history,
and for one final time, the instinct of that working class was to demand democracy in the factory.
This demand, above all others, was politically unacceptable.
When the army marched on Beijing, it was the Chinese working class they wiped out.
Even the memory of the demand for democracy in the factory would be scrubbed from the records of the CCP
and the pro-democracy movements alike,
thus ensuring the meaning of the events would be lost.
What then was Tiananmen?
In some sense, it was a transition point
between two different Chinese working classes.
The protests were the high watermark
of the political mobilization
of the old industrial working class,
who, in the street surrounding Tiananmen,
mounted the final attack of the classical workers' movement.
Their defeat ended the old working class as a political force.
and they were annihilated altogether in the economic restructuring of the 1990s,
which crushed the last vestiges of workers' autonomy in the factory
and destroyed what remained of the Chinese welfare state.
They were replaced by a new working class,
drawn from the rural and semi-urban underclasses of the old socialist system,
who were dragged into the cities to fill the ranks of the 277 million migrant workers
that today comprised the background of China's working class.
this new working class, with rural household registration,
in no way into the remaining state-owned factories,
would have none of the benefits of the previous one.
It would instead face a full raft capitalist ideology
baked into every aspect of workplace culture
and a massive attempt to encourage home ownership.
While the previous working class could at least posit a democratic form
of the factory through which life could be improved,
this new working class's greatest desire was to leave the fact.
entirely and become a business owner.
In this sense, it considers itself to be a temporarily embarrassed petite bourgeoisie.
Such ideological self-conceptions are inimical to the formation of the classical
workers' movement, and indeed, the new Chinese working class has largely failed to find
the collective identity in the workplace.
The situation is not unique.
The death of the classical workers' movement has seen the collapse of their demands of democratic
self-management everywhere in the face of a working class.
that refuses to cohere itself in the factory.
China was just late to the game.
The fact remains, however,
that the global economic system
has lurched from crisis to crisis
for the better part of my lifetime,
setting off in its wake
an increasing number of revolutions
even as the dark agor of the factory
ceased to function as a place to form identities.
For this new working class,
if a collective identity cannot be for
in the factory, it would be forged in the street instead, lacking a positive identity to
cohere itself around. Workers were only able to mobilize on a mass basis in direct opposition
to a force that threatens it on a cross-sectoral basis. The state, with its ability to increase
the price of basic commodities and slash welfare benefits, became the only available enemy,
and the constant fights against the police became the sole basis for new collective identity
formation. Contemporary revolts have thus taken the form of mass street movements in almost continuous
confrontations with the states. Factory occupations were replaced with square occupations,
and as the squares were revealed to be indefensible, they too were replaced by running fights with the police.
But this placed the new revolutionaries in a dangerous bind. Without the leverage against the state,
the classical workers' movement's control over the workplace provided, they lack the ability to bring down a government
firmly committed to fighting it out.
Even the attempts over the last five or six years
to carry out general strikes in Peru, in France, Hong Kong, and Sudan,
were, as Melatesta predicted in the early 20s,
easily defeated without the accompanying factory occupations.
But with current labor conditions exceedingly unlikely
to produce another wave of factory occupations,
the way forward for any political movement
that seeks to reintroduce democracy into the economic sphere is unclear.
Perhaps that is the greatest legacy of Tiananmen.
The workers who assembled outside Tiananmen Square had already abandoned their factories, for
all that they spoke the language of the old workers' movement.
They stood and fought and died like we do.
In the streets, they were the bridge between the world of the workers' movement and the world
we live in today, and thus faced the same revolutionary crisis we face today.
The crisis of Papua and Palestine, of Colombia and Iran, of Mervo, of Mervo and
Myanmar and Hong Kong, of victory just beyond the horizon that nevertheless cannot yet be grasped.
The workers of Tiananmen, I suspect, have no answers to give us now, but expecting answers from
the dead is demanding too much of those past and present who died fighting for liberation.
All we can do now is find our own way, and with the names of the dead on our lips, build
the world they died fighting for.
Welcome to It Could Happen here, the only podcast where anti-British discrimination is a way of life.
James, are we allowed to say that?
Do you remember the training I haven't done yet?
I was giving that training my full attention throughout the duration of the video every single time I've watched it.
That's good.
Various employers for the last half decade or so.
There was no section on anti-British discrimination yet again, another example.
Fancy that.
Yeah, we'd have been victimized.
Last time I took that training, there was just straight up anti-Asian racism in it that they didn't address at all.
So I'm assuming if that's okay, then anti-British racism is fine.
There's some shit in those videos, which is wild.
Okay.
There you go.
I think there's a lady who's literally called Karen and they do her wrong in the video.
See, I am definitely pro-British discrimination, but you do get a point for having Peter O'Toole.
So at least it's not all.
the way because the O'Toole factor keeps you from the full might of my wrath, frankly.
Fair is the greatest person.
Yeah, I'm sure that's the case.
I'm Garrison Davis.
I'm joined by Mia Wong, James Sto, and Robert Evans.
This episode, we are talking about babies.
Should there be more?
Yeah.
We're on a pronatalist kick.
We're going to have that off-putting couple who look like vampires,
but not any of the good kinds of vampires on the show.
very excited to have those people on. They seem nice. But before we do that, we all decided maybe we should
talk about other pro-natalist policies in world history and how well they've worked, generally.
We're going to start by talking about what the U.S. policy might be, or the people proposing U.S. policy,
and then we will discuss how those policies went historically.
Yeah.
So, like, to start with Trumps, besides one executive order in February supporting IVF, the new administration has yet to tackle pro-natalist concerns on the policy front, but a collection of lobbyists, activists, and influencers are vying for the president's ear while proposing a multitude of plans to grow the number of heterosexual marriages and incentivize childbirth.
The pro-natalists certainly think that the new administration is at the very least, ideologically.
sympathetic, if not in cahoots
with their agenda. The main
inns on the pronatalist front have
come from the Peter Thiel
tech right wing of the White House.
This is like J.D. Vance and
previously, Elon Musk.
Musk has been doomposting for years about how a drop
in fertility rates could be leading to a
large-scale population collapse.
And at an anti-abortion rally
this past January, Vance addressed the crowd
saying, quote, I want more babies
in the United States of America. I
I want more happy children in our country, and I want beautiful young men and women who are eager
to welcome them into the world and eager to raise them.
Yeah, and you got to like, whatever you're listening to one of these things, you got to
like have a little parentheses anytime, anytime someone says baby, there's a little parentheses
there that says white.
Because this is, this is real Nazi shit.
A lot of this stuff is certainly like based on like great replacement rhetoric that the
alt-right like progen horse.
and like pushed forward in like 2018,
which is now so widely normalized,
thanks to, I mean,
really Musk has done a lot of work
in normalizing great replacement stuff.
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson, too.
And Carlson, of course.
Well, and Musk's family goes into this, right?
Like, this is the kind of thing, like,
his grandparents were involved in.
Like, it was a little bit less of, like,
the standard great replacement shit
and a little more, like, focused on,
like, we need to be breeding high IQ white people together.
Yeah, you,
But that is what he inherits.
He comes by it honestly, I guess you could say.
Well, and oftentimes, per natalist rhetoric is also tied in with, like, the trad wife and
like loss of traditional family structure type stuff, right?
Vance has laid blame at childless cat ladies and referred to our quote-unquote broken culture
that attacks masculinity and turns our nation's youth into endrogynous idiots.
Hey, shout out.
Yeah.
I've also started referring to women with kids as catless child ladies as a result of this.
I don't think you can say that.
Some good reactions actually.
I don't know.
People reacted very negatively.
That's tough you wrote it.
A declining birth rate has also been attributed to women in the workplace
who are not getting married and raising kids at home from a early enough age.
Yeah.
And some of this rhetoric has rubbed off on Trump, right?
In Trump at CPAC in 2023, he said, quote,
We will support baby booms and we will support baby bonuses for a
new baby boom. I want a baby boom. Cool. Trump has floated a $5,000 cash, quote-unquote,
baby bonus to American mothers after delivering a baby, calling this proposal a good idea.
Well, Garrison, that's almost three months at a preschool. Oh, yeah, I'm sure that's enough.
Not quite three months at a lot of preschools. Like, not even great preschools. It's very,
preschool is unbelievably expensive. The actual cause of like, of a declining birth rate is due to
skyrocketing cost of living, so people aren't financially stable.
have to have kids in their early 20s anymore,
so instead they're waiting until their 30s.
That's part of it at least, yes.
If you want people to have kids more,
you should make the world more affordable.
And a $5,000 baby bonus does not actually
solve the key issues that would cause people to be
worried about, you know, trying to, like,
get married and have kids at a young age
in a world where that seems kind of like
unfathomably expensive.
Now, luckily, Trump does have
a few other ways of sorting out this problem.
The new big, beautiful
budget bill that recently passed the house
will create quote unquote
mega savings accounts for new
kids and here
mega stands for money
accounts for growth and
advancement
just fucking stop
stop it
so when parents or guardians
open a new mega savings account
for their kids the federal government will contribute
$1,000
for babies born between January
1st, 2024
and
December 31st, 28.
That'll help.
Great.
Great.
I believe California also does it.
Yeah, California has something called the California Child Saving Accounts Program, which already
gives children up to $1,000.
And I think it's like a college savings account from what I understand.
Yeah, that's pretty much what this is.
Although specifically for the MAGA accounts, it also lists homeownership.
Oh, cool.
Because this is like a big, this is a big part of this pro natalist thing is you need to like
own a home, get in a straight marriage, start having kids in your early 20s.
Yeah, sure. Make Instagram videos of yourself chopping wood badly.
Like, we understand.
Yeah, yeah.
The Big Beautiful Budget Bill also prohibits Medicare funds for going to plan parenthood.
Great.
Yeah.
Let me tell you, $1,000 American dollars, even with compounding interest, isn't going to do
shit to buy you a home anywhere in the United States.
Now, the Heritage Foundation's DeVos Center for Life, Religion, and Family, have pushed for a policy
that exponentially increases the child tax credit for each additional child a married couple has.
This is a little bit similar to a policy proposed in 2023 by a Republican representative Brian Slayton of Texas,
who proposed increasing property tax cuts for married heterosexual couples who have never been divorced
and have four or more children starting after marriage.
So there's a lot of caveats there.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
Okay.
Sure?
Yeah.
No, are we taking issue with this?
That is some, yeah, this is part of my British heritage trait.
We developed our own religion so that dudes could get divorced.
It is, it is a bill of rights for British guys.
Obviously, a lot of caveats in there so that you can have your little like trad Christian family.
But four kids would equal a 40% cut.
Ten kids would equal no property taxes at all.
Well, I mean, shit, that's hard to argue with.
This is property tax.
You also have to own the property to begin with
to be paying property taxes.
Yeah, all of these people want you to be
like homeowners with a stay-at-home wife.
This is like, this is what they want.
But they don't want to actually do things
to meaningfully make home ownership accessible.
No, this is just like self-selecting
for like well-off white Christians, right?
Yes, yeah, yeah, 100%.
Slayton said in a statement, quote,
with this bill, Texas will start saying to couples,
get married, stay married,
and be fruitful and multiply, unquote.
For fuck sake
It's a disaster
And a lot of this stuff
Is too
This is their sort of flailing reaction
To
Like one of the things that actually drives
Like declining birth rates
Which is not having teen pregnancies
Like significantly decreases birth rates
Because it turns out to like
Oh yeah right
It turns out
A huge part of like
Why birth rates are so high
Is just direct social coercion
And if you stop having that
Or like
You know the amount of the coercion
decreases, then yeah, like fucking birthplace are going to decline because women aren't being forced to have babies.
And, you know, and so they're trying to do all this like, you know, unhinged tinkering bullshit to sort of like deal with the fact that if you don't force people to have children as teenagers, they won't.
Yeah, because life, they quickly realize there's things in life like, you know, drugs and stuff.
Yeah, go back to the club.
Yeah, they'll go back to the club.
In March, Trump called himself the quote-unquote fertilization president.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Oh, God.
Oh, no.
And the White House is expected to soon release a report on how to expand access and affordability of IVF.
Now, this is where things get sticky.
Insert pun.
There is hot debate amongst advisors and think tanks on the religious ethics of IVF, right?
There's no real consensus among the pronatalist voices who are lobbying Trump.
This sort of breaks down into like the new tech right versus the more religious Christian family sector of conservatism.
And Vance is kind of caught in the middle of this.
But these groups may end up compromising to form an alliance.
Now, Heritage, the Heritage Foundation recommends a program to use government funds for education that promotes quote unquote natural fertility,
teaching women how to track their mental cycles
using charting courses to both help get pregnant
and avoid using birth control.
They proposed that food, nutrition, and lifestyle changes
could improve, quote unquote, natural conception
instead of using assisted reproductive technologies.
Parrottage proposed to something that they call
restorative reproductive medicine
as a holistic approach to treating infertility
through quote-unquote hormone balancing, dieting,
and nutritional adjustments,
environmental changes and surgery, unquote.
Yeah, you just need some fucking some of those baby teething pills Highlands made that kill babies.
That's what you got to take.
It's a holistic approach to your health.
Get some raw milk in that.
Put a bunch of random chemicals and lead in your body from an unregulated supplement company.
Heritage itself critiques IVF as failing to address the underlying causes of infertility,
as well as, you know, out of concern for embryo personhood rights.
For fuck sake.
So they advocate for embryo adoption and have proposed legislation to make the production of embryo spares illegal.
Embryo adoption.
Because they believe that these are like full, like people.
Yeah.
Now, on the other side of the, you know, pro-natalist right, you have people like the vampire couple that Robert mentioned.
Yeah.
Simone Collins, a pro-natalist activist and failed Pennsylvania congressional candidate.
She could still pull it off.
stay in line if your vote hasn't been counted people.
Her and her husband are self-described, quote-unquote,
techno puritans.
And she is the fucking stupid of shit.
Like, fucking damn it.
Oh my God.
Can we put these people on a boat and send it across the Atlantic?
Like, can they get scurvy?
Have they already got?
They look a little bit like they may already have scurvy, to be fair.
They do look like they have scurvy constantly.
Can we deprive them of lime juice and save the world from a fucking crime?
Put them on the next.
next starship and see how far up it gets.
Yeah, let them call on Mars.
No, they won't get that far. Let them try.
I support the human spirit.
Collins is also the former managing director of an exclusive Peter Thiel
founded social club called a Dialogue.
Cool.
Now, she is called the new administration, quote unquote, inherently pro-natalist
and has sent several draft pro-natalist executive orders to the White House,
one of which would award a, quote,
National Medal of Motherhood
to mothers with six or more children.
This is some Tchaescu shit
like I know we're going to talk about that
but Jesus Christ. She herself
wants at least seven kids
and she claims to use special technology
to select embryos with high IQs
which relates back to what Robert was saying
earlier. Yes. So they
use IVF to specifically
select embryos that they think
are like naturally predisposed to have more desirable traits, including high IQs.
They have not discussed the exact method. That's why it's called special technology.
They're looking for the one with the big head or something. So you don't know.
I guess they're not even that far along, did they, when the IVF?
So that's obviously pretty fucked up. And then I guess finally, one of the few things that actually
has happened in advancement of this ideology was way back in February, Trump's Transportation
Secretary Sean Duffy, who is a father of nine and has.
10 siblings, sent out a memo directing his staff to prioritize transportation funds to, quote,
give preference to communities with marriage and birth rates higher than the national average,
unquote, which would in effect mean less money for urban public transit and instead send it
towards like wealthier rural white conservative areas. Yeah, I'd imagine Latino communities have higher
marriage rates at least than like the national average. Yeah, I'm not sure if Sean Duffy really
wants his employees to select for that.
No, neither am I. That's kind of, that's what I'm, that's what I'm, uh, that's what I'm, uh,
that's what I'm wondering for. Yeah. Samuel Huntingdon thinks they have higher birth rates, right?
Like, that's his whole shtick. If, if you look at the full memo, I, I think this is,
this is, this is just like a dog whistle for like white Christians. Like, that is, that is really
what he's saying. Sick.
Anyway, that is what I have for, uh, the current, the current pro ralist policies.
We should go on an ad break and then return to learn the historical implications of pro-names.
natalist policies.
Mm-hmm.
All right, we are back and we are spinning our globe, our big ball of pro-natalism,
and it is slowing down and has landed on Japan, where MIR is going to explain pronatalist policy.
Yeah, and I guess I want to open on a kind of global thing, which is a concern over, like, birth rates for, like, fascists is a really old thing.
I mean, it predates fascism.
And this is like, like, if you go to like the 1870s, every single person is complaining about like, oh my God, the birth rate of the right.
Well, the white race keeps declining and we're going to get like overwhelmed by the Asiatic Chords.
And then you go to like the Asiatic chords.
And it's like, Japan has been having the same fucking panic for literally so long.
Like I cannot emphasize enough.
You can just go back through newspaper archives and you just, it's you're literally reading the same article over and over and over again going back just decades and decades.
and decades and decades.
So, like, the first big modern freak out about birth rates is in, like, 1987.
Yeah.
They have the first big, like, Japan birth rate declining freak out.
This has been happening longer than, like, most of the people here have been alive.
I can remember this from, like, my child.
It's just being like, oh, they're panicking about their birth rates again.
Yeah.
So, like, the running thing with Japanese politics.
So we're roughly doing these in order of, like, most to least hinged.
in terms of like in terms of these like natalist policies
Japan I think has an interesting series of sort of political contradictions in their like kind of pro natalist
Paul well if they have political contradictions in their pro natalist politics and political contradictions in
their conservative faction because Japan is basically like a one party liberal democratic state
liberal democratic party is the one party this is a party established by a World War II Nazi
but that means that they run all of politics so like every political
factory effectively runs through them. Their early attempts in like the 90s are focused on the
deregulation of daycare jobs. So basically their plan is like in the 90s 2000s, they're like,
okay, we're going to like deregulate the child care industry so that we can have more affordable
child. There'll be more child care jobs so people can pay for child care. This is how we're
going to promote this. And this is sort of one of the first places you see this huge intra-class
conflict between the pure social conservatives who want to just like send every woman
back to the household to raise children,
and the business people who are like,
no, you can't do that.
We need to explain these women's labor
to like make money.
And so the fight that starts to break out
is this fight between like paying for
childcare leave versus like paying for daycare.
So they eventually that their plan is like,
okay, so we're going to do the daycare stuff.
That doesn't work.
Like none of these things they're going to do
does jack shit, right?
I think that's going to be a through line here.
Yeah.
Yeah, like none of this stuff works.
And so like like Shinto,
I think it's the most famous person who spends much time trying to deal with this.
And like, again, so they have started worrying about this in 1987.
It is now 2013.
The birth rate keeps declining reciprocously.
Shenz-a-Wa-Bi, rest in piss, you fascist bastard, is still trying to, like, cook something.
Right.
I'm going to read this quote from the archives of clinical pediatrics.
Shortly after the formation of Abe's second cabinet, the quote,
task force for overcoming population decline was established in 2013,
introducing three key strategies
supporting child rearing,
reforming work styles,
and promoting marriage,
pregnancy, and childbirth.
So these are going to become
sort of like the three pillars
of Japanese pro-natalist policy, right?
A lot of it is focused on
this sort of social push
stuff to like promote
the traditional family and promote
marriage and this hasn't ever
really worked for this.
Supporting child rearing
is one that is going to get
a lot of attention in subsequent administrations.
There's a lot of attempts to reduce,
like to reduce the cost of child rearing
where we're going to see them try like 35,000 different, like,
proposals to do this.
The one that's actually interesting is reforming work style.
So, like, part of the problem here is that, you know,
everyone in Japan is working a just genuinely unhinged amount,
unbelievably staggering overwork, right?
I mean, it's one of these things that's like,
like a persistent social crisis.
There's a persistent sort of suicide crisis
because of how long everyone is working all the time.
So Shinto Abe's plan for this
was to put into place a soft cap
of you can only work 100 hours a month of overtime.
Now, this doesn't do shit, right?
Like, 100 hours a month of overtime
is enough to kill you, right?
Like, you know, especially when, like,
your regular hours are this long.
But this is, again, this problem that he's having,
which is that, like,
Okay, so yes, you probably could maybe, like people maybe would have more children if you weren't working literally all the time and you weren't just like being worked to death.
But that's really bad for Japanese business.
And like quote unquote, Abeonomics, which is like Abe sort of, you know, economic plan, like relies on maintaining this extremely high level of labor hours from everyone in the entire population.
And it's also based on putting more women into the workforce to expand the size of the workforce to, you know, extract more hours so they can be all of these.
people can make more money. Right.
They were also supposed to do
free preschool for all children. And this
just like didn't happen, which
over and over again, they're like, we're going to do these
kind of like, these kind of
like, okay, we'll give you
some kind of welfare state bullshit, but only
in order to like have kids. And it just
doesn't happen. And so, you know, this is one of
Abe's big initiatives, but by the time he's like
assassinated in 2022, he what?
He was, uh,
by time his political coalition was
finally detonated by one guy with an electric blunderbuss.
My favorite politics.
Oh, God, it's so good.
It's so good.
We have covered this extensively on the show.
If you want to hear the happiest I've ever been during an episode,
including the day after Kissinger died,
go find the episode I did right after Shinsawaba.
It was assassinated.
The Holy Trinity of Great Days on the Internet is that big stuck boat and the submarine
that killed all those billion years.
Oh, it was amazing.
Yeah, people say Biden gave us nothing.
There was some bangers on the timeline.
There you go.
So, all right, Shinsu-Wapai successor is a guy named Fumio Kishida, who lasts for a little bit.
And Kishida, every single Japanese government announces that they're going to spend, like, somewhere between $20, like, $15 and $20 billion.
on pro-natalist policies and mostly doesn't happen.
But Kishida promises that he is going to spend $24.5 billion.
A lot of this money is going to be just straight up like child allowance.
So Japan has the system that they've been, you know, they've been sort of implementing
over the course of like all of these fucking reforms, which is just like, all right,
we're just going to like hand you cash.
It's still not enough money to like substantively change stuff.
But there's a lot of different kinds of cash policies.
They have they have cash transactions.
for policies that are just straight up like, okay, here you had a baby, we're going to give you
this amount per month. I think it's like 10 to 15,000 yen, which, hold on. Yeah, so it's like,
$70 a month, which is like not, mm. Yeah, they are trying to expense state research on
this. They're supposed to have these like counselors that like come check in on you and like
give you education and stuff that are also supposed to just like give you a whole bunch of
basically like child care equipment stuff and make sure you're getting
medical care. And that's supposed to come out to about like $700-ish roughly. You know, this is like the big
sort of plan that they're doing. And then in 2024, Kishida is replaced by like some other dipshit who,
you know, if he lasts more than like two years, I guess I'll tell you his name. But he's, you know,
attempting to go back to the sort of child care side of it, right? Which is his plan involves a bunch of
things like child care subsidies, and very importantly, like tuition-free high school.
So one of the continuous plans, if you go back to like what I was talking about with,
they were supposed to do free preschool for all children, right?
That never got implemented, except in like the last two years, like Tokyo has started doing it,
just like as a city.
Because Tokyo is one of the places where like, you know, the birth rate has been like dropping
the fastest or whatever.
Sure.
I imagine cost of living is also really.
high.
Yeah, cost of living is really
high and it's also just like, you know,
if you're working in an urban,
like in an extremely urban city,
you're working a just
hideous number of hours, right?
Yeah.
There's also this,
these supposed to be these massive, like,
investments in providing
childcare and nursing.
And you can see these kind of
like this, this point where
they've reached this desperation point where they're trying
both the sort of pro business,
like, okay, fuck it, we'll pay for your
child care and also we will raise taxes to like hand you money and also nursing stuff.
And also they're trying to, there's like giant carveouts for this, but they're trying to set
up a system where you can get full pay for couples who both take parental leave at the same time.
So they're trying everything, right?
They're trying like paid child care.
They're trying, fuck it, we'll just pay people to leave the workforce to have children.
They're trying just straight up cash transfers.
They're trying paying for medical care, especially medical care for disabled kids.
And none of this shit has done anything at all, right?
Like, just, just absolutely jack shit, right?
And if you want to look at like, okay, so like what's sort of actually happening here, right?
A lot, some of it is just like overwork.
Some of it is just, if people who can have children have any kind of freedom and autonomy,
they just decide not to.
And so part of this is also just like, and this has been one of the social pushes that the conservatives have been dealing with is
they've been trying to get people to marry younger
because people are marrying later
and thus they are like
you know they're having kids later because they're marrying later
so and this is not
working at all right
but you can look at the series of structural contradictions
in their political coalition and then you can look at the fact that like again
one of the important ideological things here is that these people hate
immigrants right and they don't they don't want immigrants
they want they want like Japanese babies
and so this is kind of like,
if you look at like, okay, why is not
this shit working, right?
They're trying all these things to just avoid
having more immigrants
in the country and none of it is fucking working
at all. But, you know,
like insofar as it's failing,
it's mostly they're trying some limited welfare stuff
and they're doing a bunch of weird ideological stuff
and it is going to get so much worse
when every other country tries this.
Yeah.
Cool.
Well, you know what else is going to get worse?
probably the products and services that support this show.
Yeah, yeah.
All right, we're back. It's me.
And predictably, I suppose, I am talking about Franco as Spain.
So Francisco Franco attempted to rebuild Spain after civil war,
both through explicit eugenics and through the nationalization of women's bodies, right?
Abortion and contraception were banned.
So abortion had been legal.
Spain was one of the first countries to do that, right,
when a federal legal monseigne anarchist minister made that legal,
minister of, I guess, public health.
That was made illegal.
I think it didn't become legal again until about 2010 in Spain.
Abortion, and unless there was like a serious health issue,
elective abortion, I guess.
Franco's military in the civil war consistently used sexual violence as a weapon,
and we can see this as a kind of prelude to his nationalization of birthing bodies, right?
Kebode Yango, who is a Francoist general, right, makes a speech in July 1936, quote,
Our valiant legionnaires and regulars have shown the red cowards what true men are and their women as well.
This is totally justified because these communists and anarchists allocate free love.
At least now, they will know what real men are, not the militia gays.
This is a translation that I'm reading just so people can go to the original document.
But gaze is not the word he used.
A better translation would be a word.
It begins with F.
Yeah, okay.
Yeah.
They will not escape however much they kick their legs and scream.
Like this is a general in their army making explicit rape threats, right?
They weren't subtle about this.
Yes.
The Spanish Falange, which is Spain's fascist party, also had a Sesson Feminina, a women's section.
My PhD supervisor of Permanaghliff has written extensively about this.
The group very much served as kind of the propaganda arm of state natalist policy.
It taught women from a young age.
were inferior and subject to men.
They had to go through the organization's programs to do anything, any engagement with
the state.
It had to first go through the women's section, right?
If they wanted to get a passport, they wanted to get a driving license.
If they wanted to engage with the world outside of their homes in any way, they had to go
through this program, which indoctrinated them that their highest calling and only value was
to have children.
Women's role in the Francoist project then was childbearing, a child rearing.
Francoists, I'm going to use intellectuals here in like quotation, scare quotes, right?
Frequently turned to phrenology to justify women's domestic role.
They fucking loved a phrenology, right?
It's great to go to like antiques markets in Spain because you can always buy like a phrenology head.
Jesus Christ.
You can acquire like an OG one.
You know, like I bet if you know the right place to look, you can find the calipers.
That's the dream.
There's actually a lot of those secondhand stores in Portland.
Yeah. Shocking.
Yeah.
The hands-clasping meme with Francoism.
I found a lot of uses for those calipers, let me tell you.
No, I mean the phrenology skulls.
Oh, okay.
Yeah. I've seen them all over town.
Yeah, but I bet you it was a replicas.
I bet they're not like OG phrenology skulls.
There's a market in France I wrote to that just had a bunch of monks skulls.
Like real monks.
Seems fine.
There was one that had been turned into a holder for a Bible.
Like they'd cut like an L-shaped cut in the skull
It was pretty cool.
It was like three grand.
Like you make a courtesy for the Quran, but like...
This was a while ago, but it seemed like a good price.
Welcome to Skull Talk, your favorite podcast discussing craniums.
Using the discount code, it could happen here.
You can get 10% of the skull Bible holder.
Yeah, that's right.
Okay.
So one of the things they did was to increasingly marginalize midwives
and instead have male doctors taking control of the child birthing process
because midwives would advocate for their patients too much
and they didn't feel that women belonged to work outside the home, right?
A big part of Franco's pronatalism was the repudiation of anarcho-feminism
that had been relatively important to the Spanish Revolution, right?
The anarchists believed in revolutionary marriage and free love.
Their follow-through on those beliefs varied wildly, right?
So we can see them in some collectivized industries, for instance, the unions took on the role.
They would assign women, I guess, I was going to say mentors, but apprenticeships, right?
So like they wanted, for instance, the CNT Transport Union, once the revolution had happened and the CNT Transport Union had been collectivized,
women who wished to be tram drivers or bus drivers could apprentice to men in that position so that in order to achieve more gender equality within.
that sphere, right? This is something that the Francoist state hated. It also had its own kind of
unique take on eugenics that manifested in its pro-natalism. Spain couldn't really do the straight
racial eugenics, right? Like that doesn't really work with Spanish history, but instead,
they saw leftism as being some kind of genetic defect and something of a pathogen that spread within
society. Woke mind virus.
Yeah, yeah. God, fuck.
No, it's pulling from the same
same type of fascist thought. Yeah, you're 100%
right. Yeah. Yeah. It also
practiced something called anti-Semitism without Jews
at this time. So there was a very,
very small Jewish population
a real step forward. But nonetheless, Franco
was constantly freaking out about
Judeo-Bolshevism. Yeah. He saw
liberalism, Marxism, anarchism,
feminism, etc., as completely antithetical to
Spanishness.
And of course, they blame this for their national decline, right?
Something that all fascists like to talk about.
This anti-leftist eugenics and pronatalism
extended to something called Niño Strobalos, Nensfostatsin, in Catalan.
These children were abducted from their parents.
Sometimes this is when their parents were in jail.
Sometimes it was when the parents had been killed.
Sometimes it was when the mother had been forced into incarceration
by something called the Women's Protection Board.
this theoretically run by Franco's wife was a way of institutionalizing quote-unquote fallen women
or women who are quote at risk of falling.
It provides a way to force any woman you want to into an institution.
These children who were taken from their mothers were often trafficked
and some cases sold to approve families by nuns and priests.
I'm going to quote one example from a BBC article.
In 1971, Manoli, who was 23 at the time, and not long married, gave birth to what she was told with a healthy baby boy, but he was immediately taken away for what were called routine tests.
Nine interminable hours passed.
Then a nun, who was a nurse, coldly informed me that my baby had died, she said.
They would not let her have her son's body, nor would they tell her when the funeral would be.
Some of these clinics went as far as to keep the body of a dead baby in a freezer.
and they would bring it out to show mothers.
They even dug grave for babies,
but many of those grave just contained stones
or the remains of adults.
These babies were then given or sold to other families and raised,
and in some cases they lived their whole lives and died
without ever knowing who their parents were, right?
I remember, like, I was doing my PhD
when the initial research into this was being done,
and it is fucking horrible for people to find this out.
Right. Like, because the people who were stolen from their families, in many cases, are, like, still alive, right? And in most cases, their birth certificate exists will say mother unknown. And that was a process that existed to protect women who had children outside of marriage. But it was also used to steal babies and leave no paper trail.
Yes. At least in 2011, the BBC confronted one of the doctors who was doing this. It's kind of a wild BBC. I've linked it as an article. There was also, like, I guess it's a.
like a podcast, a radio documentary, where one of their reporters had recently had a baby,
so I was able to make an appointment with the OBGYN, who was stealing these babies.
And when she confronted him, he grasped the crucifix and started brandishing at her.
Jesus Christ.
Incredible country.
Oh, no.
The reason that they did this, right, was because their fascism was of a unique kind that was, you know,
Paul Preston said that Franco wasn't fascist to you as something worse.
they had what's called National Catholicism, right, which prevented them from doing sterilization or abortion.
So instead, they felt that they could steal these children and sort of raise them outside of this leftist kind of pathogen.
I do love just, I'm working on the Salazar episodes right now.
I love how often Iberians are like, we're going to do fascism just a, but like, we're going to put some spins on it.
Like how the Portuguese were like, we're going to do fascism, but with us having sex with absolutely.
Absolutely everyone we're colonizing and trying to make an argument to the fact that, like, that makes us the good colonizers because of all of the sex assaults.
We're not racist, guys. It's fine.
We're communing.
Oh, God.
Oh, Iberia, baby.
Spain is different as the slogan used to go.
That was a Francoist tourism slogan back in the day.
Yeah.
So the discourse of quote true Catholic womanhood was essential to Francoist nationalization of women.
and they were raised to serve the patria right at the fatherland with their bodies, not their minds.
In the Republic, Spain had used secular education to fight its perceived and real backwardness
compared to the rest of Europe.
The Franco is predicted the opposite.
It returned for its inspiration to 16th century Catholic texts,
and they saw intellectual development as a risk to femininity and a risk to the ultimate goal of women's lives, which was motherhood.
In terms of, I guess, birth rates, like they did have, you have a post-war baby.
boom rate, you have that everywhere that is affected by a large war.
Like, there are pretty obvious reasons for this.
And then birth rates do go up until, like, for the 1970s, 1980s, and then they start
declining rapidly.
And Spain is once again in like a sort of not so much of birth rate panic, I didn't think,
but it is noted that Spanish birth rates have gone down since the 1980s.
But nonetheless, Spanish birth rates never were particularly high compared to those in the
rest of Europe because Franco's a man to really rat-fucked the economy, right, which made it
harder for people to have more children. But yeah, that's what I've got. If you want to read more
on Niños Robados, I think there's a TV series about it now, stolen children. I'm sure you can find
it with subtitles, but someone made a documentary on this that was presented in academic conference
I did, and if I find the link, I will put it in the show notes. Hell yeah. Well, I think it's
time to talk about Romania. Now, when it comes to who is the worst to doing pro-Natalism?
There's a lot of contenders, but I feel like we got the Usain Bolt of natalism right here, and it's the
Chichescu regime. So we got to peel back a little bit here and talk about, you know,
when communism first came to Romania, which was like kind of the end of 47, early 1948.
And in the first years of the communist regime, it brought the same changes that communist governments in
Europe all tended to bring in the post-war period, obviously a little earlier for the USSR.
And a lot of these are good, actually, right?
Not to deny all the horrible things that were happening.
But life changes pretty dramatically in a positive way for a lot of women.
This is true in Russia as well.
Literacy for women rises.
The employment rate for women rises.
And this happens across society, right?
A lot of the poorest people in these societies experience substantial initial lifts, right?
And along with that, lifespan increases pretty dramatically.
rates of accidental death fall pretty dramatically.
And literacy increases.
And again, it increases across the board, but it is particularly significant for women, right?
And this is all lovely.
These are good things, right?
However, it comes with a problem for a lot of the leaders, and this is not just true in
Romania, but we're talking about Romania here.
It comes with a problem for a lot of the leadership of Romania's Communist Party,
which is that one of the things we see in every society, when people have more and are doing
better and live longer is that they start having less kids. Because among other things, all their
kids aren't dying. One reason why birth rates are high is people are like, yeah, well,
like, but three of them might live, right? You know, I got to really pump these numbers up and have
enough kids to keep this fucking farm going, right? And when that stops happening, women are like,
well, maybe I don't need to have 11 kids. Yeah. Right? Like if they're all going to live to
adulthood, I don't need 11 children to be adults, right? So birth rates start to fall. This freaks out,
though, a lot of these communists, because the kind of communists who are like leading Romania
are very traditional Marxists, right? And Marx was what you call a physiocrat, right? Which is a term that
I found for the first time in a journal of family history article, but it's a term you can find
other places. And the basic idea is that, and this is an idea that, again, then it goes back to
the original Marx, more people equals better economy, right? Equals more productivity. So falling fertility
is seen as a potential calamity for the state, you know? Obviously, this isn't,
how it works. Like, the U.S. has had fertility rates falling and, like, economic prosperity
rise in the same period of time. But this is, like, a thing that they think right then,
that, like, if we don't bump up these birth rates, we're going to deal with, like, an actual
economic disaster. So by the time Nikolai Chichescu takes over as party leader on June 23rd,
1966, the problem is serious enough in his eyes that it had become a crisis. And the birth
rate had declined pretty precipitously. In 1955, there were about 25, there were about 25,
5.6 live births per
thousand people in Romania.
And by the time Tichescu takes over,
there's about 14 live births
per thousand people, right?
Now, for reference, both of those are still higher
than the U.S. birth rate right now.
We're at about 11, a little less than 11 live births
per thousand people in the country.
The only reason why the U.S. population
continues to grow as immigration.
But that's a topic for another day.
Chichescu stated that women
needed to use their influence to rebuild the family.
And per that article in the Journal of Family History,
Chichescu declared that backward attitudes and expressions of levity toward the family must be combated with determination because they result in an increase in the number of divorces and the disintegration of the family and in the neglect of the children's education and training for life.
And this is something that had come alongside the revolution, right, that there's a lot of more critical ideas about these traditional concepts like the family in the society that it existed before.
And a lot of people are like, well, but, you know, we're becoming more scientific.
We have, like, women have jobs now.
Maybe a lot of these attitudes about what the family should be are kind of outdated.
And he's saying, no, no, no, no, they're not.
They're not.
You need to go back to having a shitload of kids, right?
And he announces a new initiative to increase the population of Romania by 30% by 1990.
So, which I don't know if the idea that would ever be possible is a long shot, right?
It's so unhinged.
That's a massive change in society.
But Chichescu isn't a logic thinker guy, right?
He's not like running the numbers hardcore here.
He's just sort of throwing out some shit that sounds good.
And so to encourage the shift, he unleashes a famous raft of new legislation aimed
towards like pro-natalism, towards massively increasing the birth rate.
The first step is that abortion is banned for nearly all women in the country.
There are some exceptions.
For example, you can qualify for an abortion if you already have five.
children under 18 in the house concurrently, which is nuts.
And there's one or two other exceptions based on your age, but there aren't many exceptions.
Per an article in PubMed, in addition, employed women under age 45 years are required to undergo
monthly gynecologic examinations at their workplaces, and any pregnancies detected are monitored
to term.
Unmarried persons over 25 years of age and childless married couples without a valid medical reason
for infertility are assessed at 30 percent tax on any.
income.
Jesus.
Yeah.
Women who refuse to have children have been termed deserters.
Despite official pronatalist policies, it has been estimated that 40% of the 700,000 Romanian
women pregnant in 1985 had illegal abortions.
A special unit has been established within the state security police to combat this practice.
So...
We're so close to this.
We are not...
They really want to do all of this.
We're like knocking on the door.
They are...
Like, that is the thing that I really want to drive home is that the closest
that I have found in all of my readings,
the closest direct graph
to what guys like Vance
and Musk are suggesting
for U.S. policy is Romania.
Right.
And it's also the worst
this has ever worked.
Yeah.
When I was a lot younger,
like when I was 16,
I volunteered in an orphanage
for any of divergent kids
in Romania.
Jesus fucking Christ.
Well, I mean,
they created a culture of child abandonment,
right?
Like,
yes,
yeah,
we'll be talking about that.
That shit fucked me up.
And I'm like,
You shouldn't send your 16-year-old children to do that, to be clear.
No, and you're encountering it after the worst of it, too, which we'll talk about here, not to minimize the experience, but we'll be discussing where it was at its worst.
Yeah.
So it's worth noting that while women did start working at a higher rate after communist takeover, that started to plateau by the time that Chichescu.
Because obviously, like, there was still a lot of, communism doesn't get rid of men being shitty to women, right?
It does, it does tend to things do get a lot better, right?
Sometimes it empowers shitty men.
And at the start, like, kind of right around when he announces this set of fertility laws, he does try to institute a policy with the goal of increasing the number of women working at high positions in different state departments.
Right.
There is an initial, like, we're going to break the glass ceiling kind of thing.
But that doesn't last long.
He basically cancels any sort of messaging or work on the policy after his wife, Elena, is made a member of the party executive committee.
He's like, women have gone far enough.
Look at my wife.
Classic chichess.
Yeah, sample size of one.
Classic guy who's going to die with his wife in a basement.
So as is always the case with shit like this, women were not equally impacted by the abortion ban.
Largely the impacts were pretty wildly divergent based on your level of wealth and social class.
And I'm going to quote from an investigation by the NGO Helsinki Watch, who conducted a deep investigation to all of this immediately after the regime fell.
women were not equally affected by the pronatalist policies.
Members of the urban middle class managed somehow or another to get contraceptives on the
black market. Oh, I should also note contraceptives were basically made illegal, with the exception
of like condoms. They could also obtain medical abortions. A Bucharest student candidly
informed Helsinki watch that several years ago, when his girlfriend became pregnant, the abortion
had cost him 5,000 lay, or about $50 on the black market. And several women with professional
degrees reported matter-of-factly that they had simply refused to cooperate with government
gynecological inspectors who came to their institutes without suffering any reprisals,
nor were the most rural segments of the population deeply affected. The Orthodox Christians had long shunned
birth control and abortion, and others like the Roma had not practiced it. The brunt of the policy
fell on the lower middle class, particularly factory workers, single women, urban Roma, and those from
disorganized or troubled families, none of whom had the money or connections to circumvent the regulations.
Their options were as limited as they were life-threatening. Some used a variety of would-be-abortifacians,
Others availed themselves of the services of a back-alley abortionist.
Still, others carried the term.
And the number of, like, deaths, the mortality rate for women as a result of this did right.
Like, there's a lot of hideous stuff there.
We're kind of doing the shortest version of this, but I don't mean to paper over that.
A lot of women died and suffered lasting injury, infertility, and a number of other things
because of different back-alley abortions and weird drugs that they were given.
But it's important to note that women who had money and opposition in the social class
could still gain access to this.
this shit. And that's how it will work here too, right? Like, these Republican congressmen will not be
restricting their family members from having access to this stuff. They'll be restricting poor people,
right? Yeah. Now, the first thing I should know about this whole raft of policies Chichescu introduced
is that they did not work. That Journal of Family History article that I've quoted from a couple of
times here ran the numbers to try to analyze how well did this, like, how did these policies
correspond to birth rates in Romania? And it is true that after the first major laws were pushed
and 67 and 68, there was a brief surge in birth rates, but that fell very quickly and had completely
disappeared by the 1970s. Things were back to baseline. So in 1974, Chichescu launches another
push to increase birth rates. And again, they briefly increase and then fall a year or two later.
This process plays out a couple times throughout the administration. And one of the things that's
important note is that the increase that happens after every new sort of like focus on birth rates
is less each time, right? It gets less.
effective every time. Now, the analysis in that paper concluded the birth rate would only rise
when the state applied direct pressures on the population. Otherwise, it dropped, right? Because this
just doesn't work. Like, you're not fundamentally changing anything and none of these incentives
because they're expensive. And in Romania's case, the country literally didn't have money to provide
much of the way of incentives, right? But they never are going to work. Like, as we went over earlier,
the ones being proposed here are wildly insufficient to deal with the cost of having kids, let alone a
of fucking kids. And none of the people in charge in the Republican Party have any interest in
making life affordable for people who are not rich. Now, the situation that this led to by the time
the Tuchescu regime fell in 89 was also pretty catastrophic because there had been surges
in births, right? In births of kids to parents who, because the people who can't get away from
this tend to be the poor, could not take care of these kids, right? And there was also a surge in
kids as a result of the general surge in birth rate, but also as a result of different sort of
issues with nutrition and whatnot in Romania, a lot of kids who had different physical and
mental disabilities, right, who were just abandoned straight away because their parents could not
take care of them. By 1990, there were an estimated 130,000 children in orphanages and homes
for the handicapped, these institutions that had been set up in Romania. And there were, there were, like,
posters that were going around that were part of the pronatalist campaign that basically said,
hey, if you have a kid you can't take care of or that's not like working out for you,
the Romanian government can handle it better than you.
So like, who cares?
Have another kid and we'll just drop it off with us if you can't take care of them, right?
Like that was literally a part of the propaganda campaign that led you again, like 130,000 kids in orphanages.
Oh, Jesus fucking Christ.
Yeah.
That Helsinki article I found quoted from a different piece of Western news media, like a team of
journalist that went to a town called Dadell after Chachescu fell. And this is how that article opens.
On the second floor of the state-run institution, here dazed toddlers lie or sit in iron cribs in
in close stuffy rooms. Their foreheads are speckled with flies and with scabs and bruises that come
from banging their heads and mouths on crib rails. Some cry but most are silent and appear
bewildered behind their bars with the doomed air of laboratory animals. Down the hall, other cribs
hold smaller children, pale skeletons suffering from malnutrition and disease. Despite the heat of the day,
several of the children are wrapped in dirty blankets.
From one still bundle, only a bluish patch of scalp is visible.
Asked if the child inside is alive,
and orderly says, of course, and pulls back the covers.
The tiny skeleton stirves, turned onto its side and groans.
Ugh.
Yeah.
There's worse.
This is not the worst.
This, like, Helsinki article goes into, like, how in the homes for the handicapped,
the children are just ignored.
They can go months without any real human contact
other than the bare minimum of being fed.
There's no one watching these kids.
Like this is some of the most cruelest and most hideous systematic abuse of children I've ever heard of.
A lot of children die.
Aid spreads through some of these facilities like wildfire.
I really cannot exaggerate like the horror of these institutions.
If you do want to read more, there's two articles I'll recommend for you that I'm not going to quote up from now because we're already going long enough.
but there's the Romanian orphans are adults now, an article in the Atlantic.
That's the title.
You should check that out.
And then Chichescu's children and The Guardian, both of those articles do a good job of providing additional context and horror on this.
But I think it's important to note that what happened in Romania is what sounds most familiar to the programs being pushed today and also easily the worst this is ever God.
I mean, yeah, especially combined with like RFK Jr.'s policies.
Yeah.
That is like, like, yeah.
Yeah.
It takes a lot for me to be like kind of shocked and horrified these days.
Yeah.
But that stuff is grim.
It's some of the worst shit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, boy.
I remember the time there was like concern if like kids were really nonverbal.
Yeah.
Like, or they just had never been talked to.
Oh my God.
Because right, they've been institutionalized from such a young.
Like I was there probably about 12 years after the end of the regime.
So like these kids were in their teens, I guess.
Oh, my God.
Yeah. I remember teaching little kids to ride bikes who like had never really been able to play outside very much and it was fucking. Yeah. Yeah. That shit will fuck you up. Yeah. That's a good museum. I'll see if I could find where it is because they've maintained one of the old orphanages as it was like with the iron cribs and shit. And they have like projections on the walls that the kids rocking and banging their heads. Someone had filmed. Yeah. That shit is disturbing. Like I wouldn't read any of those articles before going to bed.
Yeah. Anyway, this has been It Could Happen here.
All right. Bye.
This is It Could Happen Here, Executive Disorder, our weekly newscast covering what's happening.
The White House, the crumbling world, and what it means for you.
I'm Garrison Davis today, joined by Mia Wong, James Tote, and Robert Evans.
Yes.
Taco Trump sweeps the nation.
Musk is out with Stephen Miller's wife.
Liberation Day tariffs are fought in court.
This episode covering the week of May 28 to June 4.
So much good stuff this week.
Also a terrorist attack, not good.
But before we get into that, I want to let you guys know, I watched the movie Mountain Head,
and then I had a dream starring all of you in the movie Mountain Head.
And it went a lot better since we were just skiing and enjoying the woods.
That's nice.
I don't know anything about the film Mountain Head.
Nobody launched an AI that destroyed civilization.
Steve Carell wasn't there.
Actually, I wouldn't mind hanging out with Steve Carell, but not the Steve Correll from that movie.
Anyway, interesting movie.
Yeah.
Interesting dream, too, but it sounds of it.
Wow, thanks for that quick Robert film review.
Thanks for sharing, bud.
Yeah.
I guess a side piece of news that we aren't focusing on much today, but we will do a piece
on in the future.
Is Trump has cut a deal with Palantir to create an extensive new database that compiles
information on everybody in the country.
This covers bank numbers, student debt, medical claims, disability status.
I think this summer, myself or a few other people on this episode,
we'll work together on an episode just about surveillance, like Flock, Gideon,
foundry, these surveillance systems that are getting like spread all across the country.
So we will do a whole episode on that in the future. But let's start with that. And then
pivot to Robert Evans to discuss terrorism. I hardly know erism. Someone else should continue
the episode now. No, this is your saying. Am I going now? Am I going right now? You're out of luck.
Sorry, Robert. That was a perfect segue. Nobody's bailing you out of this shit.
Then we're fine.
They were fine.
Oh, my God.
All right.
Let me pull up the proper dock because I did this on my Chichescu doc because we recorded both of those episodes today.
God, what a heartwarming day you've had, Robert.
Oh, yeah, Chichescu, a guy firebombing a rally in Denver.
It's all been really good stuff.
Yeah.
Mostly chill things.
So on June 2nd, there was a rally in Boulder, Colorado for a group that was a group that was
protesting for hostages that were taken by Hamas on October 7th.
There's like, I think, 50, somewhere around 50, who are still unaccounted for for varying
reasons.
And that was, that was what the protest was for.
And there was like, there was like a gathering and they were supposed to be doing like a run, right,
in order to raise awareness about the hostages, right?
So that's, that's the event that happened on the second.
And a man approached during that gathering, Muhammad Sabri Soleiman.
And he started throwing Molotov cocktails.
Every story I have gives slightly different numbers for how many Molotovs he had prepared
and how many he had when he was taken.
Like an AP News story said that he had 16 unused molotovs that recovered by law enforcement
after the attack.
But I think CNN said 14.
Yeah, 14 unlit Molotov.
So it's kind of unclear to be how many they were.
But he threw a number of these at the group of demonstrators.
He also had what's described in most.
of the articles I find as a improvised flamethrower.
And so, you know, when I heard that, my first question was like, a makeshift flamethrower.
Sorry, it was the exact term the police used.
And when I first heard that, I was like, well, that could mean a lot of things.
They could literally just be like he had like a can of like spray that's flammable that he, like,
with a lighter up to.
Could have links deodorant.
No, it was apparently like a fertilizer or pesticide sprayer type deal that he had fuel in, right?
So it actually was a makeshift flamethrower.
He was attempting, but he did not use it.
on the demonstrators. He did burn himself pretty badly. He had like body armor on that he took off
after he like basically what seems to have happened is he throws something like half a dozen fire bombs at
this crowd. And he he injures a number of people, several of them quite severely. There's at least,
last I checked six people who are still in the hospital, one in critical condition,
although that may have changed since we recorded this podcast. The victims who are wounded range in
age from 52 to 88.
And yeah, so he hurts a number of people with these molotabs.
And then the way he described it, he, like, felt like he couldn't continue going through
with the attack.
He had been planning this thing for more than a year, we know, or at least that's what
he claimed.
And he basically said that, like, yeah, once I actually started it, I found it very
difficult to continue.
So it seems like he kind of, like, didn't go as far with this thing.
as he could have because it turns out lighting people on fire even when you're very angry
is something that most people cannot bring themselves to do past a certain point.
He is on video screaming Palestine is free and he stated to the authorities that when he'd
been planning this for a year, his goal was to kill Zionists.
So, you know, it's very clear like what this is motivated by, right?
Like what his motivation was.
His background is interesting, I guess you'd say.
He and his family come from each.
And yeah, he attended like high school in Egypt and later moved to Kuwait.
He has a history of like, it seems like he kind of got politically active during the Arab Spring.
He posted a bunch of pictures of Muhammad Morsi, the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, who served as Egypt's president from 2012 to 2013.
He protested against the military coup that removed Morsi from power.
And he and his family entered the United States in August of 2022 as a non-immigrant visit.
and in 2023, he received a two-year work authorization, which expired in March.
He had tried to come to the U.S. in 2005.
His primary goal in coming here in 2022 was to get his daughter primarily into a good medical
school.
He moved there with his wife and his kids.
His daughter was on the process of graduating.
They had been living in Kuwait, but for a variety of reasons, especially the fact that
they were not citizens, she was like, I'm not going to be able to go into medicine in
Kuwait. His daughter seems to be a very gifted medical student. Yeah. And so they moved here and she got
into a medical school. And in fact, he seems to have waited to carry out his attack until her graduation.
Like he wanted her to be started on her path to becoming a doctor before he carried out this attack.
I think both in the hope that it would protect her and she wouldn't get forced out of the country,
which we'll talk about in a little bit. And I think probably just because he's your dad and he wanted to see her graduate, right?
Yeah. But then he carries out this attack.
His family does not seem to have known.
He basically left some messages for them as he left to carry it out.
His wife took his phone into the authorities, which I read as her being like,
I'm at this point trying to do whatever I can to make the government less likely to prosecute
the rest of my family.
Yeah.
Like he's a right off, right?
Like he, like I can't be concerned about him, right?
I've got kids, you know.
And like potentially trying to stop anything else happening if he was, you know, like maybe
he had other people who'd been planning this with who were planning other things.
Right.
She doesn't know.
Did he build a bomb?
Right.
She has no idea.
Yeah.
I should also note here that when he was planning this attack, he initially planned to do a
shooting.
He took a concealed carry class, or at least he told investigators he took a concealed
carry class, right?
He could be lying about some of this.
This is what the police reported.
Yeah.
But he took a concealed carry class, but he was not able to buy a gun.
The AP News article says was denied because he's not a legal U.S. citizen.
You don't have to be a citizen to buy a gun.
Yeah.
That's not correct.
But you do have to be in the country legally, right?
Like, you do not have to be a citizen to purchase guns in this country, but you do have to be illegal.
I think you have to be a resident, like certain visa categories.
There's a number of ways to get a gun, well, not a citizen, but he was not able to.
Yeah.
And thank goodness, right?
Like, it's horrifying.
Like, obviously burning people is horrifying, like, the injuries that these people suffered are pretty,
are deeply, like, there's no pleasant burn injury.
But people would have just died if he'd shot them, right?
Like, that's just the reality of the situation.
And that's already happened in.
older once like bold, both had a mass shooting at a supermarket, not so long ago.
Yeah.
So that's the, that's the bones of what happened here.
Now, I mean, having this like less than a week after the embassy shooting is pretty
notable.
Not great.
Yeah.
Speaks to the contagion way these kinds of things spread, right?
Exactly.
I mean, last week we talked about how like this displays into like media that only benefits
the actions that Israel is continuing to take.
And how much immediate attention was going.
towards the shooting in like the immediate aftermath.
And something that I found a little bit interesting is how fast that story kind of went away,
which I wasn't really expecting.
I thought it would,
it would,
they would be,
you know,
relevant for a little bit longer.
People would try to keep it relevant for a little bit longer.
I think part of the reason why maybe it went away faster than what we thought is so that
it would not encourage like copycat attacks.
Right.
And that still seems to happen to a degree.
And I mean,
it sounds like this guy was planning something for a little bit longer.
Yes.
But certainly.
having that other shooting in a close time proximity is notable.
Yeah.
I mean,
and the unfortunate reality is that,
like,
I'm sure there's someone else,
multiple other people who have been planning for different periods of time,
other kinds of attacks,
and we will continue to see stuff like this happen,
right?
Some of this is when something as terrible as the genocide happening in Gaza
is happening on a small screen in front of your face,
and you are consuming hours of the curated worst footage of it every day,
people are going to react
and they're not always going to react
in the most like thoughtful
way. Sometimes they're going to make a bunch
of fucking fire bombs and attack
a group of people who
there's not really any argument that these particular
groups of people had any
influence. Any material consequence.
Any power in the Israeli government
but one of them's a
Holocaust survivor. People are going to take
irrational terrible action. That's just
going to happen, you know? Yeah, it breaks people
that kind of prolonged vicarious trauma especially is not good for you.
I think a lot of the Sloan wolf attack is almost a way that people like cope with themselves
after watching this thing unfold on your screen.
Right.
And then as a response.
I have to do something is what he said.
Like I'm never going to be able to live with myself if I don't do something.
And then as a response, you use the violence of a gun to carve your name into history.
Yeah.
As someone who did something.
I did something.
Yeah.
This is a something.
And, you know, it's, it's bad.
It's, it's just some number of people.
This is how they're, they're going to react.
And to an extent, I don't know, I don't know how you seek to stop this.
You know, the authorities have, like, confirmed this guy was not on anyone's watch list.
I'm sure neither will the next guy or gal who does something, right?
Like, this is the world, quite, quite frankly, this is, in part the world the internet is made, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Not that it would be good if horrifying footage of the genocide in Gaza wasn't getting out to people.
But, like, this isn't the first time we have watched a series of attacks carried out and attacks and copycat attacks, like, carried out and spread as a result of things that are spreading in digital media, right?
Like, this is a, this is like a thing that's happened over and over again.
This is just kind of how the internet and radical violence works.
Well, and it's one of the things where, like, you know, there is a clear way to end the violence, which is to.
end the genocide, which is the other benefit of ending the genocide, but these people have no interest
in that. No, these people, and I don't, I don't know how to, right? Like, like, I don't, like, if you're
asking, like, well, how do we end the genocide? We're like, I guess you could get the entire
international community to stop trading or selling weapons to Israel and also blockade the country. But, like,
well, then how do we do that? They're not got it. Right. Like, I can't, I can't make them. I can't
make the U.S. shoot down Israeli missiles or aircraft. Like, I don't have the ability to, like,
yell our governmented to doing that.
Yeah, and it's how to you, right?
Like, as a person, potentially a person who's isolated.
I don't know, man.
Like, if this person isn't part of a community, right,
or hasn't found community, like, processing that trauma
and feeling like you have to do something,
some people's brains will break in a way that leads to violence.
Yeah.
I want to talk about state violence now, if that's okay,
because I think what he did was fucked up and wrong,
and like, no one should obviously be firebombing Holocaust survivor.
I think that's something we can agree on.
What has happened to his family is also wrong, right?
Like, you shouldn't be punished for being related to someone who did a bad thing.
Oh, God, and this is, yeah, this is also horrifying, yeah.
Yeah.
The whole thing is a story of, like, collateral damage.
Yeah, so the White House on 412 p.m. on 3rd of June, tweeted,
Zetid, just in, colon, the wife and five children of illegal alien,
Muhammad Solomon, the suspect in the anti-Semitic.
firebombing of Jewish Americans have been captured, captured, and are now in ice custody
for expedited removal.
Next part is in block capitals.
They could be deported as early as tonight.
This is heartbreaking, right?
Like, again, like, we've talked about habeas before, but the foundation of everything that
legal systems brace on English common law hold is you have to have evidence that the person
did something wrong, not that they're related to the person who did something wrong.
Right.
You know, Robert and I are both intimately familiar.
At least, you know, I've received calls from young people in Burma who we've interviewed
whose families have been captured because of their participation in the revolution.
And like, this is not a part of the US should be going down.
I want to explain very briefly what expedited removal is because I have seen some shit
that suggests maybe folks don't understand it.
That's fine.
It's complicated.
So expedited removal is supposed to be reserved for people who arrive at a land border,
port of entry or
iwi.
Iwi is an acronym
entering without inspection.
That means entering between ports of entry, right?
Over the wall, under the wall,
over the beach,
what have you, right?
Entering without going through a port of entry.
And they're supposed to have been here
for less than two years.
The Trump administration has been massively
expanding the use of expedited removal
recently. Why they're doing this
is because in an expedited removal proceeding,
lower level immigration officials
can remove people without them seeing a judge.
Those people can still make a credible fear claim,
which has to be assessed by an asylum officer
and then approved by a judge.
But this is a lot harder, right,
than going through the asylum process.
And they have to prove beyond reasonable doubt, I guess.
I think it's a reasonable fear frame.
I think credible fear is a higher standard
for another removal proceeding,
that they are likely to be tortured by the government
or with the acquiescence of their government
if they're sent home, right?
its use had previously peaked with 197 cases in 2013.
That was under Obama, right?
And surprisingly, you didn't see people writing about it then.
It was used even more extensively by the Biden administration, especially in 2024,
with Biden passed his asylum ban, right, by executive order.
The first Trump administration did use it.
They used it in a more broad range of cases,
but they didn't use it in as many cases as either the Obama or the Biden administration.
administration, right? Expedited removal is supposed to be for the most serious cases, for things
where the person is as a threat or a danger or for other reasons need to be removed quickly.
It was never designed. It was passed in, I think, in the early 2000s, the first decade of
this century. It was never supposed to be used like this, right? Robert, you mentioned these people
had entered the United States in 2023, I think. Yeah, 2022. And then he got a,
a visa, a two-year visa to work in 2023.
They entered on a tourist visa, essentially.
Yeah.
They're not within that two-year window, right?
To the extent that that matters, I don't know, right?
So they will now, having done nothing wrong in the case of his wife,
having attempted to cooperate with law enforcement to stop her husband or anyone with
him hurting anyone else, they will be detained in the nice detention center.
And they will have to make a claim of credible fear, right?
They will have to say it is dangerous for you to.
send us back. I presume their citizenship is
Egyptian, so I presume they'll be sent there.
That's a very high hurdle
for them to clear. And
I mean, I'm sure that there are national immigration
non-profits who are willing to fight their case, because
the abuse of expedited removal
in the last two years,
to be very clear, by the Biden administration
as well, has
seriously undermined
the due process rights of migrants.
But this is still a further
step and a significant step
in removing those. So, I'm
going to follow this case. I'm sure I'll update you on it next week. I also just want to note that
this has dominated the news cycle. Yesterday, 27 people were killed in Gaza, attempting to obtain
humanitarian aid, right? The IDF is still denying that. I don't really care. The Red Cross,
as well as health authorities in Gaza have confirmed that 27 people were killed en route to
one of the humanitarian or the humanitarian aid distribution point where they've concentrated
it in the southern end of the Gardner's trip. We will have an episode on Palestine next
week. I don't want one person's
kind of stupid action to overshadow
the killing of many more people
and that tragic loss of life, right?
So I don't think that we won't be covering that. We will.
What we will also be doing is
pivoting to advertisements right now.
That's right, baby.
Let me maybe get out my
guacamole. Go fucking hell,
I'm going to become the Joker.
Is that the pivot
to the... Yeah?
Okay. Yeah, yeah.
Oh, God. Okay, let's talk about Taco Trump.
Woo! Oh, yeah. I hate the entire world.
Finally. Get out your hot sauce. Get out your guack. Let's go. Taco Trump party.
If you're doing getting full DNC style, pick a slightly racist max can cost you or something, I guess.
So, many years ago, I was a professional StarCraft 2 fan.
That makes sense.
And this meant that I was exposed to Gungan style a full two weeks before everyone.
else. And this was my experience with Taco, because I started hearing this from like financial
news outlets and like my friend Vicky was sending me things. They're like, yeah, they came up
with this thing. They're calling it Taco. And then like four days later, all of the like regular
news outlets caught out to it. And I didn't want to say shit. It's cheap in the nation.
Me, I liked it before it was cool. So Taco is this like unbelievable delusion that the finance people
have had to like, like, program into their brains in order to like keep themselves.
from believing their own eyes
about what's happening with the economy.
So Taco stands for Trump
always chickens out,
and it's these people's belief
that Trump will always inevitably
in the end back down from the terrorists.
And I've been seeing this a lot, right?
Like, I've been seeing this some people who are like,
whose analysis I respect,
who are talking about how like, yeah,
the structural conditions of the economy are such,
the Trump will always be forced to, like,
roll the tariffs back, and then it's like,
okay, like, the 50%
steel tariff went into effect, like, today, right?
Like, I don't know.
I'm going to get some cumin.
I'm going to get some coriander.
We're going to mix that up.
Oh, God.
Yum, yum.
This is a financial thing, right?
This is the thing that, like, all the day traders, like, have to convince themselves in order
to keep the stock market going.
Yeah, yeah.
That, like, no, no, it's going to be fine.
This is a magic spell that's being, like, waived over the economy to keep it kind of
holding together.
Yeah, they're like, ooh, it's going to be fine.
Ignore the 30% tariffs on all Chinese goods.
Ignore the tariffs of the EU.
50% steel tariff today.
You might say, Mia, these economists are saying,
Tarif, we don't like it.
Sorry.
God.
We had to make up for it.
Garrison wouldn't let us last time.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I know the royalties were getting too much.
I took an entire week's pay cut so that we can pay back the royalty.
Now, the good news is everybody,
we did manage to work out a new health care plan for everybody.
It is the next time you need to go to a doctor,
there will be an unmarked car
with a loaded 38 special in the glove box.
So it is a step up from United Health Care.
We've actually significantly improved things.
That's true.
And I'm actually taking no pay for a year
so we can do a white riot,
which is just white genocide.
It's about the genocide of the Boer people.
That's real.
So, okay, speaking of United Health,
one of these tariffs that all these people
have convinced themselves is not going to happen
is the pharmaceutical tariffs,
which are still like,
coming, right? But what sort of
happened with this taco shit,
right, is the Democrats were like,
okay, I have found
a way to criticize
Trump that is racist.
And now they're all just calling him
talk. That also doesn't actually
critique his policies. Like, they're
calling him Taco and Trump in relation to, like,
negotiations with Iran.
Yeah, yeah, shit that he should chicken out of.
It's good if he doesn't do it. Yeah.
Yeah. Like, I'm watching
them do, like, like, fucking Chuck Schumer is out
you're tweeting about how Biden deported more people than Trump did. And like, the thing that this
reminds me of the most is like the Chavez era of Venezuelan opposition where every single year
they would haul some dip shit out and their platform was like, I'm going to do Chavez no
better than Chavez. And every single year they would lose by 40 points. And it's like the Democrats
are like, those guys. Those people are real fucking winners. We're going to adopt every single one of
his platforms. And then we're going to run on he's not doing it well enough. And then we're going to get
fucking annihilated in every single election until like the democratic process itself simply ceases
to exist and this will be good for us somehow. Um, this is just, I, it's pure cope. Like the entire,
our entire economy is being supported by the just collective delusion that these people have built,
but they fucked up, right? And the thing about taco and the thing I remember from like,
the first time I heard about this, it was like, if this gets out, these people are fucked
because Trump is going to see this and it is going to piss him off. And, and,
He's going to like, and like, now that it's like the number kind of thing.
It's like, no, no, no.
Like the next series of tariffs has scheduled to come off is, I'm pretty sure the China one in like the beginning of July.
Could have the math wrong.
I don't know.
I hate math.
But I'm pretty sure that's the next one.
I mean, this is the thing that I'm still like questioning about.
And like we've talked about this before is like one of those 30 day deadlines for tariffs on Canada and Mexico expire.
Yeah, he just forgot about that one.
And no one was keeping count or they were like distracted.
Yeah.
I think specifically they were putting in some like European Union like tariffs like that day.
And then just nothing like happened.
And like I am wondering how much of that is like he's just going to announce tariffs, put them on hold and then just forget about them but still announce new different tariffs in the future that may cover some of the same stuff.
Well, so here's the thing.
Here's the thing.
Some of these you remember something doesn't because so the steel tariff doubled from 25 to 50.
That was one of the rolling day ones.
Right.
And so I think it's like there are some that he like.
cares about, and there are some that he kind of doesn't?
I mean, I feel the same way when I'm getting tacos.
Like, pork tacos, no thank you.
Fish tacos may be.
I don't endorse Garrison's opinion on tacos.
This Taco Trump shit is like, I long for the days of Orange Man bad.
Drumpf was better than this.
This is the worst it's ever been.
Like, oh God, get me comedians cutting his head off live on stage again.
Sure, yes, that was fine.
This is just like, what are we doing here?
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
I mean, it's really tough because cilantro prices are going to spike to these tariffs, too.
So, I mean, we can't even call them Taco.
It's okay.
You know, Garrison, that's actually just good politics, right?
Because some people have a disability where they can't taste cilantro.
Not a disability.
I have no association with previous statements.
I will not be canceled by this.
I do not buy the salontro gene.
I don't think it's real.
Wait, you don't think the cilantro?
Oh, my God.
Okay.
Okay.
I don't think it's a gene.
No, it's just, I don't think people without the salant with the cilantro taste bad gene.
I don't know.
If it tastes like soapy, I just don't know.
I don't know.
Talks with China have been breaking down.
Both sides have been accusing each other of violating the agreement they had come to to
roll the tariffs back, which they, like, both have.
I believe both sides on that, actually.
Yeah.
And again, this comes to, like, the actual fundamental structural problem of this,
which is that, and I think this is why
a lot of people think that everything will sort of eventually go back to normal
and it'll turn into sort of like bluster like it did the first time.
Is it like, okay, again, Trump's actual goal here,
which is to not have a trade deficit with China is unachievable.
Right?
There's nothing that can actually be done in order to do that.
And there's no good way to claim victory either.
And so what we're sort of escalating towards is July,
like the 130% tariff sort of like coming,
coming back into effect.
So people are building up, I think, this like,
I don't know, the sort of like psychological wall
to the fact that this could happen again.
And the fact that these negotiations are breaking down,
I think is just making it increasingly likely
that it is just going to explode again.
The steel tariffs also are just a shit show
for a whole bunch of different manufacturing sectors.
It's very bad for the U.S. auto industry.
There's already been reports on the effect of 25%
steel tariff has had on
on the construction industry
this has been tied into sort of like
oh yeah the US is like not replenishing its housing stock
because you know
but it's
it's fucked
it's real bad
I don't have a
I don't know I don't have a better thing
to say about it than that
and that it's going to continue to get worse
and at some points
probably
the taco is going to be fucking over
and people are going to realize that he's going to do this
and especially not they just pissed him off.
Oh, God.
Yeah, well, what will they do then
with their giant inflatable chicken?
This is the biggest.
Send it to Tehran.
This is the biggest live brain stuff I've ever seen.
I am living in a world
where, like, a group chat that I made on Signal
when I was manic last year
has had more policy effect on, like,
preserving trans health care
in that fucking budget bill
than the entire Democratic Party
and they are spending their money
fucking, like,
hauling out chicken,
fucking chicken inflatable.
No,
don't listen to me,
Democrats,
for just $20 million,
I will guarantee you
the youth vote,
not a guarantee.
I propose that we rename
this segment
from Tariff Talk
to Mia Mollay
for the next...
I don't know,
20 episodes.
Garrison, as a Canadian,
are you allowed to use that word?
Yeah.
Let's go on an head break before I lose my job.
Okay, we are back.
James Stout.
It's me.
What's been going on?
Hey, everyone, it's James.
It's Thursday night here, and I'm just recording a little pickup to update you that the Trump
administration has issued another travel ban.
This travel ban, bans travel, or bans all new visas for people from 12 countries.
One of those is Myanmar.
And travel is further restricted for seven other countries.
There are exemptions for people who are already in the country with a valid visa.
There are exemptions for Afghan people who have an SIV, a special immigrant visa.
There are other smaller exemptions for the Olympic Games and sporting events, for example.
We will do a whole episode on this because we need longer than we have to explain it.
But I just wanted to make people aware that we are tracking that.
We're planning on getting something out about it.
but we don't have enough space in this episode or time to edit to address it in full today.
Well, some things have been happening, Garrison, here in sunny San Diego,
with, from what I hear, actually great tacos.
Yes, tacos are actually very good in San Diego.
Yes.
Oh, excellent tacos.
Some of the best tacos in Southern California, which is saying something.
Yeah, mm-hmm, come and visit us, eat our tacos.
Cross the border.
Get some extended release Mexican tram at all.
Let me know where you are.
Anyway, continue, James.
Or tacos, whatever you,
when I get across the border.
So Ice agents raided Buona Forcetta, which is a pizza place in South Park.
I used to stay like just above here.
I would get late night pizza there all the time when my job was riding my bike
and my hobby was drinking at Hamilton's RIP, which was a craft beer next door.
In this bungled raid, they entered during the late afternoon and early evening of Friday
and Ice agents soon found themselves surrounded by an angry crowd of local people,
patrons from the vegan small plates cocktail place across the street and the brewery.
It's now South Park Brewing as well as folks from the neighborhood.
This is one of those neighborhoods that like South Park as a concept was kind of invented
by real estate agents so that it wouldn't seem like Golden Hill or Bankers Hill and it
would have like a more upmarket branding.
So you have these very nice bars and restaurants, but then you also have like a laundromat
out on the corner and like a like a food market, like a non-chain supermarket that serves
a primarily Latino clientele, I would imagine.
It's one of these very sort of class diverse neighborhoods, I guess.
When people came out en masse, they surrounded these vehicles, right?
They were chanting, let them go.
ICE and HSI agents decided to defuse the situation by throwing flashbangs
and then leaving with four employees.
I should add here that, as KPBS put it, quote,
flashbangs were thrown, which is a cowardly use of the passive voice to obscure culpability.
I think flashbangs spontaneously were deployed.
Right, yeah.
Right.
Who can say, Garrison, maybe the people at the death metal vegan restaurant bought the flashbangs.
Well, and I also do want to say I have gotten word from some exclusive sources that these were actually secret militia members.
Oh, fucking.
Masquerading as Ice Age.
Yeah.
Let's just fucking address it because it's very silly.
The understandable degree of it is that like...
They are addressing like proud boys now.
They look exactly like proud boys in Portland in 2019, right?
Like they are in disconcernable.
distinguishable visually.
Their uniform standards have, like, kind of gone away.
They seems like they don't have standards anymore.
Yes.
And now they are just dressing, like, how proud voices and three percenters used to dress.
Yeah.
So, like, I think this kind of conspiracy theory stems from the initial misidentification
of the ginger ice agent who smashed someone's window as Michael Meyer,
aka Louis Arthur, who's one of the veterans on patrol leaders.
He was live streaming in Oklahoma at the time that that raid happened.
it's not him.
Yeah.
It's just two people who are ginger.
Yeah.
That it's possible that there are lots of them.
Then I've seen this in multiple other cases.
Often from the kind of more lip sky people you see on blue sky, right, who seem unable to
comprehend the fact that, no, they are cops and they are doing evil shit and cops do
evil shit.
Cops can do bad things.
And now, cops are more likely, especially immigration officers, to not have their names on
their kit.
Yeah.
And this is something that we saw, like, in Portland in 2020, and it was incredibly worrying.
And now it's spreading all around the entire country to the point where most, most, like, people enacting these raids are both hiding their identities and also obscuring what agencies they are actually, like, from.
Which is why people are, like, concerned that you, like, what if these guys aren't even from the government?
What are these?
What if these are just, like, some kind of right-wing militia?
Yeah.
With a little bit of checking, you can usually tell that they are, in fact, from usually DHS.
Yeah.
I mean, the California one was somewhat ridiculous, right?
There is not an exemption to the California assault weapons ban for militias.
These guys had guns, which would have been about four felonies each.
I'm not saying people don't do felony things, they do, but you'd have to be a bit of a tool to just stand
on the street with your felony, select fire MPX.
Part of this is a very, and a lot of leftists felt for this too, but this is fundamentally rooted
in a liberal delusion, which is that the danger is unaccountable groups of civilians with guns,
not the police.
The danger is the cops.
The danger has always been the cops.
Yes.
We need to push back on this, right?
Like, the prow boys are not like the be-old and end-all of evil.
No, are they bad?
Sure, of course.
Like, I've had my hand broken by one.
I don't like them, but I'm not as scared of them as they am of just the cops.
Like, yeah, we need to push back on this because it fundamentally misidentifies a problem.
And until these people wake up and realize that, they're not going to respond in the correct manner.
Yeah, and I mean, like, you know, one of the things that you can point out here is it's like, yeah, there were a bunch of police in Nazi Germany.
And the moment that they started carrying out the orders of the Nazi government, they became Nazis.
Like, that's just how this works, right?
You don't get a polo like, oh, I was just a Weimar police guy, just enforcing the laws of the Nazi government.
It's like, okay, you are, you are, you are a Nazi.
And you are a Nazi because you are an agent of the Nazi state, not because you are like, you know, you were.
were like necessarily in some paramilitary or whatever.
Yeah, a member of the party.
Yeah, like that's what happens when you work for a fascist state.
So we're now a fascist.
So in documents I've reviewed,
ICE claimed that 19 employees at a restaurant were using falsified green cards.
They were acting on a tip from November 2020,
and then they received a follow-up tip in late January 2025.
The tip claim that many of the staff of Bonifortejetta were undocumented,
that the owner made them work long shifts and verbally abused them.
I have seen no evidence that this is true beyond that claim.
I've been to and passed that restaurant hundreds of times.
I've never seen anyone who looks sad to be there,
but it doesn't mean that's not happening,
but I've seen nothing to leave me to believe that it is beyond this claim, right?
HSI had been in communication with Boniforchetta's lawyer since February,
and they had been cooperating, right?
Bonifortejosa had given them these documents, which they claimed were fake green cards.
They applied for this warrant, which they got an exceedingly broad warrant.
One of the things that allowed was for everyone inside to be detained and fingerprinted, if necessary.
Even people who are not accused of, any immigration offense, right, people who are United States citizens.
The warrant also detailed that they had been surveilling the location.
City councilman, Seanila Riviera, called the HSI agent terrorists in a social
media posts. Bill Malugan got sad about this. Stephen Miller quote tweeted Bill Malugan
getting sad about this. Talk Gloria came out with three paragraphs of total bullshit and
continued to unabashedly support stripping our city of all its socially beneficial services in
order to direct a firehose of our money to the cops, one of whom earned $430,000 in 23.
Jesus. What? Yep. Yeah. Yeah. San Diego's highest paid public officials of cops by...
Oh my God. Yeah.
we are becoming a police department with a city attached because of Todd Gloria,
someone who ran in 2020 on a reform agenda, right?
Who earns himself 250,000, much less than...
That's unhinged.
That's more than a football coach makes, which is completely...
I thought that the Portland police were paid too much.
That's wild.
Yeah.
Yeah, this person worked on alleged 3,000 hours of overtime, I believe.
Mm-hmm.
It's like what, scrolling TikTok in your car, like a company?
on keeping an eye on kids yeah yeah you can't you you can't be uh 3,000 hours I mean I
someone could do 3,000 divided by 50 52 weeks a year or whatever like it's it's it's an
unfathomable amount of overtime yeah it's just 58 hours a week whoa yeah so so so
that's full-time plus one and a half full-time jobs yeah hard worker it's a KPBS article
on it. I'll link it. Multiple police officers, I guess, in 2024 are on track to earn over
$400,000 with the bulk of it coming from overtime pay. San Diego is never gets enough attention
for being a complete shit show of a city, right? And Ron by the sea is the best way I've heard
it described. Like our city consistently has massive corruption in scandals and nothing
happens. It's a problem when a place is that nice, right?
Yeah.
Like, that's really the fundamental issue is like, people, be like, hey, do you hear about that
fucked up thing that married it?
Yeah, but like, look at the, look at the beach.
Yeah, I mean, that's literally the thesis of, uh, under the perfect sun.
Yeah.
She's a book that should be, uh, should be obligatory if you want to move to San Diego.
Yeah.
I think it's one of the, one of the earlier, uh, Mike Davis books.
Yeah.
But again, San Diego, a place where the politics are bad.
It's also what happens when everyone votes them no matter what, right?
Also, people in general, if you want to understand why Southern California be like a do, read, read Mike Davis.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
In general, my advice.
Just read Mike Davis, actually, wherever you are, read some Mike Davis.
Yep.
I seem to have used, I want to get into this because I think this is an important issue that hasn't been raised in the coverage I see.
I seem to have used AB60 driver's licenses to identify the people in Buenaforgeta, or at least use California DMV documents of some.
kind. Jesus. Yeah, so there's this misunderstanding. People think that if you have a driver's
license in California, that information isn't accessible to immigration, and that's not true.
AB60 licenses, so that's Assembly Bill 60, right, California piece of law, allow people to get a
license without having legal immigration status. This is a good thing. It means that undocumented
people are less likely to drive unlicensed and uninsured, right? And therefore, it means that
people are likely to stay at the scene of car accidents
and people who get in car accidents
are likely covered by insurance, right?
I've been hit by an insured driver.
It fucking sucks.
Oh, yeah.
DHS cannot access information
on whose license is an AB60 license,
but they can access through a variety of databases
and mechanisms,
other DMV data,
which may include things like photographs,
addresses, or thumbprints.
So in this case,
they were able to look at the fake gravest,
card and then look at other data, both in federal and local databases from various things.
And some of these people had overstayed visas, they're claiming, right?
Be like, okay, well, we found a guy with this name and this day of birth, but the person
hasn't been issued a green card.
That's their claim, right?
And the same with the driver's license database.
And so obviously, just to finish up on that, I guess, this disincentivized people from
doing the thing, which I've just said is good, which is getting a driver's license, right?
It disincentivizes.
I mean, I'm seeing things from students right now being afraid of going to
their own graduation, being
afraid of having their parents at their own
graduation, right?
This was like two blocks from a school.
Fucking chicken.
Do not. She's on top of the fence,
sorry.
Can we leave this in?
She's going to fucking get out.
Oh yeah, please go.
Take a break.
I really,
I really truly thought that
that was part of the sentence and I was
to process in my brain what the fuck was going on.
I also thought that. I was like, wait.
I also thought that, yeah.
All right, we're back.
Did you non-commercial?
Did you pick up the chicken?
Yeah.
Could you say that you were kind of a chicken jockey?
No.
Everyone, no, no.
Just another 30 seconds of silence, everybody.
Let's really give that it's due.
Does anyone got a gong that we could play?
No, no.
all right
pouring one out for garrison
so to finish up
right now both Bonafortejeta locations are closed
a GoFundMe for the impacted employees
and their families has already hit twice its goal
$120,000
as I've said there have been
on suggestions which as far as I'm more unfounded
that a restaurant forced and documented employees
to work long hours it doesn't matter
right even if they did
you shouldn't be punishing the people
who are being in theory
abused, right? I don't understand how you get to that logic. And even if that is the case,
like having ice available on call to deport your employees only plays into the hands
of abusive bosses who don't want to pay people, right? They can just call ice instead. This is a
tactic that's been used for decades against migrants. So yeah, that's all I got. Good times. Good times
in San Diego. Yeah. Yeah, we're going to talk about this more in another episode. There was also a
rage in Minneapolis that, you know, there's like 30 agents out in
multi-agency raid
and like 100 people just showed up
and got them to fuck off.
And they didn't end up arresting anybody.
Yeah, I think, well, so I think
they arrested some of the protesters,
but they didn't end up detaining any of people.
They did now detain the people
they were going after.
They stopped them.
Yeah, and there's this great line
that fucking every single person
from Minneapolis who I know now
is quoting where one of the people
who got interviewed in Sahan Journal
said, that's Minneapolis, baby,
we pull up.
So you two could pull up
and stop these fucking rage.
You see people are cowards, you can stop them.
Now, speaking of incredible cowardice,
one of the things that's been happening
on a sort of another immigration front
is the U.S.'s attempt to revoke student visas
for Chinese international students.
We don't actually know what this means yet
and what it's going to look like.
All they've said is that they're working to aggressively
to revoke visas, as a direct quote from them.
And this was from Marco Rubio on
fucking whatever social media app.
And he also said, quote,
we will revise visa criteria
to enhance scrutiny
of all future visa applications
from the People's Republic of China
and Hong Kong.
So fucking rip
all of the Hong Kong liberals
who supported Trump.
Yeah, bad shit.
No one knows exactly
what this is going to mean.
I've seen speculation
that this could be a full ban.
That's what Stephen Miller
has wanted for a long time.
I don't know if that's going to happen.
They've been talking about
like quote unquote critical fields
so like stem stuff
it could also be a
you know the specific language
they're using is like anyone who's linked to the Communist Party
that's a lot
What does that mean?
Yeah who the fuck knows right?
Linked you know like
Some of these people are the kids of like
Chinese Communist Party members but like
there are that's like 7% of the population of China
right like that's a lot of people
and then linked can be fucking anything right
like yeah you know
so no one is entirely sure
what this means yet.
My guess is that it's going to be combined
with the other horrible thing
they've been doing right now
which they've suspended visits,
like consular visits to get student visas
while they try to figure out how to like
do this like implement this new social media policy
where they want to just,
effectively what it looks like they want to do
is just like if you've posted about Palestine
they deny your student visa,
that seems like the thing that they're trying to put in place yet.
My guess is that these two are going to end up being linked
and they're going to,
and that's going to be what they're going to
doing it could also just be some sort of large-scale
rollback of student visas for Chinese
international students here. Chinese international students
have been targeted under so many
goddamn administrations now. It's fucking horrible.
These are just like people.
It's interesting because when you read media accounts of this,
a lot of them will be like, well, people aren't that,
like we're not that scared. That's okay. And it's like, well, no, you are talking
to the people who are stupid enough to talk to an American journalist, right?
Most people just say no, because they're genuinely,
this is like creating an atmosphere of fucking terror
where people don't want to
speak out about it and this and this has been something that's been used
to like great grad student unions
um you know like
over the years this has been a kind of repression
that's very useful this is also
I think part of their
of just the broader war against higher education
because a lot of Chinese international students
like come in on full tuition so they're paying for
a large percentage of
like a bunch of university budgets
but yeah we will we will
We will keep you informed as to what this actually looks like.
That's what we know about it.
For now, it fucking sucks.
Let's end with some semi-good news, I guess.
We will return into my horribly named segment, Stinky Musk.
Oh, God.
Hey, this is Gare from the future, just cutting in here at the beginning, because hopefully,
in the 24 hours after we recorded this initial segment, there has been substantial developments
in the Elon Musk, Donald Trump breakup.
story. It is getting quite ugly out there, folks. The girls are fighting diva down. J.D. Vance is hiding in
the closet as the parents are screaming down the hallway. It is getting quite ugly. Trump's gotten
rid of the electric vehicle mandate and is threatening to terminate Elon's government subsidies
and contracts. Meanwhile, Elon Musk is talking about how Donald Trump is in the Epstein files. Like,
duh, like we don't already know this, but for some reason, this is blowing the minds of people like
Alex Jones, who are now crashing out on the timeline. Huge, huge shakeups in the mega world.
With some people trying to cope claiming that this is a 5D chess move and that Elon and Trump
are going to come back together in the end, which is completely absurd. This is a huge,
a huge shift in the power balance in the new right. We will be doing a whole new piece in the
near future on the Elon Musk, Donald Trump breakup story and how it will affect the Republican Party.
but the following segment, which we recorded on Wednesday,
will essentially outline how we got right up to this point,
all of these slow microaggressions and fractures
that led to this much more explosive breakup.
So enjoy that and keep your ears peeled for a future piece
on Elon Musk and Donald Trump's messy situation shift.
So Elon Musk and Donald Trump are now officially in their messy breakup phase,
where they're both trying to kind of play it cool,
but resentment is clearly bubbling.
So after report surfaced
about the growing rift between Musk and Trump,
the White House gave Musk one last farewell hurrah
on Friday, May 30th,
where Musk sporting a black eye
and a T-shirt reading The Doge Father
was gifted a gold key to the White House
by Donald Trump.
A day later, Trump withdrew the nomination
of Musk ally Jared Isaacman as NASA administrator.
So as Musk's special government employee designation
expired. Nothing was renewed. They did not try to push him through as an more permanent advisor.
He is essentially getting the soft boot. According to Axios, Musk had asked the White House
about staying on as an advisor past the 130-day special government employee threshold, but that
was denied. Now, Musk has been reportedly disillusioned by the Wisconsin election and the
unexpected difficulty in pushing through some of his doge cuts, along with a growing frustration
regarding the Liberation Day tariffs which affect his businesses. To add to the tension,
according to the New York Times, Musk has been upset that Trump has been negotiating deals
with open AI instead of Musk's own competitor GROC.
In late May, Musk posted on X, the Everything app, quote, back to spending 24-7,
at work. I must be super
focused on X slash
XAI and Tesla.
Well, to be fair, Garrison, have you
seen Chair G.P.T.
ever speaking in the style of
G. J.J.R. Binks,
in such a convincing. You know, that is
true. That's a USP
right there. Yeah. Not well
talking about the plight of the boors.
So, as
Musk was preparing to exit the White House,
he began airing his beef with the new
big, beautiful budget bill. Quote,
I think a bill can be big, or it can be
beautiful, but I don't know if it can be both.
Telling CBS News, quote,
I was disappointed to see the massive spending bill,
frankly, which increases the budget deficit,
not just decreases it,
and undermines the work that the Doge team is doing, unquote.
After this, Stephen Miller started sub-tweeting Musk on X, the Everything app,
outlining the different types of cuts that Doge can make versus reconciliation bills can make,
and defend it, the big, beautiful bill calling it, quote,
the single largest welfare reform in American history, along with the largest tax cut reform
in American history, the most aggressive energy, expiration in American history, and the strongest
border bill in American history, all while reducing the deficit, unquote, which it does not,
it does not reduce the deficit. But now that Musk's White House exit has been more solidified,
Musk's animosity towards Trump's main policy bill has just skyrocketed, posting on June 3rd on X the Everything app.
I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore.
This massive, outrageous, pork-filled congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination.
Shame on those who voted for it.
You know you did wrong.
You know it.
Similarly, Stephen Miller has also been crashing out on the timeline, attempting to
defend the bill and push back on Musk's attacks in a flurry of tweets.
One of which reads, quote, the big beautiful budget bill will increase by orders of magnitude,
the scope, scale, and speed of removing illegal and criminal aliens from the United States
for that reason alone.
It's the most essential piece of legislation currently under construction in the entire
Western world in generations.
Wow.
Now, Stephen seems pretty worked out.
and I think this could actually have to do
not just about Musk's tweets
but also maybe about Stephen's own personal life
because Stephen's animosity could relate to the fact
that Musk seems to be stealing Stephen Miller's own wife
Katie Miller
Katie Miller was working in a top position at Doge
as a special government employee
and now that her designation has also expired
she is leaving the government
to continue working with Musk full-time
including arranging
Musk's own interview appearances.
It is not looking great, folks.
The cock chair is getting warmed.
I am not thrilled about Elon Musk
possibly having a baby with Stephen Miller's wife.
This is really dark timeline stuff.
I think all of them should be doing better.
Different? Different.
I certainly can critique the way polyamory functions
in, you know, and leftist anarchist spaces.
This is the most toxic thrott.
This is by far the worst.
This is the night of wrong wives, too, and hopefully it ends up for all of these motherfuckers like it did for Heimbach.
Yeah.
Stephen Miller went on TV last week to, like, talk about how much he cares about his family.
It's such good timing.
It's really dark for him.
Yeah.
If you marry Stephen Miller, it's because you're both the same kind of evil.
And if that's the kind of person you are, Elon Musk is going.
to give you more opportunities to be the kind of evil you want to be.
It's amazing, right? It's just obvious. Like, this is big. Like, I can't just tell if Musk is an
upgrade or a lateral move from Stephen Miller. It's really tough to say. Yeah. This is very funny.
But yeah, this is, this is one of the, you know, the last bits in the White House Elon Musk saga.
He really tried to like push forward his, this, this, this doge, retire all government employees
agenda. And it ran into way more roadblocks than what he was expecting. And he seems really upset about
that. And now he has to return to the private sector to save his failing businesses, which have
only started to fail more now that he damaged an already kind of a troubling reputation the past
few months. Yeah. So yeah, that is the update on Elon Musk. Awesome. Well, everybody, we
reported the news. I love reporting the news and that you did it. Goodbye. 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, or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can now find sources for It Could Happen
Here listed directly in episode descriptions. Thanks for listening. A decade ago, I was on the
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