Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 203
Episode Date: October 11, 2025All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. - ICE’s Ethnic Cleansing in Chicago - The Riyadh Comedy Festival - The Weaponization of Mass Shootings -... Trump’s Hepatitis Vaccine Lies - Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #37 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: ICE’s Ethnic Cleansing in Chicago https://thetriibe.com/2025/09/feds-detain-dozens-of-immigrants-in-massive-south-shore-apartment-building-raid-in-chicago/ https://chicago.suntimes.com/immigration/2025/10/01/massive-immigration-raid-on-chicago-apartment-building-leaves-residents-reeling-i-feel-defeated The Riyadh Comedy Festival https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-37598413 https://www.hrw.org/news/2018/09/02/yemen-coalition-bus-bombing-apparent-war-crime https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-37598413 The Weaponization of Mass Shootings https://www.mlive.com/news/flint/2025/09/michigan-church-shooter-told-burton-council-candidate-that-mormons-are-the-anti-christ.html https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2025/09/29/thomas-jacob-sanford-michigan-shooting-suspect-anti-lds-tirade/86415139007/ https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/29/us/michigan-church-attack.html https://dailycaller.com/2025/09/29/eric-swalwell-post-photoshopped-pic-x-michigan-church-attack-suspect-maga/ https://x.com/bennyjohnson/status/1972323666705973589?s=61 https://bsky.app/profile/aric.bsky.social/post/3lxmr4jq3qs2d https://x.com/jamesstout/status/1972669516384539066 https://www.kenklippenstein.com/p/the-ice-shooters-motive https://www.keranews.org/news/2025-10-06/dallas-ice-shooting-politics-and-ideology-or-notoriety-and-fame-joshua-jahns-immigration https://x.com/KenPaxtonTX/status/1975581768876237115 https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/north-carolina-bar-shooting/ https://time.com/7323442/south-carolina-judge-diane-goodstein-house-fire-trump-political-violence/ Trump’s Hepatitis Vaccine Lies https://rollcall.com/factbase/trump/transcript/donald-trump-remarks-health-autism-white-house-september-22-2025/ Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #37 https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.ord.189270/gov.uscourts.ord.189270.56.0_1.pdf https://x.com/bennyjohnson/status/1974086514796896515 https://x.com/nicksortor/status/1974200050206322960 https://x.com/nicksortor/status/1974112113326239852 https://katu.com/news/local/court-docs-woman-charged-in-ice-protest-chased-nick-sortor-while-wearing-bird-outfit https://www.opb.org/article/2025/10/03/trump-portland-oregon-ice-immigration-police-protest/ https://x.com/RapidResponse47/status/1974861544812105853 https://www.gov.ca.gov/2025/10/05/california-secures-court-victory-trump-cannot-deploy-california-national-guard-into-oregon/ https://rollcall.com/factbase/trump/transcript/donald-trump-press-briefing-stephen-miller-the-white-house-october-6-2025/ https://x.com/GregAbbott_TX/status/1975643776161841649 https://gov-pritzker-newsroom.prezly.com/gov-pritzker-statement-on-the-texas-national-guard-being-deployed-to-illinois https://illinoisattorneygeneral.gov/news/story/attorney-general-raoul-files-lawsuit-against-trump-administration-to-stop-unlawful-deployment-of-national-guard See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Ah, come on.
Why is this taking so long?
This thing is ancient.
Still using yesterday's tech,
upgrade to the ThinkPad X1 Carbon,
ultra-light, ultra-powerful,
and built for serious productivity
with Intel core ultra-processors,
blazing speed, and AI-powered performance.
It keeps up with your business,
not the other way around.
Whoa, this thing moves.
Stop hitting snooze on new tech.
Win the tech search at Lenovo.com.
unlock AI experiences with the ThinkPad X1 Carpent, powered by Intel Core Alter processors,
so you can work, create, and boost productivity all on one device.
Hey, it's Ed Helms host of Snafu, my podcast about history's greatest screw-ups.
On our new season, we're bringing you a new snafu every single episode.
32 lost nuclear weapons.
Wait, stop, what?
Yeah, it's going to be a whole lot of history, a whole lot of funny,
and a whole lot of fabulous guests.
Paul Shear, Angela and Jenna, Nick Kroll, Jordan, Klepper.
Listen to Season 4 of Snafu with Ed Helms on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The murder of an 18-year-old girl in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved for years.
Until a local housewife, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story.
America, y'all better work the hell up.
Bad things happens to good people in small towns.
Listen to Graves County on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to binge the entire season, ad free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
In the 1980s, modeling wasn't just a dream.
a battlefield.
It's a freaking war zone.
These people are animals.
The Model Wars podcast peels back the glossy cover
and reveals a high-stakes game
where survival meant more than beauty.
Hosted by me, Vanessa Grigoriatis,
this is the untold story of an industry
built a ruthless ambition.
Listen to Model Wars on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Cool Zone Media.
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 podcast where the It is the authoritarian takeover
of the city of Chicago.
I have your host, Mia Wong,
and today is an episode
that was significantly delayed
by the fact that our guest got shot in the face
by riot munitions
while attempting to cover
an anti-ice protest at an ice facility,
and then her co-worker
was fucking grabbed by the feds
the next day, which she
was also still out at for reasons that are
semi- incomprehensible to me, because, again,
she was just shot in the face.
This is
This is Raven, a journalist with the independent outlet Unravelled, which really, truly is doing a lot of incredible work on the incredible proliferation of ice raids around Chicago.
Raven, welcome to the show.
Oh, boy.
Oh, boy is right.
Thanks for that intro.
Yeah, we're in the shit right now.
We're in it.
Yeah.
I guess I want to immediately start this with, you are mostly, you're basically okay from my understanding from getting shot in the face of the right ammunition like a week ago.
I am, I am basically okay.
I have like some swelling still in my jaw.
I'm going to the doctor.
We'll see like if there's any soft tissue like lingering effects later on down the line.
But nothing's broken.
Yeah, which thank God.
Holy shit.
Thank God.
That stuff can really fuck you up permanently.
Like, yeah, I mean, it's spent several weeks now of the feds just humbling people with these stupid little pepper ball rounds.
Yep.
And like the core of it is like metal.
You know, it's like this little bullet thing with like the pepper powder on the outside.
So if you shoot someone in the face with those, I mean, like we've seen horrific injuries these last few weeks.
Yeah.
And also like people getting concussions from like, you know, tear gas canisters exploding right by their heads.
and other things, broken bones
from these really violent arrests.
And, yeah, it's just been awful.
Not gonna lie.
Yeah.
I was shot at, like, literally,
I was, like, taking a photo of a Fed,
like, in a press gaggle.
We were all hiding behind this van
while we're just, like, being shot at.
And this guy, I mean, he stared right at me
and, like, right down the barrel of my lemons.
Like, he knew what he was doing.
Jesus Christ
Yeah
Another reporter
It was like a similar situation
Where these guys like
Fucking ambushed them
Like it was just two reporters
Like hiding behind a van
And these guys came up along
The side of the fence
And just started like
Shooting them in the face
With these rounds
Yeah
So
And this has been at the protests
At the ice facility in Broadview
Yeah
Broadview is like
Just a tiny little suburb
Like just outside of Chicago
It's still in Cook County
majority black suburb, actually black working class, the mayor's black woman, and now
this ice facility has been there for a while, obviously.
People were protesting there weekly for like over a decade, but nothing like what we've seen
these last few weeks.
Yeah.
Okay, let's go back in time a little bit because in between the last time we spoke to you
and now there has been so much unbelievably horrible.
stuff in Chicago. I guess let's go back a couple of weeks and talk about the guy they murdered.
Yeah. So shortly after this latest ice surge began, they sailed a man at a traffic stop to ice agents
who were seemingly operating completely alone. Didn't seem to have any backup with them.
It was just these two guys in this car who jumped down on the sky. And yeah, it feels it feels like
forever ago, but of course, it was only a few weeks ago.
Yeah.
And, you know, that's, that's an example of just, like, a police killing that we may never
learn more about because, you know, it involves the feds, right?
Yeah.
You know, there's no timeline under which they have to release any information or, like,
tell us anything about their own investigation into it.
Yeah.
So that is, of course, really horrifying.
and horrifying to know there's kind of these
these missing few seconds of video, right,
where we don't see the actual shot fired
or shots, excuse me.
We can sort of piece together what happened,
but, you know, this happened in a working class,
Latino suburb,
a heavily Latino suburb,
not very far down the road
from the actual ice facility.
Like, as you were saying,
part of what's really frustrating about this is,
is we can't tell you why they stopped this person.
Right.
Because they won't tell us, right?
We know very little about this other than they stopped the guy.
He tried to drive away and they shot him.
That's like, that's all we know effectively.
Right.
I mean, they claim he had some traffic violations, which is true.
But I mean, like, who doesn't?
Yeah, like, I don't know.
If we're shooting people for traffic violations, this country's going to have like 10 people in it by the end of it.
Like, yeah, he wasn't, he wasn't suspected of any, like, crime.
No.
I believe that it was.
just opportunistic that they were just looking for an easy target. And these guys were acting
like cowboys. I mean, like just doing this jump out by themselves. And, and also to be clear,
I mean, like, when they say he drove away from them, I mean, some of the video that we do have,
it shows him slowly reversing backwards away from them. It's not like he just drove over the agents.
No, no, no, no. Yeah. Which was, of course, their initial narrative that he like hit one of them
with his car and all this stuff that, of course, turned out to be false.
Yeah. And it's also frustrating, too, because, you know, in the app, well, I would say in the
absence of better information, but it's the media. They will just straight up print.
You know, no matter just how unbelievably absurd the lies are, they will just straight up print
Department of Homeland Security press releases as if they have anything to do with reality
whatsoever, even as it becomes increasingly clear, even more than it's ever been that you
simply cannot rely on police press reports to understand what happened in a situation,
people will just keep printing that. And so that's the first, that's the version of the story that
goes out first, which is what everyone sees. And they don't see the video where it's very clearly
not what happened. Yep. It is a maddening situation. So yeah, I mean, like that happened. And then
almost immediately and like concurrently, of course, all of this other ice activities started
ramping up.
Yeah.
And then around a week and a half ago, Bovino showed up and Border Patrol showed up.
And now it's amped up even further because they're even worse than our regular ice guys.
Bovino and the Border Patrol people, those are the people who seem to have been pulled out of
Los Angeles and deployed to Chicago?
Yeah, Bovino moved this sort of larger.
Border Patrol operation here to Chicago.
So there are Border Patrol units here from, you know,
Arizona, from California, different places.
And they've been doing sort of a combination of like just strictly corny-ass propaganda
ops, you know, like driving around on their boats for photos combined with like actual
terrors like a few nights ago, hundreds of feds rating an entire apartment.
apartment building of people in the middle of the night.
Yeah, and I think we'll get to that rate in a second because it was unbelievably
sort of gruesome and horrible.
But, yeah, I want to talk to you just about sort of what the general sort of ice operations
and then the Border Patrol operations have looked like in the city and what it's been
like being in a place where there's just guys in mass grabbing people off the street.
it kind of feels like screaming underwater and no one can hear you yeah just sort of witnessing this
every day and it and it is still highly dispersed right like Chicago and the metro area and
the suburban counties where this is happening it's a huge huge area so like we talked about
last time it's a real challenge to focus people's attention on because it it can
and appear like the waters are calm, like where you live.
Yeah.
You know, like, they're doing it in these very fast strike teams in this very dispersed way.
So by the time you even hear about it, they're already gone.
So many cars abandoned on the side of the road was like windows smashed out.
Jesus Christ.
Like landscapers, work vans and stuff.
You know, like people are just, rapid responders are just getting to sites where someone's
reported something happening and all they find is like a bused out car.
God.
And then they have to piece it out.
together, like, potentially what happened.
Yeah.
And additionally, the, the broad view, so like this, this ice facility where people are
protesting regularly, you know, it's, it's not set up to be a permanent detention center.
It's just supposed to be, like, a temporary stopping point because Illinois doesn't have
overnight immigration detention.
So, additionally, there are, like, so many extra people crammed into this facility that
wasn't designed to hold them. Yeah. And of course the conditions are horrible, you know,
like they don't have privacy. They don't have enough bathrooms. They're not getting fed. They're not
getting medication. You know, like after the kidnappings, after the disappearances, then there's
this pipeline of detention horrors that people are enduring. So this is, this is why people are
protesting. Yeah. You know, I mean, this is why people are out there yelling at the fence because
the people who are, who are brave enough to go out there and yell at the fence or to take
pepper balls or or what have you they they are in agony they they're aware of what's happening
they're witnessing all of this and feeling like this needs to stop and there are a lot of people
hiding in their homes yeah you know like like it's it's true like uh i don't always want to make
like holocaust comparisons because i feel like that that's what we always go to but i mean like
that's the most apt comparison that comes to most people's mind you know they think of like
and frame hiding in her attic, like those kinds of things.
And it's like, that is literally where we are at right now.
People are literally in hiding because they are worried that if they go to Sam's Club,
they will be kidnapped by secret police.
Yeah.
I think the behavior that they've been exhibiting against the protesters too
has been very, very similar to what they've been doing to the people that they're
grabbing off the street.
I want to talk to you a bit about, like, what it's been like
dealing with the way
that the feds
have been attacking
the protesters
constantly?
Yeah,
well,
these guys are
fucking monsters.
Yeah.
I'm trying to
thread this needle
for people
of like,
all policing
is bad,
right?
Like,
all policing
is violence.
All cops are violent.
But there is,
there is something
different
happening here
as a result of
the fact that
there is literally
zero accountability.
And I'm not
suggesting that like police accountability isn't a sham because in general it kind of is.
Yeah. Yeah. But, but I think like, you know, when you take away every single guard
these guys don't have to identify themselves and they don't have to answer to anyone. Yeah.
Their bosses aren't going to write them up. You know, it's kind of like with any other job,
right, you know, take a city cop here in Chicago. Of course, it's rare that any of them ever actually
get fired for the horrible shit they do. Yeah. But, you know,
there's this sort of the biggest level of knowing like, well, I got to show up to work every day
with my name on my vest. Yeah. And I also have like all these other bosses and all these other people
who are going to like, you know, maybe make my day harder if I like really fuck something up, right?
Yeah. And so when we're talking about the feds, there's just nothing. There's just nothing there.
They can literally do whatever they want on top of like just not having the same level of like,
quote, law enforcement training.
I mean, we've been watching
these guys for weeks, like,
fucking hurt themselves with their pepperball guns.
Like, they literally are, like,
dropping shit as they're, like,
running around the process.
Like, it's like watching,
people have made, like,
call of duty comparisons or, like,
proud boy comparisons.
And, like, it is kind of like that.
It's like, if you just gave a bunch of chuds,
a bunch of, like, military and police scare,
and we're like, all right,
go out and, like,
pretend to be a cop. And that's like literally what it feels like. And so I'm trying to thread this
needle for people of like, yeah, all cops suck. But like what's going on with this is like so
much worse. Like they're just out there like shooting at people randomly. Like and, you know, for
no reason. Like it is just one of the crazy things I've ever seen in my life. Yeah. And I also,
I want to put this into perspective. Like you have also covered a lot of protests in the city.
Yeah, I've covered a lot of cop violence. I've been to a lot of protests. I mean,
hundreds and hundreds and hundreds at this point, right?
Yeah.
And there's just certain, like, things that you're used to seeing and certain,
there's a certain predictability sometimes to, like, a lot of their movement.
Yeah.
And what's interesting, too, is, like, in some ways,
they are actually more militarized just in terms of, like, their riot formations
and, like, how tightly coordinated their units are because they practice and they train
for, like, crowd control stuff all the time.
And then you have these just, like, ice chuds running around.
with, like, way more gear and they look way scarier, but they're, like, way less organized and
way more chaotic.
Yeah.
And there's not enough of them, right?
So, like, they're not even, like, doing a good job of, like, backing each other up,
you know, like, in the field.
Like, I'm just watching them, like, leave their own backs unwatched and, you know, like, doing
things that are, like, dangerous for them.
Like, they want to act like a military unit, but they're, like, definitely not.
Yeah.
it's uh i mean people have made the comparison of like proud boys which i think um i don't know it kind
works in a sense like street fighters yeah because what they're acting like you know yeah it's just
it's just been super violent super awful chicago does not have really any experience with like these
just feds in general like to this level i know that out in portland for years now like there have been
various protests outside of the ice or something.
Like, there's just, there's been like a lot more, a lot more fed presence out in
Portland, Seattle.
Yeah.
Throughout the past few years of protests, I've seen, you know, people interact with them.
And we just, we've had nothing like that here.
So this is also, like, yeah.
Very unprecedented, like, for this region.
Yeah, because usually CPD is, like, brutal enough that they don't, you don't end up
with, like, federal deployments.
And now it's like, oh, boy.
Yeah.
Well, and also keep in mind, this is all happening in broad view.
So, like, they don't even have, I mean, there's been, there's been tensions and arguments and, and discussions around what's happening with their local police department and just sort of the interface here, too, because it's like, this tiny little police department is now having to sort of manage what's going on with this ice facility.
And they're not directly, like, assisting ice with fraud control, but they are, like, basically setting up a perimeter around the area.
area right and so then like their guys are getting to your gas and like complaining about it yeah
was was it brought me the police chief who like finally was like oh holy shit i've never been treated
this racistly by a police officer before i was like oh my fucking god like you're just now realizing
that you're the baddie like when it finally like happens to you like come on oh yeah he he
went on on like a bc or whatever and was just did this whole interview
about like, well, ICE is
disrespecting me as the police chief
and it's just like, what did
you expect? Yeah, man, you signed up
for the racism organization and you were
like, ah, but I'm in charge of my
local chapter of the racist
association, so it'll never happen to me
and it's like, oh shit.
You mean there's other people
who are higher up in the racism
police? Like,
oh, God.
Yeah, so that's been, that's just
been like a weird side story to
of kind of like the mayor and the police chief
and the fire chief are not thrilled about what's going on
and they're like looking into the legality quote
of the fence that ISIS put up
just like across this street that goes past their facility
which is in this kind of like tucked away
sort of industrial park thing
but there are homes like right on the other side
and you know they've just blocked off this entire street
and there is like a business on the
other side, you know, it's like obviously a huge fire hazard to just like block a whole road
like that. They didn't ask permission to like put this up. Not to mention a hazard for the people
in the detention center, which is now boarded up and has this huge fence across the street. It's like,
oh my God, if there was a fire or like an emergency and they needed to evacuate the people inside,
I mean, like, obviously people would die. It's this incredible mix of both blatant disregard
for the safety of anyone involved and also just wanting to hurt people.
and it's this incredible fusion
of they are both incompetent and malicious
which is yeah
right
which is not a great combination
no
let's talk about this raid in South Shore
yeah well
you know we don't have a ton of details
on
the true extent of this because it happened at one in the morning. So two nights ago,
hundreds and hundreds of federal agents showed up to an apartment building in the South Shore
neighborhood, which is a predominantly black neighborhood where a number of newly arrived
migrants settled because there's cheap housing there. So when Governor Abbott started busing people
here a few years ago. That is one place where, you know, a number of people found housing and
unfortunately also, too, there's like a lot of slum lords down that way. Yeah. Cheap housing means shit
in Chicago. Yeah, of course. Of course. I used to tenants organizing that shitty. I have seen
shit that like, I have seen people sewage like running out of their bathtubs. I have seen,
I have seen places with no electric, like literally no electricity, no lights, no running water,
like actually literally like frozen solid in the winter and no one can contact a landlord.
And those were in parts of the city that were, like, not even that badly off.
The apartment that I had, they're almost fucking killed me from dust inhalation.
And, like, that's like, that's like a normal cheap apartment.
It gets so much fucking worse.
The pictures from, like, inside of the apartment, not even just the parts where, like, yeah, all the doors are blown off.
It's like, these apartments fucking suck because they're run by, they're run by fucking Sloanlords.
And, yeah, like, the housing.
situation in Chicago, so much of it is so shit is never going to get repaired because these
gang landlords don't give a shit because they can just keep extracting money from it because
no one can go anywhere else. And yeah. Yeah, I mean, these people were living in really bad
conditions. I've heard that like a lot of people were like shrippled, quadrupled up in units.
You know, I don't know what it looked like before it was rated. Yeah. But it's like
virtually empty now. I mean, like, there, there were some, and to be, to be clear, like,
what happens to back up a little bit, you know, they, hundreds and hundreds of feds showed up
at this building in the middle of the night and reportedly detained everyone in the building.
So there were like, you know, people in the building who aren't immigrants, like black people
who live in the neighborhood. You know, there was one woman being interviewed on broadcast who was
like an older black woman, you know, who was just like, yeah, I was like detained by the
FBI, you know, like in the middle of the night, like asking me if I'm a citizen, you know,
like, it's just absolutely fucking wild that this happened. Also, as of today, granted, this might
change by the time your podcast is out. Importantly, so we're recording this the night of Wednesday,
October 1st. Who fucking knows what we'll have learned about this or what will happen in between
this and when it comes out probably Monday? Probably there will be new horrors if you've heard about
like the horrors in Chicago
and it's not in this episode
it's probably because it happened
after we've recorded.
Things are happening
at a terrible rate.
Yeah.
So as of today,
Wednesday,
October 1st,
I could not find
a story on the Sun-Times
or the Tribune website
about this raid.
And I think,
of course,
a lot of people want
to indict mainstream media
for not covering things,
which like is fair
sometimes.
Don't get me wrong.
They've been trying.
Things are happening
so fast now
and there are so many
horrible things
happening every day that, like, no newsroom can keep up.
Wait, red alert, red alert.
They did finally get a story up five minutes ago.
So, mid-recording.
I checked the four minutes.
They got one up.
They got one up.
Is it the Tribune or the Sun-Times?
Sometimes, sometimes.
Okay, okay.
Well, it only took them two days.
Okay, sure.
I haven't read it yet.
Maybe it's a good story.
I don't know.
Maybe they went really in depth.
It's not terrible.
Yeah, it does actually seem, I mean, it's pretty long.
I mean, I'm going to read one.
One quote from it to get people at under, and this is like I actually think is pretty representative of like the independent media coverage that I've read of it.
Aren't federal agents and military fatigues busted down their doors overnight pulling men, women and children from their apartment.
Some naked residents and witnesses said, that is the thing I've seen in every fucking report about this is that a bunch of the people just literally didn't have clothes on because they were dragged out of their bed.
They were like fucking naked children, like people holding naked babies being pulled out of their fucking apartments.
Like, Jesus fucking Christ, God.
And this was, like, such a huge number of beds that, like, the buses were rerouted around the scene.
I mean, like, there's questions, there's questions right now over, like, the level of CPD involvement in, like, protecting the scene.
And this was not just ICE.
There were a ton of FBI and a ton of ATF.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Which, you know, it's like, okay, what is the FBI doing right now?
they are fucking dragging naked children out of their fucking homes,
like out of their fucking apartment at one in the fucking morning.
Yeah.
And they were in fucking moving vans like Patriot Front.
Yeah, fucking horrible.
I mean, like, I got, I were seeing a statement where it was like they were denying
that they had loaded any immigrants into moving vans.
Yeah.
Which, like.
Maybe that's true.
I don't know.
Maybe only the FBI.
Yeah.
We don't fucking know.
Like, I don't know.
Yeah.
I was just, like, haunted by, like, what are the reports that I saw where they were talking, but, like, they separated all of the black people into, like, one van and all of the non-black people into another one, and it was just like, oh, God, like, these people, ugh, there's another one thing. I think this is in the story that you wrote about this, or they literally, like, a Fed literally said, fuck them kids.
Oh, my God. I don't, I definitely didn't write that, but I believe that someone said it.
Yeah, it was, oh, my God.
I believe it. I'm glad to hear that five minutes ago, the Sun-Simes covered it, you know.
Yeah, they finally got around to it. Yeah. Good for them. To be clear, like, they probably interviewed a lot more people than we had capacity to. You know, it's been obviously a huge challenge to even uncover all this stuff, like, as this tiny, random weirdo-ass news outlet, like. Yeah. And we're still figuring out as we go. But, yeah, I mean, this, this, this.
I am still, it has been two days, and I am, like, still trying to wrap my head around this raid, this specific raid, because it's just so horrific that this happened.
And, of course, like, the timing, like, they knew what they were doing by timing it in the middle of the night, of course.
Yeah, I'm going to fucking read this a Times article because I've just been reading it while you're doing it.
Like, Watson, this is somebody who lives across the street, said she saw agents dragging residents, including kids out of the
building without any clothes and into U-Haul vans, kids were separated from their mothers.
It was heartbreaking to watch, said Watson, even if you're not a mother seeing kids come out
buck naked and taking from their mothers, it was horrible.
They're literally ripping kids from their fucking mothers at one in the morning and throwing
it, apparently, allegedly, throwing them in U-Haul vans.
Yeah, I mean, this is like psycho shit.
The last three weeks, four weeks, has just been a gradual progression of like the most evil
shit you've ever seen in your life. I don't even know what to say about it anymore, honestly,
because it feels like, it feels like our only way of grappling with things like this is by
making comparisons to other things. Yeah. And I don't know that that is really helping anybody right
now, but, you know, it's, it's, it's ethnic cleansing. It's genocide. It's like literally,
I was just saying earlier today when like when you drill down to it, like they're disappearing
like vast majority Latino men. There are, there are some women. It's not,
only men, but, like, they are definitely targeting, like, mostly Latino men. And, like,
these are people who are, like, migrating here from Central America, who are, like,
if you look at their lineage, mostly, like, indigenous to this fucking continent on, like,
white people, you know, it's just an extension of, like, the American project, like, of the white
nationalist, like, extermination of the people indigenous to the Americas. Like, that is literally
what's happening, like, right now.
So, yeah, it does not feel like, I don't know, like enough people get it to the level that
they should.
Yeah.
Well, and that's, I think, like, one other thing I wanted to talk to you about was, like,
the way the press bubble has worked around this, where, again, the fact that federal
agents dragged naked children from their homes at one in the morning in the third,
largest city in the United States, that is a story that is hitting the mainstream Chicago
press today two days later. And I think the only national coverage of it that I've seen are
from people who are basically like repeating the scoop that was given to this like unhinged UFO
outlet who were the people that got the exclusive. Oh, have you already into this yet? Oh,
Oh, I have no idea what about it.
Hold on, hold on.
Let me, let me.
God, fuck.
Okay, I'm very excited to tell you about this.
This is so unhinged.
I saw, like, the propaganda video that they made about it.
Yeah, so the group that got, like, the exclusive, like, press release thing from the feds,
which is basically being, like, reprinted by Newsweek, who are just a joke at this point.
Like, their description of it is, like, ah, federal agents repelled from black cop helicopters
in the rooftops of Chicago residential buildings, targeting Trenda-Aguo gang members.
Right.
According to News Nation, and I was like, what the fuck is News Nation?
Like, I have a pretty good grasp on, like, all of the weird right-wing news outlets.
I'd never heard of this one.
I looked them up, and the first, like, big thing that I saw about them was that, well, A, they're the people, they're the person that Chris Cuomo went to after he was, like, publicly disgraced as a journalist.
And the second thing I saw about them was that their big thing is that they, like, quote, unquote, take UFOs seriously.
And these are the people who were given, like, the exclusive scoop on this is, like, the UFO out.
outlet. That is so funny. That is when I watched the propaganda video that we were watching about it. Yeah, it was News Nation. I just thought it was like, I don't know, some right wing outlet, like any other. That's why I thought too. I looked at it and like the Wikipedia article was like, there was a section titled UFOs. And I was like, what the fuck? Great. Great. I didn't know about the UFO connection. I mean, I saw them, I saw their reporters like actually at the
protests like interviewing like the one guy in a maga hat who showed up to counter
protest like of course that's who they interview yeah of course of course so that's good to
know that they are uh UFO weirdos regime approved regime approved media outlet the UFO guys
oh I mean the the official like like DHS line on this entire thing is that trend
day aragua was this like this entire apartment building was a trend dea aragua high down like no it wasn't
like it's literally just the same fucking thing that israel does about humas right when they're like
oh yeah this hospital that we're bombing yeah it's a hamas hospital there's hummus tunnels underneath i mean
it's like the exact same shit yeah the the connection you made earlier to this functioning as an
extension of, like, the genocide that founded this country.
I think it might have been Hannah Arendt.
Okay, I want to attribute this to her at Hannah Arendt, which is, I guess, kind of a mess
because of her, don't, do not ever look up Hannah Arendt stuff on segregation, or actually
maybe do, if you want to see the worst argument you've ever seen in your life, or, like,
famed intellectual Hannah Arendt says that segregation is, like, a defining quality of, like,
a free society.
Oh, no.
Awful.
I was not, I mean, I'm not like a super expert on Hannah-Rent, but I definitely did not know that.
Oh, yeah, no, that people, people don't, I'll say this, white people do not be bringing that shit off.
Everyone else is like, oh, God, holy shit, you were like a major segregation, like, intellectual who got brought out to be like segregation is actually good.
No.
This is free association, but I think it might have been her.
It might not fit someone else. I've been trying to look for who had this idea and I haven't been able to find who it was and I vaguely remember being a rent, but fuck her. This is all been a very long wind of saying, like, there's an idea that I ran into back when I was in my sort of like days in the academy about the way that societies reflect their founding violence. And, you know, the sort of like the founding violence of the United States is the genocide of the anxious people and slavery. And, you know, you know, the sort of the founding violence of the United States is the genocide of the issues people and slavery. And, you know, you know,
You look at what they're doing right now.
You're just watching sort of in miniature that violence just being replicated over and over again,
where, like, you're tearing fucking mothers from their children in the dead of night,
and it's the same people, right?
Like, this is an apartment building where almost everyone is black,
and the people who aren't black are immigrants, right?
And obviously, like, some of them are both, but, like, you know,
But you're just like watching the founding violence of this country, just being played out over and over and over again every night.
And it's this thing where, like, I don't think on a fundamental level that this thing that we've built, this sort of like this conception of what democracy is, like this conception of what the state is, this conception of like what this country is is going to survive this moment.
Either it's going to change completely
or the part of it that was nominally a democracy
is going to be consumed by the part of it
that's just doing this genocide over and over again.
I quote this song a lot.
Song of Choice by Peggy Seeger.
That's about the rise of fascism that I think about a lot.
That has like one of the lines is,
today the soldiers took away one, tomorrow they may take away two.
One April, they took away Greece,
but surely they will never take you.
and yeah they're just fucking taking people away in the night right now
like that's that's the stage of this where we're at
and either something fundamentally changes or
you know like that the end of that song is either like they take you
or at the end they don't take you because they know you didn't care
right and I mean look I've been
I've been covering civil conflict and violence
you know, like more or less for the last
five years, right? I was at
January 6th, like literally in the middle
of the mob. I've seen a lot of shit.
Reporting on it.
Make this very clear.
Reporting on it.
It was not trying to clarify.
I was there as a reporter.
I was not part of the gavel.
Although my fash
stalkers might insist
that I was part of like an Intiva conspiracy
to infiltrate the camel right.
But, but,
but, but,
Um, you know, I've seen a lot of shit the last five years, obviously. And I think this particular moment feels
like, yeah. Yeah, like we're kind of, um, you know, like we're a marble at the top of like a spiral.
And it's like, either we're going to keep rolling down or, or somebody like jams it or takes the
marble up. You know, like there's just, this is a spiral. Like, there are so many factors that are going to
contribute to this getting worse if we do not significantly alter course. And I think,
you know, this feeling that we have locally of like we're screaming underwater and nobody can hear
us, I'm sure is share a sentiment that is shared in L.A. that is shared in D.C. that is shared in
all of these cities all over where ICE is doing similar shit. It can make us really angry.
I mean, I've been really angry at times in the last month about.
the lack of like attention, whatever. But then I think about how everyone is overwhelmed
because there's so much horrible shit happening every day on so many places. Like, we just can't
keep up anymore. Like, none of us can keep up. Yeah. Like, I mean, like, I'm in Portland right now.
And like, it's my job to keep track of this. And I can't tell you at this exact second whether
a federal deployment to Portland is on or off. I think it's currently off. But also by the
you're listening to this who the fuck knows and like yeah like right i don't know there's an
and or a line about how it's easier to hide a thousand atrocities than it is to hide one because you
can just keep ramping the tempo up exactly i don't know i'm not a historian i'm just a journalist so maybe
maybe you would know better than me, but, but I feel like we are literally already in a civil war.
We just don't know it yet.
Or like, we're waiting for like some specific thing to like prove it.
You know, like I don't, I don't know.
Yeah.
I think generally nobody knows until it's like already, you're already in it.
To me, it feels like we're in it.
Yeah.
And but I, but I also wonder if that's just the cognitive effect of like us being here literally
in it because so much is going on and then thinking like,
well, if the ice surge subsides two months from now, is it going to still feel this way? I don't know.
I mean, to me, it feels like we've got several more years of the Trump regime at least.
Yeah.
If we look at this in the sense of like, well, they're escalating. And then also this is going to keep going for several more years.
Yeah, that's a terrifying concept. Yeah.
Where do we go from here if it's just going to like get even worse?
Yeah. And I don't know.
I think I've been there a lot recently.
I don't know.
It's the thing I've been telling listeners of this show is that, like, the upside of all of this is that everyone hates them.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Like, their approval ratings are so bad.
Everyone fucking hates them.
And all of this stuff is hideously unpopular and the giant economic collapse that is very obviously going to happen when the giant AI bubble that is like a third of U.S. GDP pops when it inevitably does because it doesn't make any money.
they're doing all of this in a situation
where the economy still appears to be functioning
and when that shit implodes on them
shit is going to be
even worse for them than it is now
but also like on the other hand
unless people do things about it
then it doesn't really matter how popular or not they are
as long as no one is willing to like stop them
and I guess that's like the last thing I kind of want to close on
is about, like, can you talk a little bit about, like, what you've seen organizing-wise
that you can talk about that have been effective?
Well, I think people here are still figuring it out.
These protests outside of the ICE facility, you know, there has been a lot of autonomous
organizing.
Chicago does not have the same entrenched autonomous organizing culture that you see in,
like, Portland or Seattle for, like, a ton of reasons.
Yeah.
Which are, like, beyond the scope of this episode and the minutes that we have left.
We can do, like, a 15-part series of the history of organizing in Chicago and, like, how we're in this specific moment.
You know, it's important to remember, like, this is a city where, like, the FBI murdered Fred Hampton, right?
It is bad.
Yep, yep, yep.
So there's a lot of tension between different organizing factions about how they want things done, and a lot of it is fear-driven.
Yeah.
For good reason, because people are terrified.
Yeah.
And yeah, they're still figuring stuff out. I mean, I think for lack of a better term, last Saturday, people got their shit rocked by Border Patrol. You know, they were so violent. They were so aggressive. They were just so out of hand. Just like immediately too. I mean, it was just like zero to 60 instantly. Like there was just a Saturday, we saw them just immediately tear gas and and shoot at people over nothing. Like nobody was doing anything. And they just assaulted the
crowd with like the most tear gas I've ever seen in my life. So I think folks were definitely
underprepared for that, but that doesn't mean that it's like insurmountable to resist something
like that. I think there are questions surrounding the best way to protest this specific
building because of a relocation and it's tough because it's not in Chicago. It's hard to get to
for some people. Yep, yep. But I don't want to, I don't want to write anybody off. I mean, I think
people are just still figuring things out.
Like, it's, it's, ISIS adapting, border patrols adapting, and so then
organizers also have to adapt.
Like, it's like this tennis match, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And so, you know, we are also very much here.
Our activists are not used to, like, a huge, and our press, also by extension, are not
used to, like, a huge amount of chemical weapons.
Chicago doesn't use tear gas, like, historically, like, they just beat people.
Right.
Or, like, shoot them with riot munitions.
Like, they don't tear gas.
The thing I was literally always told, like, growing up in the city as an activist, was, like, if they start
using tear gas, they are one-zip away from shooting you.
Right.
And they finally did it in 2020, which is the first time anyone had seen it in, like, decades.
Right.
And the fact that, like, they're just doing it all the time now, like, Jesus Christ.
Well, the feds, I mean, we saw this in L.A.
Yeah, yeah.
At the beginning of this summer, where, like, Border Patrol specifically just has this enormous
amount of chemical weapons that they like I don't know maybe they're going to expire soon and
they have to use them all like like I don't know I don't know what the rationale there is other than
just being evil yeah but it's like literally their first choice of like they're just I mean
they're fucking enjoying it they're fucking enjoying it they're enjoying yeah shooting at people
tear gassing them playing GI Joe like yeah I mean I will say it does also raise the question like
how much of the stuff do they actually have?
Because, like, 2020, they went through decades of stockpiles, right?
Right.
And, like, this is a thing that, like, I don't know, someone who has a lot of time
and is an investigative journalist should try to go track down how much of the, like,
country's tear gas supplies they've been able to replenish because they used a lot of it
on us in 2020.
And, like, I mean, this is, I don't know if it is famous.
I guess in my circles, it's kind of a famous story that one of the, one of the South
Korean military dictatorships was taken down.
by a student
like protest movement
that calculated
exactly how much
tear gas
the police had
and did this thing
where they would do
these marches
where they would
a whole bunch of people
would show up
and the police
start characterizing them
and they would just
slowly keep retreating
and keep retreating
until they ran the state
out of tear gas
I mean
I hope to see that
level of strategy
in America
at some point
yeah
inshlaw.
Yeah
inshlaw
like you know
like you know
like
Nothing, nothing, nothing, nothing is impossible with the power of really, really pissed off students.
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know what the, I'm not familiar with the manufacturing process for these kind of, like, how long does it take to like replenish and where do they source it from?
Yeah, this is 100% a, hey, I know a bunch of journalists listen to this podcast.
if one of you wants to go do this,
you would be doing a great service
to everyone in this country.
Right.
I'm like assuming that it's not made
in the United States and they're like
importing these things.
A lot of it is.
A huge amount of it's made with us.
Because like American
American tear gas ends up like all over the world
because we're like one of the big suppliers of it.
Okay.
Well then I was mistaken.
The popper ball gun dispenser company
apparently is based in Lake Forest.
So it's actually local.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's in Chicago.
Ooh, wow.
Oof.
It's just like a glorified paintball gun, basically.
Yeah.
The thing I've been getting from listening to you talk about this
and from talking to other people
is that like both part of what's making this so horrible
and also maybe where they fail
is that these people don't know what they're doing.
They just like violence.
Right.
And liking violence and being willing to hurt people
is a very effective
short-term strategy
for causing violence
but it remains to be seen
whether it's an effective
long-term strategy
for like holding power
and accomplishing their goals
yeah I would agree with that
for sure
it feels like
it feels like their
operation is brittle
like it wouldn't take a lot
to like impede it
but because they are so violent
and so out of hand
that just like the slightest
resistance
it's still really
challenging to figure out. I mean, and to your point earlier about everybody hating them,
I mean, that is palpable. I have heard the anger and the rage pouring out of people at
these guys, you know, like, of course it's palpable how much people hate them, how much what's
going on. Of course, they're struggling to hire. Of course, they're all wearing masks because they're
fucking terrified. They're going to be docs, you know, like, they know that they're hated.
Yeah. But that's also a double-edged floor because I think
knowing that everybody hates you
anyway, well, that's just also sometimes going to make
you even more violent because you don't
care anymore. Yeah, and
I mean, I think the traditional
social movement gambit has been like
the more people can
see how violent they are,
the more people will go out to resist
them. And I think right now
we're in this scenario where because of
the sort of media blackout and like the
media bubble that's been put around this,
it just hasn't been getting out
the things that they've been doing.
and I think that is also a thing that you, random listener, can do things about in terms of, like,
hey, tell people you know that, like, yeah, there's like a fucking federal occupation of a city
and they're, like, dragging naked children screaming from their homes, like, tearing them away from their parents.
Like, that's a thing that you can, like, that's a thing you could directly do that is a very, very low lift.
Yeah, and also countering this, like, National Guard misdirection thing that is just, like, constantly going on where it's like every fucking two days Trump and Pritzker are arguing about, you know, a hundred troops coming to town who are essentially just infrastructure for ICE.
They might block some roads, but, like, they're not the main threat.
Yeah, yeah.
Do you have anything else that you want to tell people and then also where can people find and support your work as you go, you know,
hopefully not get shot again.
Well, I've resigned myself to the fact that I've got to get shot again,
but they can find us at Unravelled on all the social platforms,
you know, Unravelledpress.com.
And I think the only other thing I want to say is,
as bleak as this episode sounded,
we do have to keep the fighting spirit alive and not just like,
resign ourselves to total doomerism. We have the moral high ground here. We are doing the right
thing and they are not. Yeah. And we can win this. I want to close on the story that came to mind
when you said that, which was the story of the liberation of Turin in World War II,
where Turin was like, you know, like one of the great industrial cities of Italy and it's directly
under the occupation of the Nazis by the end of the war
and ahead of the Allied advance
the city plans an uprising
and the SS commander who is
running the city
explicitly tells them if you
if you do this we will turn this into another
Warsaw and they do it anyways
and they beat them all of these factory workers
who had like had guns smuggled in
successfully do an uprising
and defeat like an SS Panzer division
and just kick the shit out of them
and liberate Turin and
you know those were people facing
odds that were so much worse than the ones they were facing today, they were facing a straight
of military occupation by the SS, and they beat them, and they freed themselves. And, you know,
history is replete with dictators who thought that their occupations would last forever
until one day the Americans were withdrawing from Iraq. And the only thing that's eternal
is their fear of the uprising that will one day destroy them.
Mm-hmm.
Oh, come on. Why is this taking so long?
This thing is ancient.
Still using yesterday's tech, upgrade to the ThinkPad X1 Carbon,
ultra-light, ultra-powerful, and built for serious productivity.
With Intel core ultra-processors, blazing speed, and AI-powered performance,
it keeps up with your business.
way around. Whoa, this thing moves. Stop hitting snooze on new tech. Win the tech search at
Lenovo. Lenovo, Lenovo. Unlock AI experiences with the ThinkPad X1 Carbon, powered by
Intel Core Ultra processors so you can work, create, and boost productivity all on one device.
Hey, it's Ed Helms, and welcome back to Snafu, my podcast about history's greatest screw-ups.
On our new season, we're bringing you a new snafu every single episode.
32 lost nuclear weapons.
Wait, stop? What?
Ernie Shackleton sounds like a solid 70s basketball player.
Who still wore knee pads.
Yes.
It's going to be a whole lot of history, a whole lot of funny, and a whole lot of guests.
The great Paul Shear made me feel good.
I'm like, oh, wow.
Angela and Jenna, I am so psyched.
You're here.
What was that like for you to solve?
launch into the show.
Sorry, Jenna, I'll be asking the questions today.
I forgot whose podcasts we were doing.
Nick Kroll, I hope this story is good enough to get you to toss that sandwich.
So let's see how it goes.
Listen to Season 4 of Snafu with Ed Helms on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All I know is what I've been talking.
And that's a half-truth is a whole lie.
For almost a decade, the murder of an 18-year-old girl from a small town in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved,
until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story.
I'm telling you, we know Quincy Kilder, we know.
A story that law enforcement used to convict six people and that got the citizen investigator on national TV.
Through sheer persistence and nerve, this Kentucky housewife helped give justice to Jessica Curran.
My name is Maggie Freeling.
I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, producer, and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to find.
I did not know her and I did not kill her, or rape or burn or any of that other stuff that y'all said.
They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her.
They made me say that I poured gas on her.
From Lava for Good, this is Graves County, a show about just how far our legal system will go in order to find someone to blame.
America, y'all better work the hell up.
Bad things happen to good people in small towns.
Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to binge the entire season
at free,
subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Jonathan Goldstein,
and on the new season of heavyweight,
I help a centenarian mend a broken heart.
How can a 101-year-old woman fall in love again?
And I help a man atone for an armed,
robbery he committed at 14 years old. And so I pointed the gun at him and said this isn't a joke.
And he got down. And I remember feeling kind of a surge of like, okay, this is power.
Plus, my old friend Gregor and his brother tried to solve my problems through hypnotism.
We could give you a whole brand new thing where you're like super charming all the time.
Being more able to look people in the eye. Not always hide behind a microphone.
Listen to HeavyWade on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to a very special episode of It Could Happen here, reporting live from the sunny beaches of Riyadh.
I'm Garrison Davis.
This episode, I'm joined by Mia Wong, James Stout, and present.
our special report, Robert Evans.
I am so happy to talk about our favorite time of the year,
which is, of course, the Riyadh Comedy Festival,
which occurs from September 26th to October 9th.
It's the highlight of my year each year.
Yep.
Happy to say all of Cool Zone will be there,
performing in Riyadh, immediately getting arrested.
It's going to be really good, very much excited.
Like all of your comedy favorites, Dave Chappelle.
Bill Burr, Aziz Ansari, we will be getting paid hundreds of thousands or over a million dollars to pretend that the Saudi regime does not execute dissidents, reporters, civil rights activists, whoever, and doesn't run a torture prison.
Yeah, so that's what's happening this week.
There's been a big backlash against a bunch of very prominent comedians.
Louis C.K., it's like a mix of guys.
Louis C.K. is falling.
No, his first radio.
Okay, not surprised.
David Chappelle.
I'm surprised that old David Chappelle would do this, but I'm not surprised that current
David Chappelle would do this.
Bill Burr is disappointing.
Bill Burr is disappointing.
That one hurts.
Mo Amur, who is a Palestinian-American comedian who lives in Houston, has also agreed to go
to Riyadh and perform.
Not great.
Comrade Shane Gillis declined the offer.
Yeah.
Sheen Gillis said yes and then said no.
Let's be real fucking clear on what.
Shane Gillis dick.
Okay.
I believe he's the one that said yes and then said no.
You get a variety of responses from people who were invited to this fucking thing.
And I'll make it clear kind of where my moral line stands.
I don't actually believe it's inherently wrong to perform inside the bounds of any country.
It kind of depends on what you're doing and how you do it.
And this is the wrong way to do it because these are not just people.
If someone who just shown up at a nightclub in Saudi Arabia to do a stand-up set,
I don't particularly care about that, even though there are Les Magist laws.
Like, I wouldn't care if someone did a stand-up comedy set that couldn't make fun of the King
of Thailand, right, which is a crime in Thailand.
Yeah, you know, people perform in parts of the world that have different or bad laws.
The U.S. has bad laws.
We do bad things.
I don't think it's inherently evil to just perform at a random club there, which is not
what the people who are performing at the Riyadh Comedy Festival are doing.
This whole convention is being put on by a guy named Turkey Al-Shake.
Turkey is the chairman of the general entertainment authority, which is a Saudi government department.
He grew up with Muhammad bin Salman playing League of Legends, and he's kind of like key to bin Salman's plan to like make Saudi Arabia cool to like bring it into the global entertainment and like social network without modernizing its laws or allowing people to, you know, make fun of Muhammad bin Salman or his friends for an idea of the kind of dude who hired Bill Burr and all of these other guys and paid them so much money, there is.
an entire wing of the Al-Hiair prison
called the Tutu wing, which
references Al-Shake's nickname
Tutu, where prisoners that
he specifically pointed out,
often people who made fun of him,
or made jokes that he did not appreciate,
are put and tortured. This guy has an
entire torture prison named after him.
That is who's writing checks to fucking
Pete Davidson, whose dad died
in 9-11.
It's fucking shocking. The fact that Pete Davidson
is at this thing. And he's
he's been like questioned about it. And his answer basically, I'll say this for Pete, was basically
like, yeah, but there's a lot of money, right? And I'm separating in my head to a degree. I think
it's bad to take money from the Saudi government to do something like this that is being used to
whitewash their human rights record to make them look like a cool part of global society.
Yeah. Even as they this week executed another journalist, I think that's bad. I think it's worse if
you're someone who's stood for something. This doesn't change.
my opinion about Theo Vaughn, who sucks. And it's like, yeah, he'll take money from Saudi Arabia.
He's a huge asshole. I'm just, I'm not surprised, right? And there's some other guys in this
that I'm not necessarily, like, shocked about. Did you see Theo Von's beef with ice this week?
Oh, does Theo Vaughn have beef with ice this week? Yeah, they use video of him without his consent in one
of their marketing videos. Yeah, great. So Jim Jeffries on August went on Theo von's podcast to talk about
agreeing to do this show. And he said, one reporter was killed by the government, unfortunate,
but not a fucking hill that I'm going to die on. And argued that freedom of speech machines like
himself would do good by like, you know, making jokes in Saudi Arabia. And key in the men on the
freedom of speech thing. Basically, it'll be a net positive for freedom if I go speak at this
thing. And in the funniest possible follow-up, he was removed from the festival lineup because
he acknowledged that they killed a reporter. And that's not a kid.
off to Saudi Arabia. You can't even do that on your own fucking podcast, or fucking Theo
Vonn's goddamn podcast. I want to play a video clip of Tim Dillon, because Tim Dillon is another guy
who agreed to show up and perform at this fucking nightmare event. And Dylan is why we know
kind of how much money is on the table at this thing, because he has said that he was paid
$375,000. Oh, my God. He was offered $375,000 for one performance to be there. He said that
kind of the lowest number people were being offered was about 150,000 and the most like highly
paid people were being offered up to, uh, 1.6 million dollars. So I mean, it's possible some
people were getting more than that. But I'm guessing that's closer to like where the Bill Burrs
and the Dave Chappelle's are getting, right, like in the 1.6 million. So these guys were offered
an insane amount of money. And Tim Dillon went on and like talked about.
this on a podcast, talked about, like, why he agreed to do it and defended. And it's very
funny. He, like, brought up, like, slavery in Saudi Arabia, because Saudi Arabia has slaves
as a way to, like, to segue into a defense of why it's fine for him to do this. And this is just
one of the funniest things I've ever heard. Well, they have slaves. Then they kill every...
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey. Get over it. Get over it. Get over it.
so what so what they have slaves so what my friend i not a friend somebody i don't even know i bumped into
them in tribeca and he goes i would never do that because i don't want to interact with slaves
i'm like well why not i they'd be deferential right i mean i imagine the slaves in those countries are
good at what they do.
Okay, so that's the clip I just wanted to have.
That's one of the most off-putting things of ever since.
And it got him fired from the show.
He's good.
Fending them. He's big, like, slavery's not so bad, and he's still got fired?
That's the level of censorship.
That's like, yeah.
It's nuts.
Oh, my God.
Like, it's really bad to cleanse our minds of whatever that was.
Here's an ad break.
Okay, we're back.
The degree to which everyone involved in this has just nuked whatever credibility they had is shocking.
I want to read you a quote from Bill Burr in January of 2010.
I also make me sad.
This is from a set he did at the time.
This is him talking about Beyonce.
She's out there singing about girl power, telling you to put a ring on it, all that
crap. And then what she do, she takes a million bucks to go sing at some private party for Gaddafi's kid.
Omar Gaddafi, you know, the guy who's been blowing stuff up and running a dictatorship
forever? Like, what the hell? You're going to jet off to St. Bart. Shake your ass for some
terrorist dictator's family. Pock and a million. And then go back to preaching about empowerment.
Come on, man. That's the hypocrisy of this whole thing. These celebrities, they'll take any gig if the
check's big enough. It's like, oh, I'm all about the people until some crazy dictator wades a stack of
cash. And then it's, where's my private jet? It's ridiculous. This sucks. Yes, Bill? It is.
This sucks, this sucks to be a Bill Barr defender for years now.
I love Bill.
This is truly the first, the first actual stain on Bill Beers' legacy, which I'm sure someone will get that out of us.
He's a very good comedian.
Quite a remarkable fucking stain.
All comedians are evil.
It's just, it's that easy.
He addressed, it's, you know, part of it is that.
And if all, unfortunately, I kind of think the response of some of the scumbags in comedy has been fair with it's like, man, it was too much money.
It was just a shit lot of money.
Like, I'll do fucked up shit for a crazy amount of money.
And it's like, that's bad.
but at least you're honest.
Yeah, yeah.
Bill's response to this was like,
it was great to experience that part of the world.
It would be part of the first comedy festival over there in Saudi Arabia.
The Royals loved the show.
Everyone was happy.
The people that were doing the festival were thrilled.
The comedians that I've been talking to are saying,
dude, you can feel that the audience wanted it.
They wanted to see real stand-up comedy.
It was a mind-blowing experience.
Definitely top three experiences I've had.
I think it's going to lead to a lot of positive things.
Now, he did talk a little bit about, like, the rules that they had to
about buy-bye and said that, like,
when they were first handing around contracts, he pushed back and was like, or people pushed back
or like comedians did and were like, you can't have all these restrictions and that they whittled
them down to just a couple of things, which Bill sums up as don't make fun of royals and
religion, right? Now, as pointed out by the fact that Tim Dillon got canceled for talking
positively about slavery in the kingdom, there were more restrictions than that.
I do want to read from a Hollywood reporter article talking about like Bill's response to this
because it gets even worse than what I've read already.
Bill first described going to the island country of Bahrain,
which is more socially liberal than Saudi Arabia,
where a customs agent immediately clocked his anxiety
about doing stand-up in the region and gave him grief about it.
When I was landing in Bahrain, like, I'm fucking nervous, right?
And then the agent says, you tell jokes about the Middle East.
You think you're going to come over here and get beheaded, right?
After a successful show in Bahrain, Burr was at a bar
where he was watching interactions among locals and decided,
I'm like, they're just like us.
I don't speak the language, but I get it.
When he flew to Saudi Arabia, Burr's nervousness crept back.
but he was struck by the amount of local Western influence.
You think everyone's going to be screaming death to America
and they're going to have fucking machetes
and want to chop my head off, right?
Because this is what I've been fed about that part of the world.
I thought this place was going to be really tense.
And I'm thinking like, is that a Starbucks next to a pizza hut,
next to a Burger King, next to McDonald's?
They've got a fucking Chili.
And yes, man, they have stores in the Middle East.
The Muslim world has restaurants.
That specific combination of countries,
like the Saudis, the reason the current government of Bahrain
is in power is because the system.
Saudis rolled tanks across the border to crush the uprisings there in 2011.
Like, hideous.
There's so much that's fucked up just being like, well, to prepare for abiding by the
laws of the fucking royal family of Saudi Arabia, I went to Bahrain.
Like, they're not the same place.
No.
Like, yeah, I went to check out some brown Muslim people.
Turns out that people.
Like, that seems to be the gist of what he's saying it.
And they like pizza too.
Fuck me.
You could go to, again, like Iraq and perform in fucking.
Yeah, you could go to Arbil, and it's nice.
And it's nice, and you're not going to be performing at the behest of the fucked up government, right?
You'll just be performing in a country with a fucked up government, and there is a difference, right?
I'm not angry at the idea that some Rando might, like, perform at a nightclub in Saudi Arabia.
The problem is that you're performing at the behest of the Saudi government, at the behest of the regime.
Yeah, that's a different thing.
I do think there's an argument for, like, well, people in countries with fucked up governments deserve to laugh.
that doesn't mean you have to take the money from their fucked up government
and say nice things about their fucked up government like Kevin Hart just did
because Kevin Hart was also a part of this show and he posted a video on TikTok
talking about how fucking awesome Saudi Royal Turkey Al-Shake is
and Turkey Al-Shake has now been sharing that video on all of his social media accounts
like you're holding water for people for a guy he was a wing in a torture prison named after him
that crosses a line for me, you know, when we're talking about entertainment, we're talking about
being ad support, all this stuff, there's compromises that everyone makes in this business.
There's compromises in what company you fucking work with, right?
Yeah.
Like, if you're talking about, you know, make it a TV show for Amazon's TV division or Disney's,
you know, fucking streaming division, right?
Well, there's a degree of moral compromise there.
And I think depending on what you're doing and whatnot can be justified by the fact that, number
one, like, that's just the way television works. There's no working with anyone completely clean
in a company that has the ability to fund, you know, a production like that. But taking money
directly from the hands of the guy with the torture prison, I think that crosses a line. I think
that crosses the line for a free speech activist. It should have crossed a line for Pete Davidson,
whose dad died in 9-11, but apparently not. That is a wild one. That's the craziest one to me,
that Dave Davidson went over to Saudi Arabia.
Oh, man.
Are you got to wonder?
It's his mom's sit on the scene.
Oh, man.
She's probably getting a lot of money if she is, so it's fine.
Fuck me.
It's fine.
I don't know.
Like, how much, and it is one of those things.
I get the people who are like, okay, but, you know, the U.S. is fucked up too.
And it is.
And so if somebody is getting paid directly by the Trump regime to perform at the White House,
I'd say pretty fucked up.
But, like, that doesn't mean it's immoral to perform at, like, a nightclub in
fucking Chicago, you know?
Yeah, and none of us are going to Guantanamo Bay to, like, entertain the fucking prison
guards, right?
Yeah.
Well, hopefully none of us will be going to Guantanamo Bay for any reason, as long as we
keep playing these ads.
We're back.
I want to talk about.
this from the Saudi perspective because they have been doing really for the last half a decade of
Fallout PR Blitz, right? We've seen this in WWE. We've seen this with a whole bunch of professional
sports stuff. Like most of the e-sports is run out of the ESPorts World Cup in Saudi Arabia now.
Like the Saudi sovereign wealth fund just helped Jared Kushner buy EA, right? Just like one of the
largest video game companies in the world, right? They've been, you know, they've been doing this
sort of whole sports washing strategy of using these things to sort of normalize.
normalized the regime. And I think the actual genius of this, right, was not that you can buy
legitimacy with like sports and with comedians. The genius of it was that they were able to control
the backlash because they ensured the backlash to it would be done by sports journalists
and entertainment journalists who don't know anything about the Saudis and thus assumed that the
Saudis were attempting to whitewash their, you know, horrific domestic human rights record. And
they were to some extent, but
even focusing on the Saudi's domestic
human rights record is a victory for
the Saudis because it means that nobody's talking about the
stuff people were talking about last decade
when they talked about the Saudis, which was things like,
for example, the Sudanese child
soldiers that they were deploying in their
war in Yemen. These Sudanese
child soldiers were drawn from their connections
bolstered by the UAE to the
Sudanese rapid support forces, a group
that is almost entirely composed
of the militias who did the genocide
in Darfur. So these are the ground
troops that they're deploying in Yemen are Sudanese child soldiers drawn from the people
who did the genocide in Darfur in 2018, which was not that long ago.
Like, I remember 2018.
So do you, statistically.
If you're listening to this show, they carried out an airstrike on a school bus that killed
26 children, right?
No one is talking about the airstrikes on funerals that they absolutely love to do.
Like, for example, there was a huge one in 2016 where they killed 140 people in one
airstrike after which the area was
described by a rescue worker as a quote
lake of blood
and this has been the really successful
thing about about the Saudis specifically
targeting sports, specifically targeting entertainment
is that the people covering this
do not know anything
about Saudi Arabia, right? And this is also partially what was
going on Bill Burr because they're just racists
or their attempt could do a backlash and
they're trying to do a backlash with things like
okay, they killed a journalist, which is really bad
right? But like, Jamal
Khashoggi was one
guy out of thousands and thousands and thousands of people that they were killing and are continuing
to kill to this day in Yemen, right? And this is one of the reasons people have been able to get
away with this, right? Is that no one has been walking up to them and going, what do you think
about the Sudanese child soldiers? Because nobody knows about any of that. And this is one
of the thing that I want to just say at the end of this, which is I know for a fact that journalists and
editors listen to this show. And please, for the love of God, find someone who knows literally anything
about the Saudis war in Yemen and have them write this piece on sports washing for you,
literally anyone.
This is what makes me insane about all this coverage, is that like, if you even a little bit
paid attention to what they were doing in the 2010s and what they are continuing to do now
in Yemen, you know about so many, I'm not even, I'm not even, I'm not even talking about
the starvation genocide here.
There are so many things that they did, you know, and like one of the common defenses
is like, oh, like, you know, like we live in the U.S. is a fucked up country, right?
like, who cares about authoritarianism?
It's like, I don't know.
It's harder to make that argument
when it's about Sudanese child soldiers.
Well, it's just, again,
we're not pissed because
some guy performed at a nightclub in Riyadh.
It's that you're taking money
from the government
to whitewash the government.
No, it's because it took money
for the government.
All of these, all of these things,
all of like WWE,
like all of these sports events.
These are funded directly
by the Saudi sovereign wealth fund,
which is the wealth fund
of the Saudi government,
the people who were dropping bombs on school buses
and sending child soldiers
to fight their war in Yemen.
Yeah, there has been some good reporting
on sports washing, I would say.
Like Ian Trello's done some excellent stuff.
The Guardian has a good article on this
where they really coalesate
some of like the very worst responses
written by Seth Simon.
So I liked that.
This does seem to be blowing up
Hollywood Reporter's piece was pretty good too.
Hollywood Reporter, my friend was editor
of that publication for years
and they have consistently done some stuff
that you wouldn't expect looking at the title of the publication.
Yeah, I'm not going to be silly enough to be like,
I think this is going to cost any of these people their career
because I don't think it is.
But it does seem to be causing them some embarrassment.
So, I don't know.
Yeah, I mean, I hope they get called out on it and shamed.
Like, it's a pretty shameful thing to do.
It's a shameful thing to do.
It's a bummer.
I wish people had not made these choices.
Because, man, it's depressing.
Yeah. Well, luckily, I have some news to lift our moods after this depressing episode. I am pleased to report that Cool Zone Media will be headlining at Victor Orban's new comedy festival, Hungary for laughs.
Yep. Next year, 2026, mark it in your calendar. Cool Zone Media presents with Victor Orban, Hungary for laughs. That's all for us today. Ed, it could happen here. See you next year in Hungary.
Bye, everybody.
Ah, come on.
Why is this taking so long?
This thing is ancient.
Still using yesterday's tech?
Upgrade to the ThinkPad X1 Carbon,
ultra-light, ultra-powerful,
and built for serious productivity
with Intel core ultra-processors,
blazing speed, and AI-powered performance.
It keeps up with your business,
not the other way around.
Whoa, this thing moves.
Stop hitting snooze on new tech.
Win the tech search at Lenovo.com.
Lenovo, Lenovo.
Unlock AI experiences with the ThinkPad X1 Carbon, powered by Intel Core Ultra processors,
so you can work, create, and boost productivity all on one device.
Hey, it's Ed Helms, and welcome back to Snafu, my podcast about history's greatest screw-ups.
On our new season, we're bringing you a new Snafoo every single episode.
32 lost nuclear weapons?
Wait, stop?
What?
Yeah.
Ernie Shackleton sounds like a solid 70s basketball player.
Who still wore knee pads?
Yes.
It's going to be a whole lot of history, a whole lot of funny, and a whole lot of guests.
The great Paul Shear made me feel good.
I'm like, oh, wow.
Angela and Jenna, I am so psyched.
You're here.
What was that like for you to soft launch into the show?
Sorry, Jenna, I'll be asking the questions today.
I forgot whose podcast we were doing.
Nick Kroll, I hope this story is good enough to get you to toss that sandwich.
So let's see how it goes.
Listen to season four of Snap-Fu with Ed Helms on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All I know is what I've been told.
And that's a half-truth is a whole lie.
For almost a decade.
The murder of an 18-year-old girl from a small town in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved,
until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story.
I'm telling you, we know Quincy Kilder, we know.
A story that law enforcement used to convict six people, and that got the citizen investigator on national TV.
Through sheer persistence and nerve, this Kentucky housewife helped give judges.
Justice to Jessica Curran.
My name is Maggie Freeling.
I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, producer,
and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to find.
I did not know her and I did not kill her,
or rape or burn or any of that other stuff that y'all said.
They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her.
They made me say that I poured gas on her.
From Lava for Good, this is Graves County.
a show about just how far our legal system will go in order to find someone to blame.
America, y'all better work the hell up.
Bad things happens to good people in small towns.
Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to binge the entire season ad-free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and on the new season of heavyweight,
I help a centenarian mend a broken heart.
How can a 101-year-old woman fall in love again?
And I help a man atone for an armed robbery he committed at 14 years old.
And so I pointed the gun at.
him and said this isn't a joke.
And he got down, and I remember feeling kind of
a surge of like, okay, this is power.
Plus, my old friend Gregor
and his brother tried to solve my
problems through hypnotism.
We could give you a whole brand new thing where
you're like super charming all the time.
Being more able to look to people in the eye.
Not always hide behind a microphone.
Listen to Heavyweight on the
IHeart Radio app, Apple
podcasts or wherever you
get your podcasts.
This is It Could Happen here.
I'm Garrison Davis.
On the morning of Sunday, September 28th, a 40-year-old man drove a pickup truck into a
Grand Blanc Michigan church.
The man started shooting people inside and then set the church on fire, burning the building
down.
Four churchgoers died, eight others were injured but have survived, and police killed the
shooter on the scene.
The president, the vice president, and the rest of the right were quick to call this yet, quote,
another targeted attack on Christians in the United States, to quote Trump on truth social.
White House press secretary Carolyn Levitt went on Fox and Friends the day after the shooting and said this.
It's unfathomable. And as the president rightfully put in his truth social yesterday,
this appears to be yet another targeted attack on Christians.
as the church was still burning right-wing podcaster betty johnson who recently rode with ice in
chicago posted on x the everything app quote church is on fire christianity is under attack
prey unquote what betty johnson neglected to mention this was a mormon church and pretty soon it
became clear the attacker was not some transgender leftist antifa but a christian truss
Trump supporter who thought Mormons were, quote, unquote, the Antichrist, according to Burton,
city council candidate Chris Johns, who claims to have spoken with the shooter just days prior
while canvassing. One of the shooter's friends told the New York Times that the shooter believed
that Mormons, quote, are going to take over the world, unquote. This guy obsessively talked
about his dislike of Mormons, stemming from a breakup with a Mormon girlfriend over a decade ago.
After the background of this shooter and his apparent motive became more clear, the Trump admin quite quickly stopped talking about this specific attack, save for vague references to attacks on Christianity.
But this attack was more deadly than any recent school shooting or any instance of targeted violence, which the administration has been framed as political violence happening this year.
After the shooter was identified, rather than talk about his apparent motive, people online argued about his political orientation.
A picture spread online of him wearing a Trump 2020 camo shirt that read,
Make Liberals Cry Again.
The right-wing outlet The Daily Caller attacked Democrat Representative Eric Swalwell for posting a photo of that shirt,
claiming that the Trump graphic was photoshopped with the Daily Caller.
are sharing a version of the shirt that they alleged to be the original unedited photo without
the Trump graphic. Except that version without the Trump graphic is, in fact, the doctored photo.
The Trump one is the authentic version. Right-wing users on X-The Everything app spread a list of
political donations to progressive organizations that they attributed to the shooter, as well
as a screenshot of a Twitter account with a bio that read politically active.
democratic socialist. Except that account and those donations were from a completely different person,
just with a similar name. Now, just because it's pretty clear that this shooter supported Trump
doesn't mean that we should frame this as partisan political violence. This was a classic American
shooting. A Marine veteran who moved to Utah after getting back from Iraq, got involved with a
Mormon woman, had negative experiences with the Mormon Church, moved to Michigan, but continued
to have very strong anti-Mormon sentiments, which he held until he acted on those sentiments
leading to his death and the deaths of four other people.
An extremely tragic, yet extremely American sequence of events.
But the conversation and coverage surrounding this Mormon church shooting is such an open
display of this game of picking and choosing shootings to care about and then which can be weaponized
against political enemies. Former assistant FBI director Chris Swecker went on Fox News to
discuss this shooting, where he laid blame on politicians' rhetoric calling people Nazis.
So, you know, this is a situation of, you find a manufactured grievance, if you will,
and that a whole lot of stimulus from people either on the internet
or even politicians, they're responsible politicians.
We all know who they are.
You know, they're talking about Nazis and anarchists
and existential threats.
You know, they need to crawl back into their dark places.
These people are out there that has to be taken into account
when you start firing off your mouth.
That simply has nothing to do with this specific attack.
But both politicians and the media have this obsession
with only talking about shooters insofar as they can try to identify a shooter's orientation
towards a political party and then weaponize that suspected orientation against political opponents
by trying to frame every deranged shooter as emblematic of the oppositional political project.
Following Charlie Kirk's assassination and the media blitz around it,
fellow far-right commentator Stephen Crowder has revived his long-dormant college debate series
change my mind. Now, with the prompt, the left is violent. Propagandists collapse political violence
into a simple binary, which is just a very limited way in trying to actually understand
public acts of violence. The idea that things can only happen because of ideologies,
not downstream of personal experiences, material conditions, or class. This year, there's been one other
targeted attack that ties the Mormon church shooting for the highest fatalities and attacks this
year. And that was the Midtown Manhattan mass shooting in July, where the gunmen attempted
to shoot up the NFL offices, motivated by getting CTE from playing football in high school.
No clear ideological motivations here.
Lots of shooters aren't typically ideological in like the ordinary political sense.
The only recent shooter that could be accurately categorized as quote-unquote leftist
is the former PSL member who assassinated two Israeli embassy staffers in May of 2025.
Now, under no circumstances do you have to hand it to Bill Marr,
but this exchange between him and Ben Shapiro just two days after the Charlie Kirk assassination,
demonstrates this point about how media and politicians only understand and weaponize
public acts of violence through ideology, long before we have any actual clear indication
on what motivated a shooter to commit an attack.
There's a shooting at a synagogue. It is very likely to be either a white supremacist or a radical Muslim.
If it is a shooting of a Republican politician, it is very likely to be a trans-Antifa Marxist shooting.
That is just not true. We don't know what this kid is.
We do know this kid was of the left.
We do know that.
We do know what?
That this kid was of the political left.
That is according to contemporaneous reporting from The Guardian as well as Tablet Magazine today.
It's two days out.
We don't know shit, Ben.
But here's...
We don't know shit.
They never do.
The Internet is undefeated in getting it wrong to begin with.
It's not about the Internet.
That's about the actual reporting by mainstream except the Guardian is not right when...
Here's what we heard.
Here's what I was told so far, and I'll tell you what was wrong.
First, I heard he's a registered Republican.
Not true.
Okay. Then he was a donor to Trump. Not true. His father works in the sheriff's office. Not true. There was a picture of him wearing a pro-Trump shirt. Not true. A member of the Democratic Socialists of America. Not true. We don't know what he is. How are you so sure he's of the left? Now, I agree when you write on a bullet. What did he write on the bullet? Catch this. Catch this fascist, which is also a gamer thing.
Okay, but now I'm hearing he may have been part of that group for whom Charlie Kirk was not right-wing enough.
You mean, the Groyper's, yes.
I mean, so that would...
That you're sure he's not that?
I'm not sure that he's not that.
Oh, a minute ago, you were sure what he was.
Hold on, Bill, hold on.
Okay, because I've been...
Another thing that can be tricky to understand is just because the target of violence is a political figure does not mean that it's political violence.
The attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan is a key example of this.
And for the Kirk assassination, available evidence points towards more of a personal motivation
based on romantic attraction a la dog day afternoon over any larger partisan political motivation.
It doesn't even make sense to view the first attempted Trump assassination as political violence.
Thomas Crooks searched online for a variety of events to commit a shooting at.
In the month prior to the shooting, he did more than 60 internet searches related to Biden, Trump,
and information about the upcoming DNC and RNC conventions.
Donald Trump's campaign event in Butler, Pennsylvania,
just happened to fall into the right place at the right time.
The mass killer-obsessed school shooter from last August,
who shot two kids at a Catholic school in Minneapolis,
which the Wright branded as a trans-terrorist,
originally planned to do the shooting at a small LGBTQ music,
venue, but feared that trans girls attending the concert would be armed for self-defense.
As I've previously reported on this show, this shooting bared similarity to TCC or True Crime Community,
not as in True Crime Podcasts, but an online community of usually young people obsessed with school
shooters or mass shooters akin to Neo-Columbiners who encourage each other online to then commit
their own acts of violence inspired by or replicating those of previous school shootings or mass
shootings. This pseudo-mass shooter fandom demonstrates the extent to which the role of quote-unquote
the shooter can be its own motivating force beyond any culture war issues or ordinary partisan politics
that might get sprinkled on top as seasoning. On Wednesday, September 24th,
A 29-year-old opened fire with a bolt-action rifle targeting an ice field office in Dallas, Texas.
This attack claimed the lives of three immigrants who were detained by ICE.
In a copycat style following the Kirk assassination and the United Healthcare CEO assassination,
this shooter allegedly wrote anti-ice on unfired bullet casings.
In the immediate wake of this attack, the right attributed this shooter.
to the radical left and blamed Democrat politicians for spreading anti-ice rhetoric.
At a North Carolina event, J.D. Vance said, quote,
here's what happens when Democrats like Gavin Newsom say these people are part of an authoritarian government.
When the left-wing media lies about what they're doing, when they lie about who they're arresting,
when they lie about the actual job of law enforcement, what they are doing is encouraging crazy people to go and commit violence.
Here's a brief Fox News report.
We have a problem, America.
We are living through a scourge of left-wing political violence
that three weeks into this month has made it bloody September.
Today, another attack on ice.
As is not uncommon with mass shooters,
this guy was a registered independent,
and the shooter's brother told NBC News
that he wasn't really interested in politics.
I find it highly unlikely that this millennial and other
Gen Z shooters, are regularly watching liberal news, getting their opinions from politicians
and news anchors on MSNBC or CNN.
Journalist Ken Klippenstein spoke with friends of this shooter, who described him as a libertarian-leaning
4-chan edge lord who hated both political parties and most mainstream politicians.
Friends believed that the bullet inscriptions could have been written as a joke,
intended to rile people up.
They told Klippenstein, the shooter became more isolated in recent years
as friends drifted away due to his continuous antisocial edge lord behavior
in regular day-to-day interactions.
Nancy Larson, the acting U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas,
said the shooter left behind a writing where he referred to ICE operations as human trafficking.
Larson says the shooter did not mention any government agency besides
ice, but left a note for police reading, quote, good luck with the digital footprint.
This shooter killed himself after the attack. These public acts of violence usually have a suicidal
component, a drive for self-annihilation while simultaneously gaining some final sense of meaning
or purpose by crudely emblazoning yourself in history through a violent act. What causes someone
to do this can be a mix of many factors, including access to
to guns, individual motivations, social alienation, self-annihilation.
Insofar as there is an overtly political element,
it's often the result of a political alienation.
Usually the type of person who commits a bloody act of violence
lacks a recognizably coherent political philosophy
that can be easily grafted onto our Democrat-Republican binary,
with there sometimes being a mix of political beliefs
across the left-right spectrum.
Mass shootings, which are accompanied by express political motivations,
usually stem from anti-Muslim or great replacement rhetoric.
The idea that white people in Western culture will slowly be replaced by brown immigrants.
But throughout the next three years under Trump's federal government and the right-wing,
anti-woke backlash currently flexing dominance over our culture,
nihilistic, self-destructive acts against American society
may take a form which could be characterized as quote-unquote left-wing violence,
despite most of these shooters being far from your average DNC acolyte or bread tube-watching leftist.
Considering the Mormon church shooting, the Kirk Assassination,
the ICE detainee shooting, and the Minneapolis Catholic school shooting,
In the year of our brain rot 2025, I think it's pretty clear that the current US state apparatus
does not need to stage false flags. The state just tries to take advantage of naturally
emergent events, twisting them to fit narratives in an ad hoc manipulation of consensus
reality. No crude fabrication of physical reality is needed. They are more than happy to
simply pick and choose and magnify and obscure various events to fit their preferred version of
reality. The night before the shooting at the Mormon Church, another Iraq war veteran did a mass
shooting in North Carolina, which did not result in nearly as many national headlines. The shooter
targeted a waterfront bar, killing three people injuring six others. The suspect rode a boat up to
the bar, fired with an AR, mounted with a scope and silencer, before speeding off on water.
Police have also deemed this a targeted attack, but without a tangential link to culture war
issues, this event will be quickly forgotten. As I'm recording this episode, Texas Attorney
General Ken Paxton announced that he's launching undercover operations to infiltrate an uproot,
quote, leftist terror cells in Texas. Leftist political terrorism is a clear and present danger.
There can be no compromise with those who want us dead, unquote. This mirrors President Trump's
National Security Presidential Memorandum Number 7, which targets, quote, unquote, domestic terrorism
indicators like anti-Christianity, anti-capitalism, anti-Americanism, extremism on race,
gender, immigration, and hostility towards traditional American values. All this partisan rhetoric on
targeted violence and political violence is in service of authoritarian crackdowns and enhanced
surveillance against their political opposition. Meanwhile, this past Saturday morning, the home
of a South Carolina circuit court judge was burned down, hospitalizing her husband, a former
state senator, and their son. The judge was out of the house at the time. Last month,
the judge temporarily blocked a voter suppression executive order signed by President Trump.
In the weeks leading up to the fire, the judge had received death threats.
This has been It Could Happen here. See you on the other side.
Ah, come on. Why is this taking?
so long. This thing is ancient.
Still using yesterday's tech,
upgrade to the ThinkPad X1
Carbon, ultra-light, ultra-powerful,
and built for serious productivity with
Intel Core Ultra Processors, Blazing
speed, and AI-powered performance.
It keeps up with your business, not the other way
around. Whoa, this thing moves.
Stop hitting snooze on new tech.
Win the tech search at Lenovo.com.
Unlocked AI experiences
with the ThinkPad X1 Carbon, powered
by Intel Core Ultra processors, so you can
work, create, and boost productivity all on one device.
Hey, it's Ed Helms, and welcome back to Snafu, my podcast about history's greatest screw-ups.
On our new season, we're bringing you a new snafu every single episode.
32 lost nuclear weapons.
Wait, stop? What?
Ernie Shackleton sounds like a solid 70s basketball player.
Who still wore knee pads?
Yes.
It's going to be a whole lot of history, a whole lot of fun.
funny and a whole lot
of guests. The great Paul
Shear made me feel good. I'm like, oh, wow.
Angela and Jenna, I am
so psyched. You're here.
What was that like for you to
soft launch into the show?
Sorry, Jenna, I'll be asking
the questions today.
I forgot whose podcast we were doing.
Nick Kroll. I hope
this story is good enough to get you
to toss that sandwich. So let's
see how it goes.
Listen to season four of Snapfu
with Ed Helms on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
All I know is what I've been told,
and that's a half-truth is a whole lie.
For almost a decade, the murder of an 18-year-old girl
from a small town in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved,
until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls,
came forward with a story.
I'm telling you, we know Quincy Kilder, we know.
A story that law enforcement used to convict six people
and that got the citizen investigator on national TV.
Through sheer persistence and nerve,
this Kentucky housewife helped give justice to Jessica Curran.
My name is Maggie Freeling.
I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, producer,
and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to
find. I did not know her and I did not kill her or rape or burn or any of that other stuff
that y'all said it. They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her.
They made me say that I poured gas on her. From Lava for Good, this is Graves County, a show about
just how far our legal system will go in order to find someone to blame.
America, y'all better work the hell up. Bad things happens to good.
people in small towns.
Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to binge the entire season ad-free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
and mend a broken heart.
How can a 101-year-old woman fall in love again?
And I help a man atone for an armed robbery he committed at 14 years old.
And so I pointed the gun at him and said, this isn't a joke.
And he got down, and I remember feeling kind of a surge of like, okay, this is power.
Plus, my old friend Gregor and his brother tried to solve my problems.
through hypnotism.
We could give you a whole brand new thing
where you're like super charming all the time.
Being more able to look people in the eye.
Not always hide behind a microphone.
Listen to Heavyweight on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to It Could Happen to Hear, a podcast,
but set by horrors of such magnitude
that sometimes you have to go back to a thing that you just talked about because there were more horrors in it
that you didn't have time to cover the first time you went through the horrors. Sorry, the first two times you went through the horrors.
And with me to talk about the horrors is Dr. Kavejota, who is a doctor, I guess, as you probably could have guessed from the title.
You know, I scripted this out very poorly.
No, this is great. You're doing great. Keep going.
I say scripted this out. Literally, the only part of this introduction that was in my notes was
Kavejoda, doctor, and host of House of Pod, and friend of the show, which was not in my notes either, but...
That's right. Friend. The energy is chaotic today.
Friend, most importantly. It has to be. That is the normal response to what is happening in this world.
If we don't embrace a little chaos, then we will lose our mind. So I am loving how this is going so far.
I am so glad because there is so much chaos.
And one of the chaos things that we have been tracking and that you spend a hideous amount of time tracking on your show is, yes, it's not good.
It's very bad.
Please stop doing this stuff so we can all go back to doing normal things in our lives.
I would love to just do more fart jokes and episodes on poop.
But people in power keep saying and doing terrible things, crazy terrible things that make.
me feel like I'm losing my mind. So I have to keep doing this for multiple ways. One, because
someone's got to talk about it. Two, it's sort of therapy for me. Like, if I just internalize
this, I'm going to be a miserable person. So thanks. Thanks for having me on. Yeah. I'm excited
to talk to you about, well, okay. See, literally every single time I do an episode, it's like,
I'm really excited to talk to you and also Jesus Christ, I wish we did have to talk about this.
that's how everyone feels
that's how my patients feel
that's how my patients feel when they see me
it's terrible
God
really truly we got to stop meeting like this
one day we'll do a fun episode
one day I swear to God okay
but the thing that I've been talking about
that we've both been covering is
basically the annihilation of the entire
U.S. medical establishment
at the federal level
is being systematically dismantled
and one of the ways
that's being systematically dismantled, is that a bunch of people have been put in charge of it who are, I mean, two years ago were fringe anti-vaccine cranks and are now running, like, the most sophisticated, like, public health institutions that have ever existed?
Yeah.
As producer extraordinaire, Sophie Lichten, once said, you can't put a hater in charge of the thing that they hate the most.
and that is what has happened completely and fully,
almost at every step of this government.
Yeah.
They find the person that hates it the most,
and they put that person in.
Yeah, and, you know, one of the big sort of,
I don't know, turning points is the right word,
but one of the major events we've been covering from this
was the announcement by RFK Jr. and Trump
that they had found what causes autism.
And also ADHD too, which got very little coverage.
I think I said this last time I talked about this.
It was very baffling.
But there was just, there was so much in that whole thing that I think a lot of the stuff
kind of fell through the cracks inside of like.
But there was a lot.
There was a lot to digest.
There's so much.
There's so much.
And so I guess I wanted, we wanted to talk about mostly the hepatitis B thing,
but also just sort of the broader antivacs.
stuff that was in this.
Yeah.
Before we get into, I don't know, like, the weirder, more boutique anti-VAC stuff, which
is like the anti-epititis B magazine stuff, a thing that I didn't realize people were
against, like, children getting until, like, now, and, like, I follow these things
decently closely.
Yeah.
Let's start a little bit with, like, let's ease the audience into this by going back to the
classics, the greatest hits.
They really have one hit.
The one hit of the anti-vaccine movement, which was Trump's stuff about separating
the MMR vaccine.
Yeah.
So, yeah, recently during that press conference where he really threw Tylenol under the bus,
he also really, it was weird because there's no new evidence, I want to make that clear,
there was no new evidence that they presented about vaccines, but Trump,
actually really harped on vaccines and his thoughts, his medical opinion, and his advice
on how to manage vaccines.
It's truly bizarre.
Never seen a president say or do those sorts of things.
But one of the things he mentioned was the MMR vaccine, the measles, mumps,
Rubella, and he said that it should be split into three separate shots.
Again, medically unfounded, it really, as you have alluded to, echoes these long debunked
claims, these Wakefield-like claims from starting from back in 1998.
Again, Wakefield was the disgraced author of that vaccine study that tied it to autism,
lost his medical license for that, but that has persisted and carried on.
And the seeds of that are still growing terrible, terrible plants and trees today.
And one of them was this fruit of Trump saying we should break up the MMR vaccine.
So I'll just say it up front.
One, there's no reason to do that.
There's no reason that shows improved safety.
There's no credible evidence to suggest that at least.
And more importantly, the more you split these things up, the more likely you're going to end up missing doses.
That is like a known fact.
If you delay vaccines, if you split them up more than they need to be, there is a much greater chance you will miss that.
In case, this is not clear, measles is bad.
It is one of the most contagious viruses out there, and lower vaccination rates quickly lead to outbreaks, as we're already starting to see.
And when there's already some hesitancy in the community, pushing it like this is a terrible thing.
So even though that was a throwaway statement from the president of the United States, it could have serious repercussions.
And it's very concerning.
And I've also, I have committed myself every single time this comes up, the wake,
field study, which is where this whole separate the other war thing, like came up. A, it's not,
it's not even a conclusion that even if you take his completely fake premise that he made up,
it doesn't actually follow that you should split the vaccines up. Right. It's baffling. But the second
thing is, the reason he wanted to split the vaccines up was that he was trying to sell his own
vaccine. Correct. Yes. He was just trying to sell his own vaccine. It makes me insane every single
time this is talked about because this whole thing is medical, it's literally an industrial complex.
It's like the anti-vaccine industrial complex. They're all trying to sell you something.
That's the whole thing. I was watching Trump give this talk, this press conference. And I said,
I think I said this on another show here on this channel. I started to disassociate. I'm like,
yeah, this can't be real life. Am I dreaming? Is this? It felt like I was having an out-of-body
experience. It did not feel real to me.
To be fully transparent, I did not make it through that press conference watching it on video about like four minutes in.
I was like, fuck this.
I'm going to read the transcript.
So I'm just working off the transcript because I was like, I can't.
It was tough.
I can't do this.
So on my podcast, The House of Pod, you should all listen to it.
I played a clip from Trump talking about Tylenol and another clip of him talking about hepatitis B.
And when you listen to it, when I listened back to it as I was editing it, it sounded like I edited his clips to make him sound crazy.
Yeah.
I did not.
I just took straight from what he says.
And it just the way he was talking, it's hard to listen to.
I mean, it's hard to read to.
But the way he talks, it's so disjointed.
And he just goes from one thought to the next.
He does this weave thing that he thinks is so clever.
But it's just lost.
The threads are never brought back together.
It's just an unraveled, terrible rug of lies.
and that is why it's so hard to, like, listen to him.
I totally understand.
Yeah, well, and this has also been, you know, one of the things that most of the media has done
is that, you know, in order to be able to, like, play a listenable clip on air, right?
And it also in sort of in service of power, they edit the clips to make him sound like
a normal human being.
Right.
So the version of it that people are seeing is not the version where he's just sort of
completely ranting incoherently and, like, you know, you just see these.
cliffs but then also because they're because they're editing it down progressively more and more
like just more stuff like more just like information content gets lost every time which is a problem
because there's just like so much stuff the fire hose in this of nonsense yeah title of my first
album fire hose is nonsense incredible incredible oh god okay so you know what all right we're going to a
second fire hose of nonsense. This is slightly early to be doing this, but fuck it. It's chaos
week. We're doing it. Do you know what else is the fire hose of nonsense? Oh, well, I wouldn't say
it's nonsense. I would say it's very important and pays bills. So it's very, very important. I believe
and I don't. I'm just kidding. I'm assuming ads and services. Yeah, this is the Fox's Services
to support this podcast.
We are back.
So, amidst the torrent of, you know, the MMR stuff, which also I do want to say very briefly,
is sort of a baffling thing to be talking about in a thing where you're not blaming the vaccines for autism.
You're blaming Tylenol, but then you're still also mad at the vaccine.
It's very weird.
Yeah.
I had thoughts about that.
You know, I felt like what Trump was doing with that by bringing up the vaccines.
stuff was I felt he was trying to console RFK Jr. in a way. I felt like he was like,
okay, hey, we're moving away from the vaccine stuff to focus on this Tylenol stuff,
but I know how much you love the vaccine stuff, RFK. So let's talk about that. So I felt like
he was just throwing that out there to placate RFK Jr. That was my guess, but I don't know how
to read sociopaths very well. So I can be wrong. This could also just be like what comes into his
when he thinks about medicine.
Right.
So, you know.
Oh, yeah.
Again, weird to me that this president was giving medical advice.
I mean, he was making statements.
Yeah.
Do not take time.
He said that multiple times.
He talked about breaking up the hepatitis B vaccine, changing the hepatitis B vaccine,
which I think we're going to talk about because that is very important to me.
And things that doctors would have a little pause to say so strongly.
And even the people whose paper.
he's citing would say, oh, slow down a little bit with that. You know, it's very important. I think
it's super impactful. And you're right, it's slipping under the radar. So I would love to talk about
the hepatitis B stuff. Yeah, let's do this. So I'll give a little background for your listeners
who don't know me. I am a gastroenterologist and hepatologist. That's liver, not herpetologist,
which is study of snakes, which sometimes people think online. I am a doctor that looks at the liver.
and hepatitis B has an important place in my heart.
It's a disease that can be incredibly devastating.
It's incredibly common.
It has so many complications.
It has such long-term ramifications on someone's life if they have it.
Some of things they have to consider do follow up.
So many possible things that can happen with it.
And the thing about it is we have a vaccine for it that is very safe and super efficacious and works really well.
And when we use it, it works amazing in Trump during this conference through that a couple of passing shots as he was doing this whole rant about Tylenol, et cetera.
And those passing shots can have a huge impact on uptake in this country.
I think it really needs to be discussed.
So I'll stop there.
I'll let you see what questions you have for me about hepatitis B because I could talk about hepatitis B for a long time.
Yeah, okay.
Let's go back to like the very basic.
How would you explain hepatitis B to our dear listener who knows many things, but what hepatitis B is is not one of them?
Yes.
So, hepatitis just means inflammation of the liver.
Anything withitis means inflammation.
And there are different ways of getting hepatitis or inflammation of the liver.
They range from alcohol, medications, autoimmune problems, to viral things.
And there are viral things that can cause bad hepatitis affect the liver.
primarily. Hepatitis A, B, C, you've heard of some of these hepatitis. And hepatitis B is a very
common one in the world. It's about 2 billion people in the world have either had it or presently
have it. About 880,000 people in the U.S. alone have chronic hepatitis B. But if you actually
look at studies that include more immigrant populations, that number can go up to about 2.2 million.
Jeez, yeah.
It is something that can, when you get it at an early age, when you're young and your baby or an infant, you're young, and your immune system is not super robust yet, it's very likely about 90% or more that if you are exposed to it, you'll get chronic infection from it.
If you get it when you're older, it's a little different.
You can have a pretty strong reaction to it.
you'll get really sick potentially, sometimes to the point where the liver fails, but most people
are when they're older, able to clear it. They're going to eventually get rid of the, the virus
at a point where the liver is fine and it manages, but it lives in the liver indefinitely. Once you
get the hepatitis B, there's a very good chance. You will have it forever. Whether or not it's
causing you problems is another thing. A lot of people can live with it, not have any problems,
but a lot of people will get it and they will be very sick in the beginning.
And when you get it as an infant, you have a very good chance of having it for the rest of your life.
And that can be a major problem because, like all viruses that go into the liver like this, all these viral hepatitis, what can happen is it can cause scarring, which you might have heard of when it's really bad, called cirrhosis.
When that happens, the liver can stop working.
You can get cancer of the liver.
You can get big blood vessels in your esophagus called esophageal varices and vomit of blood.
You can get a lot of bad things that happen.
Now, what makes hepatitis be particularly insidious.
It makes it a little bit, even my opinion, more dangerous than a lot of other viral hepatitis,
is that you don't always have to go through these phases to get to the really bad part.
Like when you have hepatitis C, for example, you get.
bad scarring over a long time, that can cause that cirrhosis, and that cirrhosis can lead to
cancer. But since hepatitis B is a DNA virus, that DNA can get into the DNA of your liver
cells, and it can cause cancer without even having to go through those steps of cirrhosis.
That's obviously terrible, and that can happen to young people, and I've seen it, and it's
awful. So I'm saying all these terrible things about hepatitis B because it's, it's a lot of
It's one of these things that does not need to be.
I didn't mean to say that like that.
No, yeah.
I didn't mean to make a play on words there.
But it doesn't need to happen because we have this great vaccine that can manage this.
Yeah.
And when we use this vaccine, it works.
In fact, in the U.S., they looked at it.
Between 1990, it was introduced in this country, like for infants in 1991.
And when they looked from 1990 to 2004, they saw 94% decrease in kids and kids.
adolescents who have hepatitis B.
That's incredible.
That's amazing, right?
That's really good.
Like, this is a great success story.
And part of the reason people, like Trump don't recognize that this is an issue is because
it's done well because this vaccine works and it does a good job.
Now, the other thing to discuss is how it is transmitted because that's a big part of what
Trump was saying during this press conference.
Yeah.
And he said, it's sexually transmitted.
which is true.
That is one of the ways that you get it.
But you also get it from the mother.
The mother, when you're having a pregnancy and a delivery, it's a messy, bloody process.
And that is a huge risk factor for the infant getting hepatitis B from the mother.
There's also household things that can happen.
You know, people share razors.
That's a risk factor.
Toothbrushes, small things, bites at daycare centers.
All these things are small risks.
They're not as common as sex or the childbirth ways of transmission, but there are other modes of transmission for getting hepatitis B, not just sex like Trump was saying.
So I think that's super important to be clear that I think that is one of the major things he said that was wrong.
He said a lot of things are wrong, but that's probably the biggest, easiest one to point out.
Yeah, and I think also was interesting because that was one of the things that got followed up on by reporters.
but the reporter was like, well, you can also get it from like reusing needles, which like, yeah, but like not, not mentioning the whole, you can get it from being born, a thing that everyone has to do statistically.
And this is true.
The statistics bear that out.
That is true.
100% rate of being born in order to exist.
That's exactly.
That's exactly right.
You know why I realized why Trump says this?
this is the realization I came to.
He doesn't even think about this as a possible mode of transmission.
If you've ever seen a delivery, I don't know if you have, Mia, but if you've ever seen
someone give birth, whether it's natural vaginal or caesarian or whatever, whatever method,
there is a lot of fluids, blood, mucus, there's a lot of fluids happening during this time,
exchange between mother and baby.
And if you saw that, I think you'd be like, oh, well, yeah, that's, that's, that's,
makes sense that you would get it that way. If you could get it through sex, why couldn't you get it
through that? You know, if you could get it by putting a penis into a vagina, for example,
why couldn't you get it from being birth from one? So you would see that and it would make
sense to you inherently and automatically. My guess is that Trump has not seen any of his kids
delivered. That would not surprise me. If he was in a nearby room, I would be impressed.
And he had to want to cast aspersions on her president.
I don't know.
Maybe he was there, you know, cutting the umbilical corridor.
I don't know.
But I get the sense he was not.
And I feel like that's why, in his mind, he doesn't even register it.
And then the other thing that's weird about this is he's like, oh, it's just me.
I say that they get the shot at the age of 12 because it's sexually transmitted.
And that makes me wonder, and I'm surprised no one's brought this up, why does he think that's okay then?
Does he think that kids are having sex at age of 12?
and that's okay?
Like, why did 12 become the number for him?
It's so weird and, I don't know,
that's truly one of the,
there is something just deeply evil going on in his mind,
but I have no idea what it is
and I can't follow the path of logic
because I'm not like a billionaire
who was born in like the 50s or whatever.
I don't know
That guy has seen
That guy has gotten brainward
From things that like don't exist anymore
No he's born in the 40s
Sorry my my apologies for
Thinking he was born a full decade later
Than he actually was
Good Lord
Yeah I mean
I think the results are still the same
Yeah but it's like
You know there's just like there's prejudices
And weird stuff that he picked up rattling
around there that like
who knows where they came from
and I think also
you know one of the other angles
about this that's sort of
really distressing
is this like what feels like
the sort of stigmatizing aspect of it
of just being like oh well
there's something you can only get
like sexually transmitted so like
why are you giving this to kids and it's like
well yeah but like there's just like a bunch
of other ways that you can get it and like
only talking about that one and then having
it as an excuse to
like raise the vaccination age for
no reason? And that, you know, again, goes back to the MMR thing. Because, you know, when we talk about
giving these doses, the WHO, the CDC, they recommend the birth vaccine within 24 hours, or the first,
at least then. The current schedule is you get at birth and follow-ups at one to two months,
and then again, it's six to 15 months. And part of the thing of stretching that out, pushing that out
further, again, same thing as the MMR, which is the more likely you are to not do it.
at all and to have decreased uptake.
Yeah.
So this is the real reason why that's a concern.
Yeah.
And it's this sort of decreased uptake is their goal.
Right.
Like that's what they want.
Like that's why RFK Jr., for example, is making it increasingly difficult to get like
the COVID vaccine and the flu vaccine and stuff like that.
And it's, you know, they're doing this sort of like double-pronged approach of both establishing it
from the top down through the medical bureaucracy.
if they can control of, and also just, like, spreading it among their supporters and among people
who are like, oh, the president wouldn't just, like, lie to me about medical stuff.
Right.
That's unreasonable.
And if you didn't know, if you didn't know that there was an other means or transmission,
what he said is reasonable.
you know, why would you give an infant a vaccine for something they could only get through sex?
I mean, yeah, you back, sure, that makes sense.
But it's just wrong.
Yeah.
It's kind of pointless to ask the question.
Does he know he's lying on this one?
but I don't think he is.
I honestly don't think he understands.
I think he probably did hear that there are some other modes of transmission.
And in his mind, it requires some sort of blood contact or some sort of mucosal contact in his mind.
And that's how he interpreted it.
And I think he just doesn't equate that with childbirth.
I think he assumes it like, because the child he sees comes out like perfectly
he wrapped and cleaned and, you know, looks like a little baby in like a blanket when he sees
it. Yeah. So I think, I think that's the thing. So I think he believes this. I don't think he's
lying on purpose on this one. Yeah. That makes sense. And I think, I don't know, I think the
interesting aspect of this is that this is like, was kind of just a Trump thing. Right.
Like, this is like one of the parts of it that like RFK Jr. and Martin McCarrie didn't really
talk about. It was just Trump. Right.
Kind of just, like, started talking about it for reasons that are deeply unclear.
Yeah, I mean, Martin McCarrey's an interesting guy, and I think he did some good things
in the past and's done some not-so-great things, some bad things.
Yeah, would not be surfing in this administration.
This may shock you, Mia, but Trump picks somebody for a high-level position that might be a little
problematic.
Well, especially this version of the administration, too, where it's like, in Trump,
It was possible for him to appoint someone random and it kind of be like Department of Energy, right?
Right.
They put Rick Perry, who famously would call to a, well, forgot that it was the thing that he wanted to abolish.
But then he got in charge of it and the Department of Energy people like explained to him this is, this is where the nuke stuff is.
And then he was like, sure, whatever fucking go run this, I'll just stay out of everyone's way.
And that kind of worked fine.
That is not happening this administration.
shit. You are not getting
Rick Perry going
to like a fucking make work
job letting the bureaucrats run
the actual stuff. How wild
it is that we long for the days
of Rick Perry.
Yeah.
The days
when someone could explain to you
hey, this is the department that does
the nukes and they would change
their opinion about it.
Staggering.
Incredible.
So I'm going to tell you,
a little bit more about this Macari character.
Yeah, yeah.
So he is a surgeon.
I don't think he practices as a surgeon anymore,
but he's sort of a health policy expert,
at least self-fashioned as one.
And he's the person that was tapped by Donald Trump
to lead the FDA.
You've seen him on Fox News a lot,
and he's been very outspoken
about pandemic policies in the past.
He was noted as one of the greatest perpetrators
of COVID-misinfluenced.
during those times when people fact-checked him again and again, found that he was wrong.
But the thing about him that you may or may not know how I first learned of him and how he
popped up on my radar a while back was he is the person that's responsible for this claim
that medical error is the third leading cause of death in the United States.
And sometimes that's cited as second.
Yes, that's him.
He's the person.
Oh, boy.
Right, right.
which there's a lot of issues with this claim.
It is at best controversial.
It's based on extrapolated data.
There was no formal methodology that went into him doing this.
It totally misrepresents the complexity of health care and health care outcomes.
But it's like the herpes of medical misinformation because it always comes back.
No matter how many times it gets disproven or people talk about it, it always comes back.
And it's always used as this.
It's an inherent part of the belief structure of these anti-vaxxers.
It is taken as gospel now.
But back in 2016, basically, he wrote this BMJ paper that estimated something like 250,000 deaths per year in U.S. hospitals, reduced medical errors.
But, again, was not a formal study.
It presented no new data, and it didn't have any sort of real rigorous statistical method behind it.
it kind of average figures from different sources.
It doesn't actually even work because death certificates don't capture medical error,
so it's hard to really study that, even if you wanted to.
But anyways, long story short, no matter how many times people disprove this or make arguments
that work against it, it never goes away.
So that's him.
That's McCarie.
Oh, boy.
Oh, boy.
And he's not running the FDA, which is great.
We put the worst people in charge of quite possibly the most important part of our country.
Yeah, I mean, just health and human service is run by RFK Jr. is just, when he first took office, my line on it was millions will die.
And we are so incredibly on track for millions to die from just this guy and his people being put in charge.
Yeah. I mean, I should say one more thing about Makari before we move on from him. That claim, you know, I wouldn't say that medical error isn't an issue. I think it is a very serious issue. Even if there's one or two cases in the whole country, it's a serious issue. And that should be addressed. But what he's doing is, I think, harmful. I don't think that is helping in any way. I think it's only made things worse by contributing to where we're at today with our anti-vax stance, our whole.
anti-intellectual approach to medicine.
And that's,
that's,
this is like a thing that they do.
This is a thing.
They take a little kernel of truth.
If there is any lack of knowledge,
if there's any slight vacuum in understanding,
it gets filled with these bad actors,
these people.
And he is, in my opinion, one of them.
But still somehow, not the worst.
You know,
not the worst is one of those bars in the Trump administration.
It's not even the bar so low it's on the ground.
The bar is so low that, like,
You have to go digging to get under the bar.
And it's not like a little bit of digging.
It's a lot of digging because the bar truly is below hell.
There's like a second hell down there to find this bar for where these people are.
Oh, God.
It's second hell.
Every time I look into any of these people just.
Yeah.
No, no, you're never going to be surprised.
Haskin hit a Marine with an act.
Like, this guy's just a secretary of defense now.
He's like, he's the guy going in yelling at the generals.
This is the guy who was on Fox News and he threw, he just throwing an axe and he threw it over the target and it hit a bunch of Marines.
Like, wait, what are we doing here?
Well, whom amongst us hasn't done that.
Maybe he is the real Antifa.
Oh, that's true.
That's true.
I have never hit a Marine with an axe.
Yeah.
So.
Yeah, well, there you go.
Tragic.
Papa, do you have anything else that you want to tell our dear listeners about this whole debacle?
Get your vaccines.
Yeah.
You know, get your vaccines.
Get vaccinated.
Now it's the time to start doing it for flu and COVID if you can.
Talk to your doctor if you're having difficulty getting your vaccine from your local places, your regular places.
Talk to your doctor about getting it.
you should still be able to in most cases.
So do it while you can.
And if you want to hear more about this stuff,
make sure to check out my podcast, The House of Pod.
We're going to talk about the stuff a lot more.
We'll also talk about other stuff too.
But you'll hear more on this along the way as well.
And, you know, I like that people are questioning some of these things.
I don't think it's unreasonable.
Some of these topics are not unreasonable.
to have, you know, we, as I discussed earlier on another podcast on this channel, I don't
channel, is that what you say, on this network, I should say. The Tylenol autism question is
not like a totally wacky, crazy one. It was a decent question to ask. There was some
correlation. But the evidence when you look at it shows that it is very likely not a causal
relationship when you look at the evidence. And I think it's okay to have some of these conversations
and sometimes it takes a little nuance when you look at them. But I encourage people to continue to
do so and to keep reading and to find trusted sources and look at those and learn about them
yourself. I think if nothing else good comes from all this, it's that people are starting to
have an understanding of antibodies and the science behind vaccines. And I think that's not a bad thing.
So, I mean, things are terrible.
Things are terrible.
There's so many bad things in the world.
But I will say this.
I see bright spots constantly.
I see more and more people who care about science.
I see more and more people than I ever have before care about important topics across the world.
They're not scientific, like Gaza, for example.
I've seen more people care about things that I've ever seen before in my long life.
And I feel like that's a good thing.
There are bright spots out there.
and that's what I cling to.
And I see more people interested in this.
People want to talk to me about hepatitis B and what it is and how to avoid it.
And I think that's great.
So there is some good coming from this.
Yeah.
And this is, I think, the fundamental thing that both the media apparatus and the regime are
trying to conceal, which is that there are more of us and there are of them.
And there always have been.
And especially right now, there are way more of us.
And, you know, their ability to.
shape the world is disastrous, but their ability to shape the world as fundamentally a
minoritarian force in this country, right, with like 30 to 40 percent of the population
is always going to be limited and always is always going to be in danger of simply being
reversed. Yeah. And we can be that reversal one person at a time. Yeah. I love that.
Well, Kave, thank you for being on the show and go listen to House of Pod. It's great.
Oh, thank you.
Yeah.
We're okay.
You could do worse.
Come on. Why is this?
Oh, come on. Why is this taking so long? This thing is ancient.
Still using yesterday's tech, upgrade to the ThinkPad.
X1 Carbon, ultra-light, ultra-powerful, and built for serious productivity.
With Intel Core Ultra processors, blazing speed, and AI-powered performance,
it keeps up with your business, not the other way around.
Whoa, this thing moves.
Stop hitting snooze on new tech.
Win the tech search at Lenovo.com.
Lenovo, Lenovo.
Unlock AI experiences with the ThinkPad X1 Carbon, powered by Intel Core Ultra processors
so you can work, create, and boost productivity all on one device.
Hey, it's Ed Helms, and welcome back to Snafu, my podcast about history's greatest screw-ups.
On our new season, we're bringing you a new snafu every single episode.
32 lost nuclear weapons.
Wait, stop?
What?
Ernie Shackleton sounds like a solid 70s basketball player.
Who still wore knee pads?
Yes.
It's going to be a whole lot of history, a whole lot of funny, and a whole lot of guests.
The great Paul Shear made me feel good.
Oh, wow.
Angela and Jenna, I am so psyched.
You're here.
What was that like for you to soft launch into the show?
Sorry, Jenna.
I'll be asking the questions today.
I forgot whose podcasts we were doing.
Nick Kroll.
I hope this story is good enough to get you to toss that sandwich.
So let's see how it goes.
Listen to season four of Snap-Foo with Ed Helms on the I-Hart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
All I know is what I've been told, and that's a half-truth is a whole lie.
For almost a decade, the murder of an 18-year-old girl from a small town in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved,
until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story.
I'm telling you, we know Quincy killed her. We know.
A story that law enforcement used to convict six people
and that got the citizen investigator on national TV.
Through sheer persistence and nerve,
this Kentucky housewife helped give justice to Jessica Curran.
My name is Maggie Freeling.
I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, producer,
and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to find.
I did not know her and I did not kill her,
or rape or burn or any of that other stuff,
They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her.
They made me say that I poured gas on her.
From Lava for Good, this is Graves County, a show about just how far our legal system will go
in order to find someone to blame.
America, y'all better work the hell up.
Bad things happens to good people in small towns.
Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to binge the entire season ad-free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and on the new season of heavyweight, I help a centenarian mend a broken heart.
And a hundred and one year old woman fall in love again.
And I help a man atone for an armed robbery he committed at 14 years old.
And so I pointed the gun at him and said, this isn't a joke.
And he got down.
And I remember feeling kind of a surge of like, okay, this is power.
Plus, my old friend Gregor and his brother tried to solve my problems through hypnotism.
We could give you a whole brand new thing where you're like super true.
charming all the time.
Being more able to look people in the eye.
Not always hide behind a microphone.
Listen to Heavyweight on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You know, quite frankly, if you ever do anything on accident that leads to a police officer falling over,
even if you had nothing to do with them falling over,
It's time to leave. It's time to go. Even if all you did was make a joke.
This is it could happen here. Executive Disorder, our weekly newscast covering what's happening in the White House.
The crumbling of our world and what it means for you. I'm Garrison Davis. Today I'm joined by James Stout, Mia Wong, and Robert Evans.
This episode, we're covering the week of October 1st to October 8th.
That's right, baby.
Brian Big Deal Day, as October 7th, are known in history.
The first week of October 7th, you know.
Glock tober.
Glocktober.
I mean, who doesn't love a good Glock?
Not in California.
California doesn't love a good Glock.
Gavin Newsom and the California legislature.
Gavin Newsom doesn't love a good Glock.
I mean, honestly.
They banned them.
Beretta fans don't love Glockes.
Still sore about that.
Sig guys, the surviving Sig guys.
Oh, boy, it's rough being a Sig guy out there these days.
It's got to be tough.
Yeah.
That's why we're selling armored boxer shorts for the day.
That's right.
You enjoy the Sig SIGSour P-320.
As long as you get it,
our new hard class
four body armor boxers shorts, you can
appendix carry a sig sour
without blowing your junk off.
Let me quickly put on my ceramic
boxer briefs here so
that I can carry a
a fucking M18.
M18, thank you.
Yeah, yeah. Stay hard by Cool Zone
dropping next week. You can find them by
tagging Robert on social media
at Y-Sophie Y.
We're finishing our 20-part
series. People have asked for
episodes on how to be a gun owner. And so we're putting together a 20-part series on how not to
shoot your own penis off. So law enforcement officers in the audience, you'll want to check that
one out. Sorry, I just got a notification that Sophie had cancelled ED, which I think is probably
a response to what we're doing right now. Let's start, because there's a lot of news this week
by talking about, frankly, the most important news story in the whole nation right now. On Thursday,
October 2nd, right-wing influencer, Nick Soder, along with two other people.
I know. I know. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I can't.
It's stupid. It's really stupid.
Along with two of the people were arrested by the Portland Police Bureau in connection with a fight outside of the ice building during a protest.
Sorter was provoking reactions from protesters when he was then chased down the street by a woman in a bird costume.
A bird costume?
Quote, swinging a large stick covered with feathers.
I think so it resulted by big bird.
According to the court documents, the three people were arrested at all charge with disorderly conduct, though Sorters' charges have since been dropped.
Sorders arrest ignited a right-wing firestorm, the likes of which I have not seen since Charlie Kirk was assassinated.
I'm glad people are finally waking up to the Antifa Police Department that rules Portland with an iron fist.
It's for a long time.
Tim Poole posted on X-The- Everything app, I'm calling on the Trump administration to launch a legal challenge.
against Oregon following the arrest of Nick Sorder.
And if necessary, deploy National Guard.
Oregon's failed to uphold federal and state law, and we should not tolerate it.
Oh.
And like, yeah, there was like a fight and they detained people.
And then the DA didn't press charges against Sorter.
And it's just, it couldn't be more of a nothing burger as an actual story.
Nothing.
Nothing burger.
Yeah.
But.
Oh, boy.
But not according to.
the AG's office, who quickly responded on it to Tim Poole's request. And by Friday morning,
the White House, the Attorney General and the Justice Department announced a quote-unquote
full investigation into the arrest and the conduct of the Portland Police Bureau.
Finally. Conservative influencer Benny Johnson, who's been embedded with ICE this past week,
posted on Ex the Everything app, quote, important news. I spoke with DHS Secretary,
Christy Noam. She's been briefed on the attack and arrest of journalist Nick
Sorder. Secretary Nome tells me DHS will surge ice resources in Portland, quote,
Antifa is a terrorist group and will not control our streets, unquote. Thank you, Secretary
Noem. Benny Johnson later showed a video captioned, breaking. DHS Secretary Christine Nome has
announced the Department of War will deploy to Portland and Chicago within 24 hours to crush
left-wing violence, unquote. And here is the video with Christine Nome talking about the
quote, unquote, Antifa-affiliated anti-ice protests.
Well, you've got a presence in Portland that is Antifa-affiliated.
And so that is a situation where you have known professionals targeted violence that want to tear down America
and will apparently attack anyone, even journalists that are just trying to report the truth of what's happening on the street.
So we're not just going to be rolling out of Chicago here, but we're sending in the Department of War at the request that I made to,
secretary haggsett they're going to be rolling in here within the next 24 hours they'll be coming
to chicago too i put a request in today for them to come to chicago and we're going to not only have
our officers that are out there with hsi ice but we're also going to have backup from our military
because everybody deserves that and so what we saw happen to that journalist last night
will not happen again okay yeah betty johnson's showing a very professional
journalism there by just saying wow a lot
it's a pretty wild scene having like troops walk behind bristy gnome as this podcaster grills
grils are on sending the military to cities yeah in front of a bad cat the reactions from the
right after after nix order's arrest were pretty wild with journalists going on fox news claiming
that the portland police are affiliated with antifa and popular right wing influencers on
on X, like a muse, saying, quote,
the Portland police are now colluding with Antifa
to prosecute federal officers
protecting the ICE facility.
When has that happened?
Each time federal officers engage with Antifa,
Portland Police Liaisons clutch statements and videos
from Antifa to facilitate state criminal charges
against DHS.
So somehow, in the Year of Our Lord 2025,
the Portland Police Bureau is now Antifa,
which is a truly miraculous state of affairs
after his release Friday morning, Nick Sordor, posted on X,
quote, you've proved what we've all been saying for years.
You're corrupt and controlled by violent Antifa thugs
who terrorized the streets, referring to the Portland police.
I have been in direct contact with top officials at DHS.
What's coming in Portland is unprecedented.
All thanks to Portland police exposing themselves by arresting journalists.
Great work, Portland, unquote.
A day later on October 4th,000.
Fourth, a Trump-appointed federal judge granted the state of Oregon and the city of Portland
a temporary restraining order blocking Trump-and-Hagcess federalization and deployment of 200 Oregon National
Guard against the wishes of Oregon Governor Tina Kotech. The judge found that existing local and
federal law enforcement were sufficient to police protests, that the Trump admin had mischaracterized
the reality of the current protests outside of the ICE facility, and that violence against
ice in other parts of the country is not sufficient justification for a local military deployment.
It's worth noting this judge, Judge Immigate, number one, not a woke judge, was literally,
if you go back and you watch the Monica Lewinsky hearings, or the, I mean, this is the Clinton
sex scandal hearings, but this is the part of it in which Lewinsky was being grilled.
Immigate was the female lawyer that they brought out to be incredibly cruel to Monica Lewinsky
because it wouldn't look as off-putting.
And it wound up,
part of why Monica Lewitsky became,
is she,
immigrant looked fucking nuts.
And immigrant is the person
who is looking at,
who is going through
all of the claims made by the administration
and going,
there's literally,
not only is there no justification
for the deployment of troops in Portland,
but everyone calling the shots
at FPS and ICE
is like everything's under control.
We have no need for additional people.
Yeah.
There's no real danger here.
Like, this is not a left,
judge? This is not a judge with a political axe to grind. This is a judge that 30 years ago
you would have called a far-right extremist. I will quote a little bit from her ruling here,
quote, to accept the defendant's arguments, that's the federal government, would be to render
meaningless the extraordinary requirements of 10 U.S.C. 12406 by allowing the president to federalize
one state's national guard based on the events in a different state or mere speculative.
about future events. In other words, violence elsewhere cannot support troop deployments here,
and concern about hypothetical future conduct does not demonstrate a present inability to execute
the laws using non-military federal law enforcement, unquote.
On the Trump admin's argument that the president's authorized to federalize state National
Guard in the case of rebellion or invasion, the judge concluded that the legal definition of
rebellion requires, quote, first, a rebellion must not only be violent, but also armed. Second, a
rebellion must be organized. Third, a rebellion must be open and avowed. Fourth, a rebellion must be
against the government as a whole, often with the aim of overthrowing the government, rather than
in opposition to a single law or issue. Here, the protests in Portland were not a rebellion and did not
pose a danger of rebellion, especially in the days leading up to the federalization, unquote.
The judge found that the president's federalization of the Oregon National Guard without proper statutory authority under 10 U.S.C. 1-2406,
exceeded the president's constitutional authority, undermined Oregon's sovereignty, and violated the 10th Amendment by infringing on Oregon's constitutional power to control its own National Guard, writing that the Trump admin, quote, interfered with the constitutional balance of power between the federal and state governments, unquote.
Yeah, is that the one where she said their argument?
was untethered from the facts.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think that was a pretty good summary of what's going on here.
Later that day, Stephen Miller went on News Nation to talk about the quote-unquote
insurrectionists, interesting word, in Portland, and the new National Security Presidential
Memorandum to investigate and dismantle so-called left-wing terrorist networks.
We're the federal government.
We are not going to tolerate a lawless insurrection.
We are not going to tolerate domestic terrorism.
and we are going after the Antifa rioters, the insurrectionists, the violent assaulters,
and we are not only going after them, we are going after their network,
we are going after their funders.
Every time we make an arrest, we are initiating an investigation into the entire domestic terrorist network.
The president issued a national security presidential memorandum in NSPM,
making clear that it is the national security priority of the United States law enforcement
to dismantle, disrupt, defeat, and destroy these domestic terrorists.
networks, and that is exactly what is taking place. It is what we are doing. It is what will
happen. His use of the word insurrection there is important. A day later, President Trump also
used the term insurrectionists to describe protests in Portland and complained about the federal
judge who blocked the deployment of National Guard, saying, quote, Portland is burning to the
ground. You have agitators, insurrectionists. All you got to do is look at the television. It's
burning to the ground. The governor, the mayor, the politicians are petrified for their
lives. That judge ought to be ashamed. And again, nothing's been burnt down. Nothing was burnt
down in 2020. Most of the big nights at ice lately have been maybe 200 people. You know,
you've had some more on a few occasions, but like, it's usually a lot less. It's probably just
unnecessary for me to correct all this, but I guess I can't fight the urge to be like,
none of this is accurate to what's happening. Yeah. Yeah. The simulation
is more important than the reality.
Yeah, yeah.
Miller's done this before, right?
Like, he kind of likes to use these words that exist in legislation
and sort of point to the direction he wants things to go, I guess.
Yeah.
Like he did this by calling anti for an enterprise.
We saw this to an extent with Title 42
and his reference to migrants of the public health threat.
This is kind of a trademark move for him almost.
Now, hours after the federal judge blocked the federalization of Oregon National Guard,
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth ordered 300 California National Guard to be deployed to Portland.
And the next day, Texas Governor Greg Abbott authorized 400 Texas National Guard to be sent to Oregon and Illinois in coordination with the Department of War.
On Sunday night, the federal judge that previously blocked the Oregon National Guard federalization made another ruling blocking the deployment of troops from California and Texas, finding that it was, quote, in direct contravention of her earlier T.R.
This secondary TRO halted any federalization, relocation, or deployment of any guard members to Oregon from any state.
The Trump administration has appealed these rulings, and oral arguments will be heard on Thursday, October 9th, in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Stephen Miller called this ruling, quote, one of the most egregious and thunderous violations of constitutional order we have ever seen,
and is yet the latest example of unceasing efforts to nullify the 2024 election by Fiat, unquote.
By Monday, Miller told reporters, without going to specifics, that the president, quote,
has a very broad range and set of authorities when it comes to deploying federal assets, unquote.
And that same day, Monday, Trump discussed the possibility of invoking the Insurrection Act in a White House press conference.
Both the Insurrection Act, sir.
The Insurrection Act, under what conditions or terms would you...
Well, I'd do it if it was necessary.
So far it hasn't been necessary, but we have an insurrection act for a reason.
If I had to enact it, I'd do that.
If people were being killed and courts were holding us up or governors or mares were holding us up,
sure, I do that.
I mean, I want to make sure that people aren't killed.
We have to make sure that our cities are safe.
And it's turning out.
and we started with D.C., it's been so successful.
You look at what's happened with Portland over the years.
It's a burning hellhole, and then you have a judge that lost away
that tries to pretend that, like, there's no problem.
Actually, she's not even saying that.
There's a huge problem in Portland.
I'll tell you what the problem is, crime.
Okay, crime.
It's a huge problem in Chicago.
It's called crime.
and we want to put out the crime
and they want to inflame the crime.
Oh, boy.
Sure.
That's the clear statement we've gotten from the president
on the conditions in which he would infoke
the Insurrection Act, I think,
specifically pointing towards governors, mayors,
or courts that prevent ICE from completing
immigration actions in those cities and counties.
Yeah, and that's the thing that we've gotten from,
that's the most specific indication of things that are,
happening right now that could cause him to do it. We still don't have a direct I'm going to do
it, but I think it's pretty clear from this that he wants to. And these people in these circles
I've been talking about wanting to do it for a long time. And I think this is in some ways the
closest we've gotten to it. Yeah. And that's why you have people like Miller and Trump himself
using the word insurrection when describing what's happening to establish a pretext to actually
follow through on that and declare the Insurrection Act when it suits them. Yeah.
I think it's worth noting Miller's doing out.
Miller is often the originator of many of these kind of legal theories.
This one has made its way to Trump.
I'm going to declare an ad break,
and then we will return to finish our reporting on war-ravaged Portland.
Okay, we are back.
DHS Secretary Christy Knoem has made some pretty fantastic claims about the nature of these protests and the threats facing ICE agents, both in Chicago and Portland.
And I'm just going to play her clip from Fox News here talking about the threats to ice.
Our intelligence indicates that these people are organized.
They're getting more and more people on their team as far as attacking officers, and they're making plans to ambush them and to kill them.
We have specific officers and agents that have
bounties that have been put out on their heads.
It's been $2,000 to kidnap them, $10,000 to kill them.
They've released their pictures.
They've sent them between their networks,
and it's an extremely dangerous situation and unprecedented.
So we've put protective detail around those individuals,
change some of our operations to keep our officers safe.
But make no mistake, this isn't just about, you know,
protesting free speech or that they don't like
that people out here are upholding the law of our
country. They're actually going out there and saying kill these people and we'll give you this much
money to do it. It's quite a specific claim, isn't it? What she's doing there is conflating
alleged cartel bounties on ice agents with protests happening outside of ice facilities, making it
sound like the protesters are putting $10,000 kill bounties on ice officers. Man, let me tell you,
Nobody who's out at ice right now has collectively 10 grand to put towards a bounty.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What are we doing here?
Oh.
On Tuesday, October 7th, Christy Noam arrived in Portland, Oregon, along with her conservative podcaster sidekick, Benny Johnson, who has been live streaming Ice Operations in Chicago with Noem.
Benny posted on X the Everything app.
Breaking.
DHS secretary, Christy Noam, stares down.
army of Antifa
and a guy in a chicken suit
from the rooftop of the ice facility
here in Portland
finally someone took that chicken guy down to size
I want to play the video that I think
one of us should like set this stage
for like what we're seeing
Secretary do you have a message
to the protesters especially the man
in the chicken outfit
man in the chicken outfit I just see him now
goodness sakes
he can do better
our goal is that people
would peacefully protest but
that we would still be allowed
to enforce the law in this country.
So it's too bad.
They're uneducated and ill-informed.
If you look at this protest,
there's about, what,
20 people on the street corner
adjacent to the ice facility,
nearly as many journalists and photographers
as there are protesters.
And this is what Benny Johnson is describing
as an army of Antifa.
It's these 20 people holding signs
across from, like, a police line
from the edge of the ice facility.
At a later point, Benny zooms into another street corner,
which similarly has about a dozen people
over one block away from the ice facility.
This is the Army of Antifa that Benny Johnson is referring to
as he, along with Nick Sorder,
stand with Christie Gnome on the roof of the ice facility,
surveying the area,
which is just a fantastical sequence of events.
We time traveled and told me that five years
ago that Christy Noem and Betty Johnson are going to be on the roof of the ice facility calling
a man in a chicken outfit, an army of Antifa. I guess I could believe you, but I would still be
upset. I guess it would still be upsetting. I wouldn't be happy, but I wouldn't like, I wouldn't
like argue with you. I'd be like, yeah, I mean, that sounds like a natural extension of where
things are at this point in time. On Tuesday night, Noam went on Fox News to talk about a meeting
she had with local law enforcement and the mayor, where she threatened to send four times as many
federal forces into Portland, Oregon. Sure, man. I told them what we wanted. We wanted more
security here at the building, a bigger buffer zone to keep our officers safe. We wanted to have
their streets opened up again and not let the anarchists run this city anymore, that we would
ask them to continue to back us up like we've been asking for instead of what they've been doing
the last several months, which is just leaving our officers hang out to dry.
The chief asked if I wanted to meet with the mayor, and I said, absolutely, came back and just met with a mayor, and I'm so extremely disappointed.
He's continuing to play politics, did not commit to any of those promises and said that he'd give me an answer by tomorrow, and I'm hopeful that he will.
What I told him is that if he did not follow through on some of these security measures for our officers, we were going to cover him up with more federal resources, and that we were going to send four times the amount of federal officers here so that the people of Portland could have.
have some safety. Again, almost no one's even there. I can't exaggerate the degree to which this
is not a major factor in 99% of people's day to day, because number one, where the ice facility
is is cordoned off from the rest of the city. Like, pretty isolated chunk. It's isolated, you
might say. And number two, just like most people that I know who were out in 2020, don't really have a
clear idea of what they should be doing right now or what the most useful thing to do is right
now and have spent a lot of time in front of federal riot lines and aren't right now. And
like it's this this complete disconnect between what's actually going on in the city and like
what's what's being reported, which doesn't matter really. Like it doesn't impact anything that
everything they're saying is a lie. Yeah. Because their people believe it. It's just kind of
frustrating. No, and this information is all in the TRO document that blocked the deployment of National
Guard. Quote, plaintiffs provided all of the PPB call logs in the month of September, which
showed that Portland Police Bureau worked in close coordination with federal protective service supervisors
and regularly checked the status of the ICE facility. As detailed above, they also show that
protest activity in September generally did not involve violence against federal property or
personnel, unquote. Portland Police Bureau have been,
working in coordination to manage the protests outside the ice building. They've not abandoned
ice officers. That's not actually what's happening. A federal judge is deemed that local law enforcement
are more than sufficient to handle the protests outside of the ice facility. The Trump government
just really wants to send the military into cities, as they've already done with D.C., as they were
wanting to do with Memphis, Chicago, Portland, eventually like New Orleans. This is just something
that they really want to do. On Tuesday, October 7th,
Texas National Guard arrived in Illinois and are currently stationed in an Army Reserve Center in a
suburb south of Chicago. Sunday night, Governor Pritzker made a statement reading, quote,
this evening President Trump is ordering 400 members of the Texas National Guard for deployments
to Illinois, Oregon, and other locations within the United States. We must now start calling this
what it is, Trump's invasion. It's started with federal agents. It will soon include deploying
federalized members of the Illinois National Guard against our wishes, and it will now involve sending
in another state's military troops. There is no reason a president should send military troops
into a sovereign state without their knowledge, consent, or cooperation. Unquote. The state of Illinois
announced that they would be seeking their own TRO against Trump's military deployment. The Illinois
Attorney General said in a statement, quote, the American people, regardless of where they reside,
should not live under the threat of occupation by the United States military, particularly for the
reason that their city or state leadership has fallen out of a president's favor, unquote.
And on Monday, Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson signed an executive order establishing city property and unwilling private businesses as ice-free zones and discuss the deployment of troops from out of state by warning, quote, the right wing in this country wants a rematch of the civil war, unquote.
Yeah, and so we have a kind of breaking news update, which is, so this is being recorded on Wednesday, October 8th.
It's possible this will again change by the time this comes out. The most recent information we have is,
This is reported by CBS per a statement from U.S. Northern Command, which is part of the Defense Department.
War Department, but yes.
They're sending 500 troops.
I'm just going to read a direct quote.
Illinois, approximately 200 soldiers from various units of the Texas National Guard and approximately 300 soldiers from various units of the Illinois National Guard were activated into a Title X status and have arrived in the greater Chicago area.
The National Guard were mobilized for an initial period of 60 days, will be under the command.
and control of the commander of U.S. Northern Command.
Yeah.
So that's where we are right now.
Yeah.
There is out-of-state guard deployed into Illinois.
Yeah.
Like, they are in the borders of the state right now.
Yeah.
When Hanks has tried to deployed California National Guard to Oregon,
it's unclear how many of them actually arrived in Oregon.
But we do have confirmation and photos of Texas Guard in the borders of Illinois.
Yep.
This morning, Donald Trump trothed on truth social.
that, quote, Chicago mayor should be in jail for failing to protect ICE officers,
Governor Pritzker, also, unquote.
This is the president of the United States calling for the jailing of a mayor and governor.
Yeah, he's also more recently calling for the jailing of everyone who burns American flags
and an amount of a year in prison.
Again, the legality here is deeply unclear.
There's not a legal underpinning for that, other than he's instructed the DOJ to start
going after those folks, but.
Yeah, this is just words that he's saying.
saying, but I think the words that he's saying are sometimes, not always, but sometimes important.
Yeah. Yeah. So I want to turn from here to the other occupation of Chicago, the one that has
been doing significant damage already in the city as we have been covering, which is the ice
and border patrol deployment in Chicago. There's been more escalations that we are going to spend a
small amount of time talking about. ICE has begun detaining unhoused people.
We have reports of 11 total people they've detained so far. Most of them have been released,
but the most prominent, and this is something that Brandon Johnson specifically mentioned in his speech,
was four people who were taken in Chicago neighborhood called Broadview, who were outside a shelter,
according to Chicago reader. We don't know where they are. As of Wednesday, they're just gone.
No one has been able to trace them down.
Yeah, and this seems to be part of a broader trend of ICE agents taking action against people who, I mean, appeared to be U.S. citizens.
We saw this a couple, like last week with, and this is another thing that Brennan Johnson specifically mentioned with him, with ICE agents just choking a black man out on the street.
The major story is that there has been a second shooting by ICE in Chicago.
what we know for sure about this shooting
is that on Saturday morning
an ice agent shot a woman
named Merrimar Martinez
who appeared to have been part of a group
that was following ice vehicles
around the city
Martinez was shot
and drove herself to a nearby
auto repair shop
where medics and police showed up
I'm going to read
the Sun Times' account
from the shop manager
which they spoke to
of what happened
when she got to the body shop,
quote,
the shop manager spoke with a 911 operator
and said, send somebody quickly
because this lady is bleeding profusely,
I mean, it was instant puddles.
Police and paramedics showed up a few minutes later,
he said, as paramedics place a turn kit
on Martinez's leg and arm,
a bullet fell out of her arm
and onto the shop floor, the manager said.
Martinez, thankfully, does not seem to have been
really, really severely injured.
She is in stable medical condition.
Now, DHS put out a press release almost immediately claiming that their agents were, quote,
ambushed by domestic terrorists that ran federal agents with their vehicles, and that, quote,
Nortina's woman they shot was, quote, armed with a semi-onic-matic weapon and has a history of doxing federal agents.
Now, it is worth noting that best practice when looking at Department of Homeland Security statements,
especially under the Trump administration, is to simply assume that they are not telling the truth until any details they have mentioned
are corroborated. What the exact situation was before the shooting is very unclear. Both Department
of Homeland Security and federal prosecutors have claimed that a group of cars basically boxed in an
ice vehicle, and there have been repeated claims that they were rammed in the ice vehicle,
and that's why the ICE agent opened fire. That's the DHS's claims, yeah. Yeah, this is the
DHS's claims, and these are the claim that are made in court documents, I want to read from
the Sun-Times also Martinez's lawyer's description of what's going on, because it is
significantly different from the government's account. And it's also worth mentioning that there's
already been some deviation between the court documents and the DHS statement. For example,
the court, the DHS statement mentions a semi-automatic weapon, and there's just simply no mention of that
in any of the sort of charging documents,
the deadly weapon that she's being accused
of doing an assault with,
which is what she's been charged with is the car.
Yeah, so here's from the Sun-Times.
So Parenty, who is her attorney,
Prenti also offered to play an agent's body cam video
that shows the shooting,
noting prosecutors did not show the video
that he claims disputes the government's version of the shooting.
Parenti said the video shows an agent
turning a federal vehicle left into Martinez's vehicle
after which the agent says
quote, do something bitch
the agent then exits the vehicle
and shoots Martinez
the attorney said Martinez had quote
seven holes in her from the shooting
and that agents were in such a hurry to take her
into custody at the hospital
that they had to return later when Martinez
began bleeding from her wounds
yeah
so this is a significantly different
portrayal of the shooting
we do not have access to this body cam
footage yet. It has not been released to the public.
There is a video
that we do have that does not show
the shooting that shows some of the stuff leading up
to the shooting from
that sort of auto repair shop that she
went to. It is still very
unclear what
exactly happened here other than the fact
that I shot this woman. That's the
only thing that we 100% know.
She does have a concealed
carry license and had a
handgun in the car
with her. Yeah. The lawyer's
have claimed she never brandished the weapon
and it was in the passenger seat.
And there's no evidence that she did brandish the weapon.
No. No. No.
Nor is ICE even claiming that.
Like, Ice isn't even claiming that she brandished weapon.
ICE isn't claiming that she fired a weapon.
No, the ICE's a specific claim is that when she was arrested later,
she had the weapon on her, which could refer to the vehicle or whatever.
Yeah.
Well, and I will say, so the initial Department of Homeland Security
press statement said that she was armed with a semi-a-edic weapon.
I think a lot of people.
took that to mean, you know, because DHS was implying stuff by saying that she was armed with,
even though she was not. Yeah, they're inhabiting the ambiguity of that verb, right?
Yeah, right. They also said that they fired defensively, which makes you infer that this person
may have fired at ICE, even though DHS has never actually claimed that. They are trying to
selectively use words to make people infer things that they're not even actually explicitly
claiming. Yeah. Yeah. And we're going to have to get more details.
and we're going to have to wait
to see
exactly what happened
but what the evidence
supports right now
is that ICE shot
someone who was doing
rapid response work
and it is
frankly a miracle
that she wasn't
severely injured or killed
and this is again
the second time
they have done this
since ISIS deployment
in the city
the first time
they did just straight up
kill a man
so we'll be following
the story as
as it develops, we'll be following
the continued actions of ice
in Chicago and other places.
Yeah.
And we will continue
to talk about stuff
after these ads.
All right,
and we are back.
Me was talking about rapid resources.
funders there, and I want to talk a little bit about one of the tools that they were using,
which was called People Over Papers. There are many of these apps that have sprung up since
the January of this year, right, since we saw much more visible immigration enforcement on
the streets. Padlet, which was the, I guess, bulletin board type service that was people over papers
relied on, has removed people over papers, right? Padlet said it violated their terms of service.
The removal comes just a few days after a Laura Luma tweet,
which tag the CEO, claimed that people over papers was violating the terms of service
by, quote, harassment, stalking, privacy violations, inciting violence,
and other unlawful activity.
Luma there is noting things in the terms of service that she perceives people to be doing
with people over papers, right?
Yeah.
This has happened after another of these apps, ICE Block was removed from app stores last week,
that also involved some Luma posting.
Notably, Trisha McLaughlin, the DHS Assistant to Secretary for Public Affairs, has claimed,
and this is in contravention of what's widely held to be caught precedent and the law.
She has claimed that videotaping ice agents is doxing them.
And separately, Christy Noam has claimed that doxing is an act of violence.
We can join the two dots there.
Did videotaping ice agents is an act of violence.
seems to be what's being suggested here.
We can see the consequences of this argument
in the deportation of Atlanta area report on Mario Ovarra.
Mario was held for more than 100 days in detention.
He was arrested in no Kingsday protest,
if you can remember back when people were doing those things,
but the charges against him were dropped.
However, since then, the government has argued
that his filming of law enforcement constitutes a threat to public safety.
Murray has now been deported back to El Salvador
he's an Atlanta area reporter and like
I guess to editorialize it would be really nice to see
a fraction of the advocacy we saw for Jimmy Kimmel
for someone who's actually doing reporting right
not just trying to be funny
he's not as big as Jimmy Kimmel doesn't have his any followers
yeah yeah but but he's he's also being sent to El Salvador
where is Jimmy Kimmel like
was sent back to his mansion in Hollywood
yeah exactly for like
less than a week. So I'm going to link in the show notes both to an advocacy campaign and the
Freedom of the Press Foundation piece about Mario. And you guys can check that out if you'd like to.
Second character for this week is Tom Homan. You guys will remember Tom Homan, Bordersah,
a guy who famously, well, relatively recently has become famous for seemingly accepting a bag with
$50,000 of cash in it, an FBI sting operation.
Let's play this clip of Pam Bondi, who is answering questions
to front of Congress here about what happened to the literal bag of cash.
What became of the $50,000 in cash that the FBI paid to Mr. Homan in a paper bag,
evidently.
Oh, my God.
Tom and Jerry asked shit.
She's looking through her notes right now.
She's selected the page.
Senator, as Deputy Attorney General
Todd Blanche recently stated,
the investigation of Mr. Holman
was subjected to a full review by the FBI.
Agents and DOJ prosecutors.
They found no credible evidence
of any wrongdoing.
And that was not my question.
My question was,
what became of the $50,000 in cash that the FBI delivered, evidently in a paper bag, to Mr.
Holman?
Senator, I'd look at your facts.
Are you saying that they did not deliver $50,000 in cash to Mr. Holmes?
Senator, as recently stated, the investigation of Mr. Holman was subjected to a full review by the FBI agents,
by Department of Justice process.
They found no evidence of wrongdoing.
That's a different question.
What became of the $50,000?
Did the FBI get it back?
Mr. White House, excuse me, Senator White House, you're welcome to talk to the FBI.
The report to you, can't you answer this question?
First of all, this guy's name is Mr. White House.
Yeah, this guy's name is Senator White House, Garrison.
That surely is a little confusing.
Yeah, maybe he gets some emails for the wrong person.
Sheldon Whitehouse, apparently, it's his first name.
Theoretically, if he got a job for the administration, his email will be
Whitehouse at whitehouse.gov.
Yes.
That's cool.
Yeah.
Unfortunately, it doesn't look like that's going to happen, given the line of questioning
that he pursued here.
But yeah, you can hear, right?
She seems to be unwilling to answer where the paper bag of cash money
Of $50,000 has gone.
Incredible stuff.
Look, it's easier to lose that than you'd think.
One would assume that the FBI would have some kind of tracking capability when giving someone $50,000 in a paper bag.
But here we are.
Maybe it's a no country for old mint kind of situation.
Whoever found it was smart enough to dump the transponder first.
We will probably never know.
If they're smart, yeah.
Well, building on that, what ProPublicer is now reported?
is that Homan went into business with a Pennsylvania consultant named Charles Sowell
and that Seoul has been offering consults on how to obtain contracts at the Department of Homeland Security.
So Homan consulted for Sowell's firm during the Biden administration.
And during the same period, Seoul became the chair of Homan's Border 9-1-1 Foundation,
according to their reporting.
ProPublica has called into question the extent to which Homan has actually recused himself from contract.
saying that he participated in meetings with executives about government contracting plans.
So normally a government official would be bound to steer clear of their former business associates for at least a year when they enter office, right?
I can't like consult for Garrison Inc and then become procurement for DHS and immediately buy a thousand of whatever Garrison Inc is selling.
You can you can tag Garrison on Blue Sky where they will read what you think they're selling.
If this will result in me getting $50,000 in a paper bag, then, you know, maybe.
Yeah, in this instance, I would be the one getting the $50,000 from Garrison Inc and return
for buying whatever it is you're selling, orbs, maybe.
Yeah, that's not a great deal.
Yeah, I did, yeah, it seems like it was a great deal in this instance.
For Tom Homan, yeah.
Well, their reporting suggests that Herman went from a relatively modest income in 2017 to being a
multi-millionaire by the time he filed his 2025 disclosure documents.
When you assume federal office, you have to file these disclosure documents,
disclose your assets.
I guess the famous one is Jimmy Carter's peanut farm.
But it seems that during that time, his personal net worth increased significantly, right?
He did a lot of consulting.
He became like a talking head on Fox News in the Biden administration.
It's difficult to summarize the intricacies of the story.
I encourage you to read it.
For instance, there's a third person called Mark Hall.
who appears to be doing some work on behalf of Homan,
but also retaining a relationship with Seoul's clients.
It looks a lot like what's happening is that the people who Homan had been doing
consulting with are now trying to make money saying that they have special access to
DHF based off their consulting.
This kind of builds on some of the stuff that we'd already seen and spoken about last week.
Finally, on the immigration beat, I want to talk about a case where the petitioners are
attorney has stated that the petitioner, I'm not going to name the person, I don't think
it's necessary, was taken to hospital by CBP after they severely injured his leg on a raid
in a car wash in Carson, California. He was booked into the hospital under a pseudonym and
kept there under armed guard from August the 27th until October 4th.
Jesus Christ. Yeah. So this person, they weren't coming up in the detainee located.
right? They hadn't apparently been allocated an A number, which is what you'd normally
use to look someone up on the ICE detainee locator. And I guess the argument there was that
they weren't booked in, so they left the hospital. So this person basically disappeared
for more than a month. The judge has granted that petitioner at attentive restraining order
in that instance. Right. But I think it's how I have been receiving a lot of messages about
a Chicago older person who was detained by ICE at a hospital. And I have seen a number of
of reports that suggest that that's because ICE were detaining people in the hospital.
To my knowledge, the only person they detained in the hospital was the older person.
They were not detaining patients at the hospital.
They were there because they had bought somebody to the hospital in order for that person to be a patient
because that person was in their detention, in their care, and needed medical assistance.
I have seen outlets.
I don't, should I name them?
Like, democracy now got this wrong and said that they were arrested.
people. So like democracy now is one example, right? I have seen outlets reporting this as
ICE were in the hospital detaining people. Nothing I have seen leads me to believe that
and lots of things I have seen lead me not to believe that. It doesn't mean it's great
for the people who are brought into hospital by ICE. I'm sure it has a chilling effect on
other people going to hospital to know that they are there. But so does reporting that suggests that
you can be picked up in hospital if you're an inpatient or if you're in the emergency room. That
stops people accessing medical care that actively puts people in danger.
We need to be really, really fucking careful when sharing this shit.
That includes people who are journalists or claiming to be journalists.
People are so upset rightly, so with what ICE is doing, that there can be this attitude,
and I've encountered it before, of like, well, by under-cautioning people, that's the biggest risk.
And it's like, not when we're talking about whether or not people go to the hospital for life-saving care.
Like, not, I'm sorry, it's just not.
Like, these are not equivalent risks.
More people are going to be in a position where they would be scared off from going to the hospital
and not in any danger from ICE going to it than might possibly be in danger going to the hospital.
Like, you were just endangering people by trying to get them to believe it is not safe for them to go receive life-saving emergency medical care at this stage.
Now, is it possible that's going to change?
Good God, I'm certainly not going to say no, right?
I'm certainly not going to say no.
100%. But that's not where we are right now.
Just over-cautioning people is not a net good in this instance.
Yeah, absolutely.
Sometimes it is, but not here because, again, if people don't go to the hospital on time, they die.
Yeah, yeah.
And I'm aware of cases where people with genuinely life-threatening medical emergencies
have been had to be persuaded to go to the hospital by people, right?
Because they had seen this.
Because these rumors don't just spread via social media, but also by WhatsApp groups and things.
And it can be very scary for people.
Well, and people largely construct their beliefs on reality by, like, what the weight of the people that they know directly or follow are saying is true.
And when you see 50 people, some of whom you kind of know, some of whom you've at least followed to an extent online, all say, this is unsafe, then there's a tendency to get really angry when people are like, well, I don't know, maybe it isn't actually.
Yeah, like, I mean, I care about the safety of migrants in this country.
I think anyone who looked at a totality of my work would believe that, right?
Like, it's ludicrous to suggest otherwise that means I want them to go to hospital when they're fucking sick.
And that means that people who are saying things that are not true.
I understand why, right?
It lines up with the other things that we know to be true.
ICE is doing terrible shit.
Shit is terrible.
But it is still an area where we need to exercise extreme caution when reporting on things until we know that it is true.
that I saw coming into hospital and taking people out of the beds, which again, not a thing
that I think is happening. Let's pivot a little bit to public lands, something that I think about a lot
that we don't always report on here, but that I think is very important. I want to talk about
the roadless rule today. So September saw the end of the comment period. It was a very short
comment period on the Trump administration's proposal to rescind the roadless rule. The roadless rule,
if you're not familiar, protects over 58.8 million acres of national forest land
from road building, logging, and other industrial activity.
According to the Centre for Western Priorities,
99% of the comments submitted, of which there were more than 180,000,
were opposed to rescinding the rule, right?
The Reddust rule has previously had broad bipartisan support.
It was not a particularly controversial thing.
Agriculture Secretary Brook Rawlins announced a proposal early in the same,
summer, saying it would increase logging and decrease wildfire risk.
Research suggests that the opposite is true.
Cutting roads into forests provides more admission opportunities, right?
By allowing people to go into those forests, you allow those people to do things which
lead to fires happening.
Right.
They're cars overheat.
They smoke cigarettes.
They fucking shoot steel targets in the middle of the summer.
I mean, we just had a guy brought in for the Palisade fires, and he was like a 29-year-old
Uber driver who had was having clearly a bad mental health day called in after he set a fire
but kind of made weird denials about it and like fled to Florida and it it kind of just looks
like he was listening to a song where there were people lighting fires and decided to light
a fire and it got way out of control way too quickly yeah and it wasn't even the same night like
it took like a week because like they put out the initial fire but it kept burning through
thick underbrush which eventually got re-hobbed that that's my understanding based on the
animals that I've read. But like, yeah, it's, it's, I mean, in that case, it's just a guy who's not
super well. Yeah, sure. And like, the other thing that cutting rose will do is it will change
of foliage, right? You'll cut down the big trees and you'll have smaller shrubs and those are
easier to burn the big trees, right? The Wilderness Society has some data on this. I think they found
that Forests with roads were four times more likely to have fires. I will link to that Wilderness
society data. The road just rule was passed under the Clinton admin, and it's being rescinded
as part of a March executive order, which sought to increase U.S. timber production.
I want to note that there will not be guys with chainsaws rolling into your favorite national
forest, like next week or next month, right? Building these roads would have to be financed by the
United States Forest Service, which is, of course, currently, well, if you go on the forest website,
forest service website, it'll tell you that radical left Democrats have shut down the federal government,
now in a pop-up.
You did it, guys.
Yeah, so the Forest Service is finally coming out against the woke left.
But, yeah, the Forest Service would have to finance these, and it's currently understaffed
because of the voluntary and Doge-based layoffs.
It's not particularly well-funded.
I don't see the Forest Service going in for a lot of road construction, but it might be
wrong, where Trump-Teneli seems to see not importing timber as a major issue.
I'm not quite sure why.
I guess it was an issue in Britain
when they had to respond to the Spanish Armada.
They cut down a lot of trees back then.
Not familiar with it.
Very similar situation.
Yeah, yeah. National security issue.
I think we can agree, right?
The Spanish...
I mean, I'm just excited that now I can finally drive my ATV
through these, you know, environmentally protected areas.
You're goddamn right, Garrison.
Without getting harassed by the park service.
Yeah, but a woke left.
I'm going to be the drunkest guy on an ATV and Joshua tree.
I'm going to drive straight.
for the biggest tree I can find.
Anything over a thousand years old
is fair game for my bumper baby.
Sit close to home, man.
I'm sorry, James.
James is seething right now.
James is going to fucking cut me.
If I see anyone stealing or destroying a Joshua tree,
I will insert it.
I would never harm a Joshua tree.
I would never harm a Joshua tree.
There's one kind of tree I will harm indiscriminately
and it's a tree of paradise.
But that's good for the environment.
Fuck those trees, kill them wherever you find them.
I think the only Joshua tree it's okay to hate is the album by you too.
Yeah, that's also.
Burn every copy of the album Joshua tree that you find.
Yeah, I'm okay with destroy it, erase it from the earth.
Run over those with an ATV.
Yeah, I wouldn't mind if that became extinct.
Why not?
Yeah.
Me, do you want to talk about terrorists?
We're talking about timber.
And, of course, there has been recently a tariff on Canadian lumber,
woke trees coming in from our neighbors to the north.
So perhaps that's why we need to destroy our national forests.
I mean, Canada kind of is destroying theirs, and they still have trees to export.
Yeah, I guess one thing I haven't said about public land that you should always say when you're talking about public land is that it's all native land, actually.
And the framing of public land is a place for white folks to recreate.
It's not the correct framing.
It's not how we win this fight.
And you should also, if you care about not just the damage that fires do, but conservation in general, and you ever get the opportunity to go through, like up here in the Pacific Northwest, you can go through chunks of the forest that are managed by the state.
are managed by the Bureau of Land Management, and then you can go through chunks of
forests that are managed by the indigenous communities. And the way in which forests are
managed is very different. Yeah. And different in a way that one is the right way to do it,
and the other two aren't. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, this is land that was all stolen
from its indigenous stewards by means of genocide, and we should give it back. And it's not
just a matter of that's the right thing to say, but also that is the
the right way to preserve those lands.
Yeah.
The people who have been
in the stewardshiphip of those lands
so much the only than America
has been a country.
Anyway, watch the I think
1991 movie Clearcut,
which is set in Canada,
but a fucking banger.
Real good movie.
Check it out.
I don't know if those two things
are compatible.
What?
Canada and a banger.
Yeah.
Hey, come on.
It's good.
It's about an indigenous activist
and a white lawyer.
Okay.
You don't like Cronenberg, James?
What's wrong with you?
Renenberg's a beer.
He's fighting this Canadian.
Canadians make great movies.
It's really good.
It's about this like liberal white lawyer who's fighting like a logging company and this indigenous activist who takes him and kidnaps the head of the logging company and takes them into the forest.
And that's all I'll tell you about the movie.
It is a fucking banger.
I don't go on this podcast and make fun of your home country, James.
Garrison Davis.
You will all, by the way, like Clearcut.
Watch that fucking movie.
It rits.
Yeah.
Tariff talk.
Yeah.
Jesus Christ.
Movie Tariff.
Look at that for a fucking segue.
Yeah.
Okay.
In lightning round, we have two pivot points here.
We're going to go for the timber pivot instead of the movie.
pivot. Okay. So lightning round. Trump is imposing a 10% tariff on softwood lumber, a 25%
tariff on upholstered furniture, and 25% tariff on kitchen cabinets and vanities.
IKEA is the thing. Ikea is losing their minds. The entire Chay's long industry is
collapsing in Canada as we speak. Yeah. So this is going to be in effect October 14th.
Get him now. And then also these tariffs are scheduled to
increase at the beginning of next year. The upholstered furniture tariffs are increasing to 30
percent and the kitchen cabinet and vanity tariffs are increasing to 50 percent at the beginning
of next year. Oh yeah. The idea that there's a vanity tariff is very funny to me. Like not as a
noun, but just like as a concept. Yeah. These are nominally lumber industry tariffs. I think
there's some kind of housing development brain inside of Trump's head.
rattling around as to why there's suddenly tariffs on vanities and upholtered furniture.
Who knows?
Baffling.
The Canadian government has been attempting to lift the tariffs.
It has not worked.
Negotiations once again failed today, which is October 8th.
Okay, bouncing from that to something that's also very important,
Blashid weight, significantly more important.
So one of the issues with the current government shutdown is the threat to the special supplemental
nutrition program for women, infants, and children.
which is normally called WIC.
WIC funding is
extraordinarily important
because it feeds several million people.
And, okay, this story is very, very weird
because we haven't gotten any direct thing
about how this would work outside of
the press secretary saying it,
but the press secretary is saying
that Trump is going to fund this program
with the money from
one of the tariff programs.
Yeah.
Now, it is worth noting that this is just very unconstitutional,
exceptionally unconstitutional,
is a violation of the part of the separation of powers
where they say that Congress is the thing that levies taxes
and decide where the money goes.
But it's also, it's not clear if this is even happening
or how it could even remotely happen,
but it is being reported.
WIC has been a program that Trump has been using
to push his narrative about the government shutdown,
Yeah, I think 40% of children are on WIC right now.
Like, this is an extremely important program.
It's one of those things where, like, again,
there was complete bipartisan and support apart aside from complete lunatics until very,
like, you would never have heard like a fuck WIC statement.
It's done a lot of good for a lot of people who need a lot of help.
I did see a statement from the WIC Council that basically asserted that, like,
look, we'd be excited if you would keep us,
keep WIC funded, but using tariff money is not a sustainable or, like, reliable approach
to do this, just fund it by playing for government programs in the U-4 way.
Yeah.
So the other major tariff news that we have is basically for the last couple of weeks,
Trump has been threatening to impose 100% tariffs on pharmaceuticals.
This was originally supposed to go into effect on October 1st, and then Trump started cutting
a bunch of deals with drug manufacturers to exchange sort of lower price agreements. And also,
and this is the major significant element, as we've seen with the whole bunch of companies
that have made deals with Trump pledges of large-scale investments in U.S. manufacturing and production.
These tariffs have sort of been staved off. And the administration is now saying that they won't do it
because they don't need to, because they have reached agreements for drug companies.
Pfizer was the first major company to sign a deal.
This has been part of an initiative called Trump RX,
which is supposedly coming in 2026.
Man.
Yeah.
And the plan is to have direct-to-consumer drug sales
by forcing these companies to give the U.S. most favored nation status,
which, like, basically the thrust of this is giving specifically this Trump RX thing.
the prices that these drug companies charge to undeveloped countries. However, comma, and this is
extremely important to not being reported very much, Trump R-X, assuming this program comes into
being, you can't use insurance on it. You can only buy drugs off there. You would only be able to
buy drugs off there without insurance, so it probably doesn't lower your drug costs at all if you
have really any kind of insurance. It certainly lowers the cost your insurance company has to pay,
right, like if you're insured badly. Yeah, right. You know, and so,
The actual good that this could even potentially do, I think, is very, very limited.
Yeah.
But that's sort of what's going on.
This is the part of the initiative.
If you see people talking about how he's lowering drug prices, it's specifically for this weird Trump RX thing, which, again, you can't use insurance to use.
There's been a few other tariffs that he's talked about, and I kind of want to set a spectrum of how real a tariff is because there's a whole much different kinds of tariffs that Trump announces and then nothing happens on.
Yeah.
So, for example, you can have a kind of tariff where he announces it on social media, but there's no date, right?
So the 100% tariff on foreign-made movies.
This is the second time he's talked about it.
There's never been a date attached to it.
It seems to be something that he tweets about and then forgets about it never happens.
On the more real end, there are tariffs like the one that is currently being proposed as 25% tariff on heavy trucks that's supposed to go into effect in November 1st, but there is no executive order.
So that one we can't treat as real as, for example, the lumber tariffs, which have an executive order.
Although also, again, you have to wait for these to actually go into effect, which would be category sort of three and four are, is there an executive order and has the date of the executive order doing the thing past?
So we have a couple of floating tariffs from there.
We have those 25% tariffs on heavy trucks, which is supposed to go into fact November first.
assuming it's an executive order, we have this
film tariff. Which is the
scariest tariff by far. 100%
tariffs on foreign made films.
What are they tariffing that?
Time to hoist the black flag again, my friends.
No one has any idea
what that means. We have no clue. Absolutely not.
We have no clue how this would work.
No detail. Okay. He just said 100%
on foreign films. Okay. Sick.
Good. I'm glad that everyone's equally
clear on that. Get back to torrenting, people.
I think the final thing we should
talk about is so on November 5th, the Supreme Court,
is going to start hearing the case against a bunch of the tariffs that Trump has been
doing. We've talked about this before. The Trump administration has also stated that even if
these tariffs are found unconstitutional, they are going to continue to apply tariffs themselves
using other laws. That's good. Even if they lose the Supreme Court case, that doesn't mean
that all the tariffs are suddenly just not going to happen anymore. He will probably try to
reimpose a whole bunch of them under different tariff authority and we'll go through this whole process
again. But yeah, this has been, this has been tariff talk. Great. Okay, so I have a fundraiser for you.
We're doing Buket again. Buket Tan is an Alavi Kurdish woman because of her beliefs and her
ethnicity. She found it very hard to live in Turkey. We've documented Turkey and Kurdish people's
relations quite a lot on this podcast. She is now living in Southern California and she needs to raise
money to pay her lawyer for her asylum case. And the website for that is gofundme.com
slash F slash urgent hyphen help, hyphen 4, hymn, bouquette, B-U-K-E-T-S, hyphen asylum,
hyphen case, or you can just click it in the show notes. If you would like to contact us
with a news tip, you can do so by emailing CoolZone Tips at Proton.me. It will be encrypted
if you use another proton email address from one end to the other end.
So if that is something that is a concern for you, that is how you can reach out.
We reported someone's news.
We reported the news.
Yeah.
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.
from CoolZone Media, visit our website,
poolzonemedia.com,
or check us out on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
You can now find sources where it could happen here
listed directly in episode descriptions.
Thanks for listening.
Ah, come on, why is this taking so long?
This thing is ancient.
Still using yesterday's tech, upgrade
to the ThinkPad X-1 Carbon,
ultra-light, ultra-powerful,
and built for serious productivity
with Intel core ultra-processors,
blazing speed and AI power performance that keeps up with your business, not the other way around.
Whoa, this thing moves. Stop hitting snooze on new tech. When the tech search at Lenovo.com.
Lenovo, Lenovo. Unlock AI experiences with the ThinkPad X1 carbon powered by Intel Core Ultra processors
so you can work, create, and boost productivity all on one device.
Hey, it's Ed Helms, host of Snafu, my podcast about history's greatest screw-ups.
On our new season, we're bringing you a new snafu every single episode.
32 lost nuclear weapons.
You're like, wait, stop, what?
Yeah, it's going to be a whole lot of history, a whole lot of funny, and a whole lot of fabulous guests.
Paul Shearer, Angela and Jenna, Nick Kroll, Jordan, Klepper.
Listen to season four of Snafu with Ed Helms on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The murder of an 18-year-old girl.
in Graves County, Kentucky went unsolved for years until a local housewife, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story.
America, y'all better wake the hell up. Bad things happens to good people in small towns.
Listen to Graves County on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
the entire season, ad-free.
Subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
In the 1980s, modeling wasn't just a dream.
It was a battlefield.
It's a freaking war zone.
These people are animals.
The Model Wars podcast peels back the glossy cover
and reveals a high-stakes game
where survival meant more than beauty.
Hosted by me, Vanessa Grigoriatis,
this is the untold story of an industry built
a ruthless ambition.
Listen to Model Wars on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
