Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 226
Episode Date: April 4, 2026All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. - The Trans Panic Clickbait Economy - Talking to Venezuelans About Venezuela - Strange People on the Hill: An ...Interview with Michael Edison Hayden - Slouching Towards Gallipoli: How The U.S. Might Be Losing To Iran - Executive Disorder: Tariff Refund Disaster, DHS Citizenship List, Idaho Bathroom Bill, Two Bombing Plots 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 Cool Zone is nominated for 3 Webby Awards! Submit your votes by April 16th! Behind the Bastards - https://vote.webbyawards.com/PublicVoting#/2026/podcasts/features/experimental-innovation It Could Happen Here - https://vote.webbyawards.com/PublicVoting#/2026/podcasts/limited-series-specials/news-politics Migrating to America - https://vote.webbyawards.com/PublicVoting#/2026/podcasts/limited-series-specials/documentary Sources/Links: The Trans Panic Clickbait Economy https://transitics.substack.com/p/trump-administration-opens-the-door https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/03/11/2026-04737/visas-enhancing-vetting-and-combatting-fraud-in-the-diversity-immigrant-visa-program https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/defending-women-from-gender-ideology-extremism-and-restoring-biological-truth-to-the-federal-government/ https://rachelnorfolk.me/sites/default/files/2025-02/25_State_11402.pdf https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/policy-manual-updates/20250402-RecognizingMaleAndFemaleSexes.pdf https://iptp-production.s3.amazonaws.com/media/documents/2025.2.24_DOS_Guidance_for_Visa_Adjudicators_EO_14201_22Keeping_Men_Out_of_Wom_VhPai1S.pdf https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/visa-information-resources/administrative-processing-information.html https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=(title:8%20section:1182%20edition:prelim)%20OR%20(granuleid:USC-prelim-title8-section1182)&f=treesort&num=0&edition=prelim https://fam.state.gov/fam/09FAM/09FAM030209.html https://bsky.app/profile/progesteronipizza.bsky.social/post/3m5w6wnkyhc2u https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/24pdf/25a169_5h25.pdf https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/transgender-kansans-challenge-state-law-invalidating-their-drivers-licenses-and-allowing-them-to-be-sued-for-using-public-restrooms https://www.kslegislature.gov/li/b2025_26/measures/documents/sb244_03_0000.pdf https://www.tiktok.com/@transitics/video/7616520936925285662 https://bsky.app/profile/firestorm.coop/post/3mgwxdih3x222 https://www.tiktok.com/@e_c_lider/video/7616688370462231830 https://www.vera.org/news/ice-is-excluding-data-on-transgender-people-in-detention https://www.them.us/story/alice-correia-barbosa-ice-arrest-brazil-trans https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/nov/18/trump-mexico-deportation https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportations_of_U.S._citizens_in_the_second_Trump_administration# https://www.congress.gov/119/meeting/house/118180/documents/HMKP-119-JU00-20250430-SD003.pdf https://19thnews.org/2025/12/trump-administration-plans-to-end-prison-rape-protections-for-trans-and-intersex-people-memo-says/ https://theneedlenews.com/2026/03/anti-trans-hate-groups-petitioning-fda-for-registry-of-trans-women-crackdown-on-transition-newly-revealed-document-shows/ https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/27871234-fda-2025-p-7321-0001-attachment-public-fda/?ref=theneedlenews.com https://bsky.app/profile/angelic.style/post/3mgv3hjepvs2p https://bsky.app/profile/tinylesbianrobot.itch.io/post/3mgvbihtidu2m https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4865109/#:~:text=Only%20346%20(18%25)%20of,Risk%20Evaluation%20and%20Mitigation%20Strategy https://www.thepinknews.com/2026/03/19/tennessee-gop-advances-bill-that-would-create-public-list-of-trans-residents/?utm_content=1773928472&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter https://trackbill.com/bill/tennessee-house-bill-754-an-act-to-amend-tennessee-code-annotated-title-1-title-4-title-33-title-56-title-63-title-68-and-title-71-relative-to-health-care/2644177/ https://x.com/popbase/status/2034737772792041622?s=46 https://transitics.substack.com/p/tennessee-republicans-advance-bill https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/legaldocs/movaokabwva/USA_HEALTH_TRANSGENDER_WESTVIRGINIA.pdf https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/19/us/rfk-jr-transgender-care-ruling.html https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/4th-circuit-rules-that-states-can https://bsky.app/profile/davidforbes.bsky.social/post/3mgv5httwss26 https://glaad.org/new-york-times-sign-on-letter-from-lgtbq-allied-leaders-and-organizations https://www.kenklippenstein.com/p/fbi-readies-new-war-on-trans-people https://gnet-research.org/2025/07/18/meaning-through-its-opposite-significance-quest-theory-and-nihilistic-violent-extremism/ https://www.kenklippenstein.com/p/what-are-nihilist-violent-extremists https://x.com/ItsYourGov/status/1968802472111083949?s=20 https://oversight-project.revv.co/urge-the-fbi-to-designate-transgender-terrorism https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/09/designating-antifa-as-a-domestic-terrorist-organization/ https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/09/countering-domestic-terrorism-and-organized-political-violence/ https://www.instagram.com/p/DOykLZJDS2h/ https://www.tiktok.com/@genericartdad/video/7554381061128473886 Talking to Venezuelans About Venezuela https://www.instagram.com/e.m.arian Strange People on the Hill: An Interview with Michael Edison Hayden https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/michael-edison-hayden/strange-people-on-the-hill/9781645030607/ Executive Disorder: Tariff Refund Disaster, DHS Citizenship List, Idaho Bathroom Bill, Two Bombing Plots https://open.substack.com/pub/shatterzone/p/the-trans-panic-clickbait-economy?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2026/03/memorandum-for-the-secretary-of-homeland-security-and-the-director-of-the-office-of-management-and-budget/ https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/27/todd-lyons-ice-stress-hospital-00848458 https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/27/trump-texas-senate-endorsement-00847967 https://ktla.com/news/california/u-s-marine-in-california-accused-of-stealing-selling-missile-systems-in-arizona/ https://www.justice.gov/usao-az/pr/gun-store-owner-indicted-conspiracy-and-attempting-provide-material-support-designated https://www.tucsonsentinel.com/local/report/032526_gun_store_terrorism/southern-az-gun-dealer-hit-with-terrorism-charges-selling-50-cal-rifle-machine-guns-atf-sting/ https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/70993525/77/african-communities-together-v-lyons/ https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/70993525/78/african-communities-together-v-lyons/ https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.646893/gov.uscourts.nysd.646893.77.1_1.pdf https://www.patreon.com/posts/129696965?utm_campaign=postshare_creator https://www.mofa.gov.mm/en/receiving-those-deported-from-overseas-with-open-arms-21-3-2025/ https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/116317880658472708 https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-889231 https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/uae-officials-deny-israeli-reports-strike-inside-iran https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/27/world/middleeast/iran-strikes-infrastructure-industry.htm https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/30/middleeast/us-air-force-awacs-jet-destroyed-saudi-arabia-intl-hnk-ml https://www.pacificislandtimes.com/post/marshall-islands-declared-a-state-of-economic-emergency-amid-global-criss https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2026/03/ensuring-citizenship-verification-and-integrity-in-federal-elections/ https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.dcd.280953/gov.uscourts.dcd.280953.81.0_4.pdf https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/media/1432851/dl?inline https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/land-olakes-woman-charged-assisting-after-fact-and-evidence-tampering-related-attempt https://www.tampabay.com/news/crime/2026/03/31/tampa-macdill-air-force-base-bomb-threat-ann-mary-zheng/ https://www.justice.gov/usao-nj/media/1433011/dl?inline https://x.com/NYCMayor/status/2037640720375316583 https://queerkentucky.com/kentucky-trans-teachers-hb-759-fact-check/ https://x.com/whooith/status/2039021995267141814?s=20 https://www.wearequeeraf.com/pinknews-to-move-to-a-reporter-free-newsroom-with-its-journalists-facing-redundancy/ https://idahocapitalsun.com/2026/03/31/idaho-governor-signs-bill-to-criminalize-trans-people-using-bathrooms-that-align-with-their-identity/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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The past few weeks, my social media feeds have been more apocalyptic than usual.
Oddly enough, not due to the escalating war with Iran, the shell-shocked economy or oil prices,
but because of a wave of posts and news articles proclaiming impending doom for trans people
in the United States. Attacks and trans rights are obviously not new and have steadily risen the
past 10 years, but this recent collection of worrying claims are especially grim or outright genocidal.
Just this month, I've seen viral posts citing online articles, saying that ICE is going to round up and
quote-unquote disappear trans people, that the FDA is making a quote-unquote registry of trans women,
and that an adult trans health care ban is imminent.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here, a show about things falling apart.
I'm Garrison Davis.
For this episode, I'd like to emphasize the could in it could happen here.
It's not, it will definitely happen here, and there's nothing you can do to stop it.
These panic-inducing claims and the articles they're sourced from
are referring to real things or movements happening in either right-wing activism
or anti-trans policy and legislation,
but are framed in a way to maximize catastrophe,
rather than actually understanding what's happening at the moment and what we can do about it.
Left unchecked, panic clickbait reduces the process of staying informed
to being in a state of constant doom and feeling hopeless against an unstoppable enemy,
or it makes someone completely check out and not believe anything they see online
even if there is a real pressing threat, both of which cloud our ability to assess and respond
to very real threats.
For the bulk of this episode, I'm going to focus on an article that claims ICE is now
permitted to detain anyone for quote-unquote looking trans.
This reporting and the online discussion around it is a microcosmatic example of how we
understand both the Trump administration's attacks on trans people and how and why ICE
operates as an agency.
This story can be traced to a substack post with the headline,
Trump administration opens the door for ICE to target anyone suspected of being trans.
The sub-headline continues by reading, quote,
under a new rule, the State Department will be able to revoke trans people's visas over,
quote-unquote, misrepresentation.
It'll give ice grounds to suspect all trans people of being in the U.S. illegally, unquote.
The information contained in this headline is the furthest many people will engage with the content of this article.
Combining that headline with preconceived notions about how ICE functions under the Second
Trump administration makes this a very frightening claim.
So what evidence does the Substantac article include to support this claim?
Earlier this month, the State Department updated its policy for the Diversity Immigrant Visa
Program, also known as the Green Card Lottery.
The new rules require that applicants upload a scan of their foreign passports' biographic
and signature page to cut down on fraudulent.
vigilant diversity visa program entries. The policy update also changed the gender entry to sex
on application forms. In the policy rule update, the State Department wrote,
the marker reflected in the sex field on any visa application, including the entry form,
should match the applicant's biological sex at birth, even if that differs from the sex
listed on the applicant's foreign passport or other identifying documentation, unquote.
The Substack article claims this could force a, quote, mismatch between trans people's applications and their passports, something it can then use to declare their applications fraudulent and disqualify them entirely, unquote.
The first half of that sentence is true. A mismatch may occur between the gender listed on foreign documents and the sex the U.S. government wants you to list on a visa application.
but it is simply not the case that this mismatch will inevitably result in an application being deemed fraudulent and then denied.
The kind of fraud this rule change is trying to combat by requiring a passport scan is not unique to trans people, according to Melita Picasso,
staff attorney for the ACLU's LGBTQ and HIV rights project.
Picasso said in an email that the new rule, quote,
seems to more directly target fraudulent activities involving third parties,
basically entering the lottery on behalf of individuals without their knowledge and consent,
and then extorting them for large amounts of money if they are selected, unquote.
The stipulation requiring an applicant to list their biological sex at birth on forms
has actually already been state department policy for both immigrant and non-immigrant visa
applications for over a year. Effectively, since Trump's executive order, mandating the U.S.
government officially recognized two biological sexes which are determined at birth, and that,
quote, government issued identity documents, including visas and all forms that require an individual's
sex, shall accurately reflect an individual's immutable biological classification as either male or
female, unquote. There's just no basis for the claim that a mismatch between the gender
listed on a foreign document, and the sex marked on application forms will itself, quote-unquote,
disqualify someone from receiving a visa. ACLU staff attorney Melita Picasso told me that the new policy
itself recognizes this could cause discrepancies, and that she doesn't see a, quote, new or heightened
risk of being accused of fraud or willful misrepresentation if a transgender person follows the
instructions by listing their sex assigned at birth on the application, even if they also file a
birth certificate that has been updated to reflect their gender identity."
The State Department has been aware for a while that this kind of policy will create
these kinds of mismatches.
A February 2025 State Department memo reads, quote, there may be instances when a consular
officer becomes aware that the sex listed on the foreign passport may not be the applicant's
sex as defined in the executive order.
In such cases, the adjudicator should confirm the applicant's sex as defined in the executive order,
indicate that sex on the visa, and add a case note documenting any discrepancy between the passport and the visa to prevent issues at the port of entry, unquote.
Later in April of 2025, the United States Citizenship Immigration Services officially updated their policy on requiring, quote unquote, biological sex on immigration applications.
The policy also states that, quote,
USCIS does not deny any immigration benefits solely based on a failure to properly indicate the benefit requester's sex, unquote.
ACL staff attorney Malita Picasso told me that USCIS officials have, quote, unquote, a lot of discretion,
and that the policy says that failure to list biological sex, quote, will cause delays in processing the application while USCIS tries
tries to verify your sex assigned at birth, unquote.
Now, the State Department has said there are grounds to deny these applications for trans
people if they make a, quote, willful, affirmative, material act of misrepresentation
by misrepresenting their, quote-unquote, biological sex at birth in application forms,
or to a consular officer to gain entry to the United States under false pretenses.
legally qualifying as willful misrepresentation is a relatively high bar, and this language was
specifically written with the intent to restrict trans athletes from entering the country to play
sports. The sort of misrepresentation the State Department is talking about is if a trans woman,
quote-unquote, misrepresents her birth sex to procure a visa or admission into the United States
for the purpose of competing in a women's sports competition.
This same sports-related memo dated February 24, 2025, also states, quote,
if there is a discrepancy either in the applicant's documents or in electronic consular records,
or if other evidence casts reasonable doubt on the applicant's sex,
you should refuse the case under 221G and request additional evidence to demonstrate sex at birth, unquote.
Section 221G of the Immigration and Nationality Act
is a temporary visa refusal pending further documents
or information provided by the applicant.
For an athlete visa, the bar is very high
and the burden is on the applicant to prove
they have the special and rare qualities required
to be eligible for a visa.
But the Substac article doesn't just claim
that being trans could disqualify you from receiving a visa.
The article escalates its claims,
stating that trans people who already have a valid visa
could have it revoked and be deported
for misrepresenting their sex in the past,
citing U.S. law that if an alien is found to have obtained a visa,
quote, by fraud or willfully misrepresenting a material fact,
they are ineligible to be in the United States.
The article also refers to a section of the Foreign Affairs Manual,
which includes providing, quote,
a fake birth certificate in support of an image
visa application as misrepresenting a material fact, unquote.
The article goes on to assert that the Trump administration could refuse to recognize
trans people's amended birth certificates from foreign countries and essentially consider them,
quote unquote, fake, thus making their visa eligible to be revoked by, quote, unquote,
misrepresenting a material fact.
The author of the substack links to another one of her own articles on a new policy regarding
the issuing of U.S. passports with sex markers reflecting biological sex at birth.
The passport policy instructs State Department employees to check birth certificates for signs
of being amended, and if they are amended, request more documents that list sex at the time
of birth, such as medical records, hospital records, or early school records.
ACLU staff attorney Picasso says that this does not mean entire amended birth certificates
are quote-unquote fake for the purposes of establishing
fraud or willful misrepresentation, which is, again, a high bar, and the Trump administration
has never argued this as such.
Quote, I think it's dangerous to even suggest that a legally obtained and valid birth certificate
could be viewed as quote-unquote fake without a much clearer statement from the federal
government to that effect.
Picasso advised.
In Trump's recent travel bans, they have specifically mentioned the availability of fabricated
birth certificates in certain countries.
And this whole claim about trans people's visas being revoked because of applications of misrepresentation is contradicted by the State Department, which said last year, quote, currently valid U.S. visas issued prior to the effective date of this guidance bearing a sex that differs from the visa holder's sex as defined in the executive order will remain valid through its expiration date.
The visa holder does not need to apply for a new visa with an amended sex marker until the current visa expires.
unquote. So the first half of this article covers what I argue are gross misrepresentations of
State Department visa policy. The second half of the article speculates on how this misrepresentation
could be enforced by ICE. In its Supreme Court ruling last year, Justice Kavanaugh wrote that
ICE could detain people based on a combination of factors such as working a certain kind of job,
ethnicity, and speaking Spanish or talking with an accent. Kavanaugh said that ICE can detainment
someone for questioning, quote, if they have a reasonable suspicion based on specific
articulable facts that the person being questioned is an alien illegally in the United States.
The author of the Substacac article argued that Kavanaugh's concurrence, quote unquote,
effectively permitted ICE to use the fact that someone looks trans as the quote,
specific articulable fact allowing its officers to question, harass, detain, and even deport
both citizens and non-citizens, as long as it has a reason to claim that being trans makes a person
more likely to be in the U.S. illegally. Unquote, with this substacker adding that because of State
Department policy requiring applicants to list biological sex at birth on forms, quote,
ICE now have the enforcement rationale to assert that trans people are more likely than says
people to have misrepresented themselves during the visa process and therefore are more likely to have
the country unlawfully, unquote.
This assertion from the substacker rests on the idea that looking trans makes someone more likely
to be in the U.S. illegally.
This idea is not supported by any immigration policy, memo, or guideline.
It also assumes that the justification for a Kavanaugh stop is the same as the legal process
of removal, which it is not.
this idea was invented by the author of this article.
It's not based on any enforcement directive from ICE
and misrepresents what the State Department means
by intentionally misrepresenting biological sex
in the visa application process.
Discrepancies in gender markers across government documents
is not itself grounds for detention or deportation.
In fact, it's federal policy to create such discrepancies.
Furthermore, dealing with potential discrepancies between gender,
markers on foreign documents, and the Trump admin's insistence on only using biological sex at birth
on federal documents, is handled by State Department consular officers and U.S. CIS employees,
not ICE enforcement and removal operations officers who work under an entirely different agency.
But the main thing that makes me believe that ICE will not suddenly start targeting people for being
trans is that this State Department policy requiring sex at birth on visa application,
isn't actually new. It's existed in some form since February 2025 for both immigrant and
non-immigrant visas. The only recent change is that the Green Card Lottery Rules have been updated
to use the same language. Quote, nothing about this new rule makes it more or less likely
that ICE will be free to scrutinize trans people's documents and detain those whose documents
show any inconsistencies, unquote, affirmed a CLU staff attorney Melita Picasso.
Put plainly, State Department restrictions on stating assigned sex at birth on green card or visa
applications does not give ICE any new justification to roam around disappearing random people
who, quote unquote, look trans. But it could make border crossings more risky for non-citizens
and visa applications harder to navigate and subject to delays.
This policy from the State Department is bad,
but turning that into saying that ICE is now going to round up trans people and V-code them
doesn't understand how this will actually affect immigrant trans people
or trans people currently in federal custody.
Side note, V-coding refers to the systematic enabling of sexual abuse
towards incarcerated trans women to please male prisoners.
Near the end of the Substack article, the author suggests that trans people in Kansas could be at
extra risk of getting detained by ICE because of a new law in validating driver's license and
birth certificates with amended gender markers, possibly leaving some U.S. citizens temporarily
unable to prove citizenship with a valid birth certificate. This new law is certainly dangerous,
and any attempt to strip away people's legal ID is very worrying and carries potential for abuse.
In the case of Kansas, already having a passport would be really ideal.
Otherwise, a hospital birth certificate or early school records can theoretically be used to help prove citizenship.
And it is worth saying that a citizen temporarily losing documentation does not put them at the same level of marginalized risk as an undocumented immigrant.
The new Kansas law does direct the Office of Vital Statistics to quote,
reissue birth certificates when necessary to correct the sex identification.
Unquote.
Similarly, DMVs were instructed to reissue a quote-unquote corrected license once the
invalidated one was turned in.
We'll be right back after these messages.
Welcome back to It Could Happen Here.
The unsubstantiated claims made in that substack article went viral across multiple social
media platforms like TikTok, Blue Sky, and Twitter.
bolstering further speculation.
Social media posts further extrapolated the potential harm facing trans people by ICE agents
beyond the claims made in the article by saying that ICE will now deport or disappear trans citizens.
Anyone who tried to push back on the legitimacy of those claims were labeled dangerous or feds
for trying to quote-unquote downplay the threat posed by ICE.
Assertions of new pressing danger in this back-and-forth discourse
largely took three forms.
One, saying that because ICE is already doing X bad thing, that means they could also start
doing this new bad thing.
Two, people asserting that ICE is in fact actually already doing this, and three, arguments
based on distrust of the government and ICE's general lack of legality.
Much of the discussion emerged from the genuine belief that ICE has been granted new power
or has been quote-unquote authorized to detain someone for looking trans,
that Trump has, quote, quote, opened to the door for ICE to start profiling trans people.
That, like the Supreme Court's ruling last year,
profiling has been essentially greenlit for trans people,
or that checking the consistency of gender markers has been added to ICE's, quote-unquote, jurisdiction.
And to be 100% clear, there's not been any new ICE memo or policy related to trans people,
gender markers or documentation being in their jurisdiction. State Department policy on requiring
biological sex on applications has existed for over a year. The real danger posed by this policy is that
more trans immigrants could have their visas delayed or in extreme cases denied, and people may need
help navigating this increasingly confusing application process. Still, people have tried to assert that
ICE's intentional targeting and profiling of people for being trans was quote-unquote
already happening. In the past year, ICE has detained trans people. It's hard to get exact
numbers on this because ICE stopped collecting detention data for trans people last year to comply
with Trump's anti-trans executive orders, though we do know of attempts to deport trans people from
news reporting. Last August, ICE detained a trans woman who overstayed a visa by six years, and in
November, a trans woman who lost her lawful permanent resident status in 2023 after pleading
guilty to a felony was quote-unquote inadvertently deported to Mexico, despite a court order
specifically barring her from being sent to Mexico. We have no evidence that these women were
targeted for removal on the basis of being trans, but what happened to them is still horrific.
As of now, there has been no reporting on people being targeted for detention based on
looking trans. Because the government has not actually argued that being trans itself qualifies as
reasonable suspicion of a legal presence. When I voiced skepticism about the claims sourced from this
substack article, people responded to me saying that even if this has yet to happen, one could
argue that ICE still could expand their operations to include profiling and targeting trans people
for detention since they're already profiling and rounding up quote-unquote random brown people.
After all, this podcast is called It Could Happen Here, and ICE has detained both citizens and
legal immigrants and sent them to, quote-unquote, camps. Though this show is called, it could happen
here. That doesn't mean we should spread unsubstantiated doom spiraling, disconnected from the
material reality of real policies advancing a fascist project. The Trump administration has been very
clear and open about targeting groups of people flooding through our southern border.
That is who ICE is designed to target, and they have policy directing them to do so, and
new permission from the Supreme Court. It is true that ICE has temporarily detained U.S.
citizens when looking for people they suspect are undocumented immigrants. This has been
for two reasons. U.S. citizens accused of interfering with ICE activity while protesting,
or because I suspect
U.S. citizens may be undocumented
based on factors like skin tone,
occupation, or speaking
a foreign language, usually Spanish.
This second group of people then must demonstrate
proof of citizenship, or if they are
immigrants, their legal status.
The period they're detained is supposed to be
relatively short, usually a few hours,
though in extreme cases, that's
stretched into multiple days.
When I posted about this online,
someone sent me a Wikipedia
article claiming it proved that ICE has deported 170 U.S. citizens during Trump's second term.
The article actually said 170 citizens have been detained. Since Trump took office again,
there have been a few reported instances of U.S.-born citizens being deported. These are
citizen children who are deported with immigrant parents to avoid child separation, though many
many children do end up being separated from their parents when their parents are deported.
The last argument that people fall back on is simply that ICE is a completely lawless agency
and they can do whatever it wants, including going after trans people. After all, ICE has murdered
U.S. citizens on camera in broad daylight. But it's important to remember that happened for a
reason. Those weren't random acts. ICE and CBP murdered people protesting ICE
rates targeting their immigrant neighbors.
Federal agents killed people because the protesting was an inconvenience, and there was use
of force policy and training directing them to do so.
For decades, CBP agents have killed people at the border and gotten away with it.
The Trump administration may not care about the law, but this analysis is not based on any
assumptions about legality.
It's based on the administration's own stated goals, which they've been very over.
open about, and the policies and practices currently in effect, none of which relate to ICE targeting
people for quote-unquote looking trans. From what we know, the Kavanaugh-Stops framework
have never been used to target trans people for being trans as the reasonable suspicion of being
illegally in the country. And there's been no changing guidelines saying that being trans can be
the basis for said stops. Asserting otherwise is simply false.
insisting that because of State Department application policy, ICE will now randomly arrest trans people is conflating two very different things.
This isn't about the potential legality of ICE targeting trans people. I'm simply saying there is no such directive instructing ICE to do that.
Asserting that the Trump administration is completely 100% unbounded by law, also ignores the fact that federal and immigration
courts are still an active terrain of battle. While the administration has repeatedly ignored courts
and judges' orders, people have also been successfully released from ICE custody by filing habeas corpus
petitions. It's not that I believe in the personal integrity of ICE agents, far from it,
but this concept of ICE as this vague fascist death squad that will go after any group the Trump
administration hates turns ICE into this abstract idea, rather than,
than a single material agency with concrete motivations and limits that leaves a wake of destruction
in the course of achieving their purpose. Ice does raids where there's high concentrations of
immigrant workers. The targeting isn't actually random. Ice is going after undocumented immigrant
workers, sometimes using skin and language as a rough proxy to do document checks. To assert the
inevitability of ICE going after trans people, people invoke comparisons to the Nazis.
And as rhetorically useful as it is to equate ICE to a modern version of the Gestapo,
this is not Germany in the 1930s. Ice is a contemporary version, but the current world is different.
The chronically online dumer may retort, but once ICE is done with immigrants, then they will go after
trans people. After all, what's the purpose of increasing ICE's staffing and funding?
or building a network of detention camps across the country,
if not to use them against the undesirables.
There's about 15 million undocumented immigrants in the United States,
and about 3 million trans people.
That's five times as many undocumented immigrants than trans people.
Last year, ICE reached a record high number of deportations,
over 600,000.
This number still leaves millions and millions of undocumented.
immigrants. Ice will never be, quote, unquote, done with immigrants. This logic again reduces
ice to this vague, abstract evil and fails to consider the purpose of ice and why it currently
operates as it does. So what motivates ICE? Do individual ICE agents share the same motivations as
the agency itself or the people directing it? Individual agents certainly could be motivated by racism,
political ideology, a paycheck, or a combination thereof.
But the motivating factors across the entire agency
cannot solely be based on ethnicity itself,
or else you wouldn't see as many Hispanic ICE and CBP agents.
People tend to think of hate as a vague causal force itself,
rather than it being the result of complex societal factors
shaped by material forces, like the economy,
jobs insecurity, and housing shortages.
These material forces are often expressed as racial or ethnic prejudice,
but the underlying motivation of ICE as an agency, and by extension DHS,
still rests on material forces, not racial hatred as an abstract ideal.
Rank and file employees could have entirely different motivations
compared to some of those at the top of the agency or the agency as a whole,
and people in charge of the agency may themselves even be confused
as to the material motivations that underline the existence of immigration enforcement agencies.
But this lack of alignment is a weakness in the agency, and DHS more broadly, as demonstrated
by the fallout of Operation Metro Surge in Minneapolis, which left ICE and DHS in a compromised state.
So why does ICE exist? What material role does it fulfill? It seeks to stabilize the social order
by targeting surplus populations.
And what's the most efficient way to do that?
By going after the most marginalized populations
with the least amount of legal and economic protections,
which are undocumented immigrants.
This operation may be sold to the public,
and indeed its enforcers,
by marketing it in the language of race and crime,
categories which are often equated,
but underneath that, it's still an attempt to solve problems
caused by material economic forces.
In reality, this material motivation establishes a certain direction of impact, as well as material
limits, like budget, personnel, and balancing between public approval and public opposition.
So with that in mind, does it make sense to claim that immigration and customs enforcement
is going to conduct the targeted mass detention of trans people as a class?
science points to no.
It's not that I disagree with the idea that trans people are under threat from the government,
but they're under a different threat than that of undocumented immigrants
or people detained by ICE based on profiling.
Obviously, trans immigrants have an overlapping threat vector.
As such, migrant support should remain focused on things like Ice Watch, rapid response networks,
and providing immigrants legal resources, including to trans immigrants who may need assistance
navigating the visa process and working to get people out of ICE detention. The latter is especially
important considering Trump's executive order forcing trans women in federal custody to be detained
with men and the Trump administration's plan to end federal prison rape protections for trans people.
But most people engaged in this discourse genuinely don't understand how State Department
policy on visa applications will actually affect trans immigrants and what we can then do to
support trans immigrants. But this whole discourse takes the focus away from the people most at
risk of ICE, which are still undocumented immigrant workers. Lillis in Seattle with a $150,000 a year
tech job is not at high risk of being detained by ICE. Believing otherwise prohibits people
who are actually safe and secure from using their wealth and status to support others who do not have
the same safety provided by wealth or status, whether they're transgender, an immigrant, or both.
Misleading articles in the larger panic-driven information economy encourages people with financial
or legal security to be scared into paralysis because they believe that any amount of opposition
to the government will result in being disappeared to a concentration camp. This justifies a
retreat from the world by framing it as safety, allowing one to focus on maximizing their own
power and wealth to achieve security. Retreating solely into the role of the victim achieves a
sort of emotional catharsis, but this also alienates you from the world and ends up doing
propaganda for the enemy. In this discourse, there's a tendency to make the enemy out to be an
unstoppable monster, which further justifies inaction because it doesn't allow you to understand the
limits of the enemy, whether logistical or ideological, and resigns us.
us to cower before an omnipotent all-powerful evil. Ice operations are an expensive,
unpopular, destabilizing thing, and we must keep an eye on the fragility of power, as that
informs us on how to fight it. When removed from action in the real world, people have no
way to confront truth. It is a frightening time to be transgender. On top of what feels like
never-ending attacks on health care and our ability to exist in public life, you need to be
now see news stories about a U.S. state invalidating people's IDs at the same time as
viral social media posts claim ICE has been given new authority to detain trans people and deport
immigrants for having the wrong gender marker. Various attacks on trans rights separated through
time could be viewed as a coherent, centralized strategy towards a singular horrific end.
But they also may be in fact disparate, often petty attempts at cruel
intending to demoralize trans people and make trans life prohibitively difficult.
The way Red States and the Trump admin are trying to eliminate transgenderism, as Michael
Knowles would say, is to simply make it incredibly difficult to socially and medically transition,
like by not recognizing gender on government documents,
being excluded from public bathrooms, and continuing efforts to restrict health care.
We'll do one more break,
return for a final segment.
The state of catastrophic fear I've been talking about
is maintained by a near constant wave of articles with panic-inducing headlines
which fuel social media posts that further escalate in abstract claims maiden headlines
to a Nazi-Germany-esque level of potential danger facing trans people.
One such impending danger circulating online this month is the claim that the FDA
is making a registry of trans women
and moving to criminalize DIY estrogen.
This claim originated from an article in a trans news outlet
published March 12th,
reporting that anti-trans lobbying groups
sent a petition to the FDA
to create a registry of trans women
who take estrogen and restrict the use of feminizing HRT,
which, if implemented, could quote,
fast-track a pathway to criminalizing estrogen use.
Importantly, this citizen's petition is not U.S. law or proposed government legislation,
nor is it FDA policy or regulation.
It was written by an anti-trans activist coalition and sent to the FDA over three months ago
in December of 2025.
The petition requests, quote-unquote, immediate action by establishing a new docket for
the public to officially comment on the safety and effectiveness of estrogen in gender
transitions and to schedule a public hearing on the subject. That is mainly what the petition is for.
Though it does make further recommendations following the conclusion of a public hearing,
these recommendations include adding a warning label to estrogen, conducting a safety review,
having clinicians report adverse effects to the FDA, and requiring the drug manufacturers,
quote, establish a patient registry as a part of a risk evaluation and mitigation study
to capture real world safety data, unquote.
And that is the registry mentioned in this panic headline.
This article, or more accurately, distorted versions of its claims, went viral across trans-tweater
with tens of thousands of likes and hundreds of thousands of, quote-unquote, views.
But the article received strong pushback on blue sky for being, quote-unquote, sensationalist
and inflammatory.
The outlet that originally published the story later updated the story.
later updated the article clarifying that the FDA receives hundreds of petitions a year,
and even if implemented, they can take years to go into effect. From 2001 to 2013, only 6.6%
of FDA citizen petitions were approved and resulted in new regulation. A study from 2016
found that on average, quote, these petitions require 2.85 years for a final agency decision,
and many decisions remain pending 10 to 13 years after their initial submission, unquote.
This FDA petition story was not the only article this month theorizing about a trans registry or adult HRT restrictions.
In mid-March, multiple LGBTQ news outlets reported that Republican lawmakers in Tennessee advanced a bill
that would, quote-unquote, create a public list of trans residents in the state.
The bill in question mandates insurance companies also cover detransition and would require that care providers submit statistics on gender affirming care to the Tennessee Department of Health, which must, quote, not contain individually identifiable information defined in HIPAA, unquote.
The Tennessee Department of Health would then use that information to make a publicly available statistics report.
But online accounts are spreading this story as if Tennessee is making a quote unquote,
sex offender-style public registry with the names and locations of all trans people in the state.
A bill like this could potentially be used for harm, and it may face court challenges for possibly
violating parts of HIPAA by collecting data on county of residence and procedure dates,
but the reporting on the bill and the viral reaction online make it out to be something
completely different. There's no reason to believe this bill would create a publicly-executive
accessible registry, or list identifying trans people by name in the state. The bill has not yet
passed the state senate, and it may not in its current form. Right now it's unclear what exact form
the collected data will take within a statistics report, and what level of anonymizing data
aggregation will be employed. This is something to keep an eye on if the bill does pass and the
State Department of Health drafts guidelines for the mandatory statistics reporting, but the way
it's being reported is incredibly misleading.
Interestingly, the source for this public list claim is the same substack outlet that created
the false story about ICE now being able to detain people for looking trans.
Also earlier this month, multiple LGBTQ news outlets reported that the Fourth Circuit Court
approved state bans on gender-affirming health care for adults.
On March 10th, a Republican-appointed three-judge panel of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled that states can prohibit gender-affirming surgery from being covered by Medicaid.
The ruling affirmed a ban on Medicaid coverage for, quote, sex change surgeries in West Virginia,
with the panel arguing it doesn't discriminate against trans people because it applies to specific procedures,
not specific individuals. This is certainly bad news for trans people.
in West Virginia on Medicaid.
But reporting that this decision could soon result in trans people losing health care in other states
or nationally is misleading and removes key context.
This is not a total ban on these procedures.
It's a ban on state Medicaid coverage of these surgical procedures.
The ruling is not a ban on other forms of gender-affirming health care like HRT,
nor does it threaten the hospital's ability to receive Medicare and Medicaid funds
for providing gender-affirming health care
like the Trump administration has threatened,
so far unsuccessfully.
Still, people postulated on how this ruling
could be laying the legal groundwork
to eliminate adult transgender health care.
But trans-journalist David Forbes noted
that this ruling will likely be appealed
to the wider Fourth Circuit,
which has recently ruled in the opposite direction
of this three-panel ruling.
What panicked assertions of an impending
total ban on trans health care
tends to overlook is that
going from a state ban
on Medicaid coverage for surgery
straight to an all-ages
ban on gender affirming health care
skips a lot of steps
and those steps are crucially
important.
The panic clickbait-induced
doomer mindset treats every
horrific potentiality as an
inevitable eventuality.
This undermines our ability to
accurately assess risk and effectively
dedicate resources to oppose what are pressing threats.
So what purpose does this sort of posting serve?
And why are people so primed to believe it?
These panic-driven claims rest on the very real fact that trans people are facing present danger.
Oftentimes, people boosting these panic stories are genuinely trying to help inform
their own community of potential harm.
In the case of that ICE story, it was based on the assumption that there was a legitimate
recent rule change enabling ICE to target people under suspicion of being trans.
It makes sense that people would want to raise the alarm about ice gaining new powers.
But ACLU staff attorney Melita Picasso cautioned, quote,
We are supporting our community by trying to warn people,
but these warnings need to be clear and accurate.
Otherwise, we end up inadvertently contributing to the chaos and fear, unquote.
Other times, these panic stories are spread with the hope of
scaring allies into caring about the ongoing attacks on trans people.
Perhaps this is successful in some cases, I don't know.
But as a side effect, this strategy deals significant damage to the people it's trying to
protect.
Forecasting Doom 24-7 can drive people into hopeless despair and push them away from
strategies to fight against the current attacks on trans rights.
Panic-driven adjut prop could also contribute to a girl who,
Who Cried Wolf's scenario, where allies start to discount concerns about certain attacks on trans rights
due to previous unsubstantiated viral claims.
Though many people spreading these claims may have genuinely good intentions, the people creating
these claims may develop certain material incentives.
Traditional mainstream journalism has failed to question the massive government overreach into the lives of trans people,
and in some cases helped manufacture consent for the stripping away of trans rights.
This state of affairs has made trans people lose faith in the big outlets,
leading to small upstart outlets filling in the information gaps in trans news coverage,
but without any institutional backing.
Independent news sites and substack style blogs have to build an audience to generate traction and stay operating.
It turns out thousands of people constantly freaking out creates high social media engagement.
This creates a loop where trans panic fearmongering boosts sorts
social media engagement, which further encourages more irresponsible click-bait framing.
Those who are successful may slowly develop a new class position, which then needs to be maintained.
Financial incentives may even pressure journalists who have done good work in the past
to fall back on panic-driven engagement bait to attract new traffic.
This isn't exclusive to trans outlets either.
Following the assassination of Charlie Kirk, Ken Klippenstein reported on his substack that
the FBI was about to, quote,
designate transgender people as violent extremists.
His report contained no new verifiable information.
The core evidence was an unnamed, quote-unquote, senior official
who told Clippenstein he, quote, unquote, feels like trans people could be labeled
nihilist violent extremists.
Clippenstein has previously misunderstood the nihilist violent extremism label.
The term actually predates the second Trump,
administration, and refers to groups like 764, child's extortion rings, and communities like
the school shooter fandom TCC. Hours before Klippenstein's report was published, the Heritage Foundation
and the Oversight Project publicly released a petition calling for a new classification of
extremism called trans-ideology-inspired violent extremism. To categorize attacks, they believe
are motivated by transgender ideology. The petition memo
denied that all trans people and their allies would be designated domestic terrorists under this
label. Only those who, quote, encourage, promote, condone, take or incite unlawful,
violent action, or threats based on this ideology, unquote. The Heritage Petition also runs
contrary to Clippenstein's report by advocating against the use of the nihilist of violent extremism
label to describe transgender-motivated violence. A heritage
petition to establish a new category of extremism is different from an unnamed official who
feels like trans people as a whole could be labeled as nihilist violent extremists, and it's
important to understand that distinction. That was last September. It's now half a year later,
and neither of these things has come to fruition. The closest we got was in late September
following Trump's Antifa Terrorism Executive Order
with the National Security Presidential Memorandum Number 7,
which listed, quote,
extremism on migration, race, and gender
as common recurrent motivations and indica
of violent and terroristic activities
under the umbrella of self-described anti-fascism,
unquote, among many other threads,
animating violent conduct.
Regardless of that,
people online interpreted both clip and Steve and Steve and
's report and the Heritage Petition as meaning the FBI classified the entire class of trans people
as domestic terrorists. Social media both amplifies and distorts already misleading claims,
turning news into a massive game of telephone, and the siloing of certain users and platforms
makes countering this misinformation incredibly difficult. The social media economy carries
certain incentives. For the producers of panic bait, that could be attention,
status and money. But the consumers of panic also stand to gain something.
Catharces, justification for their actions, or lack thereof, as well as attention from fellow consumers.
These clickbait panic pieces explode around trans Twitter, which is still quite active, consisting of
sex workers, gamers, TTT-style posters, and zoomers who think blue sky is crunch and liberal.
Some of these panic stories like the FDA registry don't do very well on blue sky,
because that's where a lot of trans journalists who do actual journalism are,
but those journalists are not active on Twitter and TikTok,
making it harder to counter misinformation on those platforms.
Countering trans-panic clickbait also suffers from algorithmic suppression
because it doesn't get people as riled up.
A wave of emotionally charged doom posting is boosted much farther
than a calm and calculated rebuttal.
The biggest TikTok about ICE detaining people under suspicion of
being trans has 1.2 million views. The biggest TikTok fact-checking this claim has 290,000 views.
So much of social media politics is emotional manipulation based on anger, fear, or catharsis.
Posting about perceived danger is essentially viewed as a form of activism. And if someone casts
doubt on what's seen as an existential threat, that person becomes emotionally equated with the
enemy. Panic produces helplessness, but helplessness can actually be cathartic for the individual.
It's not helpful for people currently in the most danger. So then, what is there to do? In terms of
the trans-panic information economy, don't be afraid to openly question the legitimacy of certain
reporting due to fear of backlash from the community. If it's good reporting, it should be able to
stand up to scrutiny. So when you see a new story that triggers an emotional response,
stop a moment before clicking share and find out where this claim is coming from, a reliable
journalistic outlet, an independent publication, what other reporting has this publication done,
has it been accurate, who is the reporter, are you familiar with their reporting,
what else have they reported on? Is it speculative? Are there logical jumps without supporting evidence?
Again, I'm not trying to minimize the danger coming from attacks on trans people. Quite the contrary.
The right is continuing to take away trans rights, and these threats should be treated seriously.
But when trying to counter these real attacks, one must be cautious about looking so far ahead
into the speculative future that it takes the focus away from the clear and present harms.
This isn't about trusting the government, it's about understanding the world in order to change it.
See you on the other side.
You can find a text version of this episode on the Shatter Zone substack with hyperlinks available for many of the terms or reporting referenced.
Canadian women are looking for more.
More out of themselves, their businesses, their elected leaders, and the world are out of them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast.
I'm Jennifer Stewart.
And I'm Catherine Clark.
And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women.
entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, politicians, and newsmakers,
all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
Listen to the Honest Talk podcast on IHart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
A silver 40 caliber handgun was recovered at the scene.
From IHart Podcasts and Best Case Studios.
This is Worshack, murder at City Hall.
How could this have happened in City Hall?
Somebody tell me that.
Jeffrey Hood did.
July 2003,
Councilman James E. Davis arrives at New York City Hall with a guest.
Both men are carrying concealed weapons.
And in less than 30 minutes, both of them will be dead.
Everybody in the chambers ducked.
A shocking public murder.
I scream, get down, get down.
Those are shots.
Those are shots.
Get down.
A charismatic politician.
You know, he just bent the rules all the time.
I still have a weapon, and I could shoot you.
And an outsider with a secret.
He alleged he was a victim of flat down.
That may or may not have been political.
That may have been about sex.
Listen to Roershack, murder at City Hall, on the Iheart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Lori Siegel, a longtime tech journalist.
And consider my new podcast, mostly human, your bridge to the future.
Anyone can now be an entrepreneur,
can build an app, and it's very empowering.
Each week, I'll speak to the people building that future, and we're going to break down
what all of this innovation actually means for you.
What I come to realize is that when people think that they're dating these AI companion,
they're actually dating the companies that create this.
We're experiencing one of the greatest tech accelerations in human history, and let's be
honest, that can be messy.
There's no playbook for what to do when an AI model hallucinates a state.
story about you.
But it's my belief that we should all benefit from this moment.
Mostly Human will show you how.
My goal is to give you the playbook, so you can benefit.
The reason I say agency is because, like, if we can give power back to people,
then I think that's probably the best thing we can do for your mental health.
Listen to Mostly Human on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your
favorite shows.
In 2023, former Bachelor star Clayton Eckerd found himself.
at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed
revealed glaring inconsistencies
in her story.
This began a years-long court battle
to prove the truth.
You doctored this particular test twice in someone's, correct?
I doctored the test once.
It took an army of internet detectives
to crack the case.
I wanted people to be able to see
what their tax dollars were being used for.
Sunlight's the greatest disinfected.
They would uncover a disturbing pattern.
Two more men who'd been through the same thing.
Michael Sbian and Michael Maranini.
My mind was blown.
I'm Stephanie Young.
This is Love Trap.
Laura, Scottsdale Police.
As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at Americopa County as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges.
This isn't over until justice is served in Arizona.
Listen to Love Trapped podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hi, everyone and welcome to the show. It's me, James, and I'm very lucky to be joined by Marianne today.
He's an outspoken member of the Venezuelan diaspora, a writer, photographer, and we're going to
talk today a little bit about our shared frustration with the left in this country talking
about Venezuelan people, but not to Venezuelan people. So thanks for joining me tonight.
Thank you for having me.
Yeah, this is something that we've been trying to put together for a while, and I'm really glad that
we're finally doing it. So I guess if I can just frame this discussion, we've spoken about this
extensively, so I'm sure we won't need much prompting. I do not understand how people
arrive at a position of identifying as being leftists if they don't love and care about other people.
And if you love and care about other people, then you should listen to them. And I am appalled
at the discourse about Venezuela, which is happening without Venezuelan voices for the most part.
people will talk to Venezuelans at all in the US press. It's far too often people in the
diaspora who are talking to the right wing of media and highlighting what are sometimes recent
objections to Maduro, sometimes which are completely insane. But it's a complete failing of us on the
left to not talk to people from Venezuela. Maybe you could just share with us like how it's been
since January. To see it offers it as a binary, right? You can either exist under Maduro.
and people can live in poverty and suffer,
or you can watch your country get bombed and choose like MCM, I guess.
And none of this is happening, what's asking you what you would like.
Can you, like, share how that's been?
Oh, my God.
It's been, it's been a wild ride.
I mean, there's a lot of different emotions going on,
which is one of the things that I think a lot of people don't understand
that are not Venezuelan.
But, yeah, just a lot of emotions.
I mean, I remember when it first happened,
I immediately messaged my family back home.
So my brother, my mom, my grandparents.
My family is not from Caracas.
So they were all right.
They were just saying, you know,
it's calm wherever we are.
It's fine.
But, yeah, the immediate thing was concerned.
Then obviously I couldn't sleep that night
because of everything that was going on.
I live in Europe.
So by that time, it was like, I don't know.
It was like five in the morning or something, eight in the morning.
I don't remember.
It was, it's all just a blur to me now.
But I remember I was just like on my phone seeing the updates like every minute trying to contact my friends who did live in Caracas.
And they were just saying, yeah, like we hear bombs.
We don't know what's going on.
And then eventually, like some people started saying that they bombed like.
some strategic military bases or like El Palacio de Miraflores, which is the presidential house.
And so everyone was like all over the place. And then we got all this information that they
took Maduro, whatever. And then at that point, it was just like, okay, concern, worry,
confusion. And then joy because, not because the place was bombed by Americans, but because
this guy was like taken away who he deserves worse than prison to be honest
but then concern again because what are the Americans going to do now
so it was just a lot of different things going on
like I think a lot of people including myself were just like
paralyzed by all these different emotions
like joy because again this guy who has done horrible things to the
Venezuela people is now paying for his crime somewhere,
but at the same time, fear because of what is going to happen next.
I mean, we're not dumb.
We know what the U.S. is capable of.
So it was a little bit of both of those feelings after we knew what had happened.
And ever since then, it has been just a struggle because, of course,
there's a lot of misinformation going out there.
It's been frustrating because I see many of my people's voices being silenced by people on the left.
And then also you have a lot of people on the right, like appropriating our narrative to like push their own pro-American propaganda, whatever.
So it's kind of just like everyone's trying to like appropriate or steal our own narrative and suffering for their own gain.
and the left and the right are doing both, like, equally.
So it has been kind of frustrating because, I mean,
every time I even just try to leave a comment on Instagram or say something,
I'm called a fascist, like Trump supporters, CIA, Mossad agent, whatever.
And, you know, it's frustrating to see so many people,
because most of the people I follow are like leftists, right?
but I've unfollowed like 70% of the people I used to follow
because they started posting like Promaduro stuff
and talking about how he was so great, whatever.
And, you know, it has been very defeating
to feel like we don't have anywhere to go to.
Nobody is supporting us.
Because again, one side just wants to rob us from our resources
and seal a narrative to like push their own agenda.
But then the other side is like completely denying
or calling us like all these horrible things
to also steal our narrative, right?
So it has been really frustrating and scary and isolating.
Yeah, it has been a lot to the point where I think,
I mean, do I even have a place in the world of nobody wants to hear my voice?
So it has been very difficult, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Very disheartening.
But then, yeah, like, that's why I told you.
you about the baseball thing recently.
It was kind of like a positive thing, like a,
because one of the good things about that game is that people were finally, like,
getting to know us and how we're actually good people.
And that was kind of like a pick me up after how horrible life has been since January 3rd.
So, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Like people obviously, like undervalue sport.
I wrote a book about support and anti-fascism,
so I'm kind of predisposed to this disposition.
But like, these moments of joy are really important.
And like, God knows the world tries to rob us of joy at the moment.
So we should embrace them and enjoy them and not feel like we're like obliged to be sad
because of all the sadness in our worlds.
Yeah.
I think something you said there, like, struck home with me, two things.
I guess let's address the first one.
it is fundamentally a colonial impulse to steal someone's narrative and assume that they're
incapable of speaking for themselves so you must speak for them, right?
That is something that I have seen not just now, but for years about Venezuela, right?
It must have been really frustrating to see this kind of campus tendency to literally steal,
like the voice of Venezuelan and people
and speak on their behalf.
Yeah. That's nothing new though.
I mean, I remember when I was in college,
it was kind of the same.
Like there were, I think it was like 2017.
There were some protests and
people were saying all sorts of things.
And I remember
losing a lot of my friends in college
because of that because I was saying like,
you know, it's more complicated than that.
Like, you know, actually people do dislike this person
for this, this and this.
reason and yeah, I remember losing a lot of friends because of that.
Maybe not a mental breakdown because it was just like a lot.
Right?
Yeah.
I remember even at one point I went to like a cafe.
It was one of these like cafes where people write on the walls and it said like
fuck Venezuela.
And I was just like, what a fucking dystopia am I living in?
And I also used to work at a front desk and this guy somehow found out that I was
Venezuelan and he started saying like, oh, Maduro's the best, like, whatever.
And my boss had to come in and like take the guy away because he was just being really
like rowdy, right? So yeah, it's calm.
Yeah.
In fact, we have us like when we introduce ourselves, like we don't say that we're
Venezuelan immediately just because it can be dangerous at times.
So.
Yeah, especially now we have this combination of like, when we've been,
we've discussed this, but on the right,
Venezuelan people are all perceived to be
fucking members of Trendyaragua now.
And then, yeah, it's that,
or you line up behind the regime.
And even when those two things,
like, they're not as distinct as people,
you know, sometimes in their imagination see them,
that they're also not as joined.
It's other people in their imagination to see them.
Yeah, it doesn't give you a place to express your identity, right?
You just have to fit into someone else's box.
Yeah.
Something else you said really struck me,
Like, there seems to be, and again, it's like, it's not distinct from the colonial impulse, right?
I think about the uplift, civilized and Christian eyes or the white man's burden or these, like, notions of people who were subject to colonial violence being lesser than or incapable of.
And, like, one of the things I see is, like, the idea that Venezuelan people are not aware of the United States imperialism.
I lived with Chileans in Caracas in like the first decade of this century, right?
Like people were extremely fucking aware.
Like I lived with people who have been tortured because of United States imperialism.
They played me Victor Hara records and then told me how they chopped his hands off, right?
Like you were a person on the left.
You have an understanding of the world and world politics and you've studied and traveled.
But like there is a cultural understanding of this, right, which does not require one to attend.
University. Can you explain how people, because people are weighing, on the one hand, we have this
Maduro regime, which is killing people, which is imprisoning people, and which is acting as a
fundamental constraint on our autonomy. And on the other hand, we have the Americans dropping bombs,
and we know what the Americans have done to this part of the world. If you could just talk on that
little bit, explain how people live with that balance. I think it's a combination of multiple things.
First, I mean, for many years, the government horribly mismanaged the country and then blamed the U.S. for everything that went wrong.
I mean, there were moments in which we knew and had proof that these problems were coming directly from the regime's actions.
And yet so many times they simply lied about it and said that it was the U.S.'s fault to the point where many of us were, you know, simply desensitized to the idea of U.S. intervention.
It's a case of the boy who cried wolf, but in this case it was.
the dictator who cried intervention.
Yeah.
Second of all, I mean, for many years now,
every cent made from our country's resources
have gone everywhere except to the people.
Our resources have been going to other country,
let's say Russia and China, just to name a couple.
And yet we, the Venezuelan people,
have not seen a single scent of that.
So at this point, we're used to being exploited
and we're used to being cheated.
So when people in the U.S. say, hey, the U.S. only wants to steal your oil or, hey, they're going to exploit your country, it's ignoring the fact that we have already been living through that very same thing for decades.
And many believe that our material reality won't be affected just because now it's someone else stealing our resources.
if anything, people are willing to see if these new guys, aka the U.S. might do things differently.
Now, whether that's right or not, what it really speaks to, I think, is I guess my final point,
which is that people are desperate.
Every time a leftist says, oh, your life is about to get so much worse or so bad or whatever,
they say that without knowing how bad things have already gotten.
I mean, I remember going to school during, like, the worst parts of the famine and seeing, like, a skeletal dead body lying on the street.
Like, that's an image I still have nightmares with.
And, I mean, for a time, I remember someone I knew dying or being killed every single week.
The abuse and the torture we've endured at the hands of this regime.
I mean, anyone can Google, like, what's going on in places like, Elilico.
or La Tumba or any of the other torture centers in the country.
I mean, people experience mock in real executions,
getting electrocuted like by their genitals,
rape, being forced to eat feces,
and a whole list of medieval-sounding torture methods.
And, you know, people are truly desperate for a change, any change.
And the fact is that the global campus left,
or as me and my friends have begun calling them,
the imperial left has done nothing for us.
They've given us no sustainable solution,
and if anything, have completely sided with our oppressors.
So, you know, if Trump comes and says,
I recognize this regime is bad,
and I'm going to do something about it,
people are going to take that.
And this is what is so frustrating to me,
is that many of these leftists will go ahead and then criticize Venezuelans
for siding with their enemies.
but what they don't see is that they have sided with ours.
And at the end, all that does is make life even harder for us.
We've gotten so desperate that we've run directly into the hands of vultures
because they're the only hands that we've been given.
I personally don't love what the U.S. is doing to our country,
but, I mean, I understand why many Venezuelans have reacted the way that they have.
and this is how I can best explain it to those who don't understand it.
It's sad, I know, it's very sad, and it's hard for people who haven't lived through this
to wrap their heads around this level of despair, but it's the simple truth,
and it's a hard truth that I think many leftists need to hear and understand.
And I say that as someone who is also saddened by this because I want to see a more left-leaning
future, especially for my country, but I don't think it can happen if people don't start
accepting realities like these.
The other thing that gets collapsed a lot, I think, is a Venezuelan opposition, right?
Like, it is always amusing to see, like, I myself, I'm not a communist, right?
I'm not a state communist anyway.
And I've seen, like, the Venezuelan Communist Party and the communist youth of Venezuela,
like, they'll put out a thing being like, we support opposition.
and then you'll see people being like,
oh, no, we're communists,
but like American communists
who don't speak Spanish
and are engaging with them.
It's very funny to see that,
like, in their mind,
all opposition in Venezuela
is of the right wing,
like MCM tendency, right?
There are many very valid reasons
where people on the left
would be opposed to what's happening.
Does it feel particularly isolating
to be of the left
and at the same time have this constant assumption
that to be in opposition, you have to be of the right?
It feels isolating when it comes to dealing with non-Venezuelans,
but when it comes to dealing with Venezuelans, not really.
I mean, pretty much all of my friends, I mean, as a queer artist,
like most of my friends are also, like, pretty left-leaning.
Yeah.
You have different kinds of people on the left, right?
But, yeah, like, when it comes to my Venezuelan friends,
it is not isolating at all.
Because precisely, we already know what's going on.
You know, we know that the, that the opposition isn't just like a right wing thing.
Yeah, I don't know.
It doesn't feel isolating because we know the political diversity that exists, right?
Yeah.
And so you just kind of have to find your tribe.
And it exists.
Again, we're a country where people have all different sorts of opinions.
And so, you know, between my Venezuelan friends, it seems pretty, what's the opposite of isolating?
Yeah, like inclusive, I guess.
Yeah.
But when it comes dealing with my non-Venezuelan friends, that's when it gets isolating because
there's just not an understanding.
Like, they just don't seem to understand no matter how much I try to break it down to them
or how much I try to explain to them.
I have been successful.
And many of my good friends who are like leftists, most of them are anarchists.
Yeah.
But when I do try to explain it.
to them. They do seem to understand because they know who I am and they know that I'm not like,
you know, bullshitting them. But yeah, but again, that doesn't mean like I told you earlier. I have
lost many, many friends and, you know, have had to unfollow many people. Like, I don't feel welcome
in all like leftists or even queer spaces sometimes because of what I think, which is, you know,
a free Venezuela isn't just free from imperialism, but also free from imperialism, but also free
from dictatorship. It's free from both. Yeah, yeah, right. It shouldn't be controversial.
But that is something that most of my Venezuelan friends, like, they completely agree because
similar to me, but my non-Venezuelan friends, or ex-friends, as I should say, they just don't
understand that at all. So it's always interesting. Like, you know, I spent a good deal of time with
Venezuelan people coming to the United States or who have recently arrived in the United States. And
earth. It's funny to see how people represent their operation to Maduro. Because at first,
they'll be like, oh, this guy's an American. So they're like, oh, it'd be great. The Americans
came to liberate us and like, what a wonderful country. And then like, once people begin to feel
comfortable and safe with you and you talk more, everybody knows we don't have it all figured out
either. Everybody knows the history, right? And then people, yes, of course, have a wide and
varied range of things that they would love to see in Venezuela. But they are united.
behind seeing an end to dictatorship and state violence.
Yeah, no.
And I think that's honestly kind of like a beautiful thing where, you know,
in spite of our differences, because I may have differences with other people who may be
moderates or right way or whatever, but we've all united against this like bigger evil.
And I think that's something that I wish actually the U.S. could learn about, right?
putting their differences aside to actually like tackle that bigger evil.
I think that's something the US should learn about us, how we've been able to do that,
how, you know, we can all say, you know, we may not agree on how certain things are done,
but we all agree on what needs to be done, which is, you know, like getting rid of this regime, right?
So, yeah, I mean, it's, it's actually pretty, pretty cool.
And although it's not always easy, because again, like, you have.
like in any country, we have all sorts of different opinions going on.
It is really nice to see everyone united for one thing and one reason.
And that's really the important thing.
So, you know, I wish other countries could maybe learn a little bit about that too.
Yeah, like the left in this country could learn a lot from the way that like,
a vast variety of left organizations in Venezuela
have managed to unite with organizations
that are more centrist or straight up on the right
to achieve at least one goal
with the understanding that they still retain
disagreement sort of profound about other things.
Exactly.
That's something we can learn a lot from.
And I'm always kind of in awe of the capacity for solidarity
that I see, especially for Venezuelan people.
Like, and I think it comes from, in part, like, decades of dictatorship and of hardship more
generally, right?
But, like, the continuous resolve that I've seen to get through it together, rather than
for each person to get their own and sort of leave the rest behind.
Yeah.
It's remarkable.
Genuinely, like, seeing, again, like, a lot of my experience, you know, I have not been in
Caracas for probably 15 years, maybe longer, is seeing people in the diaspora and migrants,
but like people who have grown so used to the state, ironically failing to provide the basic
necessities of life that they've got used to just obtaining them for and from each other.
Like, even if those people are not anarchists, they're probably doing more mutual aid than
people who spend a lot of their time being anarchists on the internet.
Yeah.
Like that's a beautiful thing that we should be in aura of rather than in vassies.
validating as so many people on the left are.
And I think that's something that really starts with our own crisis,
because I remember at the height of the famine, right?
I mean, I'm speaking maybe like 2013, 14 around the time,
because by 2017, when there was like another big like famine going on,
I was not in Venezuela, actually.
But I remember when that was happening, like it was very common like,
So in my backyard, we had plantain and our neighbor had avocados.
So we would like exchange things.
If somebody needed anything, like, if somebody's grandmother needed, like, this medication that can only be found in, like, this one place in Caracas.
But then I didn't have gas, but maybe, like, my cousin had gas so that we could drive to Caracas.
Like, so that's kind of how it worked back there.
Like, we had that solidarity towards each other.
And I think, obviously, if we go abroad, we're going to continue.
continue showing that same, yeah, like that same attitude because it's just like part of who we are,
I guess. Yeah, it does seem to be very much like part of the character of community. It's even like
when I was there, you know, a decade before that, quite a decade maybe, sometime before that.
It's funny, I went to this place where they're having like a revolution which was
extremely grounded in state power and came out realizing that the state is not the vehicle
for human liberation and the other people are.
I just find this impulse on the left to invalidate
and therefore refuse to learn from Venezuela
and people so frustrating.
It's like a mild phrase.
But like what can people do, right?
Like we're in a situation now where we have like Maduro without Maduro, right?
We have Delci doing like tweeting how much he likes Donald Trump all the time.
We are at the worst of all possible outcomes really, right?
we still have this apparatus for repression.
But at the same time, the US is basically engaged in a colonial relationship of extraction
of resources and anything else it wants from Venezuela.
Like, how can people better be in solidarity instead of trying to force you all into one box
or another box?
Yeah.
If we assume most of our audiences in Europe or the United States, right?
And they haven't been big, like, we're in solidarity with the Venezuelan anarchists
or even the Venezuelan socialist or communists
who are opposed to Maduro or to Delci now?
For non-Venezuelans,
I think the key thing is to speak about this
from a complete perspective, a whole perspective,
because what's the issue?
And I can tell you personally,
sometimes I see, I don't know,
like anti-imperialist, you know,
U.S. get out of Venezuela protests.
And I would love to join
because I want the U.S.
out of my country.
But then I see them with pro-Maduro signs or just like free Maduro or, you know, talking
positively about the regime.
And then I'm like, actually, I'm not going to participate in that.
Yeah.
So, you know, you're actively excluding Venezuelan voices by doing these kinds of unilateral thing.
And what do I mean by unilateral?
So I understand that many, let's say, Western non-Venezuelan,
are speaking and looking at things from their own perspective,
which is Trump is a bad guy.
He's not going to do anything positive.
We know the history of the U.S.
And so they are, from their own perspective,
they see what their bad guy is doing, right?
Right, yeah.
From the Venezuelan perspective,
we also see what our bad guy is doing.
Yeah.
That's why we're speaking up about this particular bad guy,
more than what we are about Trump, the other bad guy.
So it's kind of like, we have two different perspectives here and both are looking at their own, right?
And so the issue here is that those two perspectives are not combined, right?
So I would say the first thing you need to understand is that, you know, I understand why you're looking at things from your own perspective, but you also have to include Venezuela's perspective.
in your activism in order for them to actually be productive
towards the Venezuelan people, right?
Because when you say, you know, free Maduro and, you know,
US get out of Venezuela, you're still not addressing the necessities
of the Venezuelan people, right?
Which is we need to get out of the regime.
Sure, like one of those necessities is the US getting the fuck out of there.
But you're not addressing the main issue that has plagued us for the past 30 years.
years, right?
Right.
So when you're not doing that, and that's the dangerous thing about, you know,
conversations like that of Venezuela or Cuba or even Iran as well, when you speak about
things from one specific perspective, when you omit one side, you're making it seem like
the other side is better, when it should be abundantly clear that both the U.S. and
Maduro need to be out in order for Venezuela.
to actually be free.
Right?
So I think it's key.
It is very necessary
that when we have these
like free Venezuela protests,
it's not just about the U.S.,
but it's also protesting
the Maduro regime.
Right.
Because otherwise,
what you're going to do
is you're going to exclude
many people who also want
the U.S. to back off
from your own protests, right?
And if, you know,
it gets even worse
because I've seen Venezuela
an activist actually getting, you know, pushed out of conversations on Venezuela because they're
talking about, you know, what I'm telling you right now.
Yeah.
Right?
So they're talking about what the regime has done and maybe focusing on the regime.
Well, also mentioning that the U.S. should like, you know, they know U.S. history, but they're
focusing on the Venezuelan perspective because as a Venezuelan, that's what you want to bring
into the conversation.
Yeah.
Right?
Like non-Venezuelans can go ahead and out of that, you know, anti-Nexamination.
imperiless part of the conversation or, you know,
perspective to the conversation,
but they do need to make space for the Venezuelans who also need to speak out of the regime,
right? So it needs to be a combination of both.
And in your advocacy, you have to include both at the same time always.
Because, again, if you don't speak about one,
then you're sort of like portraying the other one is like the good side, right?
Yeah.
And what that does is that that continues to isolate Venezuelans,
I mean, including myself.
Like I said, I can't even go to a free Venezuela protest because I'm never going to be, you know, next to somebody chanting free Maduro.
Yeah.
So that's like the key thing, the leftist, like non-Venezuelan leftists need to understand.
Yeah.
I think a lot about how people on the left for some reason, and this is particularly odd with the fact that we have lived through a genocide in Gaza for two and a half years.
that people seem to only be able to understand solidarity with states
and not with people.
And we have the Palestinians, right, a stateless nation.
People seem to understand that there, to an extent, right,
albeit for many people, like Palestinian statehood is a solution to the problem.
It just seems to be such a condemnation of the organizing on much of the left that people cannot.
I mean, this is my general frustration with the world, well, one of them.
They can't think outside of the state model.
They cannot conceive of an alternative that does not already exist.
Yeah.
Even though there are movements outside of the state, right?
Like, a Kurdish struggle in the northeast Syria, for example, it's one.
But like, I don't know, like, we should be able to dream of a better world or a beautiful life.
And it seems like so many people have forgotten that that's what being on the last.
left is about and they identify as revolutionaries, but they're extremely reactionary in their
politics and their goals.
Like, yeah.
It must be so strange to come from, I don't know how old you were when, do you remember,
like, very early Chavismo?
I remember parts of it is like a memory.
So I was born in 97.
So early Chavismo was like a fever dream.
I remember, you know, during like the paro petrolero.
and all that.
Yeah.
I would like go outside of like my apartments like or like go to my window.
Like we used to live in a building and we would like take out pots and like
casseroles and start banging on.
And then everyone.
And that was like my favorite part of the day because I as a kid didn't really understand
that it was a protest.
But I loved banging on things.
So I remember that.
I remember like my parents not being able to find certain things that maybe in the past
they could find.
Mm-hmm.
I remember.
like at some points, like not being able to go to school because like there was something happening.
It's like you're really going to as well.
But I remember thinking, I hope there's another coup so that I don't have to go to school tomorrow.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The kids here with snow days.
So that's kind of like what I remember of early Chavisimo.
I also remember as well sort of seeing the division.
And that to me is like the biggest most impactful memory, right?
the division that existed. So on my family, I remember, just for context, like,
part of my family, half of my family is like middle class and the other half of my family was
working class, like, you know, brown working class from the coast, right? So shout out all
Kumare. So, you know, it was like different realities, different necessities. I remember
both sides of the family arguing a lot. Like, there was a lot. Like, there was a lot.
a lot of division.
Okay.
Very similar to what's going on in the U.S. right now in terms of division, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Where there were, like, heated arguments.
People did not speak to each other.
People hated each other because of, you know, like, part of my family was Chavista.
The other part was opposition or whatever.
Like, it was, that was one of the biggest things that I remember was, like, half of my
family hating the other half of my family because they had different backgrounds and different
political stances.
So, yeah, that was
a big thing, as well as the fanaticism,
right, that existed especially
Yeah.
Reistas. I mean, I remember
my grandmother had like a poster
of Chavez and like,
like a figurines and she dyed her
hair red because she supported the regime,
whatever. So,
so that's one of the things I remember
the most is my family,
both sides, like, hating each other
because of their differences.
And it's something
that I'm seeing in the U.S. right now a lot.
And I think it's operating in a very similar fashion.
Yeah, it does seem to be.
And like, did your family reconcile at some point?
Or do you still have people who are like, die hard?
No.
So, for example, my grandmother that I told you about,
she says that she's still Chavista, but she's not Madurista.
Yeah, yeah, I've heard this dance too.
Yeah, yeah.
Which is like, you know, she supports, like, what the revolution initially meant.
but like she doesn't support Maduro, right?
Yeah.
Or for example, like her husband, my grandfather,
he's just like, you know, this revolution was all bullshit.
We thought that this was going to be good,
but they ended up being absolute traitors.
Like, you know, they ended up not doing what they promised to do, right?
So it was all just disappointment.
And the other side of my family is just like, chill.
I don't know.
like they were just never Chavista so that's kind of you are like strong environmentalists so
that's why they kind of hated Chavez because they were also doing some crazy shit in the
Amazons so it's kind of like they do all get along much better right so that's good yeah I guess
because like once I realized oh actually this guy was not that good right but that particular
side of my family that was Chavista that's how they think right now or it's like either it was
disappointment or that perspective of, you know, I support Chavez, but not Maduro.
I've heard that from a lot of people, right?
Like, Hugo Chavez wanted to make Venezuela better for us.
And, like, if we just look at the shit, he said, yeah, I want people to have enough to eat.
I want them to have education.
I want them to be able to go to the hospital.
I want them to have safe houses.
Like, I want all those things, too.
They didn't get those things.
But, like, I've heard a lot of people say that, like, well, yeah, we wanted it, too.
So we supported it.
but it wasn't, we didn't get that.
We got prisons and cops.
Exactly.
And like, that stance seems to be entirely absent
in any discussion of Venezuela,
which is, it's so common.
Like, you just don't hear the, like,
it's not like a left critique from other left stances.
It's a left critique from the same place
that Chavisemu claimed to come from.
And it's completely absent in our discourse.
And, like, I can't, well,
It's because we don't talk to people from Venezuela, but yes, it's extremely frustrating.
I think, like, there's a lot that the United States can learn because we're already seeing
large numbers of people being like, oh, yeah, I voted for Trump one, two, three times.
And now something has alienated them, right?
Whether it's mass deportations, whether it's a war with Iran, whether it's the economy being
shit, whatever it is.
Like, we need to learn how to allow people to change their minds or, like, to get better.
Like, the Venezuelan opposition wouldn't be what it was.
If they said anybody who supported Chavez at any point can fuck off, we don't want you, right?
Like, it's, it wouldn't work.
It wouldn't function.
And I think if we would listen to people, there's so much that we could learn from that.
but we seem so locked in on talking down to them instead.
Yeah, I mean, exactly.
That's what I mean by, like, it reminds me of that, like, division, you know,
it's almost like a rap, right?
Like, people are foaming at the mouth.
That's kind of like the level of division that I remember growing up in.
And to be honest, a lot of what's going on in the U.S. is eerily similar to what I grew up seeing.
I think both Trump and Chavez are very similar kinds of people.
And, you know, I used to live.
in the U.S. now I live in Europe, but that's one of the reasons I decided to leave because
I saw many similarities to what happened in my country, and I decided to just skedaddle as soon as
like, because I sort of knew where it was all going, but I knew where it was all going because
of what I already lived through. There was actually one more thing that I'm thinking about it, that
it didn't get a chance, but you mentioned Palestine. I think it's really interesting because
The school that I went to, actually Venezuela has a really big population of Middle Eastern people, among them Palestinians.
There was a Palestinian club in my hometown.
And I remember during, was it like 2012, 2014, again, this was years ago, but 2012, maybe 2014.
At some point, there were protests, La Juerinas, if you know them.
Yeah.
During Las Guarimbas, there were protests for Venezuela.
whatever. And I remember that I had many Palestinian, like Palestinian, Venezuelan classmates,
and they were protesting both, right? So they had Palestinian flags and they had Venezuelan flags.
And they were protesting for both peoples. So, you know, that's like an example. Whenever people say,
like try to divide and, you know, say like, oh, like the Maduro is like pro-Palestine,
whatever I think of my friends in school where they were like, no, actually, we're Palestinians.
Palestinian Venezuelans, and we don't like what's going on in either place.
So because we do have a very big Middle Eastern population.
Again, many Palestinians, many Lebanese people who are not unaware of what has been going
on in the Middle East, right?
So that's also something to be added to the conversation is, you know, when we talk about
these things, like they're not isolated.
And precisely because we're not isolated, that's why we should, like you said, like
be more in support of the people.
rather than the states.
Right, yeah.
So I wanted to bring up like that little bit of like that little memory that I had
because I just remember the image of it of my friends doing that.
Yeah, it's very similar in a sense, I guess, to like I think a lot about how the Assad regime
used Palestinian people, right?
Like it would constantly talk about fucking solidarity with Palestine.
And it had all these tanks and all these guns and all these planes and bombs.
And it turned them all on its own people.
Yeah.
It didn't use its state power to liberate Palestine.
It would have been destroyed by the IDF if it did, I imagine,
but it used its state power to kill its own people.
Yeah.
It is so frustrating that we saw that happen,
and the world still allows people to tokenize the Palestinian people, right?
And to use them as a shield against the oppression of their own people.
I think a lot of people will be thinking or listening and being like,
well, I haven't really heard from Venezuelan voices or, you know,
they might not know any people from Venezuela.
Where can people, like, do more to listen if they want to as they, like, approach this issue
in so much as people are still approaching it, because half the US media's forgotten about
Venezuela already.
Yeah, yeah.
There's a lot going on for sure.
Yeah.
But I want to say, like, this might be a little bit annoying, but learn Spanish, right?
If you're going to advocate for a specific group of people,
at least learn the language, you know,
so that you actually know what people are talking about, right?
Not everybody speaks English.
Not everybody's going to speak your language.
So if you're actually going to take advocacy for Venezuela seriously,
then you should learn the language straight up.
So that you, it's easier for you to get into these conversations,
see what local activists are saying,
see what the news are saying,
like see even what our leaders are saying, right?
So I think that's one of the first things.
I think another thing, I mean, there are some like English language, Instagram accounts or like posting things.
Yeah.
But I think the biggest thing is to be for the people.
And what do I mean by that?
Everyone wants to claim that they are for the people, but very few people actually are for the people, right?
So what happens is they might hear like, I don't know, a Venezuela,
in person saying, oh, thank you, USA for taking out Maduro, do whatever you want, whatever.
They might hear like the typical Magasolanos, you know?
Yeah.
And you might hear all of these like perspectives that are really coming from not a place of
them being fascist or whatever, but coming from a trauma.
So I think that if you want to inform yourself, you need to develop the ability to think critically
about what's going on and be able to understand who are there.
these people and why do they have this perspective, right? So they have this perspective, not because
they were slave owners back in Venezuela, not because they're white, some of them are not white,
it's not because they are like pro-fascism or they necessarily love the U.S., right? But it's
coming from a place of trauma. And why do they have that trauma? Well, they have that trauma,
because all of the abuses that were committed, like to the Venezuelan people were on
behalf of this quote unquote socialism, right?
So they were committed in the name of the left, whatever.
So that's why all of a sudden they claim to be very right wing, although if you speak to
them, you might ask them, well, what do you want to see in your country?
And you're like, well, this doesn't sound very pro-capitalism to me.
But I guess the ability to understand these people, instead of calling them like CIA agents,
fascists, like they're stupid, they're idiots, don't listen to them.
the diaspora is just full of like Assad agents,
whatever you want to call them, right?
Like, I've seen every single in the book,
like any excuse in the book,
like to not listen to these people.
Yeah.
But I think the solution is to listen to these people
and try to understand,
and again, think critically,
okay, well, I understand that maybe what they are saying
is not necessarily great
because I also understand that the U.S., you know,
has done this, this and this,
and that they are coming from a place of trauma
that perhaps they do know
what the U.S. is history.
But again, they're just desperate.
But let's get to the bottom of this.
What is their root concern?
The crisis in Venezuela, right?
So why do they have all of these, like, crazy ideas?
Why are they so crazy?
So because of everything that they've endured in Venezuela.
So don't try to focus on, like, the shallow part of it all.
Like, try to go to the deeper end.
And that way you will truly understand what is going on, right?
not to ignore these people or just like dismiss them as A, B, or C, like, CIA, fascist, whatever.
They're not fascists.
They're just people who are traumatized.
And it's really important for you to understand their trauma in order to address the issues that
actually concern them and to actually have communication with these people and include them
and include them in your advocacy.
And who knows, maybe you'll be able to convert some to your side to, right?
Which I think that's been one of the most critical mistakes that,
many people on the left have made is that, you know, we have all these Venezuelans who, again,
claim to be right wing. And I'll get to a second why I say they claim to be. Yeah. But they claim to
be right wing. And again, it's not just because of the Maduro and Chavez regime. It's not just
because all of the abuses committed to them were in the name of socialism, but it is also because
the international left has reacted so negatively towards our cause that, you know, many Venezuelans
decided to say, hey, you know what, I'm right wing, or I'm a moderate, or, you know what,
I love the U.S. now because all of the people who are anti-West are pro the regime that is
killing my people. Right. Right. So what's that, what that is doing is like actually pushing these
people even further when you call, you know, these, like, Magasolanos, because they are
when you call them like, fascist or whatever or CIA, you're just pushing them even further.
And at the end, that sucks like for us, because then we're going to be the ones we're going to be politically confused.
And God knows that's going to lead us to some crazy places, right?
Yeah.
So I think the first thing is actually having empathy towards people and using your ability to think critically and hearing people out who maybe you were told not to listen to and thinking, okay, well, I don't agree with what you're saying on the surface, but I understand what your root concerns.
is, therefore, I think we should talk about this.
And I can understand that in order to inform myself,
what is truly happening to these people that are making them believe these crazy things,
like Trump is-dav-as, right?
Yeah, I think that's, like, really important to remember that you might come across
some of it as well, and who might be advocating for,
or someone from Iran or someone from one of these other places.
You might be, like, advocating for intervention.
Yeah.
And, like, it's really important not to be, like, okay, this person goes in the
mag or box for me.
Because, like, there are Venezuelan people who are going to go in that box, right?
But, like, we have a good deal of people who, like, they're obviously not going to be
opposed to migration if they themselves are migrants.
Exactly.
That doesn't always apply.
There's a famous video of the Turkish guy complaining about migrants as he enters
the United States.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, of course.
I guess what you're trying to say.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, there are people whose views on, like, the world and the way it should be might not
be that different from yours.
and like we only find out by engaging with each other in good faith and like as people not as tropes
which I think is a huge part of the problem I do think the language barrier is an issue so many
people on the left want to talk about places but not talk to the people and can't and then
we only see a small subset of discourse translated into English yeah I mean that's kind of what I mean
by like, you know, everyone wants to be for the people, but very few people actually are because
being for the people takes a lot of effort.
Because you need to learn languages.
You need to visit places.
You need to talk to people who you might on the surface disagree with.
You might have to think about what they tell you in order to come to a conclusion yourself about
what's actually going on and how you can actually support these people while not compromising
your own beliefs and your own knowledge and experiences, right?
So that takes part of work.
So that's what I meant by that.
Like very few people for the people in that sense, where they engage and actually go and try to talk to us.
And I think that's the best way of being informed of any issue, is just talking to the people.
But it takes a lot of work.
It takes a lot of work.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
But that's what solidarity is.
Like it's putting in the work to take care of each other.
Exactly.
It's been a failure of the non-campus left that we have not done more, that we have not reached out to more people
in Venezuela that we've not used our platforms,
that we've not shared their voices,
that we haven't done more to push back on this idea,
that like the only options for Venezuela
and neoliberal neoliberalism or maybe neoliberalism
what we're doing anymore,
but American imperialism or like this anti-imperialism of idiots.
Is there anything you'd like to plug?
Do you like people to find you on the internet
or some other stuff you'd like to direct people?
to maybe they can call you a Mossad or CIA or whatever.
Yeah, you can find me on my Instagram account.
It's e.m.m.a-r-n.
So just like my name deconstructing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I can send it to you later.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm trying to think of like what else to say, but I mean, yeah, like going back a little bit.
I just wanted to clarify this because I brought up a few times.
But what I was saying, you know, like looking at these Magasolanos and what I mean by like they are quote unquote right, they're not actually right wing.
Like if you speak to them and there's a really good video that this guy made, but it's in Spanish talking about this.
But what I mean is many people who are Magasolanos, you ask them, what do you want to see in Venezuela?
And what they want is affordable housing, affordable health care, clean water, proper environmental policies.
They don't want any more abuses committed to the indigenous communities, particularly those in the Arco Minero del Orinoco.
So you ask these people what they want, and this is what they want.
Right.
So when they just say that they're right wing, they say that they're right wing simply because they are traumatized from, you know, this apparently socialist regime, which was anything but.
and people on the left sort of, you know, just supporting that regime and isolating them and
treating them like absolute crap.
So they're traumatized by both of those things.
And that's why they claim to be in this position.
But if you actually talk to them, that is not the case.
Keep that in mind.
Because it's funny to me when many people say, oh, you guys just believe propaganda.
That's why you're pro-Trump and that's why you're right-wing.
because you consumed the CIA propaganda,
you guys are blinded by propaganda,
when in reality what that's doing is that is taking away
the accountability that many on the left should maybe, you know,
maybe think about because it hasn't just been CIA propaganda.
Like, it's also just leftist acting like assholes.
Like that's something that has also pushed many Venezuela's away from the left.
Yeah, 100%.
It's not just the CIA spreading propaganda.
It's all.
also that the left has acted horribly with Venezuelans.
And that has also pushed people away.
And I think if we're able to solve that issue,
if I think of the left is able to see Venezuela as human beings
and to have a different approach, such as, you know,
with, you know, what we talked about earlier,
I think we're going to be able to have a better conversation
and have a better relationship between these two communities
and actually get somewhere productive.
But I just wanted to bring that up because I am so,
seeing people saying it's all CIA propaganda and not really thinking, well, actually, we have also done some pretty bad things.
And that's why these people kind of have taken a dislike to us.
So yeah, I think, I think that's pretty much it.
Like in conclusion, just hear us out.
We're human and we're not the perfect victims.
We're not a monolith.
We're human.
Yeah. So we should be spoken to as humans and thought about as humans, not as some chess piece in this political game, just include us into the conversation.
I think is the most important thing anyone listening to this should take away.
Yeah. I think that's a really good place to end. Thank you so much for sharing some of that time with us.
No, thank you so much for giving me the space to talk. I mean, it's very necessary.
as you might imagine, for our voices to be heard and be put out there.
Because I'm lucky enough to be multilingual,
I try to do my best and speak in other languages
so other people understand what's going on in our minds and in our communities.
So I am very grateful that you're able to have me here and to actually listen.
It's not something many people do, so I really do value it.
Great.
Thank you.
that's great.
Canadian women are looking for more.
More out of themselves, their businesses,
their elected leaders, and the world are out of them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce
the Honest Talk podcast.
I'm Jennifer Stewart.
And I'm Catherine Clark.
And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women.
Entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, politicians, and newsmakers,
all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
Listen to the Honest Talk podcast and IHeart Radio,
or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
I'm Lori Siegel, a long-time tech journalist.
And consider my new podcast, mostly human, your bridge to the future.
Anyone can now be an entrepreneur.
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And it's very empowering.
Each week, I'll speak to the people building that future.
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What I come to realize is that when people think that they're dating these AI companion,
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The reason I say agency is because if we can give power back to people,
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do for your mental health.
Listen to mostly human on the IHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
A silver 40 caliber handgun was recovered at the scene.
From IHeart podcasts and Best Case Studios,
this is Rorschach, murder at City Hall.
How could this have happened in City Hall?
Somebody tell me that.
July 2003,
Councilman James E. Davis arrives at New York City Hall with a guest.
both men are carrying concealed weapons
and in less than 30 minutes
both of them will be dead
now everybody in the chamber
duct a shocking public murder
I scream get down get down
those are shots those are shots get down
a charismatic politician
you know he just bent the rules all the time
I still have a weapon
and I could shoot you
and an outsider with a secret
he alleged he was a victim
of flat down.
That may or may not have been political.
That may have been about sex.
Listen to Roershack, murder at City Hall,
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
In 2023,
former bachelor star Clayton Eckerd
found himself at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed
revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story.
This began a years-long court battle
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You doctored this particular test twice.
and so much. I doctored the test ones.
It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case.
I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for.
Sunlight's the greatest disinfected.
They would uncover a disturbing pattern.
Two more men who'd been through the same thing.
Greg Alesbian, Michael Marantini.
My mind was blown.
I'm Stephanie Young.
This is Love Trap.
Laura, Scottsdale Police.
As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at
Americopa County as Laura Owens has been
indicted on fraud charges.
This isn't over until justice is served in Arizona.
Listen to Love Trapped podcast on the Iheart Radio app,
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Hello and welcome back to It Could Happen here.
I'm your occasional host, Molly Conger,
and I'm joined today by a very special guest, Michael Edison Hayden.
Hi, how's it going?
Thanks for being here.
You may know Mike from his work as a
investigative journalist and an expert on far-right extremism. He currently co-hosts
posting through it, a weekly news podcast with fellow veteran of the far-right beat Jared Holt.
But today we're talking about his new book, Strange People on the Hill, how extremism tore
apart a small American town. It comes out April 7, 26, but you can go ahead and pre-order
it now anywhere you buy books and make sure you ask for it at your local library and your local
independent bookstore. Mike, thanks so much for coming on. I'm excited to talk about this.
you. I appreciate it. Yeah, I was worried that I wasn't going to have time to, like, read the whole book.
I mean, you talk about this a lot in the book, right? The stresses of covering this beat. But I sat down
to read it and I read it in one sitting. It is very compelling. Wow. But it's not the book I thought
it was. Hmm. You know, so when your publicist sent this to me, I thought, oh, phenomenal.
This is a book about Peter Brimlow in the Racism Castle in West Virginia. I would love to read a book
about Peter Brimlow in the Racism Castle. And it's not really, is it? Like, the Brimlow's
are the strange people on the hill and they sort of stay on the hill, right? You have a couple of
encounters with them in the book, but for the most part, it's a book about the town.
Yeah, yeah, it's about the town. And I'm glad that you mentioned that. I really didn't want to
write a book that was about these villains that have been, you know, populating our culture for
the last 10 plus years that just seem to get unlimited traction on social media.
there's nothing wrong with talking about them.
And there's nothing wrong with certainly reporting on them because I did my share of that, you know, day in and day out when I was with SPLC, for instance.
I think all that is important and there's different ways to do it and do it effectively.
But I think for a book, I wanted to focus more on what these people and this culture that is surrounding them is doing to everyday people.
Yeah, I was just, I was so startled by what it wasn't.
so engrossed by what it was. But just quickly for the listeners, tell us what the book is not about.
Tell us who Peter Brimlow is and V. Dare and how they ended up with a castle.
Yeah. Well, it's not totally without him. I mean, we do get a bit of information about him. Yeah, we meet him.
Peter kind of came up as a financial reporter. That's the short way of understanding, you know,
how he became America's most influential white nationalist. That's what SPLC labeled him.
which is covered obviously in the book.
And he became obsessed with immigration and in particular heartseller, which brought in tons of people from the developing world.
My mother came to the country in 68, for example.
That was like three years after a heart seller.
And I wouldn't have been born if not.
She married a white guy and et cetera, et cetera.
She came from Egypt.
So he became obsessed.
with this and kind of in the way that, I know you know a lot about the way some of these minds
work, Molly, but in the way that some people get obsessed with environmentalism and then they
kind of expand that concern to sort of say, well, there's too many people, right? There's too
many people. There's too many people. Well, there's too many brown people. That's what's
destroying the environment. And then they become, you know, sort of white nationalist-minded or
immigrant-minded. In Brimel's case, I really think it was like a financial thing, just like this is
putting all these different strains or whatever. And then it became, the financial became less of a
concern and the actual anti-immigrant thing became bigger and bigger for him. In 1995,
he publishes Alien Nation, which is a book that was actually praised by people like David
from, you know, the very same guy who's high-hadding about Trump every day. It was considered
socially acceptable. And then over time, I think people realized that the book had a very racist
undercurrent, and it became beloved by neo-Nazis, white nationalists, et cetera.
I think if people like David Frum had been honest with themselves, it was there all along.
It was not a subtle undercurrent.
Fun aside about David Frum, which is that I did put it in the investigation into Stephen
Miller's private emails. Miller shared posts by Frum on more than one occasion about,
like, sort of anti-Islam posts, which I think is interesting.
And I think what these people disagree most about is how loud you're supposed to.
supposed to say the quiet part. Yeah. No, I think I really do think that that's true. So, you know,
when Peter became more of a contentious figure, he founded Viter, which is a nonprofit that lasted
for about a quarter century. Recently died. Recently died. Well, that's covered in the book. It
dies over the course of the narrative. And it was hugely influential, hugely influential in changing
the GOP. And at the time when W. Bush was president, Brimlow was reeling against the GOP to change,
to move in this nativist direction. And eventually they listened to him. And so the book sort of starts with,
you know, it's what 2019, right? And Peter and his wife, Lydia Brimlow, have purchased this
gigantic castle in the small town of Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, right? I guess it's not a
I guess. A medium-sized castle. I don't know what the scale for castles is. And so you become interested in their purchase of this castle and you go to this town and you meet the people of Berkeley Springs, the people who are indifferent to their presence, the people who are organizing against their presence. And it's this really sort of engrossing story of just small town drama, this interpersonal drama of these like small business owners. And the castle is always there in the background, right? The strange people are up on the hill.
But it's a story about this small town struggle.
Yeah.
I think we should just talk about the castle real quick because it's beautiful.
And I think that's a key thing.
I hope when you read it, you were like, oh, I want to go to Berkeley Springs now,
which is I've had more than one person who read the book.
Tell me that.
I'm going to wait until they leave.
I've also heard that too.
But, you know, I know the people who are there who despise the brimelows and their ideology.
and I wanted to make sure that they didn't feel let down by the book, that they felt like at least honored to a degree because I really want them to be able to recover their business.
Their business have suffered since the brimlows took over.
But just a quick thing on this castle, it is absolutely beautiful.
It should be like a national park or something.
It has that feel.
It was built in 1880 by a guy named Samuel Taylor's suit who made it for a very, very young girl.
I think she's like 17 or something like that.
It's fitting that Brimlow bought it for his much younger wife.
Yes, that's true.
Yeah, there's a lot of like spiritual kind of woo-woo stuff in Berkeley Springs.
And there's a lot of, you know, superstition.
And a lot of people really think that they are carrying on like some sort of ghost like thing, like carry over from this relationship.
But he made the castle for her and he died.
And she took over and went bankrupt.
And there was also allegedly a murder or something like that that took place there.
And then there's like this kind of turnover from people, one generation of the next, trying to keep the castle going.
It's always more expensive than it's worth.
It's beautiful.
It overlooks the entire town.
The town is tiny.
Gorgeous.
It looks like a great place to go on vacation.
And if you imagine like four Berkeley Springs, the Empire State Building, Statue of Liberty, Times Square rolled into one, that's what the castle is.
It's so tiny.
And this is the main landmark.
This is the thing that everybody goes to and they go hiking around there and all this stuff.
this is a tourist town that attracts a lot of LGBTQ people from places like Washington, D.C., Baltimore, a lot of liberals.
And all of a sudden you have this, again, SPLC labeled white nationalist, anti-immigrant, nativist, whatever you want to call them.
A couple buys this castle, right? They decide to buy it. And the way they found it is because Lydia Brimlow, who is 37 years younger than Peter herself and started with him when she was 12.
or something like that.
And he was nearly 60.
Right.
She was an intern at the Heritage Foundation when they met.
Intriguing.
Yeah, at Heritage.
And it's interesting.
Weird.
In any case, she finds it on Zillow and you remember this period very well, I know.
But in 2018 or so, it became very, very difficult for these folks to stage events, right?
For, you know, for unknown reasons.
It's not because they kept killing people.
I don't want to, like, derail this podcast by bringing up Jason Kessler, but Jason Kessler, who we both know very well, who is, who secured the permit for the United the Right event, who has been at different times obsessed with both of us, I think, were like in his top in his top op-all list.
Jason, you know, was readily associated with VDair because of his contributions to the site, and people knew that.
And that may put even more pressure because they're like, well, this Charlottesville guy, right?
the unite the right guy. He's a safe. So VDIA couldn't stage any events. They were very worried about
counter demonstrators. I think that the counter demonstrators from that first MAGA era really put the
fear of God into some of these people. They didn't, they were, they were scared shitless of anti-racist,
anti-fascist. And all of a sudden you got a castle on Zillow, a million point four, and it's got
stone walls all over it. And hey, we can hold our conferences here. And so that's how they got it.
they ended up getting it for that reason.
And what happens to the town afterwards is, I think is a minor tragedy in our culture that hasn't been paid attention to enough.
Yeah, it is this sort of microcosm of what happened to America, right?
Like, we don't all have a racism castle in our town, but sort of the way this castle bears down on this little town kind of mirrors the way the influx of these extreme right-wing ideas into the GOP, into the administration that guns.
all of us, kind of is bearing down on us.
That's very smart. I think that's true. I think that is one of the reasons that the story spoke
to me so much that I wanted to pursue it for so long is it really felt like what everybody
was going through in the town. And readers will learn this. Imagine business owners who are
catering to many liberals there and stuck in in Morgan County, which is 75% Trump and 90%
white and they're panicking because they need to keep people going and the press goes a long way
in Berkeley Springs. It's a little place. They don't know how to push back. Someone buys private
property. What can you do? But they start to organize and try to figure out a way to urge Brimlow
to leave or to make it so difficult for him that he leaves. And yes, it is absolutely a symbolism
for what everybody's going through. And there are people all over the country in places,
red states where you might find people who you wouldn't expect kind of protesting against Tesla or
something like that. And they could be kind of corny. These type of people who are like corny online
and easily ignored, they're all over the country feeling that exact dread that you're talking
about where something very like above them is bearing down and pushing values that don't align with
theirs. Right. It's such a specific story about Berkeley Springs, but at the same time, this could be
almost any town.
You know, I'm sure you're, you followed the story of what happened in Enid, Oklahoma,
when the Identity Europa guy got on their city council.
And it was this, this very local small town struggle with these very specific local personalities,
budding heads.
But this story is playing out in small towns all over America because everyone has, you know,
if not a racism castle, everyone has a local racist who's making life hard for everyone.
Yeah.
I mean, they're ascending right now to use clavicular's phrase.
The, yeah, I mean, think about North Idaho.
for example. I did a story for them from Mother Jones. And, you know, they have a long history with white supremacy and certainly dead, red, far right part of the country. But you have, like, anti-Semites, like Dave Riley.
That's right. Rebecca Hargraves and those type of people encroaching on their everyday politics, right? They're trying to change the politics.
They're trying to integrate themselves, you know, coming from outside, basically, to take over.
Right.
I mean, it's the same thing as what happened in West Virginia, right?
It's that these white supremacists are moving to these places because they have a perception about what it will be like when they get there.
That, oh, everyone who's there will agree with me because they're mostly white.
Yeah.
That's why Dave Riley moved to Idaho.
Yeah.
When Peter Brimlow first moved to the castle, he would repeatedly, I think he would do it when people would reach out for comment and be like, you know,
Morgan County is 75% voted for Trump.
It's 90% white.
It's you who have the problem, not us.
And if you're looking for a more optimistic thing here,
I've gotten good reviews for the reviews that I've gotten,
but they keep using like disturbing.
Like this is so scary.
Like I think for us, it's not as much because we've been living in it
in a more intimate way.
Right.
I found it encouraging.
Yes.
You know,
because you met these people who were doing their best in this like bizarre,
a fucked up situation. Like they didn't ask for a weird old British Nazi to buy the castle.
Exactly. They're doing their best. And I think that's beautiful. I think, I think if you try to
tune out the reality that we're all going through right now and just focus on, you know,
your own private world, it can be scary because you're letting in Peter Brimlow into your
chairhead while you read the book. And you're, you're seeing neighbors kind of turning on one
another and you're seeing me go through a mental health crisis in the book. I mean, these are things
that for a normie that may be a little bit, you know, you may like the book, but you may be
a fine and disturbing. But for people like us who have kind of really been through stuff in this and
seen it up close on a regular basis, look, what I like about the book is it's rare to like say,
well, I'm going to pray some white people here. But like, it's white people saying that they don't want
to be represented by these values, right?
And I think that for me, as somebody who comes
and I'm so over an outsider, I, like, look so normal in New York.
I'm just, I'm just swarthy.
But there, there I look like Osama bin Laden in,
I was going to say, in an all-wide environment,
I don't think you pass as white as you do in New York.
Exactly.
It's very different, yeah.
Yeah.
And I say, like, you know, when you see them, I mean, they,
they have a choice to just kind of say, like, actually, yeah, we're, you know,
Peter Brimlow is standing up for my rights. He's standing up for me. He's speaking for me, but
a lot of people are not saying. A guy who thinks a $2,800 political donation is a small amount.
That's not the average West Virginian's idea of a small amount of money. Yes, that is a good thing to pull out. Yes.
You know, the other thing is the people who ultimately in the book tend to defend Brimlow or align with him because basically the
town is becomes completely divided maybe irrevocably so hopefully they'll come together one day i mean it's
still i think the tensions are still quite bad though yeah it's still happening even though vdr dies at the end
brimlow still live there the people who are not like yes we believe full-throated in the great
replacement conspiracy theory we think that the great replacement that like you know the
i'm thinking of the more extreme things that brimlow is said no they're they're just people who
see a nice white man and his nice white wife and they were nice to me and I don't understand why
you're making life so hard. Yeah. I mean, Viter has published Apologia about mass shooters'
intentions, basically. Right. But so many of these these Brimlow defenders are just,
they're not saying what he said is okay or I believe what he said. They're saying he was nice to
me. Why are you making such a big deal out of this? Yeah. I will clarify that, but they didn't,
they haven't said, yes, mass shootings are good. They have condemned that. But they've also said
that like this writing makes sense, right?
And they're like when during the top's supermarket shooting in Buffalo in 2022, that's
something I highlight in the book.
BDR publishes something that's like, actually like look what, look how the great replacement
has changed Buffalo.
That was their response to 10 black people getting shot.
Right.
So Peter Brimelow is very litigious.
So we do have to be very specific here and say, Peter Brimelow did not say it is good that
Peyton Gendron shot up that supermarket.
it. What he did say is if the Great Replacement weren't happening.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's, look, and I think that going back to the people in the town,
I don't think that they at every point be like, that is good. That what he's saying here is good.
The Great Replacements, so I'm fully on board with it. What they buy into is this
profound friend-enemy distinction that now hovers over our entire country.
right, where it's just sort of people who are friends of MAGA and Trump are on one side,
and then anybody who's at is my enemy.
And these more extreme talking points are sort of creeping into that space, and they're not stopping it.
You know, of course it's two-sided.
Of course.
There's like that that comes from the liberal left, wherever you want to, whatever you want to call it.
But I think in the case of the Bremlows, it's not the specifics.
I remember asking one guy.
in the book, whose name is Charlie Curia, and he owns a, you know, sort of a crafts shop at the corner
of Berkeley Springs Park, and it's right next to another main character of the book, Trey Johansson,
who is, you know, kind of almost the most important person. And I asked Charlie, I was like,
you know, so you met the brimlows, you hung out with them, what was that like? Is he for Christmas
and stuff like that? And I was like, well, how do you feel about the great replacement stuff? How do you
feel about like the stuff he writes. And what he said was he's a writer. He's a writer like you. He's a
journalist just like you. He's the same as you. There's no difference when he was very defensive.
Yikes. You know, I think that framing is very useful for understanding why we can't seem to
snap out of this current condition that we're in. When you're inside that bubble, that's the logic
that works. It's like, this is the guy on our side. You know, we're defending the guy on our side,
right? That's the psychosis that kind of overshadows the entire narrative.
Right. So this story in this town plays out against the backdrop of the wider world, right?
So, you know, your first visit to Berkeley Springs was right as COVID is starting, right? It's the last time you left your New York apartment before lockdown. You're in Berkeley Springs. And as the story progresses, we see the 2020 uprising. And there's like a little BLM rally in this tiny town. And then there's J6 and there's October 7th. There's the 2024.
presidential campaign, and there's these big events in the world, and then there's these
smaller events in the town, but interwoven with this sort of personal memoir, right, that the
world is in turmoil, and so is your life. Yeah. And all these threads sort of weave together.
Yeah, that's true. Regarding the events in the world and in the town, I'm glad that you brought
that up, one thing I wanted to do with the book that I don't see done enough is just to understand
that, like, everything that we see, all these, like, viral trends and all this stuff,
stuff filters down into everyday life. And I think when news is breaking or trends are happening,
we only look at the news and the trends like that. And we rarely look at the impacts on our
neighborhood. Whereas, you know, if you do a movie that's set in the 80s, you will see, like,
the events a little bit more about like at the kitchen table, what the family is going through
as something happens nationally, right? Or so. And so it's almost like we need time to process.
But this has a very clear time period, which is the period right before COVID to the 2024 election.
And it's enough in the past now that I think we can look at how these things affected regular people in this town.
Because every time you're seeing viral videos about Black Lives Matter, that's impacting the way people act there.
So you may get like five white people go stand on a street corner there with some signs after George Floyd's death.
And that's like a huge deal in that town because it's like people are shocked by it or they want to.
They want to harass those people after that.
So that was one factor.
And as, yeah, and as for, as for myself, it also overlaps, like, probably the darkest time in my life.
And that's not totally unrelated to Berkeley Springs in the sense that, like, you know, stuff at SPLC was, like, really, really bad at the beginning of the book.
And they're not there in the second half.
And my mental health was just not a great place.
I had spent, as you know, a lot of time with these guys.
And I know you personally have dealt with a lot of threats.
And really, I mean, as a woman, I mean, you're dealing with, I imagine it's even scarier because it's grosser anyway.
Yeah, that's grosser for sure.
And I mean, you're dealing with, I mean, I can't even imagine the mentality of some of the guys who are messaging you and what their private lives are like.
So, yeah.
So, yeah, I mean, I had gone through it for a while on my.
end. One example that is in 2021. I took my son to the batting cage and afterwards we went to
7-Eleven and I got a call from a number in North Carolina and then it was an FBI agent and he's like,
hey, I just want to, you know, as a courtesy, you want to let you know that we have somebody who is
like talking about assassinating you and, you know, do you have any questions?
Several, yeah. I was like, I do, but like my eight-year-old is like,
slurping on a, you know, a cherry slurpy in the back seat.
That duty to warn thing is kind of a double-edged sword, right?
Because they do have this legal obligation to inform you that there's a credible threat
on your life.
But like, they're not going to give you enough information to make you feel empowered by
knowing this information.
So it's like, maybe I would rather just not know.
Yeah.
Oh, it was.
Like if there's something I can do to mitigate this, can I just not know?
Yeah, it was horrible.
It was hard.
That is, I think, one of the things that a normie person would find deeply disturbing in the
book.
But like, yeah, I was dealing with that stuff all the time.
I would get like, you know, I'd get people sending me photos of Allen Berg's shooting in the driveway.
I don't know if you're familiar with that, but like he was the talk radio host who was killed by numbers of the order.
Killed by David Lane.
Yeah.
And I would get that all the time.
I must have been like months of just getting that from like random numbers and all this stuff.
Sometimes like a group of guys will get very into a particular image.
And I can imagine the kind of guy that is very into the image of Allenberg's corpse.
And it's not a nice guy.
I mean, it's, it's taboo.
It has like a pornographic quality to it.
But it harkens to a very specific era of the movement.
Like I can imagine there is a particular man who gravitates towards that specifically.
Yeah.
And I mean, like, I remember getting threatened by Bowers, the guy who shot up, like, because I was on Gab all the time, as you know, to a fault, I think.
But like, you know, I mean, it got a lot of stories out of it and sources.
But, yeah, because I was always dealing with those guys and I was always posting.
on there and, you know, trying to stir things up and see what it could shake loose for a story.
And, yeah, Bowers was just some kind of idle thing. And so when the tree of life shooting
happened, when he went out and said, you know, just screw your optics, I'm going in.
That's right. That's right. Yeah. And I was like, I know this guy, that one dingo held on.
So this was, this was very traumatic for me. I've been holding pretty firm on this.
I had a lot of manic tendencies in the sense of like I could just work constantly and you just
work around the clock, work late at night, constantly doing investigative reporting. And I was on a
mission because I was so angry about what had happened. You're right to write. That's what that
really triggered me. Before then, I had been really open to pursuing a beat as a crime reporter or
on climate change. These were the kind of things that were like I had written features about
previously. But it was it was after Night to Write. I got focused on. I really,
really was like, I'm going to put all my abilities into trying to create trouble for these guys.
And you did.
Yeah, I did.
And then when they pushed back, I guess, I wasn't mentally prepared for how scary it could be.
And it was lots of stuff.
I went through a separation with my wife, which is fine.
We're great friends, you know.
But that was like another factor.
And then also the SPLC thing, which we can talk about.
But the main thing is that I reached a breaking point.
I was having to be in Berkeley Springs with some of the sources from the book when I had to go home and go to a psych ward.
And I went for three weeks and I got diagnosed with bipolar there, which was a very useful diagnosis.
It makes a big difference because, I mean, especially with bipolar, if you're just taking antidepressants, like you're going to be up shit creek.
Oh, yeah.
Well, anti-depressants really screwed up my stomach and also made me like even more manic.
stuff like that. Well, the book is, it is a very frank, very honest, very personal. And I, maybe this is why
people found the book to be, you know, disturbing, because it is, is a very frank discussion of what it
means to be the person who is for so many years in the thick of it. You know, not, not doing sort of
objective, detached reporting, but getting in there mixing it up with these guys, like really, you know,
skin in the game, committed to the cause, doing investigative journalism in these spaces. And,
I mean, I think we both are guilty of this over the years.
On this beat, there is this tendency to sort of, you know, exchange war stories.
Like, oh, you know, I got this terrible threat.
I got this terrible threat.
You'd laugh it off.
And it's like, you know, it's this sort of fact of life that you brush off.
And, you know, everyone says, oh, you're so brave, I could never do that.
And you say, oh, it's not a big deal.
I deal with it all the time.
Yeah.
They say that for sure.
But then you go home and it, it is a big deal.
And people are not as honest about that as they could.
be. I mean, in part because admitting that it hurts you makes them double down. If they know they got you,
they're going to keep digging in that spot. But like, we don't talk enough about the fact that this
destroys us. Yeah, for sure. It's a very honest look at what happens when you, you bottom out on that.
And it's so much worse than just threats. I mean, you're constantly concerned that somebody is going to
use lawfare against you and try to hurt your family. And you have children. Yeah. Of course.
And I am extremely anal about legal stuff.
Like I'm just like hyper.
Like I don't, you know, I don't play games.
I like.
And so that's just an example.
It's like we published when I was with the SBLC.
We published the identity of Matt Gebert, who is the State Department official.
I remember that guy.
I was actually going to bring him up.
I was going to bring up Matt Gebert in terms of the number of guys who've moved to West Virginia because they think it's only white.
Yeah, we'll get there in a second.
But I just say, like, before I published that story, even though I'd been through a million lawyers and like every, I mean, we just went through everything and stuff like that. I bought a pack of cigarettes, which I'd never do. You know, I don't want to get into my stomach thing too deeply, but it was not working. It was not working at all that day. It was August 7th, 2019. And I was literally, I was, I was clammy. I was sweating. I had never seen his face. He kept all of his pictures offline. But I had the goods. I knew I had everything. But yet at the same, there's this.
One doubt is like, what if it's not him because I don't have the face match?
Forget threats.
That level of stress of just, you know, I checked everything, right?
I check, like, you think about the, the, you're trying to leave the house for a long trip or something like that.
And it's like, you know, that thought.
Oh, yeah.
Like, did I leave the gas stove on when I was, you know, when I was boiling something for my kids or whatever?
Like, that's the way it feels, right?
It's like sort of you're like, like, you memorize the entire investigative feature and you're like going through it and there's like, oh, oh, oh.
you know, is that, was that right? Did I check that? And I'm like, yes, I did.
Oh, I know, I know that. I know that feeling excited. It drives my husband crazy when I say things like, I'd rather get shot than be wrong in public.
Yeah. No, it's true. It's true. Like, I don't, I don't want to, yeah, you don't want to be wrong. And also you don't want to give these people a chance for, for anything. As you mentioned, Brimblow is very litigious. Not usually very successful.
No, no, he's. But that doesn't matter. Yeah, but it's stressful to report on him because of that because he just, he will use it as a tactic and stuff like that.
And I gave, I also gave the brimlo, as I should point out, many, many opportunities to talk to me and
more detail about everything. And they didn't want to. But you do speak to him several times in the book.
Yeah, I do. I do. Much to his displeasure.
Well, just to say, like, yeah, I mean, all that really led up to me going to the psych ward.
And that and the, the SPLC thing, which is basically my relationship with SPLC is like I was probably the
most well-known person there, largely because I've had a social media.
presence and I was doing a lot of spokesperson work. So I was like on TV a bunch and stuff like that.
So whenever someone's mad at the organization, they're going to take it out on you.
Yeah. And really for a good part of the early years there, after Heidi left, we didn't even have
a director of the intelligence project. So, you know, I would just get thrown into a lot of
TV, radio, stuff like that. And, you know, they treated me great. I mean, I got my pay raise
multiple times and promoted and stuff like that.
And I kept breaking investigative stories.
And then when we started to have problems,
where they started to limit our ability to publish stories,
they really became very risk-averse.
Which is so contrary to my image of what this institution is for.
Yeah.
Both like functionally and morally.
Yeah.
As a senior investigative reporter at the Southern Poverty Law Center,
you didn't have mental health coverage.
You couldn't see a real therapist.
Yeah.
That's horrific.
That's a human rights abuse to make you look at Gab all day and not get you with
therapist.
They were giving us like the app stuff, which is not going to cut it.
No, but you need like a $500 an hour.
Yeah, you need a New York analyst.
A psychiatrist, you know, in some case, like, you know, somebody good.
But they should be covering that.
Yeah, no, they were not.
And there's just a whole bunch of stuff.
There were a bunch of safety issues.
No doubt.
Hannah Gase, my dear colleagues, still my colleague, even from I'm not there anymore.
You know, she went to go cover Amran.
in Tennessee and like a bunch of proud boys like basically chased her down.
Right.
There was no security plan.
There was a woman named Susan Cork was the intelligence project director at that time.
And she was just, you know, out to lunch.
She just didn't do anything as far as I could tell.
Things like what happened to Hannah.
Like stuff like that happens to me, I expect that.
I'm out there by myself.
I have no plan.
It's just me.
I have no plan.
It was so startling to me to hear that like Hannah is out there operating without
a net too.
There was no plan for her safety.
Yeah, there was nothing.
And so one of the first things I did was I helped Shepard a grievance about this.
And it was effective because I think that got Cork put on like a performance improvement plan.
And then after that, everything changed at work.
I went from being the favored person to being repeatedly a target of what did you do?
Why did you do this?
Like it was really, I mean, to add on the already stressful situation that I was in,
it was just like your tone in a meeting.
And then there was, the thing about that was there was like a verbal warning or something that
they actually bothered to write out, which was quite stupid.
If you're doing a verbal warning, you shouldn't put it in print.
And sure enough, we found in there that like all the dialogue that was in there was completely
fabricated and made up.
And so for the listener, so discussed in the book a little bit, is the fact that at the
Southern Poverty Law Center was engaging in union busting.
Yes, that's right.
So, you know, you were dealing with retaliation for union action.
in the workplace. Retaliation for union activity. It was really bad. It happened a second time after
that when I was covering the trial Doug Mackey. With character we can save for another day.
For another day. And it was really bad. And the stress was really getting to me. And I had a panic attack,
which I've never had before while I was in the shower. And I told them about that. And Susan Cork and the
person above her, his name is Anne Beeson. I told them about that. And then
they responded by turning around and disciplining me again.
Almost like to say, like, we've got them on the ropes now.
Let's really like make them quit.
It's an ADA violation.
Yeah.
And every time we do this, we'd summon the union and we'd make it as hairy for them as possible to do what they're doing.
But there's limits to what you can do, really, when they want to try to do these sort of thing.
They pushed it as far as they wanted to go, which is after the summer of 2023, there was a Hamas attack on
Israel. And, you know, I have Arabs and my family. I have my mother's side, including Palestinians.
You know, I was distraught about this whole situation. It was adding another thing on top of it and watching
the retaliation, which became a genocide very quickly, did not improve my mood, obviously. It was
very stressful to see that stuff. And Hannah invited me to sign a thing about, you know,
They was just sort of like asking writers to sign on Israel's apartheid state, you know, calling for a ceasefire.
Writers for the ceasefire, yeah, I remember.
And free beacon.
I don't know if you're familiar with that.
Wonderful politician.
It still comes up in the first few pages of your Google results.
Thank you for notice.
Yeah, I know.
But this, the book should push it back.
The book, the book, the book, I'm waiting for that.
Free Beacon, like, came out with this thing and it was like, SPLC spokesperson, you know, blames
Israel for Hamas violence or something like that.
And just the audacity to accuse you of anti-Semitism for signing this letter, you know,
supporting a ceasefire.
I mean, I've read that letter.
It's not an anti-Semitic letter.
It is calling it what it is and just asking for a ceasefire, right?
And you have spent a decade writing about anti-Semitic violence.
Well, there's tons of, there's tons of anti-Zionist Jews on there.
I mean, there's probably more than anything else.
But, you know, when this came out, I was really pissed.
Obviously, it had a racist undertone.
I mean, Hannah was mentioned, but it was mostly about me.
And then instead of a picture of me, they used, they used like one of those pictures of Hamas looking like cobra from Chi I Joe and with like a rocket launcher.
Right, implying that you as a man of Arab descent are an anti-Semitic terrorist.
Yeah, basically.
Good faith stuff.
Adding to, I would say this is also complex because, you know, my family basically fled because of three.
threats from Islamic terrorism, right? So this is even more like, you know, to align me with that
necessarily is not my, not ideal even though I'm in like, you know, I'm sure I have a very more,
a more nuanced idea of what Hamas is than that author. The point is, it's just, I mean,
just basically to do that. And then rather than SPLC like care so much about social justice and
racism. Rather than seize the opportunity to differentiate themselves from the psychosis that the ADL
has descended into as, you know, because those two organizations sort of exist in the same
space. They're often used in the same sentence. And the ADL has really lost a lot of credibility
in the last few years. I don't think they have any credibility because of this stuff. And so instead
of differentiating themselves from that, they chose to discipline you. Yeah, they did. And that was
when I, like, like I said, mental health was like all the factors that we've just discussed
mentioned. And then I was happened to be in Berkeley Springs when I reached a point where I was,
Like, I had, you know, I was suicidal and there's trigger warning for people.
I apologize.
But that's the truth.
And came back and I had to spend the sort of Christmas break period there where I lost, you know, they ultimately terminated me.
It was a Title VII violation in terms of discrimination.
Well, we'll get into what happened ever.
But and then when people found out what happened, the union started to write things to, you know, to management.
There was all this internal dialogue happening while I was in a site.
word with like no access to anything. And almost everybody in my line of managers was pushed out. And
given buyouts allegedly, Cork, this woman, Anne Beeson, and now the CEO is- They exposed themselves to
some serious liability there. Yeah, they got off easy in many ways. Yeah. They disposed of me,
but I threatened suit with a lawyer, a wonderful lawyer who she was great, Jewish woman from New York.
and she was tough as nails.
And yeah, I mean, I got a good settlement out of it, which is, you know, I would have preferred just to be able to just continue doing my job, though.
It's heartbreaking to remember that, you know, even these progressive nonprofits that are fighting for what we believe, they're using you up and spitting you out to.
Yeah, oh, sure.
They're doing union busting.
They're firing you for having a mental health crisis.
They're opposed to you exercising your free speech off the clock.
The kinds of things you just, you don't want to see from an organization like the SPLC.
Yeah, they had to retract my termination and assign into a layoff.
And then, you know, I had to retract labor claims I had made, which would have gone nowhere as soon as the Trump administration took over anyway.
That's heartbreaking.
Which I saw coming in 2024 to a degree.
So, yeah, like, that happened.
And then bringing it back to Berkeley Springs, I was told not to go anywhere, but I needed to keep working on the book.
So it was like a week after I got out of the hospital.
all. I came back down there. And then the folks who I had been working with since 2020, when the
Bremlis first arrived, they kind of took me in and nursed me back to health. So that's why it's,
I feel unified in the narrative. And we're able to explore what happened to me psychologically and
what happens to them psychologically as this other stuff is happening. So I guess I understand why
some of the reviewers call it disturbing, but that sort of full circle, that sort of personal closure,
you know, obviously things weren't ideal, right? You lost your
your job, but it, I don't know, like, things came full circle and the people that you went there to
write about took care of you and you, I don't know, you all continue along your way as the world
falls apart. I don't think that they come across as, like, perfect either. I mean, like,
that's what I'm really hopeful for. No. I mean, everyone, they're all complicated people.
You know, I wanted to avoid, like, this sort of wishy-washy utopian, like, I'm an ally, you know,
and I'm, it's like, yeah, actually the people who are allies have all kinds of issue. They have
marital problems. Maybe some of them
are like behaved badly in one thing or whatever.
We're all people like trying to
live. It's really a question of
what this
particular ideology
that has been foisted upon us
very rapidly
by the likes of
Steve Bannon and Brimlow
and others. It was a
collective push to take the
existing right-wing
monster and
set it in this direction.
what this is doing to us.
It's a very intimate look
at what that is like for individual
people. You know, we're all experiencing
having right-wing violence
foisted upon us from above, but this is,
I don't know, there were these like small
moments of like physical intimacy.
Like when you're at the castle for the party
and, you know, you and Peter Brimlow
are exchanging like this lighthearted
moment and you reach out and you put your hand
on his shoulder instinctively.
When you're sharing laughter with someone,
you put out, you put your hand on his shoulder
and like, you know,
recoiled immediately and didn't know why you had done that, but this tiny moment of physical intimacy
that, you know, this was a person or the transgender mushroom farmer Lisa Marie who sought out
Lydia Brimlow at church and shook her hand during the right of peace. Like, I would have loved to
have seen that. She's so cool, by the way. You should have her on. She's awesome.
She sounds amazing. I would love to meet Lisa Marie. Well, I'll tell you about her in a second.
But, yeah, I mean, yeah, I mean, Brimlo is behaving in a very, I mean, he has like an infuncular kind of vibe like in person when he's not angry with you.
And I'm sure that for people who know him in a friendly way in the movement, that he's, he's fun.
You know, he likes to drink.
Room temperature vodka.
He is always talking like this.
He sounds like he's always had a few drinks.
He probably has.
He has that British way of just some kind of dry.
remark about things going to pot.
Like, you know, I'm sure it's fun for people who know him.
And, you know, you're in that space and you, any kind of party thing or whatever, you,
you can let go for a second.
And for a second, I felt, not that like I felt like, oh, this is my friend or anything.
It's just more that I'm just talking.
Exactly.
You know, people really bristle at that, you know, you're humanizing him.
Well, yeah, because he's human.
Humanizing doesn't mean excusing or, you know, coming to appreciate in any way.
It just means, like, he's human.
So for most of the book, the strange people on the hill are removed on the hill.
But when you encounter them, there is this very human intimacy to these encounters.
And not only that, everybody has a rough go in this book, including them.
Getting raked over the coals by Letitia James.
Well, over the course of this, that narrative, if you follow their arc and their arcs throughout the book.
But one particular arc, it starts with them really thinking they've got it.
This is like this is like high point of VDR's existence.
They have a castle.
They have a home base that they can use in perpetuity.
After Brimlow leaves, the movement can flourish and grow.
This is like, this is it.
They got a castle.
I mean, it would be the perfect place for white nationalist meetup.
They haven't really used it that way that much.
Like every now and again, but like.
This is the best situation they've ever had.
Like, they're great.
And they've also just coming off of getting a whole bunch of dark money.
Donations from two people.
We don't know who they are.
but it's like, you know, 4.5 mil in like one year through donors' trust.
And they're riding really high.
And then by the end from the Letitia James investigation, it had not turned into a lawsuit yet by
that point under the pressure of that.
And just under the pressure of just everybody around them, you know, not wanting them to be there,
they decide to dial down VDAR altogether.
And it still exists in the sense of like the Twitter account still exists.
and Brimel is still writing on substack.
God help us.
Some of it is a legal thing to try to, you know, get them out of the way of Letitia James.
But, you know, they're really broken down.
I mean, the videos that they published about their closing, I mean, it's just a laundry list of things that had up to a defeat.
I don't think they would disagree with that, that they felt defeated by the end.
And the people who were in the town who are so nice and sweet and wonderful and all of those, they're laughing as you would, right?
Everybody talks about like when Trump dies and everybody's like, I'm going to do this when Trump dies and all that stuff, right?
It's just liberation from that thing. But ultimately it's a really like if you just look at the brimlows, it is like, you know, it is a brutal fall by the end of the book.
Yeah, I mean, 10 years ago, they were poised to be on top of the world and their ideas remain ascendant, but he himself has really fallen.
Now he just has the flooded basement of his little racism castle.
Well, there's no, there's no solidarity on their side.
I just, oh, God.
That's what I say.
No, that's one thing they will never have.
I mean, you get somebody who annoys me,
who is a sort of anti-fascist, anti-racist, who like annoys the shit out of me,
but they wind up, like, you know, being targeted by somebody.
I'm like, okay, well.
You're not going to gloat about their downfall.
No, but it's not only that, but it's like, now it's time to, like, you know, support them.
You know, that's the way I feel.
And they just don't do that.
They don't do that for each other.
They hate each other.
They're always malignant narcissists.
because it's always about cloying to the top, right?
It's always trying to get power over other people.
I mean, everybody wants to be the crab at the top of the bucket,
but you're still a crab in a goddamn bucket.
There's two strains of MAGA.
I know MAGA is a very broad term.
And like one of them is really this kind of grift-focused,
kind of crypto web three aligned aspect.
We're just AI and this.
And like a small number of people, like 15%,
we'll go hoard a bunch of like fake coins or whatever thing.
Polymarket like odds or whatever.
They're all hoarding information to kind of beat people in Polymarket.
And then the suckers, the, you know, whatever, the rest of it, the bigger percentage is 75%
followers.
They're taking their money.
And that's MAGA.
That's a big part of MAGA.
And then the other part is less concerned with money, although money is a part of it,
is just ascending and pushing down from a power space, right?
Like you just like to be in a place where they can have power or power.
over other people and usually other people being designated by not looking like them or not
behaving like them or not having the same kind of boyfriends, girlfriends, whatever, than them.
It's like, I mean, I couldn't be happier that Peter Brimlow is going to end his career
on the bottom of the heap he was trying to climb. Yeah. Yeah. And they'll be, I guarantee you,
there'll be more of an effort from us to define his legacy than from them because they don't care.
They don't care. No, they will, they'll use you up.
and forget you. Yeah, they don't care. We will, we will spend more time on him than it.
And so we, look, I mean, we're talking about them right now. I have a, I host a podcast where
we talk about these guys all the time, right? So it's like, we're always bringing up new guys.
I think we're doing a, we're doing a full bio-up on Stephen Miller soon. You know, they don't do that.
They don't care. They're not like, here's sort of reason Stephen's great.
I mean, Jason Kessler disappeared from the internet a year ago and they don't talk about him
anymore. Oh, yes. It's like he never existed. Yeah, I mean, but you know what? I hope he stays
off that. You know what I mean? I try to find some forgiveness in my heart, you know.
Maybe it's the Catholic upbringing, whatever. But I try to find some, even though he literally,
who knows what he did that was related to threats I received because he wrote stuff about me.
I mean, I think that that series he put on V-Dare that included information about you and your family
certainly didn't help. Yeah, for sure. But, you know, if he stays offline and he stays like this,
like I hope that he's getting some help.
That's all anyone ever asked.
I mean, that's all I was ever asking for from these guys.
I'm not even holding out hope that you change your heart.
I just want you to stop doing stuff about it.
Yeah.
I mean, just stop trying to make everything worse.
Yes.
Yeah, really.
Like, I mean, but if he's out there and he's like, I'm just going to like, you know,
keep it quiet.
And I have a hard time imagining that guy like finding any kind of change of heart.
but it would be great if he just stayed,
just stayed out of everything and just lived his life.
And, oh, you know, privately.
I would, I would feel some tiny crumb of respect for that.
God willing.
God willing.
And maybe, uh, maybe Peter Rimlo will log off forever eventually too.
Well, I mean, based upon the age, uh, that, that's.
Yeah, well, he's going to, he's going to do a permanent log off eventually.
He's going to do a permanent log off eventually.
I've heard all kinds of gossip about from people in Berkeley Springs that Lydia really doesn't want to be associated with the white nationalist movement and really doesn't want to be associated with the movement in general, just if you want to give it another term that they might use like dissident right or whatever.
I think I don't know this for a fact that she would never tell me directly.
Think about Lydia Bremlow.
You're 20 years old.
This very rich white husband comes by his old.
for you.
He's like 57 and he's recently lost his wife.
Brimlow lost his first wife to cancer.
And you're in the kind of heritage scene.
You're kind of conservative yourself.
And this guy is pretty conservative.
This is happening around a time in which alien nation is still kind of acceptable.
I mean, at least in the heritage front set, sure.
Yeah, on the right, it was kind of acceptable.
And but even, you know, even if it's acceptable, the worst you could say about him, he's kind of a bad boy, like a bad, you know, he's got, right? So it's sort of like, ooh, edgy. He's like an edgy bad boy. And you kind of get indoctrinated into the movement that way. And you're in a marriage. You're like, I don't know, like when I was like 20 something, I don't know. I didn't know what the hell was going on. So you're in this marriage with this dude and you have kids now and you've seen the other side of it, the hell of it.
up close all the time, people shutting down the website, people, there are hackers, there's all
kinds of things that they're dealing with constantly. Everyone is telling you, everyone other
than people in the movement are finding ways, whenever they had a chance to speak to you,
they're telling you, you know, go fuck yourself, we hate this, right? We hate you. We don't like
this stuff. It's got to be discouraging. I mean, for years. And then now all of a sudden,
you're turning 40 and you've got kids and you're looking at this. I mean, I personally would want
like just get as far away from it as possible. I mean, it just seems like it's just a depressing,
you know? Yeah. Like I said, that's all I want for these people is that they stop doing
harm in the world. And, you know, if they have a change of heart that's wonderful,
don't tell us about it. Yeah. Just, just log off. Just go be normal. Go get a real job.
Stop being a Nazi. Just go, just go be a guy in the world. Yeah. I would really like that.
I think they're kind of entering now a sort of post-Nazi phase.
I mean, because they don't have to be edgy anymore.
They're the mainstream Republican politics now.
You can be just, you can just be like racist Nazi at all the time.
And that's why it's starting to mutate into like this like whole looks maxing and like, you know,
it's just like in cell, but like we're not insoles anymore.
We hammer our face, whatever.
You know, I just think that they're now.
So they think they're such part of the culture.
And it'll be very interesting for me to see if there is a huge change after this, if we see sort of the Trump regime kind of fall, have a really hard fall and some of this really starts to break up, what will happen. And when people like look back at some of the stuff that's happening over the past like a few years even, as there's been this tremendous explosion. If you look at the time from when the book ended, which is again on the election day, the day after the election on 2024. I mean, what a moment to end things.
But if you look at that from there to now, you see, like, that was almost like an endpoint before this new culture that we're in now, where you have the shootings in Minneapolis and just the outright violence, the blown up boats, all this stuff.
I'm very curious to see our culture, if our culture can heal a little bit, how this stuff will be viewed.
Yeah, I mean, it is, like you said, it ends before the story is over.
But I think, you know, as a portrait of that four-year period in that town, I mean, it's fascinating.
It is, I think, applicable to the world outside of Berkeley Springs, but it is a very intimate look at what it means for a weird old racist blogger to move into the castle that looms above your coffee shop.
Absolutely.
I don't want to keep you forever, but I just want to remind the listener, Strange People on the Hill, how extremism tore apart a small American town by Michael Edison Hayden.
comes out April 7th.
Yeah, April 7th.
April 7th.
You can pre-order it now,
wherever books are sold,
or you can just go to a bookstore on April 7th
and pick a copy up.
I'm going to go ahead and contact my local anarchist bookstore
to make sure they have an order in for it,
and I recommend you do the same.
Anarchist bookstore better.
Don't buy it on Amazon.
I mean, you can, but don't.
Yeah.
And tell your local library that you want them to buy a copy
because that matters too,
and that gets this book into more people's hands
because not everybody can afford to buy a book.
So, request it at your local independent bookstore and your library, if you can.
Yeah, I heard from friends that, like, at random places in Illinois and whatever that they can find the book at their local library, they will be able to get it.
So that's great.
Please ask for it.
And, yeah, and enjoy it.
I think it'll have, my hope is it has a long tale.
Some word of mouth about the era.
So something to read, something to read not just now, but also in the future.
Yeah, it is a fascinating picture of a particular moment in time that has.
broader lessons, I think. But my, thanks so much for coming on. Where can people find you online?
Thank you. You're so, you're even cooler in person. I just want to see. Where can find me online?
I'm in blue sky. What the hell is? I hate the blue sky handles. That was the one thing that,
you know, people complain about blue sky. And it's like, for me, it's like, what do you even want,
dude? Like, you know, all this stuff is so bad, right? Like, what do you even want? It's Michael e.
B-S-K-Y-D-S-O-C-I-L.
I'm still technically on Twitter at Michael E-Haden,
where I've always been, you know,
when I was writing the book and I was recovering from the mental health thing,
I wasn't online at all for all of 2024.
And so my,
that like cratered my,
my ex-engagement.
In any case, I don't like being on there too much just for anything other than research.
And people can find you every week on posting through it, Jared Holt.
Oh, that's true.
Yeah, just, yeah, just do that.
You can listen to us, talk about all kinds of things.
We're talking about Kach Patel.
We're talking about the AI fruits that we keep finding on our feeds now.
All kinds of topics.
The AI fruits.
Oh, Mike, thank you so much.
And again, buy the book.
You're going to love it.
Thanks, Molly.
Thanks so much.
Bye.
Bye.
Median women are looking for more.
More to themselves, their businesses, their elected leaders,
and the world are out of them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast.
I'm Jennifer Stewart.
And I'm Catherine Clark.
And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women.
Entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, politicians, and newsmakers, all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
Listen to the Honest Talk podcast on IHartRadio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
I'm Lori Siegel, a longtime tech journalist.
And consider my new podcast, mostly human.
your bridge to the future.
Anyone can now be an entrepreneur, anyone can build an app, and it's very empowering.
Each week, I'll speak to the people building that future, and we're going to break down
what all of this innovation actually means for you.
What I come to realize is that when people think that they're dating these AI companion,
they're actually dating the companies that create this.
We're experiencing one of the greatest tech accelerations in human history, and let's be
honest, that can be messy.
There's no playbook.
for what to do when an AI model hallucinates a story about you.
But it's my belief that we should all benefit from this moment.
Mostly Human will show you how.
My goal is to give you the playbook, so you can benefit.
The reason I say agency is because, like, if we can give power back to people,
then I think that's probably the best thing we can do for your mental health.
Listen to Mostly Human on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
caliber handgun was recovered at the scene.
From I-Heart podcasts and Best Case Studios,
this is Rorschach, murder at City Hall.
How could this have happened in City Hall?
Somebody tell me that.
July 2003,
Councilman James E. Davis arrives at New York City Hall with a guest.
Both men are carrying concealed weapons.
And in less than 30 minutes, both of them will be dead.
Now, everybody in the chambers.
A shocking public murder.
I scream, get down, get down.
Those are shots. Those are shots. Get down.
A charismatic politician.
You know, he just bent the rules all the time.
I still have a weapon.
And I could shoot you.
And an outsider with a secret.
He alleged he was a victim of flatdown.
That may or may not have been political.
That may have been about sex.
Listen to Roershack, murder at City Hall, on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
In 2023, former Bachelor star Clayton Eckerd found himself at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story.
This began a years-long court battle to prove the truth.
You doctored this particular test twice in someone's, correct?
I doctored the test once.
It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case.
I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for.
sunlight's the greatest disinfected.
They would uncover a disturbing pattern.
Two more men who'd been through the same thing.
Greg, the Westby and Michael Marantini.
My mind was blown.
I'm Stephanie Young.
This is Love Trap.
Laura, Scottsdale Police.
As the season continues,
Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at Americopa County
as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges.
This isn't over until Justice
is served in Arizona.
Listen to Love Trapped podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Hey, everybody.
Robert Evans here, and this is It Could Happen Here, a podcast about, well, what's happening?
And on March 30th, 2026, which is the day that I started sitting down to write the episode
that you're listening to right now, Reuters published an article announcing the arrival of
another 2,500 United States Marines in the Middle East, as the Trump.
Trump administration, quote, considers options for Iran operations. As you all know, Operation
Epic Fury, it's nothing to call it, but its name, was launched a little over a month ago with
the administration insists an expected duration of four to six weeks. And we're coming up to the end
of that timeline. Trump announced the day I record this March 31st that he's expecting
combat operations to end in two weeks or less. So we'll see what happens to
Tomorrow, there's supposed to be a speech by the president on Iran, so we'll know more then.
But relevant reporting indicates the Trump administration is at least seriously weighing the feasibility
of sending Marines in to take and hold Iranian territory, namely Karg Island and potentially
other islands in the Strait of Hormuz, most of which are inhabited and all of which
are heavily defended. If they go through with this, we might be about to watch in real time
one of the most consequential disasters in military history, a modern-day Gallipoli in which hundreds
or thousands of American soldiers and billions in material get chewed up in an unsustainable and
unwinnable war of attrition. There's no real way for the average American to know what kind of
stockpile our military maintains of the most advanced munitions. We're talking precision-guided
missiles like the Tomahawk cruise missile, but also the interceptor missiles used by our various
missile batteries. Estimates suggest the U.S. has already expended about a thousand Tomahawks in a month
of combat operations, which would be around a third, maybe a little less of the total stockpile.
That doesn't sound so bad until you realize that our present stockpile of tomahawks was built up
over more than a decade. We're only capable of making about 150 a year at present levels,
which means our military already burned through around seven years' worth of these things.
Maybe more, because in 2025, the U.S.
U.S. defense budget included something like 56 tomahawks, even though our largely ineffectual war
against the Houthis had already depleted the stockpile. This is a story that you'll hear over
and over again in this episode. The U.S. military is actually quite bad at knowing and asking for
what it will need, and even worse at predicting accurately what it's going to need in the immediate future.
Each Tomahawk costs around $3.6 million to produce, and these are the only long-range offensive
weapons mounted by our naval destroyers.
Per a source interviewed by Military Watch magazine, quote, without intervention, the Pentagon
may be left out of ammunition.
Now, Tomahawks aren't the only things the U.S. military is low on.
For that same article, inventories of anti-ballistic missiles and G.BU. 57 bunker buster
bombs are estimated to have been almost totally spent while being significantly more costly
to replace.
We just don't have granular data on the size of U.S. interceptor missile stockpile.
or a supply of stuff like Patriot missiles.
But we do have a pretty good understanding
of how badly our regional allies
have depleted their stockpiles
of these defensive tools.
Bahrain is estimated to have expended
87% of their Patriot missiles.
The UAE and Kuwait are up to 75%
and Qatar is at like 40%.
Experts estimate that Iran has gone through
or lost via airstrike
roughly a third of their ballistic missile stockpile.
This may or may not be accurate.
and if it's inaccurate, it may or may not be inaccurate in either direction.
Our intel and Israel's intel is often very spotty when it comes to stuff like this.
A good illustration of this would be the fact that on March 20th,
Iran fired two ICBMs at Diego Garcia,
an island in the Indian Ocean that hosts a joint U.S.-UK. Air and Naval Base.
Neither missile did any damage, but that wasn't really the point.
The launch of these missiles was a message from the Iranian regime to the U.S. one.
Previously, Iran had limited itself to only striking targets within 1,240 miles of its own borders
with ballistic missiles. Diego Garcia is roughly 2,300 miles away.
Many U.S. analysts had treated, for years, 1, 240 miles as if it represented an actual
hard limit on Iran's striking capability based on what their missiles could reach, as opposed
to what it really was, which is a political decision made by Iranian leaders to limit the scope of
conflicts. When the Trump administration launched an unprovoked series of joint strikes on Iran,
killing the Supreme Leader and many senior officials, we violated one of the unstated agreements
that had held for over decades of conflict. The president's supporters and major hawks on Iran
argued that these self-imposed limits were allowing Iran's leadership to support terrorism abroad
with impunity. The strike on Diego Garcia proved that military analysts had been wrong
about the top range of Iran's best ballistic missiles, but it also served as a statement from Iran's
new leaders. You've taken the gloves off and thrown out the rulebook. Now we have two.
Hudson Institute's senior fellow, Khan Kosoopoglu, published an analysis that made this same
basic argument. Quote, a strike profile extending into the Indian Ocean demonstrates not merely
extended range, but Iran's deliberate abandonment of strategic ambiguity. Iran is no longer
signaling restraint. It is signaling reach and doing so under life warfighting conditions.
additions. It also, more subtly, signaled something else. U.S. planners didn't know as much as they
thought they did about Iran's capabilities. This has been evident since the war began. Despite Trump's
claims to have totally annihilated Iran's offensive capability on March 27th, a combined missile and
drone attack hit Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, injuring more than 10 U.S. soldiers,
too seriously, and damaging several aircraft. One of these, which we have pictures of, was an E3
A-Wax, aka the planes with those huge radar dishes on top. And at least one AWACs was destroyed.
The Air Force only has 16 of these, and only about half are mission capable at any given time.
The Army also maintains a fleet of E-3s. I found an article in Air and Space Forces magazine
by Chris Gordon and Stephen Lossy, who interviewed Heather Penny. She's a former F-16 pilot and current
director of the Air Force Academy's Institute for Aerospace Studies. Penny said, quote,
The loss of this E3 is incredibly problematic, given how crucial these battle managers are to everything from airspace deconfliction, aircraft deconfliction, targeting, and providing other lethal effects that the entire force needs for the battle space.
E3s provide an irreplaceable service on the battlefield.
They act as both airborne radar stations and air traffic control towers, spotting threats up to 250 miles away, and providing crucial early warning to forces in combat about incoming threats, particularly missiles and missiles in front.
drones. Drones really about anything else. In other words, the E3 is really, really useful if you're, say,
planning to have troops land on islands in a narrow strait surrounded by hostile forces who can
shoot at you from the mainland. Now, the AWACs themselves aren't technically irreplaceable,
but they aren't easy to replace, especially on short notice. Each one costs between $700 million
and a billion dollars, and we don't like make them anymore. AWX are old, the average age of
our remaining fleet is 45. Per irrelevant article in Task and Purpose magazine, nobody may spare
parts for the E3's TF33 engines anymore, which takes a toll on maintenance. In 2022, General Mark
Kelly, then the head of Air Combat Command, told reporters, we basically have 31 airplanes and
hospice care, the most expensive care there is, and we need to get into the maternity business and
out of hospices. That's a weird metaphor for a plane designed to help you fight wars, but we'll move past
that and into some ads.
And we're back.
So when we left off, I'd mentioned
how in 2022, Mark Kelly,
then the head of air combat command, was like,
we've only got about 31 of these
AWACs and they're in hospice care, and we
need to, like, make some new AWACs
that are modern and aren't
falling apart and have engines being
produced. Unfortunately for our
military, but fortunately for
not our military, the Pentagon
voted against getting into the
maternity business last year.
E7 Wedgetail, which is in service currently in the Royal Australian Air Force, was meant to
replace the E3s for the U.S. Air Force, and the first of 26 new craft were supposed to arrive
from Boeing in 27. But the project was killed last summer. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
argued it was, quote, sort of late, more expensive and gold-plated. Plus, Pete warned, it might
not survive a war with China. Hegseth's plan was to just have the military use satellites for all
their airborne tracking needs. And if we had to have, you know, a plane doing some of that,
we could just have Navy E2D Hawkeyes as a temporary replacement. Now, most of my listeners
are not Air Force generals and either am I, but I've read stuff, guys who know that kind of thing
have written, and I'll tell you this, it's a bad fucking idea, or it's widely agreed by the
experts to be a bad fucking idea. For one thing, the E7, which is what we would have been
replacing our E3s with, has already proven itself in combat.
The Aussies sent theirs over to Iraq during the fighting against ISIS, and per task and purpose, it, quote, was so reliable that whenever American F-22 fighters were in theater, the U.S. Air Force asked the Aussies to support the U.S. jets.
Sixteen retired U.S. Air Force four-star generals took the unprecedented step of writing a letter to Congress and begging them to reverse Egg Sets' decision.
Their reasoning why boils down to this.
Satellites aren't ready to track airborne targets, and the Hawkeye is too small for the job.
Congress ultimately reversed course, but it's uncertain when, if ever, new E7s will arrive.
Certainly not in time for whatever the Trump administration is going to do next.
In the meantime, the Air Force is down roughly 10% or more of its functional fleet of AWACs,
and we don't even have boots on the ground anywhere.
Now, what I think happened here, what I think is behind all of these bad decisions,
and this is not something I can verify, this is opinion, is that AWACs aren't sexy.
They're not like a cool weapon system.
They don't kill people directly.
They facilitate other soldiers and sailors and airmen from killing people using other weapon systems.
But you can't threaten somebody with just an AWAC.
They're not like scary.
And you can't show one blowing something up on the news because they don't do that.
So I don't think it was a priority for Hegg Seth or anyone else in his administration
because they're all fucking 12-year-olds.
Previous administrations, and let me be fair here,
it's not like they were any more forward thinking,
had kind of looked at our aging fleet and said,
eh, good enough.
It's not like anyone were fighting as a better alternative, right?
Who cares?
It's the same kind of story we just heard with the Tom Oaks, right?
What the military was already doing
was good enough to scrape by in the conflicts it was already fighting,
and nobody involved in starting the next conflict
was interested in making sure that the military was prepared ahead of time.
Now, I recognize all this talk about failures
to produce war material in sufficient quantities may make it sound like I'm complaining that our Air Force isn't buying enough weaponry and that I'm urging us to spend more money producing arms and ammunitions, and that is not my intent. I want exactly the opposite.
What I'm trying to do is to highlight how utterly unprepared our administration is for the conflict they started and how that failure to prepare has made a major military disaster for U.S. forces, not just foreseeable, but likely if the administration makes the decision to send in ground.
forces or in some other way significantly escalate the pace of our operations against Iran.
Now, the mainstream media has done an okay job of reporting on the ammunition shortages that I've
discussed, but what I don't think has been hammered home enough is that both our expenditure
of advanced ammunition and the loss of multiple aircraft due to Iranian strikes are a kind
of attrition, and they're a really serious kind of attrition. Now, you may be more familiar
with the term attrition as it applies to human casualties in a war or battle.
But to an extent, the attrition of interceptor missiles and hard-to-replace special-purpose vehicles
like AWACs does a lot more to damage U.S. warfighting capability than human losses.
A good example of this came in March 6th of this year, after Iran struck and PerCNN
apparently destroyed the radar system for a THAAD missile battery in Jordan.
Thad stands for terminal high-altitude area defense.
These are our absolute best, most effective anti-missile defense systems.
each battery costs more than a billion dollars, and each missile they fire costs like $12.6 million.
These are part of why you don't have health care.
Now, we know another series of strikes in the UAE, quote,
hit buildings housing similar radar systems to the THAA battery in Jordan.
It's unclear if these were damaged or how badly they might have been damaged,
and it's going to remain unclear because the workings of these systems are extremely classified.
As of 2025, the United States owns and operates a grant.
total of eight THAAD batteries. So at least one of eight is now out of commission and two more
may have suffered some degree of damage a month into this conflict. That is not the kind of attrition
you want to see prior to actually putting boots on the ground. Now, U.S. military spokespeople
will point out whenever asked that the vast majority of Iranian missiles and drones are being
intercepted and that Iran is currently firing few of these munitions than they did at the outbreak of
hostilities. And what you're supposed to conclude from that is that they're running out because we are
doing a better job of attritting them than they are doing of a tritting us. And I can't tell you who's
actually coming off worse in this fight. I certainly don't have good insight into the levels of Iran's
stockpiles of the weapons systems that they're using. However, there is reason to doubt that the
United States is coming off the better in this conflict. Ari Sissurel is an analyst for the Jewish Institute
for National Security of America or Jinsa, and he told Fox News, quote,
overall high missile and drone interception rates have been important, but only tell part of the story.
Iran came into this war with a deliberate plan to dismantle the architecture that makes those
strikes possible. It has struck energy infrastructure to upset markets and use cluster
munitions to achieve higher hit rates. Because we simply lack good data on this stuff, I can't tell
you perfectly how a rate of interceptions has changed from day one to day 30, but there is evidence
in a few different place.
that in late March, the rate of successful drone attacks on our regional allies like the UAE increased.
In other words, more drones were getting through or being launched, but I think getting through
is the more supported conclusion. And they're getting through because our defenses have gotten,
or the defenses of our allies, have gotten less effective. The Jensu report also notes that Israeli
officials have stopped intercepting some cluster munition attacks in order to preserve ammunition,
basically not shooting down the cluster munitions that don't look like they're going to hit anything or anyone
because they don't have the ammunition to stop everything.
Now, I don't doubt that Iran is also feeling somewhat pinched in the munitions department.
It would be kind of weird if they weren't, both due to how many they fired and how many have been destroyed via airstrikes.
But the question isn't, are they suffering attrition too?
It's, are they better able to maintain the rate of attrition their suffering than we are?
And while I can't answer that question in absolute terms, I think,
the answer is probably yes. Iran's ballistic missiles generally cost a few hundred thousand dollars each.
That interceptor missiles cost, as I said, around $13 million. Shaheed drones cost like $30,000 to make
and are often stopped by munitions that cost millions to make and are hard to replace.
It's also worth noting that the reduction in the total number of missiles fired by Iran is not
just due to the fact that they run through some of their stockpil, at least partly a strategic
decision, as even Fox News admits.
Quote, Iran has adapted its tactics accordingly, shifting from large barrages to smaller, more
frequent attacks designed to maintain constant pressure while gradually draining defensive
resources.
These persistent salvos, even if limited in size, forced defenders to remain on high alert
and continue expending interceptors, accelerating the depletion of already finite stockpiles.
Now, there's an important point made towards the end of that paragraph.
Persistent attacks forced defenders to remain on high alert.
is true, and it also brings us to another under-discussed aspect of attrition, the energy and time
of the soldiers our administration expects to fight this war for them. And we'll talk about that
after another brace of ads. And we're back. Too often people who want to war game out how
the U.S. will perform in a given conflict, just focus on the theoretical capabilities of the vehicles
and weapons systems we own. An Emmett's class aircraft carrier has this many planes, and so it can
unleash this amount of firepower on a target in this amount of time. And that's a bad way to predict
combat performance because it ignores the human element. The USS Gerald R. Ford, a Gerald R. Ford
class aircraft carrier, is what's commonly known as a super carrier. It can travel for 25 years before
its nuclear reactors need refueling, and it has a complement of more than 4,500 men and women. It is a small
city at sea, and I've talked in the past about how hard these things are to actually sink. During the Ford's
deployment to fight the Houthis, there were viral rumors stoked by AI misinformation that it had been
seriously damaged or even destroyed by a Houthi ballistic missile strike. Now, I pointed out at the time
that this was fanciful. The defense systems on a boat like this cost billions and provide excellent
proven protection against most missiles, drones, and aircraft it's likely to encounter. The entire naval
battle group it travels with exists to protect and enhance the carrier's capabilities. And even if it
were stripped of all those things.
These boats are just so damn tough to fucking sink.
In 2005, the U.S. Navy conducted a live-fire test to sink a retired Kitty Hawk-class supercarrier.
Per an article in Forbes,
The carrier endured nearly a month of intense weaponized testing
and was finally scuttled via internal explosive charges.
It should be added that the warship had been decommissioned nearly a decade earlier
and was in poor material condition.
There were also no damage control efforts to save the ship.
In February of this year, just days before his own death,
Iran's former Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khomeini
threatened the U.S. carriers operating in the Persian Gulf
in a post on Twitter because
it's fucking 2026.
Quote,
The Americans constantly say that they've sent a warship towards Iran.
Of course, a warship is a dangerous piece of military hardware.
However, more dangerous than that warship
is the weapon that can send that worship to the bottom of the sea.
Now, it's kind of unclear exactly what he was talking about.
Maybe it's some sort of secret weapon that the Iranians have
that we don't know about.
But we do know that Iranian negotiators are currently talking with the People's Republic of China
about purchasing CM302 supersonic missiles.
These were developed by Chinese military planners to fly low and fast,
avoiding most of the layered defenses of boat like the Ford enjoys.
They're carrier-killer missiles, or at least that's the idea.
Beijing also has a line of land-based carrier-killer missiles,
because if you think you might wind up in a war with the United States,
it probably behooves you to think about how you would kill an aircraft.
carrier. Now, again, Iran doesn't have any of these weapons systems yet, at least not to our
knowledge. But this war of choice by the United States didn't come as a complete surprise. The Iranian
military and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps had been preparing to fight this war for
quite some time. Those preparations have included the construction of multiple fake aircraft carriers,
with their forces have sunk in a variety of war games, exercises. The most recent of these
occurred in 2020. The Prophet Muhammad 14 exercise was meant to prepare for an attack on a Nimitz-class
carrier. And ironically, Iran made it too easy to sink, which caused it to go down while it was being
towed in an inconvenient location that temporarily blocked a canal. And that should act as a warning
that just as American military planners and analysts fuck up constantly, so too do their Iranian
counterparts. And we shouldn't assume our guys are a bunch of Heg-Seth-looking chuckle-fucks,
while Iran's Pentagon equivalent is staffed entirely by hard-eyed professionals,
every military has dipshit officers and has to deal with bad calls made by people with political power that fuck shit up for everyone.
What you should take from this, though, is that Iran is a country with a large, comparatively well-funded and prepared military.
They regularly invent and sell weapons systems that are utilized around the world,
and they've been obsessively planning to kill an aircraft carrier for years.
And now that doesn't mean they're going to sink one.
In fact, I still think that's pretty close to impossible, at least with the technology we know they have.
But they don't need to sink one to render it inoperable.
Just hitting the top of it could be enough to do serious damage that would render it combat incapable for an extended period of time.
And to back me up on that point, a few weeks ago, while it was actively engaged in combat operations against Iranian forces, a fire started on board the Jerry Ford.
It began in the laundry room, or at least in an area related to the vast laundry system that a vehicle like this has.
It's kind of a little unclear exactly what happened.
According to the New York Times, though, the fire alone took 30 hours to put out.
Now, the Navy disputes this, that the ship was burning for more than a day, but they provided no reason anyone should actually trust them here.
I found an article published in the national interest by Peter Sousio.
He writes that, quote,
The fire caused far greater damage than was initially reported,
with one sailor medically evacuated from the ship
and 200 more treated for smoke inhalation.
I'm not surprised that the Navy wanted to hide the extent of the damage
its biggest warships suffered due to a laundry fire,
but this reinforces how unreliable the Navy is
as an ongoing source in these matters.
Sousio notes, quote,
there remain conflicting accounts of the fire in the media,
and the Pentagon seemingly attempted to downplay the severity of the fire
in the immediate after.
leading to later confusion. What we do know is that the Ford, a small city on the sea,
lost all ability to launder clothing, bedding, and anything else. This caused an immediate hygiene
issue aboard and a logistic nightmare for the Navy, which had to fly in clean clothing at terrific
expense. Saying a supercarrier was taken out of commission by a laundry fire sounds silly,
but you can't keep a town of 4,500 people going if no one can do the laundry. The fire
seems to have also done extensive damage to crew living quarters, which forced a thousand mattresses
to be flown in while the crew slept, well, wherever they were sleeping, it wasn't in their
bunks. Now, we don't know how the fire started again, but unconfirmed reports have blamed sabotage
by members of the Gerald Ford's crew. I can't tell you if this is true or not, but if it is,
it would not be the first time something like this happened. In 2012, a civilian contractor
started a fire aboard the USS Miami
and attacked submarine because he wanted to leave work early.
The fire cost $400 million in damage
and led to the vessel being decommissioned two years later.
The contractor was sentenced to 17 years in prison.
Naval sabotage was an even bigger business
during the latter stages of the war in Vietnam.
In December of 1972,
Jeffrey Allison, a 19-year-old sailor from Oakland,
was sentenced to five years in prison
for lighting a fire aboard an aircraft carrier,
the USS Forrestall.
That same year, a sailor aboard the USS Ranger, another supercarrier,
delayed its deployment to the Pacific by three months by allegedly sticking a paint scraper
in the main reduction gear, which disabled an engine.
Per an article in the Alameda Post,
The Navy's official history of the Ranger confirmed that sabotage was becoming more popular
as the war in Vietnam became more unpopular.
Sabotage happens every day, all day, a crewman serving aboard another carrier based in Alameda,
the Oriscani, was quoted as saying.
these sailors, the folks sabotaging their own warships in the later stages of the Vietnam War,
were part of the so-called SOS movement, a protest campaign launched and sustained entirely by sailors
angry at being forced to participate in the war against Vietnam. The movement gained its name
from an act of protest in 1971, when 40 sailors stood on the flight deck of their returning
aircraft carrier and spelled out SOS with their bodies. Again, I don't know if sabotage caused the
fire on the Gerald Ford, and neither does anyone else.
but there are good reasons to believe it did. As Senator Mark Warner, Vice Chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee said in late March, the Ford and its crew have been pushed to the brink
after nearly a year at sea. Normal deployment for sailors on the Ford is like six months.
Come April, it will break the record for the longest post-Vietnam carrier deployment,
294 days. Crew members have been told their deployment will likely be extended to May,
at which point they'll have been at sea for an entire year. Now, I don't want to,
really expect anyone to pour out their sympathy for sailors on a warship that has helped to kill a
minimum of 1,500 Iranians so far, including 200 children. But you don't need to feel bad for all the
lost birthdays and weddings and missed funerals to understand the deleterious effect that this has on
morale. Fighting spirit has just a buzzword. When soldiers are exhausted and pissed off, they're
likelier to fuck things up, and I'm not just talking about grand acts of sabotage. When it was still
off the coast of Venezuela, earlier in this deployment, the Ford suffered massive,
current issues with its plumbing system, which was ripped off a design used in crew ships and
works very badly. I can't exaggerate how bad the sewage systems on the Ford work. They are broken
fucking constantly. And, per the Alameda Post, some crew members may be intentionally exacerbating
problems with defective toilets aboard the ship by flushing t-shirts and other objects, as documented
in an email from the ship's engineering department obtained by NPR. Our sewage system is being
mistreated and destroyed by sailors on a daily basis. That March 25 email
stated, my whole maintenance technicians are currently working 19 hours a day right now to
keep up with the demand. It's a lot of flushed shirts. Now, what I'm building to is that there's a
perfectly good chance this fire didn't even start as an act of sabotage, but because somebody
fucked up, maybe because they were exhausted, maybe because they've just been running the machines
too long. The laundry is always going while this thing's underway, and if it's going for months
longer, the normal shit-like lint is going to build up. In fact, I want to read a quote from that
article in the national interest. If the ducts haven't been cleaned out properly, it is easy for small
lint particles to catch fire, potentially leading to a larger blaze, not unlike a house fire caused
by lint buildup. So again, this fire was certainly not enough to sink the Gerald Ford. It didn't
destroy it, but it did enough damage that it became combat ineffective, or at least you could argue
that's the case. Obviously, we replaced it with the different carrier group. There's not just not a
carrier now, but the Ford was not originally scheduled to leave and left as a result of the
fire in order to undergo repairs. That gets at something very important, very relevant to the
question of how a higher intensity war, one involving ground troops against Iran would go.
Because while Iran may or may not be able to sink a carrier, they certainly have the tools
to potentially hit one, starting a fire or just damaging the deck badly enough to render it
combat ineffective. And if these deployment cycles keep getting extended,
if sailors are kept at a high operational tempo for days or weeks or month at a time,
people will start fucking up.
And some of those fuck-ups have a chance, as we've already seen,
to remove the ship from being combat capable or to remove other ships from being combat capable.
If you're talking from perspective, U.S. Marines trying to hold onto an island surrounded by enemies,
this is a really scary thing.
The fact that your main source of air support might not be able to function because somebody fucks up
or sabotages it, there's a fire, it gets hit.
You know, these boats are not sinkable,
but in certain ways they're a lot more fragile
than people are used to thinking of them as being.
Aircraft carriers have been gods of the sea for so long.
I think it really is something people ought to pay attention to.
The fact that this simple laundry fire
took the Jerry Ford out of the theater matters.
The longer the U.S. keeps fighting,
and the longer we keep our ships deployed
chasing Donald Trump's dreams,
the higher the odds that something else goes wrong.
Get, whether it's just exhausted soldiers screwing up,
angry sailors, sabotaging things to protest an unpopular war,
or a damned lucky shot,
the Pentagon is continuing to roll those dice every day.
And I guess we'll see what happens next.
That's all I've got for you right now, everybody.
Hopefully we're not invading islands with ground troops
by the time this episode comes out, but we might be.
Canadian women are looking for more.
More into themselves, their businesses, their elected,
leaders and the world are out of them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast.
I'm Jennifer Stewart.
And I'm Catherine Clark.
And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women.
Entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, politicians, and newsmakers, all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
Listen to the Honest Talk podcast on I Heart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
I'm Lori Siegel, a longtime tech journalist.
And consider my new podcast mostly.
human, your bridge to the future.
Anyone can now be an entrepreneur. Anyone can build an app.
And it's very empowering.
Each week, I'll speak to the people building that future.
And we're going to break down what all of this innovation actually means for you.
What I come to realize is that when people think that they're dating these AI companion,
they're actually dating the companies that create this.
We're experiencing one of the greatest tech accelerations in human history.
And let's be honest, that can be messy.
There's no playbook for what to do when an AI model hallucinates a story about you.
But it's my belief that we should all benefit from this moment.
Mostly Human will show you how.
My goal is to give you the playbook, so you can benefit.
The reason I say agency is because if we can give power back to people,
then I think that's probably the best thing we can do for your mental health.
Listen to Mostly Human on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
A silver 40 caliber handgun was recovered at the scene.
From I-Heart podcasts and Best Case Studios, this is Rorschach, murder at City Hall.
How could this have happened in City Hall?
Somebody tell me that.
July 2003, Councilman James E. Davis arrives at New York City Hall with a guest.
Both men are carrying concealed weapons.
And in less than 30 minutes, both of them will be dead.
Now everybody in the chambers ducts.
A shocking public murder.
I scream, get down, get down.
Those are shots.
Those are shots.
Get down.
A charismatic politician.
You know, he just bent to rules all the time.
I still have a weapon.
And I could shoot you.
And an outsider with a secret.
He alleged he was a victim of flat down.
That may or may not have been political.
That may have been about sex.
Listen to Rorschach, murder at City Hall,
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
In 2023, former Bachelor star Clayton Eckerd found himself at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story.
This began a years-long court battle to prove the truth.
You doctored this particular test twice in so-ins, correct?
I doctored the test ones.
It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case.
I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for.
Sunlight's the greatest disinfected.
They would uncover a disturbing pattern.
Two more men who'd been through the same thing.
Greg Alesspian and Michael Marantini.
My mind was blown.
I'm Stephanie Young.
This is Love Trap.
Laura, Scottsdale Police.
As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at Maricopa County as Laura Owens has been indicted
on fraud charges. This isn't over until justice is served in Arizona.
Listen to Love Trapped podcast on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is It Could Happen Here, Executive Disorder, our weekly newscast covering what's happening in the White House, the crumbling world and what it means for you.
I'm Garrison Davis. Today I'm joined by Mia Wong and James Stout. This episode, we are covering the week of March 25th to April 1st.
Yeah, so we're all going to do silly things that aren't really news.
No, we're not going to do us.
We're not.
I love it when an outlet to do that.
This comes out Friday.
This comes out Friday.
It's over.
It's done.
No more fish of April Day for all those French people out there.
Now, with the midterm elections rapidly approaching, I know everyone's going to get tired of election news,
but there is some very important voting that needs to happen in these next few weeks.
Mm-hmm.
Because it could happen here.
another show called Behind the Bastards,
and James's excellent series
Migrating to America,
have been nominated for Webby Awards.
You know the Emmys?
Yeah.
They're like those,
except they're for the Internet,
but they're just as serious.
More serious, some people are saying.
The Internet, obviously,
is more real than television.
No one watches TV anymore.
Yeah, it's like the Emmys,
people who aren't boomers,
people are saying.
So this is obviously very exciting.
And voting lasts until April 16th.
There will be links in the show notes to vote for the three nominations that we have here at Cool Zone Media.
Migrating to America is nominated for the limited series and specials.
Podcast documentary category.
Find the Bastards is the podcast features for experimental and innovation.
And it could happen here is also nominated.
under the limited series category under news and politics.
It's kind of confusing to navigate the website
because there's just so many categories,
but those three links will be there below,
and we will continue to be talking about
what is arguably the most important election of our lifetimes
in these next few weeks.
Yeah, Pokemon Go to those links and vote for us.
Even if you see that we might be ahead, stay in line.
You cannot leave.
We will not let Trump land by MS now
Come on.
Steal our spot as number one.
So stop the steel.
Do not let Trump land win.
Vote.
It could happen here, April 16th, up until the 16th.
Vote early, vote often.
Vote early vote often.
Vote with your spare email address.
Look, vote early vote often, the great slogan of my home state of Illinois.
Everyone take this liberal direct action very seriously.
Let's start with some actual news getting serious.
here. Christy Noam's husband was outed it as
what I'm going to call a sissy cross-dresser
with an interest in quote-unquote
bimboification.
Noam as governor
signed a joint state letter
attacking trans rights.
There's so much gendered angst among these
conservatives, uh, projection,
etc., etc.
Representatives for Noem released a statement
after this news dropped
quote, Ms. Gnome, which is interesting.
Quote,
Ms. Gnome is devastated.
The family.
was blindsided by this, and they asked for privacy and prayers at this time.
Yeah, cool.
I think, I think we need to, we need to expand the right to arm bears to the right to arm
dogs.
This is my final statement on this matter.
Yeah.
Isn't not a great month for the gnomes after she, uh, she joined the Shield of America's
task force, which, uh, so far has existed for less than a month and already bombed the
wrong country once.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
In other important news, 413,7993 kit-cat bars were stolen in transit from Italy to Poland.
Okay, when you give that statistic, is that 413,793 four finger bars?
Or is that 100,000 and you're counting each finger separately?
No, it's each packaged bar including some of the new limited edition Formula One and Chunky.
bars? Oh, that's been a thing
in the UK for like 20 years.
Kit Kat Junkie. This is a new
version. This is a new version
according to a press release from KitKat.
Okay, so if you want to argue with KitKat
I think what you're seeing
is called Cool Britannia.
It's a phenomenon by which British culture
is slowly taking over the world.
This is
12 tons of Kit Kat bars
that were stolen.
Their whereabouts are currently unknown.
And on-duty Secret Service,
agent assigned to Jill Biden shot himself while at the Philadelphia airport last week. Look,
the lines are bad, but come on. It's not that bad. This was a negligent discharge while the agent
was traveling through the airport in an unmarked car. Jill Biden was not in the immediate area at the time
of the shooting. Last weekend, Trump signed an executive order to start paying TSA agents as the
Senate and House failed to agree on a DHS funding bill. Congress has adjourned for two weeks as the
shutdown continues to set new records.
for the longest in any federal agency's history.
Quick update here.
Literally, as we were recording,
House Republicans caved and agreed to the Senate bill
to fund DHS except for ICE and CBP,
which Republicans will be trying to fund later in a reconciliation bill.
But as of Wednesday afternoon,
it looks like Congress has finally reached a funding package
for the rest of DHS.
Politico has reported that,
acting ice director Todd Lyons has been hospitalized at least twice for stress-related issues.
Oh my God.
While working to implement Trump's immigration policy.
I think it's specifically like because they're shouting him for not hitting the targets, right?
Because Stephen Miller has been calling Lions yelling at him, quote unquote yelling.
Yeah.
About not hitting certain immigration targets, yes.
And Trump has yet to endorse, still, still yet to endorse anyone in the Texas runoff between
John Cornyn and Ken Paxton.
Early reports indicated Trump would back Cornyn, the incumbent,
but recently, Paxton has been seen a meeting with Trump at Moralago
in what have been reported as quote-unquote positive meetings.
A Russian oil tanker has dogged in Cuba after the United States allowed it to break the
blockade on the island.
As we reported last week, it's been a massive shortage of oil in Cuba.
This will alleviate that slightly.
Yeah.
A U.S. Marine, probably former U.S. Marine now,
if not very shortly to be former US Marine,
has been charged with federal offensive
after allegedly selling millions of rounds of ammunition,
including M855A1,
which isn't normally available for civilian purchase,
and javelins in Arizona.
What?
Javelin.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just for those who are not familiar, javelin,
I'm not talking about like a spear here.
I'm talking about a guided anti-tank missile.
Holy shit.
Yeah.
Who was he trying to sell it to?
So he sold them to two people who acted as brokers,
two unindicted co-conspirators,
and then they sold them to other people,
and an undercover agent was able to purchase some of the ammunition.
Guy's name is Andrew Paul Amarillas.
He was indicted by a grand jury this week.
He was an ammunition tech at Pendleton,
but he bought them to Arizona to sell.
And at this time, about two million round,
are not recovered.
Great.
It's not clear
if there are still javelins
in circulation, basically.
What?
They don't know
where the javelins are?
They lost it.
They recovered a javelin.
They don't know
they recovered all the javelins.
So potentially
there are just anti-tank rockets out there.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
They're with the Kit Katz.
It's a joint operation.
Maybe that's how they stop
that large Kit Kat truck.
They hit the vehicle with Jaff.
Javelin.
Got in there.
Yeah, it's one of those growth operations.
You know, you get one javelin, you strike a Kit Kat vehicle, you sell the Kit Katz.
Now you got two javelins.
You hit the Mars bar vehicle.
Right, this is capitalism in action.
Hmm.
And then let's return to Arizona when normal things happen.
Also, in Arizona, a grand jury has indicted a man for material support for a foreign
terrorist organization after he allegedly sold weapons that he intended.
to provide to the CJ&D and CDS,
Cartel Halisco Nueva Generation and Cartel de Sinaloa,
so two of the larger Mexican cartels, right?
These are two groups that were listed as FTOs
by the Trump administration very early on last year.
Lawrence Gray, 65, was a federal firearms licensee.
He owned a shop called GRIPS by Larry.
He sold Fancy GRIPS for 1911.
He was already facing a raft of weapons charges
after selling a 50-caliber Barrett,
a semi-auto belt-fed,
and, of course, a 38-super 1911 pistol
to a confidential informant.
The 38-super-1911 pistol,
the reason I say, of course,
is because any time people get busted
for illegal weapon sales in the southwest,
there always seems to be a 38-super-1911 involved,
that they're very much like a status gun
in organized crime in Mexico,
because certain calibers are less available
there, 38 Super is pretty most uniquely
associated with that market.
Like it always seems that that pops up in bust.
And he was selling fancy grips,
some of which had symbology,
which sometimes is used by organized crime groups in Mexico.
Anyway, this is the first time
I've seen a material support for terrorism charge
for one of these cartels
who were recently designated as FTOs.
So that was interesting to me.
Finally, Israel has passed a law
allowing the death penalty for murder.
It uses a phrase, quote, with the intent of rejecting the existence of the state of Israel.
It appears to be a binary system of punishment, right?
It seems that the death penalty is only going to pertain to Palestinian people here.
Yeah.
It's worth noting the Palestinians of the West Bank tried in military courts,
and they face a very high conviction rate.
Often people will admit, I think we can safely say,
that they admit under duress in conditions that would not generally be considered applicable
with justice, right?
This is, I mean, this is an apartheid legal system on top of everything else, right?
Israel previously haven't had the death penalty other than for certain war crimes,
which is in and of itself quite amusing, given the stuff we will talk about later in this very episode.
One of the really bleak things about this is, oh God, Ben-Gavir, who's been, who's the Minister of
National Security, a unbelievably unhinged right-winger who's been campaigning for this law,
has been going around
with a bunch of his parliamentary factions
wearing yellow noose pins.
Yeah, this is their thing.
And in support of this, so it's really
truly cannot be clearer what this is
about. Yeah, no, that's their
version of the Marga hat, I guess, like their branding
of their movement is this noose pin.
Yeah, well, it's,
it's specifically, it's the thing that
they've replaced the, like, the ribbon
they were wearing for the hostages has now just been
replaced with.
But the news.
With the news.
Yeah.
It's pretty disgusting.
Jesus Christ.
There's one more little thing I'd like to mention.
There was a Daily Mail article that went viral.
Only the best news coming from the Daily Mail.
Yeah.
That carried the headline, quote,
bullet used to kill Charlie Kirk,
did not match rifle,
allegedly used by suspect Tyler Robinson.
Oh, God.
So, this article is reporting on a,
motion filed by the defense characterizing findings that are still yet to be fully resolved
from the ATF. This does not mean that a different gun was used. What it means is that the ATF was
maybe unable to positively match the bullet fragments to the gun, which does not mean that this was
a negative match. This did not come from that gun, but that the fragments could not be positively
linked to the gun.
Again, this is a motion filed by the defense
doing what they need to do,
which is legally defend this man.
Like, that is their job.
Yeah.
And that is what they are doing.
The characterization of this motion
by the Daily Mail is designed
to drive clickbait.
And it's being used to encourage
this sort of conspiracy around
the Charlie Kirk shooting
that there was this like other
currently unknown shooter,
possibly it was for,
warranties. It's a very, very popular thing right now on the internet. The grassy knoll theory of
Charlie Kirkshy. Yes, that basically, like a massod agent was hiding somewhere. And Tyler
Robinson is a patsy. Tyler Robinson, obviously innocent until proven guilty. This is going to get
settled in court. But the characterization of the early findings by the ATF through the Daily Mail was
a bit misleading. Daily fail. And also I think it's worth mentioning that like this kind of
bullet matching stuff is
just as a forensic science
and this is true of a lot of the sort of forensic sciences
that are used in
in courts like we
I think Robert just talked on behind
the bastards about like a bunch of like the fire
pattern stuff this is kind of
in the same category as that in that it's not
very good
even to begin with
and so what we have here is a
bad mischaracterization
of a report of like
an incomplete
analysis from a not very good piece of forensic technology that's being used to do conspiracy
because it makes money. Yeah. We'll certainly follow this case as it actually reaches trial,
there will be many interesting things that come out through the course of that trial.
All right. So let's begin by talking about immigration with this. Brad Lander, more or less,
broke this right, on his social media accounts. The United States Department of Justice
via the United States Attorney's Office in New York has a mission.
that it was misguided by ICE attorneys in asserting that they could detain migrants in
immigration court. There was a memo, right, an ICE guidance memo that they relied on. The memo they
now say should have applied to other courts, but not to the Executive Office of Immigration Review.
The declaration came in a New York court suit filed by the ACLU on behalf of advocacy groups,
which had challenged a courthouse arrests. There's been happening for about a year now, as I'm sure
most people are aware. In the filing, the US DOJ said, quote, this error, however, was not caused by a lack
of diligence and care by the undersigned attorneys. The undersigned were specifically informed by ICE
that the 2025 ICE guidance applied to immigration court house arrests. In addition, we discussed
and obtained the approval of assigned ICE counsel before filing every brief in this case
and making any oral representations to the court and the plaintiffs. We also transmitted
copies of the court's orders, transcript as a September 2nd, 2025 oral argument,
and plaintiff's filings to ICE counsel throughout its litigation. Based on our discussions
with ICE today, this regrettable error appears to have occurred because of agency attorney
error. So what you've got there is a US attorney basically saying like, not my fault,
ICE attorney's fault. Relatively unusual statement, right? Obviously, we've seen them
attempts to kind of split the executive branch before in these.
legal filings, right? We saw this happen in some of those cases in Minnesota, and then the judge
rejected that, right? The ACLU in a letter of response noted the wide-reaching consequences
here, and it's asked for 14 days to consider what to do next and file a motion. The memo in question,
right, this ICE guidance memo said that, quote, civil immigration enforcement actions in or near
courthouses when they have credible information that leads them to believe the targeted aliens,
alien brackets S is or will be present in a specific location.
It said those were permissible, right?
DHS, however, has said that there will not be a change in their policy going forward.
It's unlikely that they will stop until they are told by a court to do so, right?
Yeah.
So what it seems here is that the ICE attorney has, for some reason, reconsidered,
perhaps because of this ongoing case in New York,
what they had said there and now attempted to walk back something that they have been doing for a year.
This will not change the fact that people who have probably been arrested in those courthouses.
I have no doubt many of them have already been deported from the United States, right?
Many more of them will have suffered material damage if they have not been deported
because they will have been detained in horrific conditions, right?
We've seen more photos today from inside immigration detention.
Immigration detention has always been horrific.
It continues to be horrific.
we can't make those people whole again in a meaningful way.
But what it means going forward, we will keep reporting on.
Another deportation story I want to talk about.
A deportation flight on Monday landed in Myanmar.
The flight also stopped in Thailand,
and it is the fifth such deportation flight that I'm aware of.
I know of two that were announced.
These have not been previously reported.
But in March of 2025, one at the time was a state administration council,
the Myanmar military
dictatorship is going through the process of changing
its clothes and pretending to be a civilian government right now.
That doesn't matter for this story.
In 2nd of March 2025,
the illegitimate government of Myanmar announced
that it had received two individual deportees,
one on each flight.
In April and May of that year,
they received more.
So we now believe that 22 people
had been deported up to this Monday,
and more people, it appears,
from this flight,
have been deported on Monday.
The last deportation flight resulted in the deportees being detained and tortured by Myanmar's brutal military intelligence.
The flight was aboard a jet owned by Journey Aviation and it returned via Sydney to the United States of America.
The United States has been trying to counsel the temporary protected status for Burmese people for some time.
But even with the TPS, it's worth noting that people, some people who have been convicted of crimes and for other exceptions can still be deported.
The Hunter said in a press release last year, quote,
the Myanmar government is cooperating with the relevant U.S. federal entities
in verifying and accepting deportees to Myanmar.
This and some other things the Trump administration have done,
they've tried to characterize it a de facto recognition of their right to rule the country.
Yeah.
Very clearly, the reason that they're talking about these deportations
is because they're flexing that, hey, the U.S. government is talking to us.
This has downstream effects, right?
I think the world is not not taking that seriously, but nonetheless,
that they are using that, whether it's for external or internal signaling.
The last time has happened, according to Myanmar now,
the deportees were taken straight to the Ongta-Piai interrogation center.
And last time, it was mostly ethnically Karen or Chin people.
So these are not people as a majority of ethnicity, right?
The majority ethnicity, the ethnicity that comprises most of the armed forces
or certainly most of the high ranks of the armed forces are Burma people.
If people want to listen to more about Myanmar,
Rob and I have made two very extensive series about that.
We will link to.
Talking of torture, here are some advertisements
which are like torture for your ears.
Some people actually like torture.
Just to clarify Garrison.
I don't think this is the kind that people like.
Some people might like those ads.
There is a huge industry of watching vintage advertising on YouTube,
just like edits together of like old ads.
People love that.
stuff. Weird, weird nostalgic capitalism, brain. Yeah, it is funny to look at the old ads.
When I was doing my archival research, I'd find like 1920s and 1930s ads and you're like,
oh, what you're selling is drugs. So true. So true. Yeah, it's like the two kinds of early
1900s ads are drugs and you should buy this because it has a swastika on it. Yeah, it's just like
some form of racism in marketing. Well, it wasn't even racist in like 1905.
I mean, kind of, yeah.
And guys, it's a Buddhist symbol originally, guys, it's fine.
Let's return to our namesake and discuss two executive orders.
As the voting restriction bill dubbed the Save America Act continues to stall in Congress,
Trump has attempted to take matters into his own hands by signing a new executive order,
quote, ensuring citizenship verification and integrity in federal elections.
This order directs DHS,
USCIS and the Social Security Administration to create a, quote, state citizenship list of individuals
confirmed to be United States citizens who will be above the age of 18 at the time of an upcoming
federal election and who maintain a residence in the subject state, unquote.
And this citizenship list will then be used to compare to state voter rules.
The list will be derived from, quote, federal citizenship and naturalization records,
Social Security Administration records, the DHS systematic alien verification for entitlements data,
and other relevant federal databases, unquote.
James, do you want to talk about this idea of having like a list of citizens?
Because this is, I think, something we've mentioned before, how there, to this point,
hasn't really been like a single list of U.S. citizens.
Yeah, because you can obtain United States citizenship through a number of means, right?
Yeah. So these would exist in different agencies. And generally there has been like a hostility, a well-founded, like hostility to this kind of overarching government like in Outlist, right? Not least because they will screw it up monumentally.
And that could have devastating consequences that affect not just your ability to vote, but as we have seen through the past year of ICE enforcement, your ability to remain in the United States.
Yeah. And just every.
part of everyday life, right?
Yeah.
Let's not least add that
like one of the ways you can obtain
United States citizenship is through being an enrolled tribal citizen.
I don't know if their consulting tribal citizenship roles.
I don't.
There was nothing about that in the order.
I legitimately do not think the people who are pushing this
understand that that's a thing.
Yeah, they don't think about it.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
It's not a group of people who they care about, right?
Earlier today, during the Supreme Court oral arguments
on birthright citizenship, which Trump attended for 90 minutes and then left because he wasn't happy with the way it was going.
Gorsuch asked the season Solicitor General if he thinks Native Americans are birthright citizens under their test.
To which the Solicitor General replied, ah, I think so, and then said, I'll have to think that through.
Oh, my fucking God.
He later indicated that they probably would, but this just shows that they aren't really like, think.
about all these sorts of things.
It's not necessarily, like, in that case,
trying to be intentionally harmful.
It shows just, they're not even, like,
thinking about these sorts of things
that could have really, really devastating effects
if implemented.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Which is, like, an odd part of the Trump administration
has, like, not everything bad they're doing
is necessarily has every single specific
implementation pathway in mind.
Yeah.
But when implemented,
is, like, still devastating to people's lives.
I want to say one thing about the birthright citizenship thing.
Josh Chaffetz, who's a professor of law at Georgetown Law and Politics,
had a very good point about this, which I think is worth making,
which is like part of what's going on here is that the Trump administration is trying to carve out
like a specific thing called birthright citizenship.
That's like a thing that you get if you have two immigrant parents.
But birthright citizenship is a citizenship that every single person in the U.S. has.
Yeah.
It's everyone's.
There's no distinction.
There's not like a different kind of citizenship you get if you have two immigrant parents versus if you have like parents that were like born in the U.S.
Right.
Like it's all one thing.
Every single person in the United States has the same kind of citizenship.
But the moment you start trying to like hack apart different people citizenship, right?
You try to, you try to like, you know, like make there be like classes of of how you're a citizen through like this whole birthright citizenship complaint that they're doing.
Right.
and to be like, oh, well, just these people who were, like, born to immigrants or birthright citizens, right?
That's one of the ways you start getting into these, like, fucking hideous issues of, like,
okay, are people with tribal membership, like, you know, residences, like, citizens, right?
It's like, all of this stuff is, like, downstream of this effect to, like, cut citizenship apart
that needs to just be resisted, like, from the fundamental thing of there is not a different category
of people called birthright citizens.
That's every single person in the U.S.
Yeah, unless they naturalized, right?
Unless they're a naturalized citizen.
Yeah, unless they're a naturalized citizen.
Yeah, unless you're naturalized.
Yeah, yeah.
And even then, you're still just a citizen.
Yeah, then you become a citizen.
You just go into the citizen bucket.
Yeah, then you are now citizen.
Yeah.
Yeah, and the moment you cut that apart.
Like, it's terrible, terrible things happen.
Yeah.
2024, I made the episode as Robert and Sophie,
in which we discussed potential attacks on citizenship
and potential ways of Trump.
And we get into the birthright citizenship
and we get into where it comes from.
And the fact that this is not an issue
about which there has been legal debate.
You will now see articles being like the debate about birthright citizenship.
That is people pulling things out of their ass to create two sides on an issue which has been settled for quite literally decades, if not centuries.
Oh, yeah.
I would probably try and do something else on birthright citizenship.
The reason I haven't done a lot is because there isn't a great deal to say.
Yeah.
Like birthright citizenship is a thing in the United States.
It has been a thing in the United States for a very long time.
It's just in the Constitution.
It just says that.
It just says that.
Yeah.
There are some people who want to take it away.
and specifically like we did that after we ended chattel slavery, right?
Like for a very good reason.
Yeah.
And pushing back on the things we did after we ended chattel slavery is bad, actually.
But yeah, I will, maybe I'll do another episode because I know you've picked up a lot of new listeners since then.
Now, Trump's new executive order on citizenship verification for elections also states, quote,
The Secretary of Homeland Security shall establish procedures to allow individuals to access
their individual records, as well as to update or correct them in advance of elections.
Unquote.
Unclear how this is going to work.
If it even is going to work, it's still not clear that this executive order will actually
be implemented as written because of potential constitutional violations.
But, you know, this would be in an attempt to address some of the pretty, pretty big issues
that we're saying about someone may be a citizen and not show up as a citizen in these
databases for a number of reasons, whether that's going to be.
because they were naturalized, or even in some cases,
were granted citizenship through one of their parents
after being in the sole legal custody of that parent
who is a U.S. citizen before this individual is 18.
This is called the Childhood Citizenship Act of 2000,
which makes a permanent resident become a citizen
if they're living with a U.S. citizen parent.
Yeah. And things like that,
citizenship kind of rolls over
from permanent residency
without ever actually having to become naturalized.
And getting that added to any kind of database
doesn't really happen by itself.
You have to then apply for proof of citizenship,
like a passport or a certificate.
So there's all these sorts of weird instances
where someone is a citizen,
but it may not show up in these sorts of records,
including social security records.
Yeah.
I should just clarify that not all tribal members
are necessarily U.S. citizens,
but tribal membership documents can sometimes be used,
like Garrison was saying,
right, as a way to prove United States citizenship.
It's just more than 100 years now
since the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924, right?
Like, there may still be people alive today
who were made citizens by that act
but would not have any particular documentation
that's personal to them to show that.
The executive order also writes
that the Attorney General will investigate
and prosecute state officials, local officials,
individuals, and public or private entities
who issue federal ballots to individuals
not eligible to.
vote, or aid and abet the printing, production, shipment, or distribution of ballots to those
ineligible to vote. That's what we call a chilling effect. The second half of the order
takes on vote by mail by instructing the Postmaster General to initiate a proposed rulemaking
that requires states submit lists of voters who will be provided mail-in or absentee ballots
at least 60 days before an election, and that the USPS shall not transmit any ballots for
for anyone not on this state citizenship list.
Now, all of this is intended to take effect before the midterm elections,
with the DHS instructed to establish the infrastructure necessary
to compile, maintain, and transmit the state citizenship list within 90 days,
though this executive order may very well be blocked by courts
for being an unconstitutional breach of presidential power.
The follow-out of this will be determined in the next few weeks,
as states and legal entities prepare lawsuits.
Let's talk about one other executive order. On Tuesday, a federal judge ruled that a key section of
the executive order, quote, ending taxpayer substantization of biased media is unconstitutional. In this order,
Trump instructed all federal agencies to cut funding to PBS and NPR. The judge in this case
wrote that the president can criticize reporting from such outlets and fund programs that
promote specific perspectives and impose limits on federal grants, but under the First Amendment,
government cannot use the power of the purse to, quote, punish or suppress disfavored expression by
others, writing that both the Supreme Court and the D.C. Circuit Court have repeatedly observed that
one, quote, may not deny a benefit to a person on the basis that infringes his constitutionally
protected freedom of speech, even if he has no entitlement to that benefit, unquote. The judge
writes that the executive order, quote, does not define or regulate the content of government's speech
or ensure compliance with the federal program,
nor does it set neutral and germane criteria
that apply to all applicants for a federal grant program.
Instead, it singles out to two speakers
and on the basis of their speech
bars them from all federally funded programs.
It does so, moreover, without regard
to whether federal funds are used to pay
for the nationwide interconnection systems,
which serve as the technological backbone
of public radio and television.
To provide safety and security for journalists
working in war zones,
to support the emergency broadcast system
or to produce or distribute music,
or other educational programming or documentaries, unquote.
Now, besides setting a good legal precedent,
this ruling won't have much in terms of immediate effects
because the corporation for public broadcasting was dissolved last month
after being defunded by the Republican-controlled Congress.
That's not being reversed.
But this ruling could make it less difficult for PBS and NPR
to receive money in the future, either from Congress or some federal agencies.
What's that sound?
Oh no.
Someone desecrating the legacy of the clash
by singing their worst song with different lyrics.
Seriously, though, I'm still angry.
To be fair to my entrance music,
the clash desecrated themselves by making that song.
Yeah, with the moment they released that song,
Joe Strummer cried when they played that song
during Desert Storm.
and if he was alive today, he would be crying again.
Yeah.
So, okay, we actually do have tariff news,
which is the first tariff news in a while.
But when we last spoke about the Supreme Court
nullifying the Liberation Day tariffs
in a significant chunk of the tariffs
that Trump had been putting into effect,
we said that there wasn't a plan really
to get tariff refunds out
and that it really hadn't been addressed
other than by dissenting Supreme Court members.
we are sort of starting to see what that looks like after a series of rulings from trade courts.
Right now, it is a fiasco.
So the government has set up a portal through which you can get relief.
Now, after it was sort of forced to by the courts,
the implementation of this has been delayed several times
because the government didn't have time to actually get it out.
a bunch of the portal is not built yet.
The government is claiming that it is going to take more time to build a whole bunch of it.
Yeah, I bet.
Now, this is a catastrophe because they're dealing with a bit over $166 billion of tariff money,
but they have to pay back plus interest.
That's funny.
Yeah, plus interest.
This is the whole thing, right?
They have to do interest on all of this, which is a nightmare.
It's the interest accruing while they bungles setting up their score.
West-based site or whatever.
Yep.
It's still going.
Every second,
the interesting thing is ticking on this.
So I'm going to quote here from Bloomberg.
Brandon Lord,
executive director of the trade programs director of the customs agency,
who are the people who are sort of running all.
This is also part of why it's such a disaster because there's like 17 different
agencies that are like working on this, right?
So some of it's like the trade program director at the customs agency,
but there's also just,
there's different parts of the customs and,
like Cousins and Border Patrol, that's dealing with all of this stuff,
quote, wrote that more than 26,000 importers who paid $120 billion in the
challenged terrorist were registered to receive electronic refunds so far.
The government has said that payments could take up to 45 days to review.
I would bet that it takes longer than that, because again, the portal hasn't been written,
hasn't been like made yet, but parties are still being built.
I'm sure those Doge guys are on it.
I'm sure they'll get this thing up and running in no time.
I'm sure they'll vibe code their way to a perfectly functioning portal.
It's going to be so good.
And again, I can't emphasize how much fatstrophy this is.
The government has said in court that their portal set up for two-thirds of the money, right?
There's still another third that they're like, yeah, I don't know, we're working on it.
Who knows when it's going to happen?
So there's just, again, like a third of $166 billion that they don't even plan to refund.
Amazing.
Now, this is not even the messiest part of this, right?
There's a very good piece in the conversation from Peter R. Krabb, who's a professor of
finance and economics at Northwestern Nazarian University, and also Alison Graham Larson,
who's an assistant professor of criminal justice at the same university.
And they point out that it's not actually as simple as, okay, you have a item on your balance sheet
that is the tariff payments for these companies.
Because, for example, okay, so if you were doing like FedEx,
which example, they use, right, FedEx has like a number, right?
Because they just, they passed the cost directly onto the consumers.
However, Costco didn't do that.
Costco shifted the cost around internally.
So it's actually very complicated for them to figure out how much money they, like,
they paid on these tariffs because it was spread a bunch of around a whole bunch of stuff.
They also, like, changed the way that they were structuring deliveries and stuff internally.
And there were, so there are a whole bunch of different lawsuits.
from these companies to try to get their tariff money back
because a lot of these were going on
before the actual formal refund process was started.
So this is another role in catastrophe.
There's also consumer lawsuits of consumers,
people who bought shit who want refunds for the terrorists
because they were forced to pay the costs of it.
Now, because this is the United States of America,
there's another layer of this,
which is there are a whole bunch of companies
where there are these investment firms
who have come in and said,
hey, we will buy the rights to your tariff money for a fraction of the money, and we will guarantee that you get this money now, and then we will pay ourselves with the tariff money that we got back?
So now you have investment firms who are buying up pools of this tariff money, and I bet, from spending a bunch of time last week in the trenches of the 2008 financial collapse with Mali, I bet that they're going to start selling securities based off of these pools of tariff money.
So this is, this is going great.
It's what I got to say about the tariff refunds.
Amazing.
Oh, it's so good.
Well, I'm just excited to receive my refund from all of the J-Fashion I ordered from Japan,
which I'm sure I'll be personally receiving thanks to this.
Hey, you know, here's the thing, here's the thing.
The one truly beautiful part of the U.S. legal system is that you can sue someone for $20
of damages.
That number has never been changed.
It is the one truly beautiful part of the United States of America
is that you Garrison Davis almost certainly could sue the government for that money.
That's funny.
Yeah, I'm not doing that shit.
It's so good.
That's too much work.
No, no.
We'll include the GoFundMe link for Garrison's constitutional lawyer.
If someone takes a $20 bill from you, you can go fucking sue them in court.
That's funny.
It's beautiful.
Just tag Garrison at I Write Okay
On blue sky
On the sky.com
Yeah
And just say hi
I'm a constitutional lawyer
I would like to represent you in court
Re the $20.
Thank you.
By the way,
by the way,
the last thing I want to notice
on a somewhat serious note is that
this entire catastrophe
is just for
one specific set
of authority that Trump was using
to put tariffs into place
There are a whole bunch of other ones
that he's been doing now
that will also get challenged
that will have their own refund processes
where we will go through this entire mess
again with different things.
So it's great,
great things happening for international trade
as we, yeah,
increase the price of fucking oil
to like $200 a barrel
and I don't know,
finally get our Calvin and Hobbs
$8 in gasoline.
It's great.
Long live the cycler.
Yeah, the national price of gasoline
is now at four bucks, I think.
And that's why,
they call him the affordability president.
Uh-huh.
Yeah, has anyone checked on the egg prices, though?
Because that's how we do things now.
Expensive as shit.
Expensive as shit, James.
Yeah, yeah.
Not cheap.
Let me divert new listeners to our famous chickens episode,
circa 2023.
And we'd say you can learn more about keeping poultry at home.
Talking of catastrophes,
I would like to continue to talk about the war on Iran.
The president truthed this week that he was prepared to attack desalination and power plants in Iran if the state did not comply with his demands.
Jesus.
In his truth, he said, I will skip remarking on capitalization, as is our house style, because as well as these would take half an hour.
The United States of America is in serious discussions with a new and more reasonable regime to end our military operations in Iran.
Great progress has been made.
But if for any reason a deal is not shortly reached, which it probably will be, and if the Hormuz Strait is not immediately open for business, we will conclude our lovely stay in Iran by blowing up and completely obliterating all of their electric generating plants, oil wells, and Khaeg Island, probably all, this is sick, desalinization plants, which we have purposely not yet touched.
This will be in a retribution for our many soldiers and for others that Iran has butchered and killed.
over the old regime's 47-year reign of terror.
Thank you for your attention to this matter, President Donald J. Trump.
As a reporter, NBC pointed out, targeting civilian infrastructure is a war crime.
Under international law, striking civilian infrastructure like that is generally prohibited.
Why is the president threatening what would amount to potentially a war crime with the U.S. military?
And how do you square that with the administration repeatedly saying that the U.S. does not target civilians?
Look, the President has made it quite clear to the Iranian regime at this moment in time,
as evidenced by the statement that you just read, that their best move is to make a deal,
or else the United States Armed Forces has capabilities beyond their wildest imagination,
and the President is not afraid to use them.
That's not what I said, Garrett.
And you're saying the word potential for a reason,
because I'm sure some experts are telling you that in your ear to try to ask me that question.
Of course, this administration and the United States Armed Forces will always act within the confines of the law.
But with respect to achieving the full objectives of Operation Epic Fury,
President Trump is going to move forward unabated.
And he expects the Iranian regime to make a deal with the administration.
It should be noted that Iran has said that it is not negotiating directly with the United States.
They're negotiating through a third party.
What is largely missing from this discussion is that Israel has,
has been doing this stuff already.
Obviously, Israel has not limited its war crimes to its bombing of Iran, right?
It has been on a war crimes freeze for several years,
and that is an extension of a war crime speed that has been arguably on for several decades.
Yeah. Israel attacked a desalination plant on the 7th of March.
Very briefly, the Israeli press attempted to report that the UAE had done this.
The UAE had to issue a statement, essentially saying, like,
we would never attack the people of Iran while we disagree with the same.
state of Iran, while you've been
outwoked by the UAE, but
them saying, like, it's no
way to attack the Iranian regime to force
Iranian people to die for lack of water. It's a
perfectly reasonable and just statement,
right? Officially, both the
IDF and the US government have denied
this strike, but the combination
of, like, several factors, including
this incredibly rapid disinformation campaign
strongly point to this being an IDF
joint. Yeah, also, who else?
Like, what are you two
bobbed it? Like, I don't know.
Yeah, what are you going to do?
It's like, Peru.
Just getting involved lately.
There have been, there have been attempt to, several attempts over the last month to, to, to suggest that like other Gulf states have done things when they're politically inconvenient.
Yeah.
This, as far as I'm concerned, very, very likely to be an IDF situation.
This points is something that we've talked about for more than a month now.
But I just want to make it really clear that the U.S. and Israel very clearly have very different goals in it.
I think that sometimes we see this, this very purell analysis has taken hold on the left in the
United States, right?
We suggest that Israel is entirely driving the bus here, that they cajoled the United States
into doing this war and that they're telling the United States what to do when, where and where
and how.
I think that's a very juvenile way of understanding this.
Hawks in the United States have wanted war with Iran for decades.
Trump talked about it in his first term.
Trump also still clearly harbors resentment for Obama, quote, unquote,
getting bin Laden and wants a sort of similar commander-in-chief win.
His confidence was significantly bolstered after the Venezuela operation,
and he thought he could affect a regime change here quickly
and then extract tribute from a client's day,
as he appears to be doing from Delsey and Venezuela now, right?
This has not worked so far in Iran.
Israel, on the other hand,
is continued with his own campaign,
which is an extension of what we have seen it doing in Gaza,
what we are seeing it doing in Lebanon,
which seems to be to cripple any state in the region,
any population in the region that opposes it, right?
But it genuinely seems that its goal here is to leave itself
sort of the only functioning polity in the region
and to destroy any other armed actor
with very little concern for the loss of innocent life.
The United States in the last week has lost significant aviation resources.
after Iranian ballistic missiles struck an airbase into Saudi Arabia.
They damaged at least one E3-A-Wax aircraft,
and then a handful of KC-1-35 air-to-air refueling aircraft.
This is not an insignificant loss.
This is half a billion dollars of aviation wiped out in a single strike.
And these are not airplanes that the United States has a large number of, right?
Iran also hit a QAT tanker this week.
A drone seems to have hit it off the coast of Dubai.
It caught fire.
there was potential for an oil spill, but what I'm seeing at the time recording this has not been one so far.
Christ.
Yeah, I mean, every war is an ecological disaster, right?
But this one could read a particularly remarkable one.
And then I just do briefly want to mention the economic impacts.
Of course, like, it would be very hard to be living on this planet right now and not notice the economic impacts.
But the Republic of the Marshall Islands has declared a state of emergency and begun fuel rationing.
that they're strictly limiting the use of government vehicles.
I have reached out to the government's presidency.
You can hear my reporting from Republic of the Marshall Islands,
including an interview with the then-president in 2023.
That's another series that we've made here on.
It could happen here.
But I'm going to see if we can get someone from the RMI on for an interview
because I think some of these small island nations,
right where everything has to be shipped in,
the cost of fuel can make things extremely difficult
for people just trying to eke out an existence there
in a place that the United States
nuked despite never raising
a word and anger against us.
Finally, our last few stories
this episode, starting with a
tale of two bombing plots.
American classic.
Truly, the American tradition
that just won't die.
A brother and sister have been indicted
after allegedly planting an improvised
explosive device outside of McDill
Air Force Base in Tampa,
Florida on March 10.
10th before fleeing to China two days later. After planting the bomb, the brother allegedly
alerted officials by calling 911, but the explosive went undiscovered for nearly a week. It did not
detonate. The sister was arrested after returning from China, and she's charged with evidence
tampering and being an accessory after the fact. Prosecures alleged she helped clean and sell
the car used to plant the bomb, and asked Chat GPT how to obtain it.
a Chinese visa and transfer properties in her brother's name and searched for Chinese schools
for her brother to attend. Her brother is still suspected to be in China. Look, I am stunned that these
people didn't accidentally blow themselves up. Well, the reason why is because it's actually very
hard to build a bomb. Yeah. Oh, so yeah, I guess, I guess, well, because when you try to build a bomb,
there's three outcomes, right? There's one, you failed to build a bomb. Two, you either succeed to build a bomb or
fail to build a bomb and it blows you up or three successfully build a bomb and successfully building
a bomb is like by far the hardest and it's you're pretty likely to blow yourself up or
fail to build a bomb so i guess i never got to the threshold of bomb building when it would
blew themselves up because they just didn't produce it viable device in this next bombing plot
the suspect did actually construct what could be considered a bomb oh good lord
that could have been used in what's being reported on as an assassination plot.
Last Thursday, a New Jersey man, Alexander Heifler,
was arrested as a part of a plot to firebomb the home of pro-Palestinian activist Nardine Kiswani.
Jesus Christ.
Alexander Heifler is a member of the JDL-613 Brotherhood,
a new offshoot of the terrorist group, the Jewish Defense League,
which has been active at Palestine protests in New York the past few years.
This is a Zionist, extremist group that has been designated in the past by the FBI as an extremist group.
Yeah.
According to the criminal complaint, Heifler was in a group video call with an undercover officer last February,
in which he asked about receiving training, quote,
for how to use instruments that were not knives, guns, or crossbows for, quote, unquote, self-defense.
That's an odd phrase thing in the complaint.
Cross?
Not.
Things that aren't to those things.
Yeah, sorry.
Why would, okay.
Great things happening here.
And Heifler later specifically mentioned that he was looking for somewhere to throw Molotovs.
Oh, boy.
The undercover sent Heifer a message via an encrypted messaging application stating,
Hey, let's talk about that in person.
Don't say that on here.
Heifler responded, don't use the.
M word, copy that. The M word, apparently being Molotov.
Incredible operational security happening here.
The next day, the two met in person, Heifler told the undercover that Molotovs were easy to make,
and they discussed targeting the home of pro-Palestinian activist Nardin Kiswani.
Heifler talked about needing to obtain fake license plates and told the undercover that he
had an escape plan to flee the country at the end of April. Mayor Zora Mamdani clarified
online that Heifler intended to flee to Israel.
Great. To quote Heifler in the criminal complaint, quote,
I'm thinking like if we wanted to go after Kiswani, we have Kiswani's address.
So it's like that. That would be easier if you'd be more comfortable with that.
Drive down to Kiswani's home, middle of April, no IDs, no phones, in and out, unquote.
Great.
A few weeks later, they met up again and drove to Kiswani's home to conduct surveillance.
Heifler told the undercover that he had done tests with a Molotov and a DNA kit from a pharmacy,
and because his DNA showed up on the test, they should wear gloves during the attack.
A real genius at work.
Oh my God.
The plan was to build 12 Molotovs and throw several at the home and two at cars parked outside.
Heifler mentioned having an address they could hide out before he would then flee to Israel.
On March 26th, they met at Heifler's home.
to start making the Molotovs, and after the assembly, law enforcement searched the home,
and Heifler was arrested and has since been charged with unlawful possession and making of a
destructive device.
Great stuff. I'm very glad they didn't pull this off, and also Jesus Christ.
You know, something like this, it is interesting that this was joint with the FBI,
that the current FBI was doing a sort of sting operation like this with the Jewish Defense
League is interesting. That is that is something that I think people may not have expected.
The undercover was part of the furthering of this plan in some way. It's, it's, I don't know.
We don't know if this guy would have done this exact attack. Yeah. If not planned with the
undercover. But this guy was very, very clearly willing and able to hurt and possibly kill this
pro-Palestinian activist. A very prominent one at that. Lastly, let's talk about
Pink News and the Idaho
bathroom bill. Oh my
fucking God. Yeah. Earlier this week,
I released an episode and an accompanying
article online on what
I've dubbed the Trans Panic ClickBate
Economy. My reporting goes through a series
of misleading vital claims about
the attacks on trans people from the Trump administration
and red states that have been
recently flooding the zone and overwhelming
the census with an endless stream
of forecasted doom. These
viral claims are usually
based on some irresponsible reports.
designed to drive internet engagement rather than inform about the very real dangers trans people
are facing. This kind of clickbait treats every horrific potentiality as an inevitable eventuality,
undermining our capacity to accurately assess risk and effectively dedicate resources to oppose
pressing threats. One of the key outlets profiting from the panic clickbait economy right now
has been Pink News, an LGBTQ news outlet, which we learned last month is pivoting to a
a quote-unquote, reporter-free newsroom.
Incredible.
I just, one of the most Orwellian things I've ever heard.
Just, holy fuck.
Just on a base level of, like, just, oh, my, reporter-free newsroom.
Because of this change, one of the journalists there have already quit.
Yeah.
With four others possibly being laid off shortly.
The sort of editorial department of Pink News
is now being taken over by their social media, content creation,
wing and some of like the editorial staff, which are repackaging press releases and stealing the
work of other journalists, including some other journalists who may be engaging in this sort of
misleading reporting attempting to drive their own engagement.
Then Pink News is using that framing to drive their own engagement.
That's why this sort of panic economy is a whole economy.
Like it feeds on itself.
Now on March 30th, Pink News published an article that went viral online that claimed Kentucky
was, quote, to pass a bill that would declare trans people mentally ill, unquote, as well as
prohibiting trans people from teaching in schools. But a report from an actual Kentucky-based
journalist named Olivia Croft, for the outlet Queer Kentucky, clarified that no such bill
was going to pass. The push for a bill declaring trans people as mentally ill was by a single
Republican state senator named Gex Williams. Jesus Christ. It's a
Oh yeah, let's pause there.
Gex Williams.
And Gex could not even accomplish
the first step in the legislative process
getting the Senate committee assignment
for this prospective bill.
Gex then tried to turn his failed bill
into a floor amendment,
slapped onto a separate bill that was expected to pass.
But such an amendment still requires a vote
on approval separate from the vote to pass the bill itself.
Olivia Croft reported that this amendment
does not have such support from other legislators.
Yeah.
And that Gex was expected to withdraw his amendment
for breaking Senate rules on piggybacking failed bills
onto different bills as an amendment.
And even if this amendment somehow got through,
the bill would then need to be sent back
to the state house for approval
and would spark a huge fight
that the legislature does not have time for
because the legislative season is now wrapping up.
Yeah.
So after this article from Pink News
was fact-checked by this really good journalist
doing important reporting in Kentucky. Pink News then deleted this article and the viral posts
plugging it, but any corrections to this false story do not spread nearly as far as the initial
panic-inducing claim. And like that's crucial here because like the night that this article
went out on Pink News, literally my entire feed was full of dozens and dozens and dozens and
dozens of people all quote tweeting this pink news story. And the fact check and the fact that
Pink News deleted this is not going to get spread in that same way. Now, misleading stories like
this distract from the very real attacks Republicans are waging in red states. Yeah. One of which,
one of a few was on Monday. The governor of Idaho signed a new bill into law that criminalizes
trans people using the bathroom that matches their gender, including bathrooms in private
businesses. Yeah. A first offense would be a misdemeanor with punishable by up to a year in prison.
Second offense within five years would be a felony, punishable by up to five years in prison.
And this would be prison housed based on quote unquote biological sex at birth, which
leads to abuse of trans inmates. This is the most extreme bathroom bill that this nation has seen
so far, most restrictive affecting private businesses and this sort of very, very intense criminal
punishment. Yeah, and it's also worth noting in ways that are very blatant.
People are also just criminalized at an extremely high rate, and these felony charges would count
for Idaho's three strikes law, which is a fucking nightmare. This, and we also got the Supreme Court
ruling on Tuesday, which applies a significantly stricter level of scrutiny to any, like,
ban on conversion therapy, which is probably going to end up killing a whole bunch of
of conversion therapy bans across the country, which by the way, 8-1 ruling.
So a bunch of liberal justices also fucking agreed with this.
Yeah, and like that shit is like actually happening.
And then meanwhile, we have this like panic slop bullshit that people are using to get money.
And it's incredibly frustrated.
Yeah, it makes it hard to actually evaluate the news as it's happening and trust certain,
news from certain sources.
Yeah.
Because we all know that these attacks are real.
Like, there are real attacks going on.
that are really bad.
But we do need to focus on the ones that actually are real
as opposed to a single state senator's amendment to a bill,
which is never going to pass.
Yeah.
Taking up all of the oxygen one night.
Meanwhile, literally that same day,
a bill like this Idaho bathroom bill is being signed by the governor.
Yeah.
Well, on that note, I think that does it for us here at it could happen here.
Put a trans girl on your couch,
I guess especially also now trans people of Idaho
who are going to be fleeing in,
presumably very large numbers.
Just great and good.
We reported the news.
We reported the news.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now
until the heat death of the universe.
It Could Happen Here is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media,
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Thanks for listening.
I'm Lori Siegel, and on my new podcast, Mostly Human,
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I'm about to go on a date with an AI companion
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Mostly Human is your playbook for how tech can work for you.
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Listen to the secret world of Roll Dahl
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This is one of the most dramatic events
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I scream, get down, get down.
Those are shots.
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