Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 4

Episode Date: October 9, 2021

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Alphabet Boys is a new podcast series that goes inside undercover investigations. In the first season, we're diving into an FBI investigation of the 2020 protests. It involves a cigar-smoking mystery man who drives a silver hearse. And inside his hearse look like a lot of guns. But are federal agents catching bad guys or creating them? He was just waiting for me to set the date, the time, and then for sure he was trying to get it to happen. Listen to Alphabet Boys on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. What if I told you that much of the forensic science you see on shows like CSI isn't based on actual science?
Starting point is 00:01:21 And the wrongly convicted pay a horrific price. Two death sentences in a life without parole. My youngest, I was incarcerated two days after her first birthday. Listen to CSI on trial on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to the Money Moves podcast powered by Greenland on the iHeart Radio app or wherever you get your podcasts. And make sure you leave a review. The art world, it is essentially a money laundering business. The best fakes are still hanging on people's walls.
Starting point is 00:02:20 You know, they don't even know or suspect that they're fakes. I'm Alec Baldwin and this is a podcast about deception, greed and forgery in the art world. I just walked in and saw this bright red painting presuming to be a Rothko. Of course, art forgeries only happen because there's money to be made, a lot of money. I'm listening to what they're paying for these things. It was an incredible amount of money. You knew the painting was fake. Listen to Art Fraud starting February 1st on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:03:22 Hey everybody, Robert Evans here and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode. So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want. If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing new here for you, but you can make your own decisions. All right, welcome to It Could Happen Here, a podcast that is about 50% of the time introduced well and about 50% of the time us talking about how we're bad at introductions. And today it is just me, Christopher, but with me is Hadley and Mike from Lobelia Commons who are here to talk about many things, one of which is the first edition of their Earthbound Farmers Almanac. Hey. Hey. How are you two doing today?
Starting point is 00:04:34 I heard there's maybe a thunderstorm rolling in. Yeah, we're doing pretty good. I'm going to be glad for the rain, I guess. Yeah, yeah, it'll be good to have it. We're going to talk a little bit first about Lobelia Commons. So how did that project start? I know, I know it was something from the beginning of the pandemic, but had y'all been working on this kind of stuff before and yeah, just run us through a little bit of that. Yeah, so it kind of started last year during the pandemic, basically, basically at the beginning of the pandemic, we had a surge of interest in these kind of mutual aid groups.
Starting point is 00:05:14 And the largest of which that formed in New Orleans specifically, which some of us helped form was called New Orleans Mutual Aid Group, which was doing like food distribution. And I stemmed out of a project that was already running like a food share, basically getting excess produce that was coming into the port and distributing it for free in front of like one of the gentrifying grocery stores. But within like, I want to say like a couple of weeks, there was such a surge of interest in doing that type of like volunteer or whatever work that there was like a ton of labor to make it happen. And that basically meant buying tons of produce eventually because the ports eventually shut down and there wasn't any produce coming from anywhere at the beginning of the pandemic. And that meant basically buying tons of produce from like Costco and that labor meant like waiting in lines for, you know, wrapping around entire like massive like multi city block warehouse stores. And so that was basically doing like food distribution. So we took the opportunity to, since there was so much labor happening that we could go and start to address the question of like food production specifically and try and do that in interesting ways. So we felt like it was pretty important to start like experimenting in different forms of food production and like, like ways of relating to food production. So, I mean, this first started with like a, we were basically just starting tons of seeds and delivering them all over the city, just driving around from we had like one centralized nursery that was run out of a warehouse.
Starting point is 00:07:02 And that was a ton of labor was a really time consuming. It was super centralized. And so we moved from that into a number of other projects. Shortly there after we put together like a, like a collaborative mushroom production group where we were getting people who had been growing mushrooms and teaching folks and like doing skill shares to produce oyster mushrooms out of buckets. And we started doing some like woodlot production of shiitakes, which has like since expanded pretty dramatically. And yeah, just like kind of like things that that draw people's interest like that and and and think about like how you can grow food in an urban or peri urban scenario. Fairly interestingly and like with joy. Also, you know, after this we were reached out to by folks that were like, well, I want to grow herbs and rather than specifically getting like a lot and covering it in different herbal medicines. We reached out had already had folks reaching out to us. And so someone came up with the idea of well, let's just all grow in like our backyards tons of herbs. So let's find herbs that already grow abundantly around us to kind of collectively share the experience of harvesting and and turning those into medicines. And so now there's like this herb commons group that the labor is distributed. It's distributed geographically. But there's these like meetups where their bulk herbs are given up. Yeah, given out just like in a communal space and yeah, like there's skill shares happening there. And so there's kind of some community being built around that that happens in a very decentralized manner.
Starting point is 00:09:09 Yeah, it's definitely very decentralized. There are working groups that are part of Lobelia Commons that I'm like not entirely sure what they're doing any given day or you know what what's going on. I'm involved in like a couple particular projects within it. And I think that it's really flexible for folks who are trying to get involved, they can kind of be involved at whatever level they want. Like, if somebody doesn't want to go to a bunch of garden workdays or a bunch of meetings or something which, you know, are have been a great way for us to like see each other and see our friends during the pandemic and stuff is to get together for these workdays outdoors or whatnot. But if somebody wants to just like do nothing but sprout plants at their own house and then somebody will come pick up those seedlings and, you know, bring them to one of our decentralized nursery spots. That's great. That's one of the other kind of projects we have we call the decentralized nursery. And that's kind of like just something that people already do at a certain time of year, you know, gardeners will regularly start more plants than they need and then just kind of give them away to friends and neighbors and stuff and we tried to just make it a little bit more of an intentional thing. And this was also kind of growing out of like, at the very beginning of the pandemic and we were actually doing seedling deliveries to people, which made sense at that time but it was like very labor intensive. So we kind of moved to this model of having just like free stands in front of houses on street corners in different places. You know, there's already like a bunch of free fridges around New Orleans and things like that. And so this is kind of like a free plant version of that. And it's really easy for somebody to just set one up. And then that kind of also allows us to like work on this other aspect of decentralizing food production because like, that's definitely one of our goals right is to like not have a tiny percentage of the population to the
Starting point is 00:11:03 community, the only ones who know how to grow food and doing it under the control of a tiny number of corporations that own all the land and obviously we're trying to get away from that food system. And so one of the ways we can think about doing that is finding ways to really decentralize some of the skills that are that are necessary. So for example, like if somebody's growing avocados for our nurseries, the thing about growing an avocado from a pit actually is that that tree probably won't produce fruit. It actually needs to be grafted. So we can have people starting pits and then we're also, you know, sharing the knowledge of how to graph these things, because we kind of like see a future in which a lot more people will need to be involved in food production, but also like Mike was saying, like, we want this to be not like a job that it feels like people have, but this joyous kind of thing that's just a part of everyday life. Yeah, one of the other things that I was interested in is, you know, so part of what I think the beginning of the EarthBound Farmers Alumni Act is about is talking about how I guess people have the tendency to sort of focus on climate change is just like the only sort of climate thing that's happening. And, you know, I mean, there's obviously, yeah, there's there's a bunch of sort of stuff that is climate change, but isn't the weather that are sort of, you know, things like the phosphorus cycle, things like the nitrogen cycle that are breaking. But simultaneously, I think it's, it's also true that, you know, that that kind of stuff. And this is also something that's talked about in there is is going to have a large impact both on sort of even just what kind of biomes exist in a very short term. And, you know, another product of that is, you know, is that the sort of increasing rate of storms. And I was wondering if y'all could talk a bit about what happened after Ida and how both just sort of in the short term and long term that the
Starting point is 00:13:15 increase of just hurricanes and I hesitate to call them natural disasters because, you know, that there's there's a whole thing about how these disasters are sort of manufactured in a lot of ways but how that's been affecting how y'all I think are sort of thinking about and working with these kind of mutual aid projects and food production. Yeah, so I think with Ida, it's kind of complicated because you could almost look at it, look at it as like two different storms. Because what happened in New Orleans versus what happened in say like, Homa or the river is these areas that are, you know, generally south and west of New Orleans are kind of like two different animals in some ways like what happened in New Orleans specifically relates to infrastructure so like what you're saying like the kind of quote unquote natural disasters thing. That's, you know, that's a pretty commonplace way of looking I mean it's not a very radical conception that like these aren't natural disasters or whatever the disaster is created as soon as there was the attempt to create a colonial New Orleans in the first place. So this became honestly part of like national discourse as a result of Katrina most famously because of the Army Corps of Engineers failure 2005 and so what happened this year was with with Hurricane Ida was the one of the main transmission towers for the energy energy corporation in New Orleans is called Entergy. So the Entergy tower fell into the Mississippi River and you had that happening at the same time that thousands of power lines fell down the power lines are on poles and very prone to getting that down even just during the during any day of the week. And so there wasn't actually much flooding that was happening. It was primarily wind damage so that the tower falls into the river power lines down you had something like I believe 55 barges in the
Starting point is 00:15:28 port of south Louisiana falling into the they're falling off their moorings and floating around just crashing into things just crash and like there's like several ferries that connected east and west banks of the city, those fell off their moorings so so like the physical infrastructure of the place and and how that relates to beyond New Orleans is New Orleans is located at the very southern reach of the Mississippi River's port of southern Louisiana which is like a 55 mile port, I believe a 52 mile port that processes like 60% of all US grain going to export so it's like a massive, really, really important piece of American capitalist infrastructure that when those boats fall off their moorings, it's not like oh this like whatever quaint like value problem is a very serious imperial problem. But so for the average person living in New Orleans, and this looked like, I think it ended up being for most people around a week and a half without power which, if anyone's lived even with air conditioning in New Orleans for a summer, it's extremely difficult to live here during the summer. It's obviously not impossible if we have modern amenities but when you're one year without those, when you're without the refrigerator, without your freezer, air conditioning, it's really, really, really hot. So that's what was happening in New Orleans. There was some damage to people's roofs. There was some fairly substantial damage to the structures. But what happened to the west in cities like Laplace, which is about 25, 30 miles west of New Orleans, that's where you started to see like very severe flooding, very severe damage to structures, places like Homa, Lafite, Port of Shan, all these places that are closer to the coast. That's where you saw the real heavy destruction. So a lot of people had been framing what's happened down the bayou and in the river parishes as we would say, as like those places Katrina, because the destruction was so total in that way.
Starting point is 00:17:52 So the way that you relate to that type of again, quote unquote disaster is much different. Whereas what happened in New Orleans is more of a continuation of what could be called like a series of apocalypses that have been happening since colonization. I think that's an interesting point also that I want to talk about a little bit about US grain exports, because I think that that's another part of this whole food system question that is important on a scale that I don't think people understand. It's just for a bit of background for listeners. So when all of the sort of giant like free trade agreements went into effect, you know, so the free trade agreements are like, okay, you're not supposed to be able to like have government subsidies of agricultural products. And there's a couple of carve outs that were put into this. Now, almost all of them, but there are exceptions for this. There's a couple of like weird manufacturing stuff in like Italy and Germany that have carve outs. And the other big one is that the US government's allowed to just do enormous levels of agricultural subsidies that no one else like really in the world is allowed to like match or do it like you know, if you try to have grand subsidies right it's like you know the IMF will come after you like you know you're not allowed to do it but then you know simultaneously you have the US producing all of this like this. I mean it's not it's not really cheap right but it's you know this enormously subsidized grain that nobody can actually really compete with. And I think that's like an interesting, I was wondering like how do you guys think about that in terms of you know trying to do decentralized I guess agriculture in a place that's to a large extent this sort of like conduit of grain to the rest of the world but in a way that like also inhibits those places from actually you know having their own kind of like decentralized agriculture.
Starting point is 00:19:57 I mean I can speak a little bit about like what that kind of does to our context of like making it like especially when I see people in the kind of organic gardening farming world, trying to go on this model of like, but we're going to make, you know regenerative agriculture profitable we're going to make it somehow compete with conventional agriculture. And I guess I just don't really think that that is is feasible in that in that terrain, like you know if we're trying to compete on that same terrain and we're competing with these absurd subsidies it definitely just the same problem that you see around the world where people aren't able to afford to grow their own thing because there's no way they can they can sell it as cheaply as US grain. So I think it's more important to sort of like look at like there's there's a piece in the Almanac actually that sort of gets into this this issue of like well are we really growing enough food in this regenerative way like you know we don't even hardly grow that many grains or that many high salary things a lot of things are just focused on vegetables and things like that and like I think that's a really important critique and also I think that the way out of it isn't just going to be us trying harder or something or like the the future I can envision for us like really changing the food system kind of involves like really large scale expropriation of that land where the grain is being produced and of those huge machineries those huge like satellite powered or satellite directed you know plows and tractors and other that are doing this stuff and so like when I'm trying to think about like the impact that a food project is having or like a food justice project I don't try to think like we're trying to replace agro business on its own terms I think like we're trying to be an ally or an aid to any kind of antagonistic sort of social movement that actually is going to create the conditions where like we can all get together and start to actually address these problems without being hindered by you know things like private
Starting point is 00:22:19 property so I guess that's a good point to jump into the Almanac from I think yeah do you want to just introduce the project a little bit and then we can talk about some of the stuff in it that I thought was really interesting yeah so the Almanac kind of came out of like a little bit of a like partially is like a joke you know like everyone gets the Almanac and kind of you know it doesn't really relate too much to like most of us what we would be growing so we had we had posited something like different you know something that does kind of grapple with some of the questions of you know growing food and kind of the conditions we live in maybe you can speak on it more yeah I can even just I'll actually just read the back of it because I think it speaks to it pretty well this is a farmer's Almanac for the end of the world growing food used to be a lot more straightforward when you'd plant your okra the same time every year like your grandpa did now we've got to be ready for anything late spring freezes free heat waves that bring plants out of dormancy too early fire season longer every year the polar vortex and if that wasn't enough we've also got to contend with the fallout from breakages in the global supply chain when millions of gallons of milk get poured down the drain and mountains of potatoes are left to rot it's a world that calls for a new kind of farmers Almanac today's crisis has roots in the earliest moments of land theft against native peoples a process that has continued alongside hundreds of years of slavery and colonization the way forward out of this mess will mean grappling with the crimes of the past as well as charting a new course guided by black and indigenous knowledge creative experimentation and food production and paying attention across generational and species divides so I mean what one like very concrete example of like how this farmers Almanac is different and what you might see just from the standard Almanac is you know we we don't have like oh it's it's may it's
Starting point is 00:24:26 time to plant corn or whatever because I mean first of all that that was never that useful as for a publication that's meant to be used across this vast continent you know it's going to be different everywhere where you're going to plant things at which time but also like those standard resources that we would go to like for here for the southeast for example or wherever like if you're looking at something that was made a few decades ago it's not going to actually be accurate or it's going to give you undue certainty about where the seasons line up and things like that so you know instead of telling people exactly when to plant their seeds we have a chart that has the actual germination temperatures of like all the major annual vegetables that people would want to grow and then we also have like the monthly notes from this local farm in New Orleans so you know located in this area you can you can also get a really precise view of like oh they were planting this then they were harvesting this then yeah I think that we hope to make something that was you know our original focus was something that was specific to New Orleans and the region you know in the Gulf south and the southeast generally because we are so aware of the you know the differences or what have you between growing food here and growing food in Ohio or something or whatever and we all get these same seeds you know out of Walmart or Lowe's or whatever and try and grow the exact same plants all over the place so trying to hone in on some of that local perspective with me in terms of like getting some like folk tradition getting some you know anecdotal evidence about you know things that work through things that people are trying and I think that that was that was fairly successful and I think I think a side that we weren't really expecting as much was just the amount of national and even international kind of grasp that it had
Starting point is 00:26:32 I think a lot of people like could could use something like this in their area and it's fostered some really interesting connections for people that are experimenting in New York for people that are growing things or thinking about maybe food systems and how they relate to prisons in California or even you know as far away as Brazil it's kind of began to foster a connection between Lobelia Commons and a group called Thea dos Bolvos which translates roughly to like the web of peoples in Brazil so called Brazil where it's kind of like experimental agroecology project that's very specific specifically focused on you know sovereignty land stewardship kind of following a little bit in the tradition of the land less workers movement if anyone's familiar with MST it's kind of following in that tradition a bit but is heavily stewarded by black and indigenous knowledges yeah so that was something I think of a kind of pleasant surprise out of it yeah I thought that was a really interesting way of looking at it because I feel like there's this tendency in the U.S. when we talk about sort of our relationship to the land which is something that comes up a lot in the sort of essays that are in the all neck is about you know like there's a piece that I related to a lot which is about someone from Guam trying to sort of deal with like I mean particularly like legacies of sort of Japanese imperialism and being driven from their home and it was like oh hey look like this is someone who experienced when Japan went west and it was like oh yeah my family had this very similar thing when they went east and you know but there's I think yeah I think it's very smartly you get to a point very quickly where you're trying to grapple with you know how do you build connections to land but then also how does that work in a context in you know in a context that's basically defined by Southern colonialism and defined by this sort of by this occupation and I think looking at the
Starting point is 00:28:55 MST looking at a lot of stuff that happened in Latin America I mean there's very similar to what you guys were talking about in Brazil there was a huge movement like this that was indigenous land reclamation sort of agriculture in Columbia for example too in the 90s and they run into this problem of you know there's a civil war going on in Columbia and a lot of them getting murdered by sort of state paramilitaries in the army but I think it's a really interesting way of looking at what is what does land back actually look like and how do you deal with interacting with land and also yeah the land workers in particular they use a lot of methods but you know they actually do just take a like an enormous amount of land like back from the state and sort of back from corporate things so I'm interested in how we all started talking to a lot of these a lot of Brazilian groups and how that sort of like that that perspective is shaped the way that like this this this whole sort of project turned out so we were specifically to the depots some previous connections that some of us had in Brazil had when talking about what we were doing and just kind of keeping up an exchange of you know just like kind of updates from from the golf and they would kind of send updates from things going on down there they kind of drew the connection for us and put us towards them and I reached out to the depots and was like hey you know we're doing this thing and I you know I'm inspired by what you're doing personally and I think you know I'd be curious to see what what what kind of relationship whatever we can foster and they took it you know also with with some inspiration seeing that this very clear connection in terms of relationship with land historically this possession historically between the two continents across the Caribbean and the implementation on a wide scale of plantation monoculture
Starting point is 00:31:14 that was fueled entirely by slavery and genocide and I think that having that kind of like shared common history I think gives us a good bedrock to like exchange notes about where we are now kind of multiplied by the fact that the way that so-called emancipation happened here versus in Brazil radically different like the for instance the existence of PT or the workers party in Brazil being such a force after the dictatorship and having that like strong populist movement that was you know rooted a very traditional left that fueled MST well you don't have anything like that here you know that happens at the same time that here actually the workers movement in the US was kind of getting defeated I mean up in the 70s so with respect to like land back specifically you know I don't know if you I don't know if you will see it in the same forms I doubt at least obviously would totally be there cheering it on and happy to see it but I think it looks a lot more like during the uprising last year you saw in Chicago for instance the one that when like the trains were being expropriated as they were moving taking goods out of these box cars and just expropriate in these kinds of goods taking you know taking goods that would normally be going you know just commodities normally going to court just cut off in the middle line or you know these these these kind of like more I don't want to say small scale but focus more on like infrastructural choke points rather than necessarily like having thousands of people swarming you know a massive industrial agriculture set up in Kansas or something you know yeah I think it's great to imagine that I think I really love sharing the history of MST with people in America who've never heard it before because I think it's a great way to kind of expand the imaginary of like what is
Starting point is 00:33:40 possible like what kind of actions are actually at our disposal like it and it truly is not gonna look exactly like that and I think it's also really important for us to like not forget a lot of the similar histories here like part of the inspiration for the Almanac or what kind of drove us to make it was some of us were doing a reading group of this book called Freedom Farmers that's about kind of like various black projects in the south for food autonomy after slavery and a lot of it is about Fannie Lou Hamer and Freedom Farms and you know we were definitely inspired for some of the Lobelia things by Fannie Lou Hamer's Pig Bank which was a really cool thing where they just like started with a bunch of pigs and if you're in the community like you get you get your pigs from you get a couple piglets from the Pig Bank and then the interest on that is a couple years later you got to give them a couple pigs because you're producing your own pigs and so the Pig Bank is like self sustaining and another thing from that book that was inspiring to us was reading about George Washington Carver's public education projects out of Tuskegee University that were just really inspiring in terms of like he was doing all of his own kind of independent research about soils and pests and all these different crops and everything and creating these farm bulletins that were then being distributed to black farmers throughout the region to kind of you know share better practices and a lot of the stuff was like agroecology before people had that word like he was very far out of his time in terms of understanding soil dynamics and pests and things like that so yeah we definitely try to try to lift up all that history as much as possible Yeah I guess the other thing I thought was very interesting that you alluded to briefly in this was yeah because there's a session of this that's talking about food in prisons and I wonder if you could talk about that part a little bit more because that's a connection that I really don't think gets drawn very often
Starting point is 00:36:02 I mean one of the things that it's kind of hard to describe I do love the visual that we have for this piece but yeah I mean it's just like the it's a striking image you know it's got like in the center there's a picture of a really high density chicken operation where somebody wearing sort of like a full Tyvek suit suit and just walking through this like massive herd of chickens and then that's super imposed over this just like really nasty looking close up photo of a prison food tray and just like the canned veggies and everything and like I mean I don't I've been to jail a number of times and the food is always terrible it's always one of the things you talk about or you can find over whatever it's just how bad the food is but I think people who have an experience that don't really think about just how much systematic like starvation is going on and nutrition is going on where it's like the only way you could possibly survive in these places is spending a bunch of extra money on commissary to get stuff that also isn't healthy but at least you can get more calories and stuff and like I think that that there's like a lot of parallels between kind of the structure of prisons and the structure of our of our food system I mean one example that I used to talk about this is like the banana plantation where like the you know we have an entire variety of banana that's like basically extinct or it's it can't be grown commercially anymore because the banana industry you know functions by putting like warehousing these bananas together and these like super tight plantation formations you know which really only makes sense if you're just trying to maximize your profits and get as much out of a small space as possible but what it does is is the exact same thing that happens in prisons during covid or with any kind of you know pathogen like tuberculosis or whatever you know it's like the the trees are so close together that the fungus spread so rapidly and then they're also like pumping all these things into to fight that and they're actually breeding super funguses all the time
Starting point is 00:38:20 and at some point the banana that we eat now is going to also stop existing because of this and I guess I don't know if I can draw anything deeper out of those similarities and the fact that there's this like overriding logic of capitalism that is just like has no respect for these beings like whether it is a person or a banana tree like it's all just commodities and things to be warehouse yeah I think to add on that I mean this is the piece in there which is called the struggle for good food across walls I think it does a nice job of talking about how like you know for talking about quote unquote food food justice or what have you like like how can we talk about that on the outside while forgetting about just the most deplorable food conditions on the entire continent and I think that that it's really good at that I think I would really like to see in the next year all the ways that the imaginaries of inmates kind of go and like attack that like the logic of prison food being completely deplorable like you know you have all these forms of creativity of like making tortillas and stuff and like doing wild things with like stuff that's in the commissary and you know it's contraband kind of ways of making kind of life a little bit more livable in there and if anyone has spent time in jail or prison or kept up a relationship with someone on the inside or what have you and everyone has a story about a way of making making food more interesting and joyful and like there becomes whole cultures around them. One of the things that we're starting to do in one of the farm spaces we work with outside of the city is is through pre existing relationships with inmates in Angola State Penitentiary in Louisiana which for those that don't know was a plantation civil war happens two years after the civil war it becomes a Louisiana State Penitentiary it's still a plantation it's you know many times it's descendants of the same enslaved folks who were on that plantation prior
Starting point is 00:40:59 and you know it's a it's a guard on a horseback riding around while there's folks pulling cotton and so so through some of these relationships with some of these inmates who are like kind of clandestine organizers we're starting to come up with ways to like grow food collaboratively with folks that are behind walls and find ways to get food to either their family or maybe sell and get that into their commissary kind of just like trying to spitball ideas about like different ways of producing food despite people's incarceration. Yeah that seems like a really I guess the word you can really say is a necessary way for this sort of food politics to go if it's going to actually deal with sort of both the land conditions and the conditions of just you know the fact that we have an enormous that there's still just an enormous life population the US and I think that kind of resistance and creativity I think is how yeah y'all are on the right track with with pushing it that way yeah that this is this is sort of a bleak note to end on I think but I don't know I think it yeah it's a it's a hopeful one to and where can people find but basically all of the work and then also you talked a little bit about trying to get submissions for everything so can you talk a little bit about how that how that's going to work. Yeah, so we're it's it's kind of been on hold a little bit because we've been like very active after Ida yeah yeah and you know trying to make sure our people are all good and supporting. In various places and kind of doing like different workshops and stuff and because our focus isn't just on food production it's also like neighborhood survival or whatever so we've been working with an old neighbor of one of ours who. You know she's already been kind of doing this mutual aid stuff you know by any other name for decades you know letting people stay in her house and feeding people she's like kind of like a block mom and she's really one of the last.
Starting point is 00:43:19 Black homeowners in her neighborhood so we're really trying to like help her achieve some autonomy one way that we've been putting it is when all the air being bees like lose their power because they're still relying on the colonial world well miss healthy it could still have her lights on because she's going to be totally autonomous from the system so. And I think that that link is on our Instagram page if you click on the like the link or whatever there's a go fund me that is where we've been putting a lot of our effort and really working with her on and then also like growing growing a garden like a Jason to her so that there. People in that community are food as as food autonomous as as we can get. We can put them in the show notes. Yeah and the the handle for both Twitter and Instagram is at Lobelia Commons. And the Almanac you can find links to the Almanac PDF on through either of those if you want to just read it for free and then there's also copies for sale on emergent goods dot com. And for submissions I mean yeah like I said we've been really behind on this just because of all this stuff but for submissions we're really looking for folks. During the summer of 2020 some Americans suspected that the FBI had secretly infiltrated the racial justice demonstrations and you know what they were right.
Starting point is 00:44:52 I'm Trevor Aronson and I'm hosting a new podcast series alphabet boys. As the FBI sometimes you got to grab the little guy to go after the big guy. Each season will take you inside an undercover investigation. In the first season of alphabet boys we're revealing how the FBI spied on protesters in Denver. At the center of this story is a raspy voiced cigar smoking man who drives a silver hearse. And inside his heart was like a lot of guns he's a shark and on the gun badass way and nasty sharks. He was just waiting for me to set the date the time and then for sure he was trying to get it to happen. Listen to alphabet boys on the I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcast.
Starting point is 00:45:41 What if I told you that much of the forensic science you see on shows like CSI isn't based on actual science. The problem with forensic science in the criminal legal system today is that it's an awful lot of forensic and not an awful lot of science. And the wrongly convicted pay a horrific price. Two death sentences in a life without parole. My youngest I was incarcerated two days after her first birthday. I'm Molly Herman. Join me as we put forensic science on trial to discover what happens when a match isn't a match. And when there's no science in CSI. How many people have to be wrongly convicted before they realize that this stuff's all bogus.
Starting point is 00:46:29 It's all made up. Listen to CSI on trial on the I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcast. I'm Lance Bass and you may know me from a little band called in sync. What you may not know is that when I was 23 I traveled to Moscow to train to become the youngest person to go to space. And when I was there, as you can imagine, I heard some pretty wild stories. But there was this one that really stuck with me about a Soviet astronaut who found himself stuck in space with no country to bring him down. It's 1991 and that man Sergei Krekalev is floating in orbit when he gets a message that down on earth his beloved country, the Soviet Union, is falling apart. And now he's left defending the Union's last outpost.
Starting point is 00:47:25 This is the crazy story of the 313 days he spent in space. 313 days that changed the world. Listen to the last Soviet on the I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts. To contribute throws a pitch. I think if you've seen the first one or listened to this you probably get something of an idea of what we're looking for. And we're happy to like talk to people about like, you know, different ideas. Bear with us if we're a little slower to respond because we're, you know, still ways deep right now. But the submission for deadlines is the end of October. And you can email ideas or pitches or whatever to Lobelia Commons at protonmail.com.
Starting point is 00:48:16 And lastly, the project that I'm most focused on is the front yard orchard initiative where basically we just propagate as many fruit trees as cheaply as possible, things that are really easy for us to grow from cuttings like figs, mulberries, things that are easy to grow from seed like papaya, Moringa, pecan. And we basically just have some nice flyers that we put up and we advertise a bit on social media and also just kind of go door to door in neighborhoods where we already have gardens or connections and offer to give free fruit trees out to people. And we're also happy to plant them for people and then kind of offer consultation on how to take care of it or whatever. And also if folks want to hear some of the pieces from the 2021 Earthbound Farmers Almanac read by some of the authors and then some interviews with those authors, you can check out this podcast called Partisan Gardens that did a really good episode that's kind of like an audio exploration of the Almanac.
Starting point is 00:49:23 Cool. Yeah, people definitely go read the Almanac. It's a really good piece of work. Yeah, thank you too so much for joining us. Yeah, thank you for having us. I'm Colleen Witt. Join me, the host of Eating While Broke podcast. While I eat a meal created by self-made entrepreneurs, influencers and celebrities over a meal they once ate when they were broke. Today I have the lovely AJ Crimson, the official princess of Compton, Asia, Kiddink and Asya. This is the professor. We're here on Eating While Broke and today I'm going to break down my meal that got me through a time when I was broke. Listen to Eating While Broke on the iHeart Radio app on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:50:14 I call the union hall. I say it's a matter of life and death. I think these people are planning to kill Dr. King. On April 4, 1968, Dr. Martin Luther King was shot and killed in Memphis. A petty criminal named James Earl Ray was arrested. He pled guilty to the crime and spent the rest of his life in prison. Case closed. Right? James Earl Ray was a pawn for the official story. The authorities would parade over. We found a gun that James Earl Ray bought in Birmingham that killed Dr. King. Except it wasn't the gun that killed Dr. King. One of the problems that came out when I got the Ray case was that some of the evidence, as far as I was concerned, did not match the circumstances. This is the MLK tapes. The first episodes are available now. Listen on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:51:13 After 30 years, it's time to return to the halls of West Beverly High and hang out at the Peach Fit. On the podcast 90210MG, join Jenny Garth and Tori Spelling for a rewatch of the hit series Beverly Hills 90210 from the very beginning. We get to tell the fans all of the behind-the-scenes stories that actually happen, so they know what happened on camera, obviously. But we can tell them all the good stuff that happened off camera. Get all the juicy details of every episode that you've been wondering about for decades, as 90210 Superfan and radio host, Sisani, sits in with Jenny and Tori to reminisce, reflect and relive each moment from Brandon and Kelly's first kiss to shouting, Donna Martin graduates! You have an amazing memory. You remember everything about the entire 10 years that we filmed that show.
Starting point is 00:52:01 And you remember absolutely nothing of the 10 years that we filmed that show. Listen to 90210MG on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. You suddenly wake up to the loud growling of a tactical vehicle. Must have left your window open. A few streets away, you can hear the troopers doing their morning patrols. This is closing in on week 4 of the all-day curfew. Cops and state troopers have put checkpoints at every bridge and on all major streets for about every 10 blocks. Your friends and the city's local liberal majority are now calling this what it is.
Starting point is 00:52:43 Your city is functioning as a full-on police state. National establishment media has been more hesitant to use that term. But your Fox watching conservative family from out of state has been texting you about how good it is that someone is finally establishing law and order and taking back the town after months of senseless looting and destructive riots. You've been mostly stuck in your downtown apartment. You quit your job when the recent bout of protests started up, which now means you don't qualify for the working hours exemption of the curfew. You've got enough money saved up for another month, but you're looking to get a grocery delivery job, which would have the added benefit of allowing you to go outside during the day.
Starting point is 00:53:27 Luckily, you've been able to sneak out at night to do roof topping and surveil the police's checkpoints and patrol routes in your neighborhood. You've noticed that the cops rarely look up. You've been feeding your intel into a surveillance database shared on a telegram channel ran by some various activists. After lying in bed, gathering your thoughts for a few minutes, you finally roll out and pick out your clothes. A dark loose pants, a plain shirt, beanie, and a high-viz jacket. Ornarily, you'd break into your Red Bull stash for morning caffeine, but you've already got plenty of energy today. It's your boyfriend's birthday, and for the past week, you've been planning to surprise him. You think there's finally enough information in the surveillance database to plan a trip across town with little to no law enforcement interaction.
Starting point is 00:54:19 Between the in-person reconnaissance and hacking into the city's traffic cams, which was surprisingly easy, you've been able to figure out a route using city buses and on foot that should be able to avoid checkpoints and the regular patrol routes. From what you've seen online, bus drivers won't ask for a work authorization card, and you're hoping the high-viz jacket will make it look like you belong. Lastly, before you leave, you grab your small yellow messenger bag and jam in a water bottle plus a tin of a half a dozen cupcakes. Deep breaths. Slowly twist the handle of your door and stare down your apartment hallway. You're on your way. You keep telling yourself, just act like you belong. After taking the stairs down to ground level, you make your way street side. This part you feel more confident about. You've been able to study the patrol patterns around your immediate area more carefully.
Starting point is 00:55:12 The bus stop you're going to is just four blocks away. You can zigzag through two streets and to avoid the main drags. As you walk through the sidewalks, you keep your head down, but your eyes are darting side to side to get a lay of the land. Don't walk too fast or too slow. Match the people around you. Obviously, not many people are out right now, but there are enough to mirror their movement and pace. It feels like it took forever, but you get to the bus stop without incident or seeing a single cop. Waiting at bus stops always feels like an eternity, but today it's worse. Within a few minutes, the Blue Metro bus does pull up. The bus driver gestures you on. The electronic ticketing system isn't turned on. You peek up to the driver. The look in her eyes is telling you just to head on back.
Starting point is 00:56:01 At least you know she's probably on your side. You picked this bus, not because it's the most direct route to your boyfriend's place. It's not, but because he gets you close enough while avoiding the checkpoints you and your internet buddies have mapped out. It's a slower, more jagged route, but at least you get to relax for a while and enjoy the ride. And hey, you can get an in-person look at the rest of the city under the curfew and police occupation. The ride's now closing in on a little over half an hour, about 10 more minutes until you get off. Your heart's racing. You might actually do this. In your flash of nervous excitement, you look up ahead on the road, and your face drops.
Starting point is 00:56:39 About half a mile up ahead, you spot a checkpoint. Fuck. No, this is wrong. This wasn't on the map. The checkpoint on this street was supposed to be further up the road after you get off. Your mind flashes through different possibilities. Did the cops change the checkpoint this morning? Wait, did the police find the database map on Telegram and are feeding it false info? You stop yourself from thinking because you realize you need to act now and think later. You jump out of your seat and sprint up the bus towards the driver. You blurt out, I need to get off this right now. Please. The driver looks ahead, looks at you, and tilts her head down and pulls over.
Starting point is 00:57:20 Quick. That's all she says to you. You dart out of the bus and into the half-residential, half-retail labyrinth. And as you're running, you hear sirens. Fuck, they saw you. Your head swivels around to catch a glance. One car from the checkpoint is headed your way. You hope the bus driver doesn't get in trouble, but right now, that's not your problem. You think, first thing you need to do is prevent the vehicle from pursuing you. So, off the big streets. You take a second to tighten the messenger bag around your body, and here we go. To your right, you see a walled courtyard for a small two-story apartment. You estimate the wall is eight feet tall, doable.
Starting point is 00:58:01 You turn out the street and run towards the wall, slowly gaining speed. Jump up and plunge your foot on the side, then your arms reach up and grab the top. It's a bit of a struggle to pull yourself up. You got some stuff weighing you down and you're a bit out of practice, but you get up. You hop down onto the other side and keep going for now. You barrel through some dense bushes and vault a few small railings as you traverse the side streets. Soon enough, you're far enough away from the car with plenty of obstacles in between you and it, that you feel like you can catch a quick breather. Now you have a choice. Hide it out here for a bit, or figure out a way to your boyfriends.
Starting point is 00:58:37 You still got a decent sense of where you are. The destination should be only about ten blocks away now, in a diagonal direction. You'll get plenty of time to rest your boyfriends' place, so you figure you should continue on. As you're about to head on your way, two armored state troopers turn the corner on foot. You remember, you're still pretty close to the checkpoint. One look at you with your hands on your knees as you pant, the cops know you're out of place. Stop, yells the cop. You're being detained. Fuck. Time to book it. Gonna have to think as you run.
Starting point is 00:59:13 Good news is that they're in armor. Bad news is that you're tired and your outfit is blown. You can change clothes once you get to your boyfriends, so you decide the best course of action now is to make it hard for two people in armor to follow you. Time to put some obstacles between you and them. You're already mostly out of the retail area, which means it's time to hop some backyard fences. Ferris Bueller's day off shit. You make a sharp left turn behind a car and into someone's yard and up and over their fence. One hand grabs on top, one hand goes to the far side and you flip your body over.
Starting point is 00:59:44 Next few fences are shorter. Regular speed vaults will do. The sound of the clunky tactile boots chasing you gets quieter as you traverse through the yards and zig-zagging around blocks. Before you know it, you're on the back street of your partner's place. Only a few more steps and you can see their backyard in the distance. You quick turn your head and look around. From what you can see, you've lost the state troopers. You scurry through four more yards before you reach your target.
Starting point is 01:00:10 You let out a sigh of relief. You jog past the side yard towards the front. You probably should use the front door. Before you knock, you take a look inside your messenger bag. You unclip the latch and inside lies a smushed pile of cupcake crumbs with pink frosting coating the insides of your bag. Well, at least I made it in one piece, you say out loud. After an exhausting trek, you finally knock on the door.
Starting point is 01:00:43 It could happen here. Podcast Robert Evans. Sophie is not here today, so I get to open the episode with atonal grunting because she was unable to stop me. Welcome to the podcast that this is talking about things falling apart, how to, you know, make it not maybe. My guest today, well, my co-host today first is Garrison Davis. Garrison, how are you doing today?
Starting point is 01:01:07 I'm doing good. Good. We have a little bit of a fun update. This actually happened last week, but this will be the first episode we're recording since it happened. Last week, we put up some links to a GoFundMe and a couple of different episodes of Bastards and it could happen here to try to help a woman named Ruba
Starting point is 01:01:25 who lives in Portland and is a community activist, save her house. When we started the fundraiser, she'd raised about $28,000 to, you know, basically keep her home. And it's up to the $50,000 she needed. Y'all did that in about three days. So you've kept a woman in her home and allowed her and her family to stay where they are.
Starting point is 01:01:49 And I'm just extremely grateful to everybody who donated, who shared. It's just awesome. You know, this comes after earlier in this year, you all funded the Portland diaper bank. I just continue to be very impressed with how much people who listen to these shows are willing to throw down to help people out. So thank you all. And now I'm going to hand it off to Garrison. Garrison, what are we talking about today?
Starting point is 01:02:18 So today, we're going to be talking about and discussing two of kind of my favorite practical skill sets that I've been training for, I don't know, seven, eight, eight. I think I'm almost eight years now. And it's one of my favorite interests. It's useful very practically. It's also useful for fun. We're talking about parkour, which people may have heard me discuss before,
Starting point is 01:02:46 but also just kind of like stealth in general and how to be kind of mindful of your presence among other people. As a big, clumsy guy who's worked extensively with you in aggressive situations, I can confirm that your parkour is very, very effective because you are a fast little son of a bitch. Very good at getting away from the cops and getting to where you need to be to film things. It was always kind of amazing, as frustrating as it was sometimes
Starting point is 01:03:16 when you would dart out ahead of everybody, but can't hurt you with the results. So to help us kind of talk about parkour and stealth, I have brought on a friend of mine who is the person who mostly taught me parkour and stealth. My friend, Rick, who has been teaching parkour for a long time. Say hi, Rick. Hi. That's Rick. Rick is very not super social.
Starting point is 01:03:45 So I think it's amazing that I was able to convince him to come on a podcast. Pretty funny. First off, Rick, do you want to kind of just like give your definition of like parkour in general? Because I know whenever we say parkour, everyone just thinks of the office, which I know you find frustrating. But for people who maybe aren't as into it as us, do you want to just give a kind of a brief overview of parkour as like a concept? Parkour is a really annoying concept to actually pin down.
Starting point is 01:04:18 But basically speaking, it's movement with purpose. You are somewhere, you want to get somewhere, and you're trying to find the best way of doing that. When we're training, we kind of focus on efficiency, safety, speed, and the reason behind the movement. Yeah. Yeah, I think that's thinking of it more as like a movement with purpose or like intentional movement is much better than thinking of it.
Starting point is 01:04:47 Like parkour isn't like flips. Like flips and that kind of stuff is more of what we call like free running. It's more of like a creative expression. It's more of like a kind of like a sport, whereas parkour is more usually, there's always going to people that are going to fight you on this in the parkour community, but it's generally parkour is kind of more based on utility. So like last summer at the protests,
Starting point is 01:05:11 I used parkour in a lot of different ways, both to like get somewhere specifically, or parkour is great as like a recovery tool. Like if you get pushed over by cops, parkour can be very useful for like getting up very fast. It's like all that kind of more practical side of things. And I've used parkour before I was doing filming at different kind of activism related type things.
Starting point is 01:05:33 It's just a super useful skill to have. And today I wanted to talk a bit about like parkour is practical application in conflict ish scenarios, but also wanted to touch on stealth as, you know, sometimes you don't need parkour. And if you can avoid a scenario where you have to use it would be kind of great. So I've asked Rick to kind of prepare a few things on stealth, which then we'll kind of, you know, bounce off each other and talk
Starting point is 01:06:01 kind of a general discussion of parkour and stealth in general, and how it relates to kind of conflict scenarios. So Rick, where would you like to start for, you know, stealth overview? Well, in conflict with other people, there's like three different levels of the conflict. And all of these get trained in different places. Usually there's the actual like conflict, the combat, which is more of a martial arts or gun training
Starting point is 01:06:36 or weapon training of any kind is what pairs you for that. Beneath that is the parkour level where you can avoid getting into the conflict in the first place if you can get away from the situation. Yeah, if you're more of an arms length away then you can create more distance between you and someone that's trying to hurt you. And in 99.9% of conflict situations, that's going to be a better self-defense option
Starting point is 01:06:59 than literally any weapon you could carry. Just giving the hell away is always the preference. There's a really good comic. It's like a comedy comic of someone trying to get into a knife fight and you're just like, nope, I'm running away. Because there's no winner in a knife fight. The only way to win a knife fight is to be far away from someone with a knife. Again, the only justified situation I can think of to physically getting into a knife fight
Starting point is 01:07:30 is like what happened on the Portland Max train when someone else can't get away and trying to protect them. And the two guys who did that died. They died, yeah. Not that they did the wrong thing, they did the only thing they could, but that's what a knife fight is. So yeah, being able to get the fuck away is the best self-defense. Yeah, I carry weapons with me wherever I go,
Starting point is 01:07:52 but I don't want to ever use them. My first response is always going to be look for an escape path. Yeah, a weapon is only for if you can't get away or if someone else can't get away. Pretty much, yeah. Yeah, I've always been interested, because again, I've watched Garrison hop away from cops over fences where I had to fall over the fence, essentially,
Starting point is 01:08:19 because I'm not nearly as good. I'm someone who exercises, but number one, is it even possible to learn this stuff without fucking your 33-year-old body up a bunch in the process? Oh yeah, I've got a student who is over 60, and he's good. Very good. He's actually one of my high-intermediate low-advanced students, honestly.
Starting point is 01:08:43 And he started when he was like 50. How do you... I mean, it just seems like injury, I guess because my stereotypical view of it is a bunch of jumping up on buildings and leaping over stuff. Yeah. It seems like injuries would be a pretty common fact. So I guess that's kind of always been my first concern there.
Starting point is 01:09:08 How do you train people to do this stuff with a minimum of risk? Well, that's kind of always the focus of my teaching. There certainly are other instructors out there. But the guy who taught me parkour was basically, this is a convolt, this is what it looks like, do it. My training, I sucked at parkour when I started. So my teaching method has been coming at this as a sort of, okay, I'm going to try to break this down into as many pieces as I can,
Starting point is 01:09:38 and I'm going to try to keep you completely safe. Bumps and bruises do happen when you're training parkour. That's just unavoidable. It's learning how to do walking but fancy. So you get bruised when you're learning how to walk. You get bruised when you're learning every technique in parkour. But I've been doing it for 14 years now and I've never broken any of my bones. So if you do it right, you shouldn't be able to stay safe when training.
Starting point is 01:10:06 You definitely, if you can get someone who's more experienced, getting them to break down steps for you is very useful. Whether that be like a parkour gym in your area, or just like a friend that's been messing around, trying to train with somebody is probably one of the most important things, is to have someone else there. Both of you, like one, get hurt and need help. But two, to help prevent that from even happening in the first place,
Starting point is 01:10:30 because there's a lot of very simple moves that can be introduced in very safe environments. I've been wanting to get Roberts down to the gym for over a year now, just to go over a few basic kind of stuff that's just really, really useful and pretty easy. We're not jumping to doing roof-topping, where we're jumping from one roof to another. We're starting by being like, here's a concrete barricade. What's the safest way of getting over this if you're under pressure?
Starting point is 01:10:58 It's that kind of stuff that's specifically useful in conflict scenarios. Because when we're facing in a riot line, I'm not going to be doing flips and cartwheels to get over fences. I'm trying to be like, what's the safest, fastest way I can get over this thing while making sure I'm not going to get shot with a rubber bullet? It's very different from what you see on YouTube. YouTube is very showy. What you see on YouTube is people are doing a choreographed performance,
Starting point is 01:11:25 whereas parkour from a utility standpoint is very different from what you see online. It's improvisation. That's one of the things that we try to train too when we're training parkour, is we just give ourselves an environment and say, okay, I'm going now. Yeah, and do it over and over again and try to figure out what's the best way of getting over this specific path. If you can make a designed path, even doing this at a playground or any place with logs, you can do parkour in the forest and stuff.
Starting point is 01:11:55 I'm going to set this path and experiment with how many ways can I move through this set of obstacles. You can figure out parkour on your own in that kind of way. Because your body knows what it's going to do. People have been moving like this for thousands and thousands of years. It's only in the past few hundred years where we've lost this ability or it's become less necessary. We know how to interact with our environment in creative ways.
Starting point is 01:12:23 We know how to do this. It's just that the past few centuries, it's been less important. I think parkour is really fun because you can rediscover interacting with your environment in these more wild ways. It's something that we all do as children, just evolutionarily for some reason. As children, we do this as play. We climb trees and we try to go over fences.
Starting point is 01:12:52 It's just that something in our society has made a shift so that when we become adults, it's suddenly not acceptable for us to do this anymore. I can remember when I was a little kid growing up on the farm, we had a bullpen because we kept the bull away from the cows. My cousin and I would hop over the fence and we would throw stuff at the bull. When it started to charge, we would hop back over the fence.
Starting point is 01:13:16 Obviously, I'd never do that today because it's mean to throw things at a bull. I was six, but also I couldn't physically hop over the fence that way today. I'm guessing within even just a few hours of practice, you could figure out a lot of ways to get over stuff. I could be back to fucking with bulls is what you say. Exactly. You don't need to kiss the bull fucking goodbye. We can go back to this. I could return to tradition.
Starting point is 01:13:44 Yes, exactly. What is the degree of this that can be done without... Again, we have a wide variety of income levels that listen to this show. What is the degree of this that can be done without paying for training? Is it even possible to start on this kind of thing if you're in reasonable shape on your own without paying someone? Because that seems like a recipe for breaking something to me. But again, I don't know. I don't know shit.
Starting point is 01:14:11 It is very much about knowing yourself and knowing what you're ready for. This was something... I mean, I say that I never broke a bone in my training, but there were a couple times I started pushing myself further than I should have, and it would have been really good to have someone there to say, hey, you're probably not ready for this yet. Let's break this down into little pieces. But if you come at it methodically and you don't endanger yourself too much,
Starting point is 01:14:42 what I started out with in Parkour is I would just put a piece of tape on the ground and another piece of tape and jump from one piece of tape to the other and went out to parking lots and jumped from just an arbitrary pebble to the curb on the parking lot and found some just railings and learned how to go over those railings safely and gradually just started building up to higher and higher things. You always want to start at ground level when you're training Parkour.
Starting point is 01:15:13 Don't go up to high places for your first thing. Yeah. There's a lot of instructional videos on YouTube, too, that are not just showing off. It's actually people trying to break down movement, so you can find a specific video, be like, I want to bring this on my phone, go out into a playground, a parking lot, a wooded area and be like, OK, this is this one vault.
Starting point is 01:15:36 I'm going to watch the video and I'm going to try to replicate it myself. That's really the easiest, cheapest way to break that down without having to pay someone tons of money. Parkour classes aren't the most expensive thing, so if you do have a little bit of disposable income, I like Parkour classes, I did them for a long time, but there was a certain point actually that I couldn't afford classes anymore, and luckily I've been doing Parkour enough at that point
Starting point is 01:16:05 that I was able to become an assistant instructor, which means I got a free membership in exchange for helping out in classes a few hours a week. That's what I did for years when I couldn't afford classes is just help teach, which eventually I got leveled up to being a full-time instructor. That is the other way, once you get enough stuff, there's ways you can make friends who know more Parkour than you,
Starting point is 01:16:33 you can do outdoor training with them, which can be free, but if you do really want a gym environment, there's ways of making classes, not the most expensive thing. Also, there's online groups that schedule meetups every now and then, so if you can find an online group in your area, you can go to one of their meetups and ask for advice. Not everyone's going to give the best advice. There are some people in the Parkour community
Starting point is 01:16:59 who are always pushing their boundaries. They'll be in a cast half of the time. The more advanced people, yeah, they generally. So always take advice with a grain of salt. Not everyone knows everything, and no one knows your body as well as you do. You've got to keep yourself safe above everything else. You can't get better at Parkour if you break both of your legs.
Starting point is 01:17:25 Yeah, that's always... So, a couple of questions here. Number one would be... Obviously, I don't expect somebody's in Michigan or whatever. I don't expect you to know the best Parkour instructor there, but if somebody is looking at going the gym route, are there some hard and fast rules for determining whether or not these folks know what they're doing?
Starting point is 01:17:44 Is there any kind of advice you have in terms of picking a gym, or is it just kind of like going to Google Maps and see where the Parkour would be? That's a little bit tough, because especially since COVID, there's not many options for Parkour gyms out there. My best advice would be go, and if they let you just watch a class
Starting point is 01:18:07 and see what's going on, see... See how many people have casts. Yeah. Back when I was learning Parkour, originally, we would have basically two people in a cast all the time just watching the class. Really? Yeah. I didn't know that.
Starting point is 01:18:25 The guy that I was trying to keep up with the whole time spent three stints in a cast? Yeah, just funny, because I've never got a serious injury ever. I was always more careful in my training, but the most I've gotten is bruises and stuff. I got to a relatively high level of Parkour a few years ago. You only took classes from me, and my focus was always on breaking things down
Starting point is 01:18:54 and making them accessible and safe. True. There's definitely people who are more carefree with their body and okay with hurting themselves to do something cool. Yeah, and some people get away with that. For folks who either don't have the financial means to go to a gym or there's just nothing in their area, because as you've said, there's a plague.
Starting point is 01:19:16 You've given some advice on how to start trying yourself. Are there any specific online resources you would recommend to folks who are looking to get on on their own, dip their toes in, YouTube channels or people who do good writing breakdowns? Anything that you would push folks towards? I haven't been up to date on it recently. A lot of the videos out there are garbage. What I recommend you look for is you look for, first of all, explanation.
Starting point is 01:19:48 Second of all, if you can find videos of someone who's training something and they fail to do the move that they're trying to do correctly and they fail to do the move that they're trying to do correctly, they fail and fail and fail and fail and then succeed, that's an honest video. That's one that I would listen to more because they understand the process. The other videos out there are sort of greatest hits compilations and you don't get to see the whole process that goes into that.
Starting point is 01:20:20 That makes a lot of sense. I don't have any specific person or channel to recommend, but when you're going out there and looking for resources, just make sure that the person is putting some understanding into the fact that this is a process of training. This is how it's done. Do it. Now you can do it. There is a parkour wiki, parkour.fandom.com, that you can find just lists of all of the moves
Starting point is 01:20:50 and they give you very simple explanations of them and they link to some videos. If you just want to learn more about it, then that can be a good resource just so you're familiar with all the different types of movement. Make sure you take every video with a grain of salt and watch other people's explanations and be like, okay, I like the way this person describes it versus this person because everyone teaches differently.
Starting point is 01:21:12 Everyone teaches for different body types, for different body performance models. You can't just apply the same thing to everyone because everyone's different. The parkour wiki is a decent resource and there's YouTube, especially since the 2000s, there's been a plethora of content, most of it bad, but there's lots to at least look for.
Starting point is 01:21:38 Alright. Anything else you wanted to get into? Yeah, I wanted to branch off of the parkour discussion into the more stealth-based discussion of being aware of your presence in relation to other people. Rick, I know you were talking about the different levels of stealth. Yes, so you've got the combat training which prevents you from getting killed or captured in the worst of scenarios
Starting point is 01:22:09 and then you have parkour that you can use to prevent the combat in the first place and stealth is what you use to prevent the chase from happening in the first place. It's kind of a tree of, I really don't want to have to fight someone so I'm going to run away instead. I really don't want to have to run away from someone
Starting point is 01:22:31 so I'm just going to try not to be noticed by them instead. And that's been a lot of what my training in parkour has been focused around is just staying deescalated as possible with everything. Yeah, because me and Rick have focused most of our parkour training on stealth as opposed to being super strong or super powerful. And stealth's always a really hard concept to talk about
Starting point is 01:23:02 because it's kind of like nebulous in nature because stealth isn't being invisible. It's not being totally unnoticed. It's wanting to craft the way you're seen in a specific way. Yeah, it's always been very difficult for me to explain what stealth is. The most recent definition that I've given for it is that everything that you do,
Starting point is 01:23:29 everything that you are, gives off a certain amount of noise and a certain type of noise. So the way that you dress, you can dress in a very loud way with a high vis vest, day glow colors, something that makes you really easy to notice. But if you're in the right environment,
Starting point is 01:23:53 that might be the right type of noise to be making to blend into a crowd. A three-piece suit is also a very loud outfit to wear. But if you're on the streets of New York, that's normal. If you come into a parkour gym wearing a three-piece suit, it's very abnormal. So that's not the right type of noise if you're trying to blend in there.
Starting point is 01:24:18 Yeah, a lot of it's about kind of constructing the way people see you based on what environment you're in and who you're trying to remain undetected from. Because they were not even necessarily undetected, but just detected in a specific way. Because people's eyes can glaze over a lot of stuff. If just the right puzzle pieces are put into their brain, then it's like nothing to see here.
Starting point is 01:24:44 Everything's normal, nothing to be alerted. Because what you're trying to do is prevent someone from being alerted to your presence. That is kind of the main thing. So you can be within someone's sight lines, but the way that you're dressed, the way that you're moving, the way that you hold yourself fails to get their attention. They're subconscious registers that you're there,
Starting point is 01:25:06 but it doesn't register consciously to them that you're there. It's the gray man stuff that we were talking about with Chelsea, which again, there's a very frustrating, chuddy dimension to it. But the original idea before it got taken over as an entire fashion aesthetic was, if you're going to make yourself prepared for bad situations, you don't want to wear a bunch of tactical gear.
Starting point is 01:25:28 You don't want to be dressed in like five combat pants. You don't want to be carrying like military backpacks and like the cargo pants with the, you know, clearly bulging with weaponry. You don't want to be open carrying a gun. You want to be dressed however is going to least, to least set you apart from the crowd. And that is, as you said, going to vary.
Starting point is 01:25:48 It's not a matter of like wearing all gray or wearing all black. If you're in fucking downtown Salt Lake City, you know, a black hoodie and jeans might stand out more than it does if you're in like downtown San Francisco, in which case you're going to look like a million other people. I mean, and generally, if you're trying to avoid being seen, I recommend against wearing black, basically at all times, especially if you're trying to remain like actually invisible
Starting point is 01:26:13 at night, you don't want to wear black because black is usually too dark. You want to wear like darker blues or darker greens. Yeah, generally black is should be avoided. Of course, like black block is a whole separate thing because black block are trying to remain anonymous within a crowd context. But, you know, in a lot of cases, you don't want to be in black block at protest or you want to be able to switch from black block to what we call like
Starting point is 01:26:37 normie block very quickly. So like, you know, quick changes are another kind of form of stealth that you can like practice. Like you can you can just practice doing quick changes like in your apartment like how fast can I get from this outfit to this outfit in like a small space, right? You can you can practice these even like outside. But specifically for like black block changing both in and out of is a skill
Starting point is 01:26:58 that needs to be practiced. But overall, I think like there's a lot of other ways of being anonymous at a protest besides actually black block like there's a lot of other kind of methods like black box is a very specific tactic, but it's not a tactic that needs to get applied all the time. It's it's very it's you should be mindful that it has a lot of downsides. And based on what you're trying to do, there's a lot of other ways to dress that would maybe be better.
Starting point is 01:27:21 Yeah. Yeah, it's this. Yeah, it's a little bit like angles of it are kind of what we talked about even in like the last week when we were talking about like storing, you know, food and canning food and like the value of paying attention to the cycle of like what is in stock and what is not in stock during what seasons. It's kind of the same thing at the value of paying attention to how people dress and how people move and like what is a normal way to move about
Starting point is 01:27:47 in wherever you live as opposed to like what stands out. Like there's a lot of value and a lot of self-defense value and just kind of paying attention to people wherever you live and getting an eye for what will stand out and what won't stand out. If you're if you if you are someone for whom being able to blend in is something you see value in, you know. Yeah, Rick, do you have any things kind of on that side of things or any like exercises people can like do to improve their own personal stealth?
Starting point is 01:28:15 Yeah, it's very, very situational. You have to sort of study many different environments. The biggest advice that I give people for stealth all the time is pay attention. You have to pay attention to the smallest details. When I'm even just moving around my house like the the bathroom door lock. When you twist the lock, the button pops out and makes a huge noise. I actually place my thumb over it and deaden the sound as I'm doing it. And I pay attention to the kind of noise that I make in every situation
Starting point is 01:28:52 and try to minimize that as much as possible. Pay attention to which parts of my house make noise when you step on them and avoid those places. I basically just pay attention to every noise that my body makes that my environment makes as I'm moving through it. Also, you have to pay attention and study other people in different environments. You can go to a grocery store and watch the body language of the moms who are shopping with their kids, the people that normally you wouldn't pay attention to.
Starting point is 01:29:30 Pay attention to them because they're doing a good job of blending in if you're not normally paying attention to them. And then try to start mimicking their body language. What I'll do when I go out is I don't directly look at anyone but I'm paying attention to if I'm being paid attention to and give myself that conscious feedback and say, hey, I wasn't all that stealthy this time. I kind of stuck out. Yeah, practicing your peripheral vision is definitely useful for that.
Starting point is 01:30:00 I mean, in terms of exercises, yeah, just going to parks or other places where there's a lot of people and people watching and trying to figure out who does your eyes glaze over the most and what are they doing to cause that? I think one thing that me and Rick have talked about before is every part of your body points somewhere. Whether that be your eyes, your nose, your chin, your arms, your hips, your chest, your hands,
Starting point is 01:30:24 all of these things point in a direction. And if you can figure out which direction you can point them to make people pay less attention to you, that's kind of one of the easier models of understanding how to walk and move in a stealthy manner that I think out of all the different ways of thinking about it, I think that's the way that's helped me the most. Speaking of, if my head is pointed up and my nose is pointed out
Starting point is 01:30:47 and I'm moving my arms around a lot, people are going to look at me more. People, if eye contact is made, that is like a failure. So if your head's pointed down, your arms are more slouched. They kind of move with your body, but that's not super exaggerated and it's not super stiff. These are different ways of pointing your body to make you seem more introspective and less external.
Starting point is 01:31:09 Also, walking around with earplugs or earbuds, earphones, those are ways people will pay attention less to you. Looking at your smart device. Looking at your smartphone. Yeah, back when I took classes with you and taught classes, we would have a weekly games class where we'd have different games related to parkour and stealth would always be something I would try to do.
Starting point is 01:31:33 And you could survive so long in stealth games by just pretending that you're looking at your phone, not even actually doing it, just walking in a circle around the arena as people are trying to tag and stuff. And if you can walk with your head down slowly, you can survive a ridiculously long time because people are looking for people that are running around
Starting point is 01:31:55 and being super energetic. And if you're not, people aren't detecting you as much. Another thing to practice would be quiet walking, which we kind of mentioned before. It's like learning how to move your foot and interact with different surfaces that makes your walking basically silent, which is very fun because you can use this to scare your friends.
Starting point is 01:32:14 It's very exciting to try to figure out what's ways I can hide in my friend's house to jump scare them or how close can I get behind someone without them noticing? There'd be times I can just walk up behind someone and wait. I kid you not, 10 minutes before they notice I was there. It's hilarious.
Starting point is 01:32:33 I feel even better when I can do that to their pets because generally the animals are paying more attention to everything. So if you can successfully sneak up on someone's cat, you're doing it right. Yeah. Oh, man. I do really enjoy stealth,
Starting point is 01:32:47 and I'll be happy to practice it more regularly once the plague is over, if it's over. And the other kind of stealth notes that you would want to kind of bring up if someone's trying to get into stealth or start thinking about detection more often in their everyday life. It's very important that you engage in indirect observations.
Starting point is 01:33:08 Yeah, I was looking this up. You were talking about how everything points. And one of the things that we subconsciously notice the most is people's eyes. We're kind of programmed to notice eyes. So if you're looking directly at someone, they're probably going to notice that you've noticed them. But if you're using your peripheral vision
Starting point is 01:33:30 or if instead of watching them, you're watching a reflection of them or if you're watching their shadow, or you're not even looking in their direction, and instead you're tracking them by sound, it makes it so that you have a big one-up on everyone around you. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:33:48 Indirect observations is one of the best tools that you can use. If you get really clever at it, now this is harder because it actually, if you do this wrong, people will pay more attention to you. But you can get good at it to start using your phone camera or even just your phone screen
Starting point is 01:34:07 because your black phone screen is pretty reflective in nature. So you can use this as a mirror. But yeah, using phone cameras and phone screens as a reflective surface or just as a camera can be used in indirect observation. But you do have to be careful because if it looks like you're filming somebody, they're going to pay so much more attention to you.
Starting point is 01:34:30 So you have to be very careful with this method. But it is possible. This is how I documented different Nazis at rallies. If I don't want to be super obvious that I'm taking a picture of them, there's ways of doing indirect observation with my phone that I can get pictures of them from certain angles to be like, okay, now I can add you to my folder
Starting point is 01:34:52 of Nazis that have showed up. That method, you have to be super careful if you're surrounded by potentially hostile people. Yes. Anyone who's behind you is going to see that your phone camera is on. So it's something that you only want to use if people are on one side of you. Or you use your body as a shield for certain angles.
Starting point is 01:35:16 Yeah, be tricky for hoodie and increase your odds of success with that. But most often I would recommend against this method, especially if you're just starting out, because it is a lot more risky. But when it does work, it can come in very handy. But more often than not, using reflections, like windows, mirrors, like car windows,
Starting point is 01:35:38 puddles on the ground, shadows, sound, all of these different methods of observing someone without looking directly at them are generally much safer. And they can be very useful for trying to track someone or just be aware of what they're looking at without looking directly at them. Kind of more similar to what I talked about in the fictional opening we did for...
Starting point is 01:36:02 stealth is very dependent on what you know is trying to watch you. You need to be aware of the ways people are trying to detect you. Yeah, if you're being tracked by a canine unit, it's... During the summer of 2020, some Americans suspected that the FBI had secretly infiltrated the racial justice demonstrations. And you know what? They were right.
Starting point is 01:36:27 I'm Trevor Aronson, and I'm hosting a new podcast series, Alphabet Boys. As the FBI sometimes, you gotta grab the little guy to go after the big guy. Each season will take you inside an undercover investigation. In the first season of Alphabet Boys, we're revealing how the FBI spied on protesters in Denver.
Starting point is 01:36:50 At the center of this story is a raspy-voiced, cigar-smoking man who drives a silver hearse. And inside his hearse was like a lot of guns. He's a shark. And not in the good and bad ass way. He's a nasty shark. He was just waiting for me to set the date, the time, and then for sure he was trying to get it to happen.
Starting point is 01:37:09 Listen to Alphabet Boys on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. What if I told you that much of the forensic science you see on shows like CSI isn't based on actual science? The problem with forensic science in the criminal legal system today is that it's an awful lot of forensic and not an awful lot of science. And the wrongly convicted pay a horrific price.
Starting point is 01:37:37 Two death sentences and a life without parole. My youngest, I was incarcerated two days after her first birthday. I'm Molly Herman. Join me as we put forensic science on trial to discover what happens when a match isn't a match and when there's no science in CSI. How many people have to be wrongly convicted before they realize that this stuff's all bogus, it's all made up?
Starting point is 01:38:06 Listen to CSI on trial on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Lance Bass, and you may know me from a little band called NSYNC. What you may not know is that when I was 23, I traveled to Moscow to train to become the youngest person to go to space. And when I was there, as you can imagine, I heard some pretty wild stories. But there was this one that really stuck with me.
Starting point is 01:38:37 About a Soviet astronaut who found himself stuck in space with no country to bring him down. It's 1991, and that man, Sergei Krekalev, is floating in orbit when he gets a message that down on Earth, his beloved country, the Soviet Union, is falling apart. And now he's left offending the Union's last outpost. This is the crazy story of the 313 days he spent in space. 313 days that changed the world.
Starting point is 01:39:10 Listen to The Last Soviet on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. Different than just being chased down on foot. Or security cameras, of course, like online tracking, which we're not really getting into today. But being aware of where security cameras are mapped out can be very useful. Learning to figure out where they are
Starting point is 01:39:36 without looking directly at them can be useful. A lot of cities have websites that map out where all the cameras are. I know there's one for Portland that can map out all of the cameras in downtown. And then you can plan a route through downtown that has no cameras watching. There's only very few routes that actually have that. But they do exist. So learning to move in ways that make cameras less able to spot you,
Starting point is 01:40:05 that's definitely another method of learning about stealth and learning about how surveillance works. Never looking directly at the camera, but... That's definitely useful. Paying attention to where they are. Which plays into indirect observation. This gets more tricky when police are using thermal drones. It's a whole other side of things that is very hard to combat.
Starting point is 01:40:32 The infosex side of things is hard to combat. There will be a point in time in which it becomes effectively impossible to monitor for cameras. There's a hierarchy of worry. Because if the NSA wants to find you, they will. But most often they're not. Most often people are dealing with their local law enforcement unit. Most often people are not dealing with the FBI.
Starting point is 01:40:56 Most people usually aren't dealing with the FBI's CIA or NSA. If they want to find you, they will. But if you can learn to only interact with your surroundings in a way that would only concern your local police department, that's much easier to combat against. Because it's way easier to hide from your local department than it is from the NSA. Anything else?
Starting point is 01:41:20 I think that pretty much covers everything. Yeah, I think that's a good, that's a soad. Great. That's a cast that we have potted. All right, we got any plugables here to plug at the end before we roll out? What, me? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:36 No, please don't find me. Leave me alone. Don't find him. This is the most invisible you've ever been, yeah. Is there any, I don't know, fundraise your charity for someone else that you want to highlight? Not currently. No, you do try to be a virtual ninja.
Starting point is 01:41:58 All right, well, I'll plug something. One of our fans is putting together a graphic novel about the famed anarchist militant of the Spanish Civil War, Buenaventura Duruti. So if you just go to type Duruti into Kickstarter, you'll find the graphic novel Kickstarter. Check it out, it's cool. Yeah, and I guess the other things I'll close with is
Starting point is 01:42:21 learn to walk quietly, learn to observe your surroundings, keep these things in mind. Practice with other people if you can. Practice with other people, don't do this alone. It's really useful to have stealth be a collaborative process because stealth by itself isn't just about you, it's about you and your whole environment. Yeah, collaborate with the CVS clerk
Starting point is 01:42:43 when you rob the CVS stealthily. That is a different podcast I'm working on is that. How to shop the shoplifting cast? I mean, yeah, that is something I will pitch very soon. Anyway, we've had trouble getting sponsors for the shoplifting podcast. I will tell you that. It is difficult.
Starting point is 01:43:03 If you could actually get CVS to sponsor that. Yeah, big shoplifting. I mean, we are giving them a lot of free advertising if it does happen. Anyway, most people who shoplift also spend. That's true. One of the best ways to shoplift is to buy other things in the store. I'm already giving out advice.
Starting point is 01:43:24 Yeah, that is how I always shoplifted back when I shoplifted. Yeah, back when I did that 20 years ago, that's how I did it as well. I feel like if Sophie were here, she'd be trying to backpedal right now and stop you guys. No, Sophie supports shoplifting. This is a very pro shoplifting podcast. Anyway, that's the podcast.
Starting point is 01:43:49 This is Roxanne Gay, host of the Roxanne Gay Agenda, the bad feminist podcast of your dreams. Now, what is the Roxanne Gay Agenda, you might ask? Well, it's a podcast where I'm going to speak my mind about what's on my mind and that could be anything. Every week I will be in conversation with an interesting person who has something to say. We're going to talk about feminism, race, writing in books,
Starting point is 01:44:15 and art, food, pop culture, and yes, politics. I started show with a recommendation. Really, I'm just going to share with you a movie or a book or maybe some music or a comedy set, something that I really want you to be aware of and maybe engage with as well. Listen to the Luminary Original Podcast, the Roxanne Gay Agenda,
Starting point is 01:44:37 the bad feminist podcast of your dreams. Every Tuesday on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The art world, it is essentially a money laundering business. The best fakes are still hanging on people's walls. You know, they don't even know or suspect that they're fakes. I'm Alec Baldwin, and this is a podcast about deception, greed, and forgery in the art world.
Starting point is 01:45:06 You knew the painting was fake. Um... Listen to Art Fraud starting February 1st on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Listen to Waiting on Reparations on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. You were out of town when the last cop left Seattle.
Starting point is 01:46:02 It had been unseasonably cool that week. The 70 degrees of old and not the 97 you had come to dread every summer. But you'd already promised you'd visit your family in Montana and so when the riots started, and the National Guard opened fire into the crowd, you watched it on Twitter from your couch like everyone else. The second battle of Seattle, they were calling it. You wondered briefly what the first one was.
Starting point is 01:46:26 They'd been fighting in Portland, too. Some kind of massacre in Oakland, and no one was quite sure what was happening in the Napa Valley. Couldn't be anything good, you thought. But it was Seattle everyone was talking about. The mayor fled the city in a helicopter when it became clear that there was no one there. After that, the cops had simply broken and retreated across the Cascades.
Starting point is 01:46:47 No one knew who was running the city now, and you sure as hell didn't want to be the one to find out. But after two weeks, you'd burn through every vacation day and every favor you'd ever accumulated at the hospital. And besides, the rent was due. No one was sure if the postal service was even still functioning. And with the eviction moratorium lifted, you weren't going to risk getting evicted
Starting point is 01:47:09 because you weren't there to handle it. So, with rary resignation, you pile into your battered car and head towards Snowqualmie Pass. What surprised you most when you hit Seattle was the art. You'd been expecting burnt out buildings and streets filled with burning cars. And there were some.
Starting point is 01:47:27 A few streets were still blocked by what looked like improvised barricades. But every surface of every building, it seemed, had some kind of mural on it. Someone, and no one seemed to be quite sure who, had first come up with the idea, had blocked off an entire street up near Capitol Hill and people were painstakingly painting portraits
Starting point is 01:47:46 of every protestor killed in the fighting in Seattle on it. As you walk past, they were discussing doing the same for the dead in Oakland. The second surprise came when you tried to pay your rent. A woman you'd never seen before was sitting at the office's reception desk. When you tried to handle your check, she laughed and handed it back to you,
Starting point is 01:48:08 explaining that after the cops fled, the local tenants union had taken over most of the apartments in the city and placed them in something called a community land trust. You didn't quite get the details, but no one was going to evict you, so you decided to just take the win. Besides, your friend had convinced you to do some childcare
Starting point is 01:48:26 for the tenants union in college, and they always seemed like a decent sort, so there didn't seem to be any immediate cause for concern. The hospital was another matter entirely. From what you could gather, there'd been some kind of labor dispute between the chaos. Management seemed to have fired a group of nurses for giving injured protestors shelter from the police.
Starting point is 01:48:45 Your ward had already been understaffed due to COVID and budget cuts. Now, the situation was intolerable. Worse still, many of the senior administrators had fled the city with the police. No one seemed to know who was in charge, supplies were starting to run low, and with so many administrators missing
Starting point is 01:49:03 in the insurance situation completely up in the air, on account of nobody being entirely sure if Seattle was even still part of the United States, it wasn't clear if anyone was going to get paid. So when a co-worker pulled you aside and asked if you'd be interested in doing something about the management problem, you figured, what the hell,
Starting point is 01:49:22 maybe it was time for a change. It wasn't like it could possibly make anything worse. The fired nurses, it turned out, started to set up a community health center with the help of the local neighborhood council. But some of the nurses still working at the hospital had another idea. Why not just turn the hospital into the community health center?
Starting point is 01:49:42 After all, the hospital already had more equipment than any new center could possibly assemble. All they needed was some help from the community, and the whole thing could be run by a council of the hospital workers and insurance companies be damned. Besides, if all the hospitals started pulling their resources together, they might be able to solve some of the shortages.
Starting point is 01:50:03 At the mention of solving the supply shortages, even the more skeptical workers started to come around. By the next morning, the Seattle Hospital Workers' Council was marching on the hospital. The remaining management found out somehow and tried one final lockout to hold on to their property. But as you saw, yet another column of protesters joining the crowd surrounding the hospital you knew.
Starting point is 01:50:26 This wasn't their city any longer. On April 18, 2001, military police in the Kabilia region of Algeria shot an 18-year-old high school student. Almost immediately, hundreds of thousands of people took to the street, chanting, You can't kill us, we are already dead at the lines of policemen assembled to attack them.
Starting point is 01:50:50 The police would kill over 100 people and severely wound 5,000 more in the months-long battle of the streets that followed. But protesters burned police stations, government offices, courts, and the offices of Islamic fundamentalist parties until the government agreed to give ethnic minority groups language and cultural rights.
Starting point is 01:51:09 The hated military police were driven from the region entirely, and so few regular police stations survived the uprising that the regular police likewise ceased to function across broad swaths of Kabilia. They were replaced on a local village level by self-organized security committees, which would assemble on the rare occasion trouble emerged. Contrary to the expectations of the state,
Starting point is 01:51:30 crime plummeted. But the Algerian government otherwise continued to function as usual for over a decade until the local government in a small region called Rabacha attempted to rig their local elections. After banning the most popular political party in the region, they installed an unpopular coalition government.
Starting point is 01:51:50 The people of Rabacha responded by storming the city hall, seizing control of it, and setting up a democratic general assembly inside the newly dubbed House of the People to replace the existing government. This was dual power in its original sense, a council of the people facing off against an increasingly illegitimate parliamentary representative
Starting point is 01:52:10 in a struggle for control over the fate of a new society. If you Google dual power, you are likely to encounter a pamphlet written by Vladimir Lenin entitled The Dual Power, describing the conundrum of the situation following the first Russian revolution in February of 1917. After the overthrow of the Tsar, political power was split between two competing bodies.
Starting point is 01:52:33 On the one side, a new provisional government of liberal and social democratic politicians holdovers from the old Duma from the previous regime. On the other side, revolutionary social forces rallying around assemblies of popular power called Soviets, which were councils of delegates sent by directly democratic factories, soldiers, and sailors' committees.
Starting point is 01:52:53 Lenin saw this as a situation to be overcome by the seizure of state power by a socialist party. For Lenin and his Bolsheviks, dual power was a problem because after the Tsarist state seized to exist in the middle of the World War, the new provisional government failed to fill the vacuum left in its wake by its collapse.
Starting point is 01:53:12 To Lenin, the solution was obvious. Fill that vacuum with Lenin. For the peasants, soldiers, and workers who made up the majority of Russia's population, however, dual power was their first fleeting taste of freedom and autonomous control over their lives. Lenin used the Soviets to seize power, but almost immediately began to turn
Starting point is 01:53:32 on these democratic assemblies of popular autonomy. Over the course of the Russian Civil War, Lenin and the Bolsheviks stripped power away from the workers, peasants, and soldiers, sometimes by bureaucratic fiat, often at the point of a bayonet, until the Soviets had been stripped of all meaning in the very state named after their democratic form
Starting point is 01:53:52 and became synonymous with dictatorship. Dual power today draws from the potential of that post-revolutionary crisis, from the bottom-up direct democracy that was so threatening to the social order, that Bolshevik revolutionaries and Tsarist police spies alike conspired to wipe them from the historical record. Just as Russia was haunted by the memory of the French communes,
Starting point is 01:54:11 so is America today haunted by a memory of dual power that against all law refuses to die. We are, after all, still ruled by a greedy bloodthirsty and out-of-touch elite who have chosen to march us to our deaths by the hundreds of thousands by forcing us back to work during a plague. But the Russian Revolution is as far away from us today as Napoleon and his brass cannons were from the Russian revolutionaries and their machine guns.
Starting point is 01:54:35 Times have changed. There is no Bolshevik party waiting in the wings to seize power as the state crumbles. The vacuum that the state leaves in its wake as its power deteriorates will be filled by any number of organizations, most even more hostile to the working class than the Bolsheviks had been.
Starting point is 01:54:51 It could be warlords with the personal allegiance of the remains of the military. It could be organized crime. It could be religious fundamentalist militias. Most likely, it will be an uneasy combination of all of the above. Or it could be you. It could be your family, your friends,
Starting point is 01:55:08 your neighbors, your co-workers, the person you wave to every morning at the bus stop when you're on your way to work. The path to that world, a world run not by capitalists in their cops or by warlords in their armies, but by autonomous communities free to decide for themselves what to produce and how to best use their resources
Starting point is 01:55:27 to care for each other, is dual power in the 21st century. At its core, dual power is about creating a counter power against the state. During the Russian Revolution, this counter power was formed essentially by historical accidents as two governing bodies emerged from the course of the Fiberia Revolution.
Starting point is 01:55:46 But modern dual power does not arise from the whims of the course of revolution or from an innate instinct of the working class. It is something we build together by creating organizations that resist the power of the structures of violence, capitalism, racism, homophobia in the state, name a few, that control this world.
Starting point is 01:56:05 Dual power organizations can take many forms, from tenants unions to debtors councils, childcare cooperatives to land occupations, workers councils to rank and file labor unions, mutual aid networks to community self-defense organizations. These organizations seek to build autonomy from and against capitalism in the state. Alone, they are no match for the state's raw power
Starting point is 01:56:28 to inflict violence and corporate control over our resources. But by joining together to form federations and pooling their resources and expertise to coordinate their efforts, they can become a powerful enough force to challenge the state both directly and indirectly. These dual power organizations are designed to be the state's successor.
Starting point is 01:56:47 As the industrial workers of the world famously put it, they form the structure of the new society in the shell of the old. In order to fulfill that task, they take the shape of the new society they seek to create. Academics call this prefigurative politics, organizing that employs the values and organizational structures that they seek to create in the world.
Starting point is 01:57:07 As we will discuss in the next episode, there are right-wing forms of both dual power and prefigurative politics. But for most of the people who employ it, prefigurative politics means creating direct democratic institutions without bosses, managers, bureaucrats, or a party apparatus. The means of creating the new world
Starting point is 01:57:27 are thus the same as the ends. Dual power organizations serve multiple purposes. Their long-term goal is to replace the state and the corporation with free and autonomous forms of organization, ones organized and powerful enough to protect themselves and manage the logistical challenges of a new world where previous forms of organization and power no longer exist. But even reaching a point where this is remotely plausible
Starting point is 01:57:54 requires not just the painstaking construction of counter power and organization out of a fragmented American population, it requires a profound cultural transformation in how we make decisions. As the anthropologist David Graber put it, it is assumed in many parts of the world that democracy is a group of people facing a certain problem who come together to solve it in a way
Starting point is 01:58:16 where everyone has an equal say. It's true that most Americans think of themselves as living in a democratic country, but when was the last time that any Americans actually sat down and came to a collective decision? Maybe if they were ordering pizza, but basically never. Dual power organizations thus also serve as schools for democracy where people can learn, experiment with, create,
Starting point is 01:58:38 and spread their own forms of democracy and collective decision-making. When these spaces of democratic experimentation are functioning properly, their very organizational structure serves as a kind of recruitment tool. This was the original theory behind Occupy Wall Street, that democracy and the experience of autonomy were contagious and would spread rapidly as more and more curious people
Starting point is 01:58:59 experienced it for themselves. That experience in turn would create a new generation of people trained in democratic practices who could go forth and transform the world. Obviously, this didn't quite happen. Occupy's model of democracy was limited in many ways, not the least of which was that it required a public physical meeting space
Starting point is 01:59:18 that could be closed down by police violence. But the initial premise worked. Occupy itself, of course, had been inspired by the mass democratic assemblies in Spain and Greece in 2011, and the direct democratic co-ops and factory occupations that engulfed Argentina for the better part of the 2000s. At the most basic short-term level, however,
Starting point is 01:59:38 dual power organizations are designed to meet people's needs. The cornerstone of this effort... During the summer of 2020, some Americans suspected that the FBI had secretly infiltrated the racial justice demonstrations. And you know what? They were right. I'm Trevor Aronson,
Starting point is 01:59:56 and I'm hosting a new podcast series, Alphabet Boys. As the FBI, sometimes, you gotta grab the little guy to go after the big guy. Each season will take you inside an undercover investigation. In the first season of Alphabet Boys, we're revealing how the FBI spied on protesters in Denver.
Starting point is 02:00:18 At the center of this story is a raspy-voiced, cigar-smoking man who drives a silver hearse. And inside his hearse was like a lot of guns. He's a shark. And not in the good-bad-ass way. He's a nasty shark. He was just waiting for me to set the date, the time, and then, for sure, he was trying to get it to happen.
Starting point is 02:00:37 Listen to Alphabet Boys on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. What if I told you that much of the forensic science you see on shows like CSI isn't based on actual science? The problem with forensic science in the criminal legal system today is that it's an awful lot of forensic
Starting point is 02:00:59 and not an awful lot of science. And the wrongly convicted pay a horrific price. Two death sentences and a life without parole. My youngest, I was incarcerated two days after her first birthday. I'm Molly Herman. Join me as we put forensic science on trial to discover what happens when a match isn't a match and when there's no science in CSI.
Starting point is 02:01:25 How many people have to be wrongly convicted before they realize that this stuff's all bogus? It's all made up. Listen to CSI on trial on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Lance Bass, and you may know me from a little band called NSYNC. What you may not know is that when I was 23, I traveled to Moscow to train to become the youngest person to go to space.
Starting point is 02:01:55 And when I was there, as you can imagine, I heard some pretty wild stories. But there was this one that really stuck with me. About a Soviet astronaut who found himself stuck in space with no country to bring him down. It's 1991, and that man, Sergei Krekalev, is floating in orbit when he gets a message that down on Earth, his beloved country, the Soviet Union, is falling apart.
Starting point is 02:02:24 And now he's left defending the Union's last outpost. This is the crazy story of the 313 days he spent in space. 313 days that changed the world. Listen to The Last Soviet on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Dismutriallade. Probably the most famous example of such a project was the Black Panther Party Survival Programs.
Starting point is 02:02:52 Former Black Panther Jonina Irvin describes them in detail. The Black Panther Party Survival Programs were, in fact, an example of an effort, a successful effort while it lasted to create dual power in the United States. The Black Panther Party had a school. It had free food programs. One of its most respected survival programs was a breakfast for children,
Starting point is 02:03:12 which was overall a response to hunger and poverty in the country, particularly among poor low-income Black people. We had free medical clinics in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. We had free ambulances, free pest control, free shoes. We had free busing to prison programs, legal aid programs to help people get attorneys who needed them. And we had a program that was called the SAFE Program, Seniors Against a Fearful Environment,
Starting point is 02:03:36 in which we provided free transportation and escort service to senior citizens who needed to get out and take care of their errands, their business. They were often being attacked, so this was a form of protection for them. The Panthers were able to grow their influence by keeping their communities safe, healthy, cared for, and increasingly autonomous from the state.
Starting point is 02:03:55 But most importantly, they were able to keep people alive. As Black Panthers co-founder Huey P. Newton famously said, these survival programs satisfy the deep needs of the community, but they are not solutions to our problem. That is why we call them survival programs, meaning survival pending revolution. The existence of the survival programs themselves reflected the necessity of keeping people alive,
Starting point is 02:04:20 especially people who the state would rather kill or leave to die for building any kind of power. But these programs are also necessarily insufficient. No mutual aid program, no autonomous project, no liberated territory can provide for the entire community while the corporations, capitalists, and states maintain their stranglehold over the resources and production capacity at the working class
Starting point is 02:04:44 collectively created over centuries of grueling labor and struggle. Dual power, more than just survival, is about building the counter power to take it back. Building power is what draws the line between what is and isn't dual power. Growing food for you and your friends may cut down on bills and make some killer pesto, but it's not necessarily challenging the capitalist system.
Starting point is 02:05:09 Autonomy for its own sake is not necessarily dual power. If it doesn't actively aid in struggle or better organize the community, then from the perspective of building counter power, autonomy is meaningless. Making food for striking workers to allow them to stay on strike longer is building dual power.
Starting point is 02:05:29 Where simply producing it for general consumption is not. While dual power organizations necessarily serve the needs of the community, they must also be able to pivot and attack the state and capital and provide solidarity and mutual aid to those in their community who are already in struggle. Or they simply aren't dual power organizations at all. The simplest solution to this problem, of course,
Starting point is 02:05:52 is to organize around a specific side of resistance. Organizations that build up the capacity to fight can emerge from almost anywhere. The Symbiosis Research Collective described how dual power organizations emerge from Palestinian prison organizing during the First Intifada and uprising against the Israeli government in the late 1980s.
Starting point is 02:06:10 Most discussion of the First Intifada focuses on the role of mass protest in making Palestinian society ungovernable for the Israeli occupying forces. Less discussed is the role of community organizations of mutual aid in confederated participatory democracy in making such mass protest possible. Organizing from within the political system
Starting point is 02:06:29 was a political incubator of the Palestinian resistance movement and offers a microcosmic example of the development of dual power in the much larger prison of the occupation. With hunger strikes, political prisoners eventually won concessions for their own self-administration within the prisons.
Starting point is 02:06:47 They assembled structures of political organization and representation, forced prison authorities to recognize their representatives, and developed a division of labor around hygiene, education, and other daily tasks. Palestinian prisoners described this arrangement as internal organization, similar to the concept of dual power.
Starting point is 02:07:06 Even in the least free of circumstances, these prisoners carved out space for self-governments and created the preconditions for revolutionary struggle. Prisoners taught and studied everything from Palestinian history to Marxist political economy, often from 8 to 14 hours per day. As freshly educated and trained political activists were released back in society,
Starting point is 02:07:27 the resistance movement was galvanized. Deliterate teenage boys arrested for throwing stones re-entered the fray months later as committed competent organizers who had studied movement building, strategic resistance, and dialectical materialism. Meanwhile, the organizing context outside of the prison was transformed dramatically.
Starting point is 02:07:46 Saleh Abu Laban, a Palestinian political prisoner from 1970 until 1985, stated, When I entered the prison, there wasn't a national movement. There were only underground cells that performed clandestinely. When I got out, I found a world full of organizers, committees, and community institutions. Central to this new world of community organizing was the Palestinian labor movement.
Starting point is 02:08:09 Unions were formed out of workers' places of residence and workplaces because migrant labor was prevalent in Palestinian unionism within Israel had been criminalized. Unions then formed strong alliances with local organizations in the national movement. With rapid growth in the early 1980s, labor unions found it necessary to decentralize and democratize their structures
Starting point is 02:08:30 to become more resilient as Israeli repression intensified against union leaders and organizers. These local unions were networked together through the Palestinian Communist Party of Israel's Unity Block, creating a web of labor organizers and community groups that linked their class struggle to the larger project of national liberation.
Starting point is 02:08:49 This wave of resistance, carried out largely outside the purview of the major Palestinian political parties, showed that even communities in the most dire circumstances can assemble astounding levels of organization and resistance. As was also true in the United States, although today the memory of these prison radicals is largely forgotten,
Starting point is 02:09:07 many an organizing emerge from the sights of deepest oppression in their society. But this kind and level of organization is not just the property of the left. And in part two, it happens when the right gets hold of it. I'm Carolyn Osorio, a journalist and lifelong resident of the Pacific Northwest.
Starting point is 02:09:50 I grew up near the banks of the Green River, and in the shadow of the killer that bears its name. How many times did you bring the camera to the river? One time. Just one time. He started fantasizing about having sex with his mother, and he fantasized about killing her. But this podcast isn't only about tracking down the killer. It's about the victims.
Starting point is 02:10:10 We stayed in the woods. He always liked to go in the woods. He was just to all of us kind of strange. Do you know how he feels about prostitutes? Listen to the Shadow Girls on the iHeart Radio app, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Go to the doctor's sex re-show every Tuesday on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 02:10:56 Hi, I'm Robert Lam. And I'm Joe McCormick, and we're the hosts of the Science Podcast, Stuff to Blow Your Mind, where every week we get to explore some of the weirdest questions in the universe. Like, if sci-fi teleportation was possible, how would it square with the multitudes of organisms that inhabit our human bodies?
Starting point is 02:11:14 Can we find evidence of emotions in animals like bees, ants, and crayfish? How would an interplanetary civilization function? Disfree will exist. Stuff to Blow Your Mind examines neurological quandaries, cosmic mysteries, evolutionary marvels, and the wonders of techno history. Basically, this show is the altar
Starting point is 02:11:34 where we worship the weirdness of reality. If anybody ever told you, you ask the weirdest questions. It is time to come join us in the place where you belong, the Stuff to Blow Your Mind podcast. New episodes publish every Tuesday and Thursday with bonus episodes on Saturdays. Listen to Stuff to Blow Your Mind on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 02:12:01 It's been three months since you and your coworkers took control of the hospital. Things aren't back to normal yet. You're not even really sure what normal is anymore. But the days have fallen into a kind of routine. It's Thursday, which means it's your turn to go report back to home before your work is done. In 2017 the episodes that were made about you
Starting point is 02:12:22 涵en the The only people who had any idea what was going on in their portion of the city or in their workplace were the members of the local council, which meant there was no way in hell any kind of central apparatus could dictate to them what actually needed to be done. There just wasn't a way to move the information around. The solution had been decentralization, let the councils do their work, let them work out who they needed to talk to, but make sure there was some kind of daily council that people could show up to, where the various groups would do report backs in what they were doing and what they needed. The structure was messy, but it mostly worked,
Starting point is 02:13:15 and at least someone had had the idea to make sure that the delegates to the EMA rotated, so one person wasn't stuck spending half their life showing up every day. The problem, really, was the same problem you'd been dealing with for months now, even with the pooling of resources and people donating their last precious American dollars to paying people to import more supplies. The blockade was taking its toll. Nobody wanted to try to force their way through the blockades and the cascades. There had been some attempts to get in touch with groups in Portland, but the control map was so ugly there was no real chance of getting any assistance. Besides, the real problem was the port. When the cops had fled, the ships had simply stopped coming.
Starting point is 02:13:57 They'd rerouted further south, many of them to Oakland, or so you'd heard. The logistics lines were collapsing faster if anyone could piece them back together. What the long-term consequences would be, no one knew. But something was going to have to change. The calls to start engaging in piracy were only half oaks now. A week later, an answer of sorts arrived. It wasn't precisely what anyone had been expecting. You'd heard about negotiations between workers' councils, shipping companies, and a couple of governments to try to prevent a bloodbath of the docks, with the port of Seattle already at a commission. No one could afford another stoppage. You hadn't really been sure what to make of it, but the representatives were here now. What they proposed,
Starting point is 02:14:41 in front of the largest assembly you'd ever seen, was a kind of under-the-table deal. In essence, the port workers would go back to work in both Oakland and Seattle, in exchange for seating part of Oakland itself to a newly formed federation. No one was sure how any of this was actually supposed to work, but it was the first chance you'd seen in months to start solving the supply problem. That didn't mean everyone else would agree to it. Democracy is still democracy, after all. But maybe, just maybe, with a toehold in Oakland's, the councils would start to spread, and that so-called government in California was looking shakier every day. Who knew? Maybe next time, you wouldn't be negotiating at all.
Starting point is 02:15:20 In March of 2004, American occupation forces in Iraq attempted to shut down the newspaper of a Shiite cleric named Bektar El Sader. The Americans had expected Sader to simply fold, under the weight of the coalition's pressure. Instead, they triggered mass protests that quickly turned into an armed uprising. This was a new force in Iraq. The American occupation force, who'd been expecting to be fighting al-Qaeda and maybe the rump of the remaining bathists, were stunned to suddenly be facing a working class uprising among the Iraq Shiite population. This new body army, as it began to call itself, was extremely well organized and were initially able to route coalition forces. So what was this body army that had so thoroughly rewritten the
Starting point is 02:16:10 rules of Iraq? Shortly after the US deposed Saddam Hussein in 2003, Bektar El Sader, the son of another famous Iraqi Shiite religious figure, both Saders had been famous for this support and care for the poor. So when Sader returned to Iraq, he began to build a political base among Iraq's working class, particularly in Sader City, a working class suburb of Baghdad. He used his organization to redistribute wealth, providing a form of welfare state in an almost completely shattered country. Sader and his allies also began to set up a network of free clinics for pregnant and nursing mothers. They used these clinics, which were enormously popular, to build a base of support. It is, after all, extremely difficult, no matter what your ideological
Starting point is 02:16:56 or political disagreements with the group, to attack them when they're running free clinics for pregnant mothers. They protected these clinics with militias, which allowed them to transform the community organizations and goodwill that they'd gained from the clinic into the military power necessary for self-governance and eventually for resistance against the American occupation. Strategy proved enormously successful. Bektar El Sader is still today one of the most important political figures in Iraq, despite sustained coalition and occupation force attempts to stamp him out. But for all their working class support, the Saderists were by no means leftists. In late 2019, massive anti-austerity, anti-imperialist and anti-sectarian protests erupted in Iraq as a
Starting point is 02:17:40 reaction to the murderous incompetence of the Iraqi government, who, among other crimes, managed to poison 118,000 people in Basra through the mismanagement and subsequent contamination of the water supply. El Sader initially backed the protest, but turned on them in early 2020, at which point Saderist militias began to carry out a brutal campaign of repression against the protest camps that culminated in outrent massacres of protesters. These massacres became semi-regular features of Saderist mass mobilizations, and alongside state and paramilitary disappearances of activists, the attacks essentially crushed the uprising. The violent homophobia and sexism of the Saderists may seem at odds with their anti-imperialism and concern
Starting point is 02:18:25 for the poor, but right-wing organizations have often adapted specific policies, positions, and organizational structures from the left. And in this case, the Saderist mobilizations have been extremely effective. Indeed, right-wing organizations are often more effective at utilizing dual power tactics in organizations than leftist movements. This is partly because of a fundamental asymmetry between the right and the left. Right-wing organizations can almost always depend on financial support from wealthy political backers, who, when pushed comes to shove, can simply create a movement with pure money as the Kochs did to create the Tea Party. Leftists, the ravings of right-wing conspiracy theorists notwithstanding, have no such backers.
Starting point is 02:19:08 This funding and support can go a long way towards explaining the success of groups like Hezbollah. It is certainly true that without Iranian support, Hezbollah would not be the movement that it is today. But a great deal of their success is simply attributable to the tactics themselves. This does not escape the notice of the U.S. Army. Joint Special Operations Universities Major James Love wrote a monograph entitled Hezbollah Social Services as a Source of Power. In it, he writes, The most important branch of the Hezbollah organization is the Social Service section, which can be demonstrated by the allocation of an estimated 50% of Hezbollah's 2007 budget and social service efforts. It is through the work of the Social Service section
Starting point is 02:19:50 that all party activities are possible. During the summer of 2020, some Americans suspected that the FBI had secretly infiltrated the racial justice demonstrations. And you know what? They were right. I'm Trevor Aronson, and I'm hosting a new podcast series, Alphabet Boys. As the FBI, sometimes you've got to grab the little guy to go after the big guy. Each season will take you inside an undercover investigation. In the first season of Alphabet Boys, we're revealing how the FBI spied on protesters in Denver. At the center of this story is a raspy-voiced, cigar-smoking man who drives a silver hearse. And inside his hearse was like a lot of guns. He's a shark. And on the gun badass way. He's a nasty shark. He was just waiting for
Starting point is 02:20:43 me to set the date, the time, and then for sure he was trying to get it to happen. Listen to Alphabet Boys on the iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. What if I told you that much of the forensic science you see on shows like CSI isn't based on actual science? The problem with forensic science in the criminal legal system today is that it's an awful lot of forensic and not an awful lot of science. And the wrongly convicted pay a horrific price. Two death sentences and a life without parole. My youngest, I was incarcerated two days after her first birthday. I'm Molly Herman. Join me as we put forensic science on trial to discover what happens when a match isn't a match and when there's no science in CSI.
Starting point is 02:21:35 How many people have to be wrongly convicted before they realize that this stuff's all bogus? It's all made up. Listen to CSI on trial on the iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Lance Bass and you may know me from a little band called NSYNC. What you may not know is that when I was 23, I traveled to Moscow to train to become the youngest person to go to space. And when I was there, as you can imagine, I heard some pretty wild stories. But there was this one that really stuck with me about a Soviet astronaut who found himself stuck in space with no country to bring him down. It's 1991 and that man Sergei Krekalev is floating in orbit when he gets a message that down on earth, his beloved country, the Soviet Union, is falling
Starting point is 02:22:33 apart. And now he's left defending the Union's last outpost. This is the crazy story of the 313 days he spent in space, 313 days that changed the world. Listen to the last Soviet on the iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. This section was designed to influence all aspects of Lebanese Shia society. The original intent of providing needed services to an oppressed people appears to have been manipulated by Hezbollah as a vehicle to bolster its ranks, provide a humanitarian shield to the organization, increase influence within the Lebanese government, and combat its sheer rival, Ambal. The social service section serves as an equal arm within the organization and is used as much as the military and political wing in terms of leverage. Hezbollah
Starting point is 02:23:27 as deputy secretary general describes the purpose and intent of the social service section in the following passage. Hezbollah paid particular attention to social work, not one aspect of aiding the poor was neglected as the party worked towards achieving joint social responsibility, answering their urgent needs, and introducing beneficial programs. Such work was simply considered party duty and concentrated effort towards raising funds and making available social service resources served towards achieving these goals. The party worked to the best of its capacities, cooperating with official institutions to respond to societal needs. Hezbollah has provided medical aid, reconstruction assistance, education programs, and particularly programs
Starting point is 02:24:12 that take care of veterans and widows, which have served to solidify their base. These organizations were critical to Hezbollah's meteoric rise from a political non-entity to arguably the most powerful fact-shaded side of Lebanese politics. Hezbollah's state within a state, as it's become known, is capable of even resisting the Israeli army. Major love's frustration with the inability of the American army to either deny Hezbollah's own aid efforts or replicate them in a way that could strengthen American power are testaments the effectiveness of such a technique and the dangers they pose to the American imperial and state project. One of his love's major concerns is that American aid programs are simply caught up in red tape. They're unable to respond as fast as community
Starting point is 02:24:54 led efforts, which means that those efforts will get off the ground faster, get to the scene faster, and thus reap the political benefits. When the state is unwilling or unable to provide services, especially in the wake of disasters, it leaves a power vacuum for organizations to exploit. You may not have heard of the RSS before. It's a paramilitary group affiliated with India's ruling party, the BJP, and counts among its members India's Prime Minister Modi. It's also probably the world's largest fascist organization. The RSS was founded in 1925, a group nominally dedicated to protecting and promoting Hindu interests. What this means in practice is that the RSS is dedicated to creating a Hindu state and maintains and promotes a violent
Starting point is 02:25:39 hatred of Muslims that results in RSS members being at the forefront of anti-Muslim programs. The RSS's pre-World War II leaders were open admirers of Hitler and Mussolini, and while they eventually abandoned those positions at the start of World War II, the RSS's politics remained thoroughly fascist. In the intense communal rioting that both proceeded and followed the partition of India and Pakistan after independence, which saw mass population transfers of Hindus and Muslims, and the death of somewhere between 200,000 and 2 million people, the RSS established itself as a protector of Hindu refugees against Muslim violence, provided protection and aid to those trying to survive the chaos. The good world is generated,
Starting point is 02:26:21 however, collapse after a former RSS member did the single most famous thing anyone associated with the RSS has ever done, assassinated Gandhi. The RSS was almost immediately banned, but in light of the terrible PR you get when you're associated with killing Gandhi, the RSS became increasingly involved with disaster relief. Over half a century of painstaking organizing, it created schools and youth programs to spread its influence and use them to fuel further anti-Muslim violence. In 2001, the organization gained national acclaim for its response to a massive earthquake in Gujarat. The RSS heavily emphasized the non-discriminatory nature of their aid work and their propaganda. But in reality, many of the villages the RSS had rebuilt after
Starting point is 02:27:09 the devastation had been transformed into miniature versions of the fabled Hindu state that the RSS seeks to impose on all of India. Strategically, this should look familiar to us now. It's essentially a fascist form of prefigurative politics. The RSS used an earthquake to build the structure of the new Hindu society in the shell of the old. The BJP's dominance over Indian politics, while led by a member of the RSS and the brutal crackdowns Modi carried out in Kashmir, are a bloody testament to the success of their strategy. Christian fundamentalist organizations have also been extremely effective in utilizing their own form of rat-wing prefigurative politics, though in a somewhat different way than the RSS. Their new world is defined above all by
Starting point is 02:27:55 theocratic patriarchal authoritarianism. Like the radicals that occupy, the religious right was operating off of a form of contagion theory. The theory that exposure to their social organizations and forms would essentially be contagious and spread. But the Christian right's preferred form is the patriarchal family, which serves as a microcosm of the kind of hierarchy and patriarchal violence that dominate their long-dreamed of theocratic society. The Christian right would instill these values into their children and send them off into the world to propagate their ideology. Eddinger, an expert on the Christian right, wrote this about the second phase of the strategy. In 1975, several church leaders came up with a new approach, identifying seven spheres
Starting point is 02:28:41 of culture to focus on, one after another, to try to bring about the lasting change and have a significant impact on the superstructure of American culture. Lauren Cunningham, founder of Youth with a Mission, a Christian missionary group coordinating international and national mission trips for young Christians, describes these seven areas as such. These are the areas you can go on as missionaries. Here they are. First, it's the institution set up by God first, the family. After the family was the church, or the people of God. The third was the area of school or education. The fourth was media, public communication in all forms, printed and electronic. The fifth was what I call celebration, the arts, entertainment, sports, where you celebrate
Starting point is 02:29:30 within a culture. The sixth would be the whole area of the economy, which starts with innovation in science and technology, productivity, sales, and service. The whole area, we often call it business, but we leave out something. We leave out the scientific part, which actually raises the wealth of the world. Anything new, like making sand and chips for a microchip, that increases wealth in the world. And then, of course, prediction, sales, and service helps to spread the wealth. And so the last area was the area of government. This is a neat encapsulation of the rights refigurative politics. Start first with the family, and then with the church, then reshape school and education and mass media in their image. And from there, you can begin to take the entire economy.
Starting point is 02:30:19 Churches have also long used aid programs to proselytize and also expand their control over the population, which becomes dependent on their aid. In the places where the left has failed to provide for their community, the far right has stepped in and has been able to rapidly and effectively reshape the political landscape. This does not mean, however, that they can't be beaten. Cooperation Jackson has offered one of the most powerful visions of dual power in the modern U.S. A product of the new African Peoples Organization and the Malcolm X grassroots movements Jackson Kush Plan. Cooperation Jackson has put forward a radical and democratic model of dual power, with the aim of turning over control of the land and the means of production to Jackson's
Starting point is 02:31:02 black working class and allowing it to achieve its own self-determination. Cooperation Jackson has formed mutual aid networks, started an incubated program to help workers' cooperatives get off the ground, and formed a community land trust that purchases abandoned buildings in Jackson and turns them over to the community. They've also somewhat unusually wound up engaged in the electoral process after the untimely death of ally and Jackson mayor Chokwe Lumumba, which led to the election of his son, Chokwe Antar Lumumba. This placed the movement in a somewhat awkward position of having allies, even if constrained by the realities of state power in the state itself. But politics in the real world is never as clean as the models we create
Starting point is 02:31:44 to describe it. It is only in our ability to adapt to the changing conditions of struggle while maintaining our political principles that we can build the new world in the shell of the old. And we can build it. The question is simply, will we? When P.T. Barnum's Great American Museum burned to the ground in 1865, what rose from its ashes would change the world. Welcome to Grim and Mild Presents, an ongoing journey into the strange, the unusual and the fascinating. For our inaugural season, we'll be giving you a backstage tour of the always complex and often misunderstood cultural artifact that is the American side show. So come along as we visit the shadowy corners of the stage and
Starting point is 02:32:35 learn about the people who are at the center of it all in a place where spectacle was king. We will soon discover there's always more to the story than meets the eye. So step right up and get in line. Listen to Grim and Mild Presents now on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts. Learn more over at grimandmild.com slash presents. I'm Eve Rodzky, author of the New York Times bestseller Fair Play and Find Your Unicorn Space. Activists on the Gender Division of Labor, Attorney and Family Mediator. And I'm Dr. Aditya Narukar, a Harvard physician and medical correspondent with an expertise in the science of stress, resilience, mental health and burnout. We're so excited to share our podcast
Starting point is 02:33:22 Time Out, a production of I Heart Podcasts and Hello Sunshine. We're uncovering why society makes it so hard for women to treat their time with the value it deserves. So take this Time Out with us. Listen to Time Out, a Fair Play podcast on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Oh, well, that wasn't very good. I'm Robert Evans, host of the podcast you're listening to and ashamed of probably because that was Jesus Christ. Garrison, come in here. No, I refuse. Fix this. Fix this. This is it could happen here, a podcast about the fact that the world is falling apart, as embodied by me falling apart when I try to introduce the show. See,
Starting point is 02:34:19 I tied it in. Yeah, good job. Thank you. Thank you. It's poetry. It rhymes. It is. It is. It has to rhyme. It's like the Star Wars movies. That's what I was doing. Our guest today is Melissa Asadera, founder and director of Polo's Pantry, a mutual aid food distribution project in Los Angeles, California. Melissa, thank you for coming on and talking to us. Thank you so much for inviting me. It's a pleasure to be here. I apologize for the introduction, but I honestly, it's better than I usually do. Sophie can back that up. Yes. Okay. So I'm an LA native, and I've been doing community organizing for probably close to a decade, doing a lot of community work for a long time. And a few years before the pandemic, actually, I started to
Starting point is 02:35:11 organize with a lot of grassroots organizations in LA, working with a lot of houseless folks all over LA. And kind of clock pretty early that a lot of groups were burning through their budgets, spending it on food. And so, since I worked in kind of the food industry, I started to kind of poke around and figure out that we could get a lot of these things donated to us. And pretty much started building a roster, like building kind of like a Rolodex of other organizations, nonprofits, food banks that we could rely on. So almost kind of almost kind of created sort of like an alternate system for these groups who are working with houseless folks to get food every week. I just wanted to figure out a way to make a steady
Starting point is 02:36:10 and reliable system so that our unhoused neighbors would get food and that organizers across LA wouldn't have to worry about it. And so that's pretty much how Polo started, officially started in 2018. I was organizing with a group called K-Town for All. And they do a lot of political advocacy and mostly rooted in like kind of, you know, human rights for our houseless neighbors. If you don't know K-Town for All, look them up. They're awesome. Follow them. Fantastic organization. Yeah. And, you know, I actually was, because I was already doing a lot of mutual aid work in Skid Row around that time and really kind of felt at some point that, you know, like, yes, it was great that I was going out there with teams, getting hot meals out and hot beverages,
Starting point is 02:37:05 whatever people needed to people. But I just was so down on the conditions, seeing all the conditions that they were living in. And I just wanted to meet other activists and other folks who could really figure out how you connect people to services and just really, you know, anyone working in policy that's really changing things for people out there. And so I wanted to take sort of my advocacy and like my work a step further and connect with activists all the way. So that's sort of like my org is really rooted in a lot of activism and organizing. So I see a lot of, I'm not sort of your standard kind of organ nonprofit. I really see things in the lens of as a community organizer. And so that's why our work is pretty much exploded during COVID.
Starting point is 02:37:56 I'm kind of interested for starters, because you're, you know, this is a mutual aid project as opposed to kind of a charity project. And what do you see as being the dividing line there? Yeah, well, for, you know, for a lot of, for us, you know, it's very easy for folks to kind of see the work that we do as part of the kind of charitable food system, because obviously we're, you know, mutual aid, it's the difference really is that obviously, you know, there's a, there's a reciprocity between the two of you, between neighborhoods, between individuals, of sharing resources with each other. And charitable obviously is that there's only one way, right? There's only like one person giving, but for us, the way we picked our partners,
Starting point is 02:38:52 we are already part of this nucleus of kind of a coalition of orgs doing this work. And so it was just really very easy for us to kind of share resources with each other. So I was doing food and some folks were doing hygiene kits, other folks were doing tents, other folks were doing tarps or whatever. And so there was so much, you know, kind of mutual aid and activity going on. And so that that's why we're really kind of rooted in that, in that thinking, as far as, like as opposed to charitable orgs that basically just set up somewhere and give, you know, give, give stuff out to people. And so we have, like in part, in part of my advisory circle are a lot of houseless neighbors, houseless leaders in our community. I also take a lot of
Starting point is 02:39:43 advice from Indigenous organizers, Black community leaders in different neighborhoods that we work in. So our work is really informed by the community. And so we basically ask folks, hey, you know, like, what can we do? And plug in to work that already exists in those in those areas. I hope that means sense. But that's kind of how I feel about what we do. And as an organizer, because I think we get a lot of questions from people who are interested in starting mutual aid projects in their own areas. And one of the questions we often have is like, well, how do I, how do I do that? Right? And yeah, I'm interested in like, like if you could kind of walk us through the steps when, when Polo's pantry got started,
Starting point is 02:40:33 like what is, what was the kind of order of operations that you had to go through to get this, this up and running? I think the first thing to do is really to, for me, it was already kind of being part of grassroots org. So I was part of a few of them. And so it's really important to, to kind of identify the needs of a community first before setting up your org. So I feel like I already had an idea of, you know, of what certain orgs needed, which areas, how many. And so kind of identifying the needs first kind of number one. And to do that, you really have to connect with grassroots organizations, local ones in your area. So, you know, I recommend really just kind of doing research. There's always folks doing that kind of stuff all over. If you're into political advocacy,
Starting point is 02:41:24 there's folks that do that. If they're folks who are more food justice oriented, like I would recommend going to a local food bank or soup kitchens to have also like I've been doing that for years. And I've met a lot of people with kind of similar values mine. So just kind of pretty much identify one what you'd like to do, what you're good at. And then essentially research, you know, kind of opportunities to tap into a local org, doing that work. And then essentially start organizing with them, right? I don't, I don't recommend to build, like to build an org prior to not having this kind of knowledge, because I feel like it's really crucial to sort of kind of map out first what the community needs. Instead of you building mutual aid
Starting point is 02:42:17 organization based on, you know, whatever, because I feel like it's, it's important to work through things from the ground up. That way you feel like the work is impactful. That way the community is leading and informing your work. And so that's, that's kind of like how I, I approach mine. So look for a local org. So kind of sit in organizing for a little bit. And then from there, once you guys identify what it is, and start to kind of have an idea of the demand or the need in that area, then start to reach out to say, for me, for, for food, a lot of local, local chains will, will, will pretty much, if you, if you tell them what you're doing, a lot of them will support you. So I actually have, I started with just going literally to my local Ralph's and telling the
Starting point is 02:43:14 manager there, like, Hey, this is what I'm doing. I'm starting this org. I, you know, was it Ralph's being a local grocery store in like Los Angeles area? Sorry. A lot of, I didn't know what Ralph's was before I moved to LA. So I just wanted to be like, she's not just like rolling over to her buddy Ralph's house. He's like, you got some food. Yeah. Sorry. Yeah. So that Ralph's out here in LA. So Kroger most places. Yeah. More or less. Yeah. I will work folks that not everyone is down for that kind of stuff, but you somehow you'll, you'll really end up on one that's really, you know, that is really unkind. I think most folks have to realize that this, this, this kind of work is not, it doesn't happen overnight. Like building, like building, you know, like a reliable network
Starting point is 02:43:58 of people to donate to you is, is takes time. So, but I think if you hit kind of larger chains, you will get, you know, you'll, you'll get a, you'll start to get a steady supply from them. Do you have any kind of advice for when you're actually approaching, you know, manager at a Ralph's or something, somebody who works for like, what do you have? Like, I don't know, not like a script, but kind of a rough guide to like, here's how I try to start these conversations. Here's some ways I try to phrase things because that could be useful for folks. You know, I actually have like a form letter so I could share later. Maybe you can share too. Oh yeah, that would be great. Yeah. That, you know, that they can use to, you know,
Starting point is 02:44:39 if they're, if they're going to solicit folks with that stuff. And I think a lot of mutual aid organizations do have that kind of kind of literature, that kind of form. So I think just basically kind of letting them know who you are, who you're serving, how often which demographic is going to, that's usually really important. What would help me though was I was, as I started to get more serious about, about doing the food work, I connected to, you know, some, some community partners and I actually turned polos into a fiscally sponsored org. So we moved from being just fully grassroots to be fiscally sponsored. That basically means we're operating under the 501c3 number of another organization, of a larger organization. So that, that was that open so,
Starting point is 02:45:33 so many opportunities for us. It really allowed us to be able to access larger amounts of food and really help out a lot of, a lot of, a lot of smaller orgs that needed to get their food programs off the ground. And so that is something I recommend if you're, if people are serious about it, to find a community, a community partner who is an established 501c3 that they trust, to see if they, if they, you know, if they can sign on to be a fiscal sponsor. That I think is one of the quickest ways to be able to, to really kind of establish yourself as, as far as getting larger amounts of food than, and by that I mean getting pallets of food, not just cases but literally pallets of food delivered to wherever you are. As soon as we did that, that completely changed the
Starting point is 02:46:27 game. And, and I think I did that because I knew I had so many friends who were doing mutual aid that needed so, you know, just so much stuff from, you know, from groceries to, you know, fresh produce and it wasn't, and it wasn't, you know, it didn't stop in food. We were getting, you know, hand sanitizer, we were getting tents, we were getting all sorts of stuff, you know, and so, so yeah, that's what I recommend for folks who are serious about food is to really, again, start to build a relationship with local businesses that they, that they like the businesses and really telling people, this is what I'm doing. If you're, if you're, if you're, you know, if you are willing to support us, you know, like this is, you know, these are, these are the days that we
Starting point is 02:47:19 need food or whatever, or these are the times that we'll need food and just let them know that, you know, you're, you're happy to like pick it up or that you're happy to, because there's, there's, I think at least for California, we're, we're starting to change law, like policy and law behind food waste. And so I think something's going to change in January of 2022, where a lot of food waste is basically going to decrease because it's going to be much more difficult. The city is going to make it much more difficult for, for businesses to just get rid of stuff. They're really pushing them to, to separate them. But anyway, regardless, you're helping the business really move, you know, move food waste. And, and most of them, and a lot of employees too that I've talked to,
Starting point is 02:48:09 just, you know, just our hard work at every time they have to clear out, you know, a full, full tray or just trays and trays of, of, of, of, you know, of perfectly fine food. So yeah, there's, there's a video going viral on Twitter right now of, of like someone working at dunking donuts and just like dumping just like hundreds and hundreds of donuts into the garbage. Yep. And then that happens, that happens every single day, you know, I have, I have friends who used to work on Whole Foods and they would tell me just, just how heartbreaking it was, just the amount, just the massive amount of food that's being wasted out there. Yeah, it's evil. It's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's a thing that in the more
Starting point is 02:48:52 difficult days ahead as, you know, things like, well, like wheat under in a lot of areas, like the crop was half of what it normally is this year. That's going to continue. One day we will look at videos of dunking donuts, dropping an entire day's worth of donuts into the trash and use it as a pretext to bring executives to trial. It's going to be like, like, like a war crime. Yeah, it really is. I mean, I mean, honestly though, as someone in food, you know, like the food system is changing massively in so many ways. I feel like the one kind of good thing that happened in the pandemic is that lawmakers were able to identify that the way SNAP or CalFresh, I mean, pretty much food stamps were not enough really to, you know,
Starting point is 02:49:42 to feed families and feed people. It's not nearly enough though, but at least it kind of pushes the needles where we need, where we needed to go. And I think, I think having, having been so focused and so like in the center of mutual aid work in LA, I'm able to kind of broadly tell, you know, tell, really tell lawmakers to that, hey, you know, there's so much, there's so much need out there, but the community themselves have built alternate food systems to be able to care for themselves. I feel like like my hope really is to be able to kind of hyper-localize our food systems that way neighborhoods and really like communities are essentially dictating their own, you know, their own needs.
Starting point is 02:50:34 They're basically bringing in the resources that they want. They're bringing in the kind of food that they want, you know, and, and really just working towards a real kind of food sovereignty where people are able to, you know, to get the resources themselves. And, and for me, I feel like mutual aid scares a lot of people because again, it really is this sort of like the reason why we were able to, a lot of communities were able to, to survive COVID, you know, we're still doing it. Yeah, we still are. Yeah. It's still, we're so deep in it. And, and even like I try to tell students to like, you know, mutual aid isn't just food or what I ever, it's also like say your dad has a pickup truck and your neighbor needs to move, I don't know,
Starting point is 02:51:24 their dining room table across town. Like that is a form of mutual aid. Or like there's, there's so many things that especially a lot of immigrant communities that I, that I work with. This, this form of care, community care, you know, has existed forever. And it's just somehow elevated itself during the pandemic, because as we know, the safety net just wasn't enough. It didn't, it didn't, it really didn't help me, you know, didn't really help a lot of communities. And so this system essentially kept people afloat. And now we're trying to figure out how to to really create better ways to sustain it and to really create better ways to get the resources directly to communities that need them. So that's kind of where I'm at. I'm working with other
Starting point is 02:52:20 folks trying to figure out how to, how to keep this sustainable and really have more agency over what kind of food and what kind of aid they want. How have people that have been needing to access the mutual aid and the food, how have they been learning about your organization? I think honestly, all this stuff really happened by word of mouth. I think because I was, I was already part of this huge coalition. That's part of, of the Sophie knows a K-Town for all. There's a group called Street Watch. There's a group called Brown Game. There's a group called like this. There's all these different folks that basically are in our wide coalition. I haven't had to really advertise much. Like people just sort of like, just kept telling others like, Hey, you know,
Starting point is 02:53:03 like Melissa Polos and her team are doing this. And also as a COVID response, I created another like COVID initiative called Homemade Meals. And, and that is the partnership with another organization called EX. And so as of today, I think we're close to 75,000 meals. Wow. That's all community led. Yes. So we, so we, since March of 2020, we essentially created a system where we, we work with people who are, who are cooking, homemade meals in their homes and connecting them to drivers. And so we have about six different org partners. So one of them is, obviously it's the same people, K-Town, Street Watch, Covenant House. They work a lot with Homeless Youth, LA Cannes, they're in Skid Row, and a bunch of other mutual aid groups in different areas of LA.
Starting point is 02:54:06 So I, I recognize at the beginning of COVID, a lot of my houseless neighbors were telling us that they were scared, like, because a lot of, a lot of businesses were closing, a lot of corner stores, restaurants, the food access completely shut off for them during the beginning. And I started to freak out. I was like, how are we going to get food to people? And so some friends who run, basically they're going to kind of look at youth, kind of youth focus org, wanted to activate their, you know, activate their community. They're like, hey, how can we help? What can we do? So we created this program, basically, that, you know, figure out, like, okay, well, a lot of people want to volunteer, but they can't leave home. So why don't they cook meals
Starting point is 02:54:59 at home? And then we'll just pair them with drivers. We can pick it up safely. And so we just started doing that. We created this system to, and I think we, honestly, I thought we were just going to do it for two months. But now we're what, like, 19 months later, 70. Oh, geez. 75,000 meals, over a thousand volunteers. Like, it's been wild. Actually, Jamie, friend of the pod and a dog expert, she'd be angry if we didn't state that. Jamie. Jamie actually is, it's one of our OG, like, like cooks, like, she started with home and made meals from the very beginning. She's kind of one of our, that's kind of how we know her. It's because she found, she found that program. And it's been wild. It's been, it's been so amazing to really activate so many people across
Starting point is 02:55:56 LA to cook for our houseless neighbors. And so I haven't even fully digested, our team has even fully digested the real impact of that, but it's been 75,000 meals made by the community for our, for our houseless neighbors. So, so that's, yeah, so I don't know. Like, I feel like, and I truly believe there's just so much, just so much power in the people and really trying to figure out ways to continue to, you know, to create better systems where we can redirect those resources, you know, to us, to us. And, you know, like really kind of break down these systems where, you know, because even people were telling me like folks who are like, you know, these sort of big institutions, food institutions who've been around for decades, or even folks from like,
Starting point is 02:56:56 yeah, from like running food orgs since the 80s, or like, you know, how are you able to move so fast? I'm like, that's mutual aid. That's like, that's mutual aid. Then our ability to not have to run through so much bureaucratic crap and red tape is a reason why we were able to, you know, to, to, to create such huge impact because people believed in what we did and, you know, and helped support us, funded us, and we essentially just, you know, just hit the ground running. We're able to figure out what people needed on the ground and just, just got it to them. That's, that's it, you know, and we'll figure out if, if we don't have it, we're going to keep, you know, we'll ask around for folks who have it. Like, there's a group called CELA, they're in Silver Lake.
Starting point is 02:57:48 And my friend Kat, who's one of the co-founders, she, they also work with, with, with houseless folks, and they do incredible work, like, you know, providing showers, providing hot meals, providing wraparound services for folks. She, she was great at getting hygiene kits, and so that's, that was our mutual aid between each other. Like, she needed hot meals, I gave that to her on Saturdays, and then I needed, like, hygiene kits, and so. And that's kind of like the basis of mutual aid. Yeah, exactly. Like, I literally will give her 200 meals, she'll give me 200 hygiene kits, and that was like that throughout the pandemic. Like, we just would share resources, and people thought we were this huge org, but essentially it was just, you know, we really
Starting point is 02:58:35 like, our friends and I talking to each other, like, hey, what do you have today? What do you have coming in today? And we just essentially kind of built this sort of cloud, like, sort of inventory, right? So it's like, Polo's has a thousand meals, and like, Sela's got 500 hygiene kits, and like, you know, Street Watch has, like, 50 tents and like, 100 tarps. So it's like, we all, we're like, hey, you know, there's, there's a houseless man on the corner of like Sunset or whatever, that needs like, blah, blah, blah. And so we essentially just, you know, just grab and go, like Polo's has meals, and like, Street Watch has tents, and like, KTown's got like the tarps. So you all just, again, beautifully just sort of started to like, build this sort of,
Starting point is 02:59:23 sort of cloud like inventory of stuff, and it just worked, and it's still working. So. And it's consistent, like, is what we're bringing up, or at the beginning is talking about how consistent you've able to, you've able to have done this work, which is, if you're an LA resident, you know that, you know, the city's support is never consistent. So having that consistency is so vital. Yes. And impressive. Yeah, thank you. Now, it's a lot of hard work. There's so much that people don't see. Obviously, there's so many, so many things that people don't see. There's a lot of organizing behind it. There's literally a lot of community building. A lot of meetings. Yeah. I think again, like the bulk of mutual aid is relationships and trust,
Starting point is 03:00:13 you know, like that's, that's really it. That's how you breathe life into your system. And it's like, you know, you have to, you have to continue to like nourish your relationships, you know, between yourself and other organizers, between yourself, if you're running an org, between yourself and another org. And really, that's how we've been able to, you know, to reach so many people is because we focus on making sure that, you know, it's so easy to burn out in this work. But again, we also have to make sure that we take care of each other. And we focus on making sure that we're checking on each other too. And so I, you know, it's hard to fully explain what, how to even teach that, you know, how to, how to,
Starting point is 03:01:01 yeah, how to properly build relationships. But I feel like that's such a key part of creating a really robust mutual aid network. And that's at least the experience that we had, you know, the work that you've done and what you've been able to accomplish is very impressive. And is, is something that a lot of people can aspire to. Is there any like resources online that you can point to if someone's wanting to get into this type of work? Or any, any, yeah, like any kind of like advice to get started in your own city, or to like look for stuff that's doing this similar, that's like, that's doing a similar thing. Wow. Let's see. Who has, that's a really, really, really good question. Well, well, first I hope that people have read
Starting point is 03:01:56 mutual aid by Dean Spade. Sure. That's a really good book. And from there, I would read, I would read the Black Panther social programs. Yeah. I got a lot of, I got a lot of my, my inspiration from there. And really, that's, that's really those, those two things to kind of start as just sort of like your, your primers. And then if you want to kind of get deeper into food justice, there's a really good book I read years ago. It's almost, I think it's literally called Food Justice 101. Okay. Let me see. It's literally called Food Justice 101. Yeah, there's, there's quite a few, but, but one, that's one. And then there's another, there's a one book I read called More Than Just Food. And then it's, it's by, I'll give you guys my top five and that really kind of
Starting point is 03:02:57 helps sort of like shape my thinking on food justice. So it's written by a guy named Garrett Broad. And he essentially like kind of lays out sort of how the industrial food system kind of created this huge crisis that we're in. And, you know, like how there's, there's really kind of an abundance of food everywhere. But, you know, obviously. It's just not getting distributed. Yes, exactly. And so, and it also kind of lays out how food justice, you know, activists who are in mostly low-income communities of color, help really build community-based kind of solutions to these problems. And so that's really kind of where my thinking and my, my lens comes from is because I am a child of LA, I'm able to understand what
Starting point is 03:03:46 different neighborhoods need based on, because I either grew up there, work there, have family there, you know, what's school there, or just have friends or other organizers who live there. And so say if, you know, I didn't grow up in Wall Heights, but I have friends who did. And so, like, if I'm trying to build out a food program or a mutual aid program in Wall Heights, I'm not going to just walk in there and be like, all right, I'm going to do it at, you know. Yeah, you're not going to take over their thing. Exactly. But I think that's one thing I think I really want to, for people to really, especially for, for, for young people who want to get to food justice is like, you really have to
Starting point is 03:04:29 really honestly do your research first and lead, lead, lead your program with you, right? And there's a difference between like making community connections and then trying to like take over, right? You know, it's very, very, two very different things. Exactly. Yeah, you don't want to be extractive, right? You don't want to be extractive. You don't want to be coming in and, you know, and really like, you know, try to like show up with like, you know, solutions where they weren't informed at all by the community. And I keep trying to stress that. Yeah. Is there anywhere that people can support or at least follow you online to keep up with the work? Yes. I'm very active on Twitter. It's, we're at Polo's Pantry. So it's P-O-L-O-S-P-A-N-T-R-Y.
Starting point is 03:05:25 And then I'm also tweeting as myself as an organizer. It's under M-E, smelly music. So it's M-E-L-L-E music. And that actually, that handle for me everywhere is like my personal. So I, I, I tweet from there a lot. I tweet a lot about food justice work. I feel and all our, all our work in LA. I tweet, I retweet a lot of our movement work and coalition work. Yeah. Thank you for coming on to the show to talk about food justice and the work you've been doing. It's great to hear more examples of people from around the country and then hopefully, you know, around the world getting involved in, in this type of work. Anyway, I think that wraps up us today. You can follow this show on Twitter and Instagram at happen here pod and cool zone media. Subscribe to the feed,
Starting point is 03:06:18 leave a five star view, whatever. Anyway, that's, that's, that's the show. Bye bye everybody. Say, say bye everybody. Bye. Bye everyone. Bye everyone. It could happen here is a production of cool zone media. For more podcasts from cool zone media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com or check us out on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can find sources for it could happen here updated monthly at coolzonemedia.com slash sources. Thanks for listening. Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of the universe. Conquer your New Year's resolutions with the before breakfast podcast. In each bite-sized
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