Behind the Bastards - Part Three: The Pol Pot Episodes: How A Nice, Quiet Kid Murdered His Country
Episode Date: May 1, 2025Pol Pot and his friends are now in charge of Cambodia and in a remarkably short period of time they manage to kill two million people. Including a leftist academic from the UK who thought the Khmer Ro...uge was rad. Here's how!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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CALL ZONE MEDIA
Holy crap.
Welcome back to Behind the Bastards.
A rare three part episode.
You motherfuckers, you lucky sons of bitches and rat bastards
are getting three episodes this week.
I am now legally your father. You're welcome.
Hi, Sophie. Hi, Andrew T. How are you guys?
You don't need to be responsible for people
I like that that's like leprechaun rules like episodes 3
I'm your father. I don't think you're I don't I'm gonna say something really. I don't think you're their father
I think you're their daddy
That feels a lot worse for me actually yeah, but I think that's what that legally means is you're not father. You're your daddy
I'm like I'm like one of those dads that like should pay child support
But instead I live on a boat in in the harbor of fucking New Orleans and are you a libertarian in this scenario?
No, no, no, but I definitely don't believe in the moon landing.
This is Behind the Bastards. Again, a podcast. You're enjoying part three of our Pol Pot episodes. And basically the way it goes here, folks, we have a massive audience,
and I'm always trying to like do the most I can to like please the most people,
which you can't do with every episode.
Some people don't like certain kinds.
Some people don't like the cult leaders.
Some people don't like the dictators.
Some people only want the dictators.
And likewise, we've started doing a lot more four-parters over the last couple of years,
in part because there were guys where I felt like I'm kind of doing it to service to try
to limit this to two episodes. And a lot of people really like the four-parters and say these this is my favorite part of the show and a lot of people say
I don't like I prefer the two-parters. So we try to like you go with variety, right?
Everybody's regularly getting what they want and I didn't so I didn't want to do a four-parter for pole pot
And then I wrote 14,000 words on him and was like, god damn it, Robert.
Because there is really that much to say.
So this is all to say, I didn't wanna break this up
over two weeks for the people who are tired of four-parters
so we're just giving you three episodes this week.
So you're fucking welcome.
Cold open, done.
Would you say we're not like all the other girls?
We're a lot like all the other girls.
I'm not. We're also gonna be. And that all the other girls. We're a lot like all the other girls. I'm not.
We're also going to be.
And that all girls are beautiful.
OK.
To get through the words, we're going to be talking super fast.
So if you put this on like 0.66 speed,
you can make yourself a fourth episode.
I'm actually going to slow down a lot just to.
Yeah.
No.
No.
No.
Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley Season 1.
Every time I hear about my dad, it's, oh, he's a killer.
He's just straight evil.
I was becoming the bridge between Jeremy Scott and the son he'd never known.
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer. Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley Season Two
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Soledad O'Brien, and on my new true crime podcast,
Murder on the Tow Path, I'm taking you back to 1964
to the cold case of artist Mary Pinchomire.
She had been shot twice in the head and in the back.
It turns out Mary was connected to a very powerful man.
I pledge you that we shall neither commit nor promote aggression.
John F. Kennedy. Listen to Murder on the Toe Path with Soledad O'Brien on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I want you to ask yourself right now, how am I actually doing?
Because it's a question that we rarely ask ourselves.
All of May is actually Mental Health Awareness Month and on the Psychology of Your 20s, we
are taking a vulnerable look at why mental health is so hard to talk about.
Prepare for our conversations to go deep.
I spent the majority of my teenage years, my 20s just feeling absolutely terrified.
I had a panic attack on a conference call.
Knowing that she had six months to live, I was no longer pretending that this was my
best friend.
So this Mental Health Awareness Month, take that extra bit of care of your wellbeing.
Listen to the psychology of your 20s on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, and my latest interview is with Michelle Obama.
To whom much is given, much is expected.
The guilt comes from am I doing enough?
Me, Michelle Obama, to say that to a therapist.
So let's unpack that.
Having been the first lady of the entire country
and representing the country and the world,
I couldn't afford to have that kind of disdain.
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I was going to say, Hey Robert.
Yes.
Did you know that Better Offline and Weird Little Guys
won their Webby categories?
Did they?
Did they?
Did Better Offline and Weird Little Guys,
two new weekly podcasts launched by CoolZone last year,
both won Webby's in their first year?
Yes, yes they did.
That's astonishing.
Yeah, you know, I'm very proud of our little team
who despite being very small in terms of, you know,
the broader podcasting universe has way more listeners
than most of the other podcast networks out there and actual fans
because we don't just buy a bunch of downloads like some people I'm not gonna name,
but we could just like bleep out and pretend that I accused whoever the fuck of doing that.
So yeah, you know, we're the Vietnam and you know, let's say our enemies,
the Pod Save guys or the Khmer Rouge of podcasts, right?
They also they also wanna webby I saw I I know I know I don't know why it's literally just like the only other
Podcast network I can remember off the top of my head usually so as far as shit a lot
I don't know any empires go podcast empire, a lot smaller body count than most empires.
Yes, well the exception of the Joe Rogan podcast, which he actually might wind up creeping up
on old Pol Pot's numbers.
You give him some time and some more testosterone shots.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, as I noted at the end of the last episode, Pol Pot had made it to the standing committee
in 1960, and then the party leader of
the Communist Party of Cambodia, a guy named Semaut, was assassinated three years later,
probably by the King's security services, although we don't know. So some people think maybe Pol Pot
orchestrated it. But anyway, he winds up in charge as a result of this. And yeah, initially, the
people that he's fighting against as he's leading this increasingly
large and capable communist insurgency is King Sahanek's monarchy, which he battled
out of a headquarters named Office 100. This is a mobile headquarters. We're talking about
a jungle insurgency. He's moving constantly to stay ahead of the King's intelligence, which is
in a large part provided by his American allies, right? Because for the US, his fighting against
the Khmer Rouge is kind of part of the broader struggle against communism in Vietnam.
And to be fair, the Vietnamese are still running a decent amount of what the Cambodian communists
are doing even in this period.
The mid-60s, they hold a lot of sway because they have a lot.
They're a major source of weapons.
They're more organized.
But the Cambodian party is getting a lot more independent during this period of time.
Salah Sar is making it his business to both increase that independence and to make friends with the people he needs to beg for guns
because they're not really capable of manufacturing weapons in the jungle.
Sure. Yeah, that's a fucking very, very vivid setup.
What was the name of the headquarters again? Office 100.
That fucking rule. Yeah, it's very cool stuff.
I mean, it's always when you're talking about like an underground insurgent,
you've got this secret leader.
Nobody knows his name.
Again, it's a real bummer from a narrative standpoint.
I would have had him born Pol Pot and switched to Salah Tsar
because that's such a cool name.
Like it's such a scary name.
But whatever. That's how they change it up. it's such a scary name. But whatever.
That's how they change it up.
He's subverting expectations.
And yeah, yeah, exactly.
A few further dominoes will fall.
Just like Rian Johnson's Star Wars movies.
And like Rian Johnson's Star Wars movies, Salazar travels to Beijing
in order to beg for weapons.
And that is true.
That is that is partly true. Yes. And. That is true, actually. That is partly true, yes.
And so he is talking with Ho Chi Minh City or with the Vietnamese communists.
And they are coordinating, but never to the extent that the West kind of imagines, right?
Even though they're very dependent on the Vietnamese for a while, they never like it.
And there is absolutely no desire
among the Cambodian communists or among Pol Pot
to be tightly aligned with Vietnam.
This like fantasy that the US has that China
and all these Southeast Asian states are going to form
like one unified communist block is just absolutely
Anyone with the slightest degree of a knowledge of any of these people like the fucker know they hate each other. I mean
Just even meeting four different Asian people anywhere
You could probably extrapolate some of this shit talk to a Vietnamese dude about China like Like seriously, have a Conver fucking station.
In 1970, Sehannuk's regime is overthrown, because again, the war is not going well for
him.
He's not particularly good at running Cambodia.
And a bunch of these kind of right-wing leaders in the military with the backing of the United
States gets pissed off.
So when the king, like I think he's actually technically calling himself the Prince because
he gives up his royal title to quote unquote run for office, whatever.
Sahanak leaves the country on like a diplomatic visit and there's a coup and the coup is headed
by this guy called Lan Nol.
Lan Nol is actually the brother of Salath Sar's childhood best friend.
And obviously like because of that Lan Nol's brother is a major part of the regime Lanol sets up.
And he's like, yeah, probably if the communists win, my friendship with Salah Sar will protect
me.
It doesn't, by the way.
This guy gets the fucking shit liquidated out of him.
And the fact that there's a family connection, or a deep connection between Salahzad,
who's leading the communists and the family of Law Nol
does nothing to temper the brutality
of the conflict that follows.
Now, a lot of this comes directly
as a result of Law Nol's policies, right?
This is not just, Pol Pot is running
a very brutal insurgency,
but it's brutal in response to the sheer violence unleashed by Noll in
order to try to maintain control.
As soon as the monarchy is abolished, the so-called Khmer Republic begins calling on
the US to continue and extend their bombing campaign in Cambodia, which had started clandestinely
and very illegally in 1969 under Nixon as a way to try and stop Vietnamese communists from
being able to supply themselves, right?
There's this idea, this accurate idea that Cambodia is a big part of how the Viet Cong
are supplying and this is where they're retreating to in order to regather their strength.
That is essentially accurate and we are bombing them for years and pretending not to.
And now when La Nol is in power, we don't have to lie because we're being invited.
Now we're being invited by this coup that we set up.
The US would ultimately drop more than half a million tons on Cambodia in a four year
period of time.
And for an idea of how many explosives that is, that sounds like a lot.
500,000 tons is a lot of weight.
That's more than the total weight of bombs
dropped on the empire of Japan during all of World War II.
And here's the thing.
These bombs are being dropped both to deal with
like Viet Cong tunnel complexes and some of their bases
and to stop the Khmer Rouge.
The Khmer Rouge has no industrial base. Their weapons have to be smuggled in.
They are not building tanks. They don't have cities that are functioning as part of an industrial
core. The Empire of Japan was one of the most powerful industrialized states on the planet.
And we dropped more bombs on Cambodia than we did on them.
Right.
Like, right?
That's-
Jesus Christ.
It's fucking, and we nuked Japan famously, right?
Like the degree of force that we deploy on these guys
is outrageous and we get fuck all for it. Like this could not
have been a less useful use of force. Not that that would have made it like moral. If like it had won
us the war, it wouldn't be okay. I'm not saying that, but it like, this is just like the biggest
L a military. One of the biggest L's a military ever took
is our operations in Cambodia.
Not just evil, but also somehow extreme,
even more pointless than some of the other wars.
And that's the thing,
I tried to make this clear in the Kissinger episodes,
it's not just how evil he is,
because he gets depicted as this evil genius a lot.
He sucked so much shit at a lot of what he was doing.
Between 150,000 and 300 Cambodians probably died that's a
Credible death toll although there's a lot of arguments that both of those numbers either is is much too low
Right that it's significantly higher than 300,000 you can find some lower estimates
150 to 3 is kind of somewhere. That's close enough for
what we're talking about here. It's a historic crime against humanity, right?
Most of those dead are civilians, including a shitload of little kids who are just incinerated
from the sky by the United States Air Force. So the fact that we're doing this, the fact that we
are incinerating entire villages,
we're just lighting little kids on fire from the sky, makes people angry.
The folks who don't die and who previously had their ambition in life had been to like,
you know, be a peasant, feed my family, live a life, you know, like be a normal Cambodian
person. Their ambitions changed after their
families get incinerated. And suddenly they're like, you know, what would be cool? Killing
a bunch of people in revenge, you know, getting my vengeance. And so a lot of peasants start
flocking to the banner of the Khmer Rouge, which had not been super popular previously,
right? It had been growing before this bombing campaign escalates, but not
massively. The bombing campaign's primary result is to supercharge support for the Khmer Rouge,
because wouldn't you want to shoot somebody? Yeah, that is, it is, I mean, that's eternally
the best recruiting tool. Yes. And I'll never say anything to mitigate or reduce the complicity and the responsibility
of Pol Pot and the leaders for the crimes that are about to happen.
But the crimes are being committed directly on the ground by a lot of these young people
from the jungle who grow up under this bombing campaign and then join the guer. And I can't, no matter how hideous things are, I can't really blame them.
Which isn't saying that it's okay or justified. It's just saying that like, you, you, you
ruined people and they went insane. It's explainable. It's extremely explainable.
No one's capable of acting rationally with the damage that you have done to them,
you know?
Right.
With the exception, again, of these people at the top, guys like Pol Pot, who do not
grow up, are not raised being bombed or, you know, living under these horrible conditions
in the jungle.
These are people of privilege, of education, who had the opportunity to pick a different
path and did choose horror.
And that's where my blame lies here.
I want to quote from an article for the Mass Violence and Resistance Research Network by
David Chandler next.
This is kind of describing how the Khmer Rouge develops as a result of all this.
The small scale guerrilla movement, which he had launched against the Henex government
in the late 1960s, developed with with Vietnamese and Chinese backing, into a full scale resistance
army fighting the American-backed Long Ngo regime in Phnom Penh.
At the same time, Tsar developed the distinctive ideology which made the CPK, that's the Communist
Party of Cambodia, very different from other Marxist-Leninist parties.
He mistrusted the working class, relying instead on the poor peasantry, whom he saw as the incarnation of Rousseau's noble savage.
His party functioned like a sect, and some authors underlined that his communism was
colored by Cambodian Buddhist structures.
Its members were required to renounce not only material possessions but also spiritual
ties.
The ultimate goal was to crush individual personality and replace it by unquestioning adherence to the collectivity.
Discipline was ferocious,
security omnipresent. Saurabh hoard the limelight, preferring to operate from the shadows and using multiple aliases.
Polk, He,
87, Pole, Grand Uncle, Elder Brother, First Brother, and in later years,
99 or Pym.
Yet his fanaticism was marked masked by great personal charisma.
People who met him remembered his winning smile and considerable talent as an orator.
I mean, a sick ass lick list of nicknames.
It is pretty cool.
I know I'm fixating on all the names, but they're fucking rad. Yeah, it's hard not to right like that
For whatever reason I think 87 is my pick
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. What is 87 based off of? Did you did you find that out actually?
No, um, I I probably could have figured it out if I like but I I didn't come across that in my reading
now Because this is an exercise for the listener. Yeah I probably could have figured it out, but I didn't come across that in my reading. Now, because this isn't-
Exercise for the listener.
Yeah, yeah, figure it out.
Find out when he's having a bit.
Now, because this isn't a military history podcast
and the overall story of Cambodia during this period
is so much more detailed than we can get into,
I'm gonna have to yada yada a lot
of how the rebellion succeeds.
I love when you yada yada.
Please yada yada.
Yada yada. Yada yada. Please yada yada.
The gist of it is that Lanol's government was only capable of holding the line against
the communists with US backing and even then not all that well.
By the early 1970s, it had become clear that there was an expiration date on that assistance.
The Khmer Rouge grew larger with each atrocity by the right-wing government and their allies.
In areas where the Rouge took power, everyone old enough to fight was drafted into the military, and everyone else was put to
work. The all-black garb of the peasantry, which had just kind of been a traditional thing in
Cambodia, became the only acceptable outfit to wear. You're literally not allowed to dress
differently. Those who refused to serve were executed. By 1973, most of rural Cambodia was in rouge hands.
And I gotta say, the one aspect of the Khmer Rouge
I could have done great with is just kind of
wearing black pajamas all the time.
Like, I got that shit on lock, baby.
Like, I'm wearing this like, sport coat thing,
but it's just black pajamas under this motherfucker.
I was gonna say, this is the tragedy of the YouTube era.
Yeah.
Is this fucking sport code when you know Robert
could just be full jamming out.
Yeah, yeah.
And I am, this thing doesn't reduce the comfort.
It's fine.
Don't worry, don't worry.
I'm pole potting under this.
Jesus Christ.
That's what he says.
That's what he says every episode.
It's not just this one.
The final straw for Lon Nol's regime
is when Prince Sahana, hiding in exile, announced his support for pole pots rebels. He says every episode, it's not just this one. The final straw for Lon Nol's regime
is when Prince Sahanak, hiding in exile,
announced his support for Pol Pot's rebels.
Now we've done, we did a two-parter,
one of our very first episodes on Notre Dame Sahanak.
He sucks ass.
Listen to those episodes as to why.
But the reason he does this is he believed that like,
he thought this might give him a shot
at returning to power, right?
If I back these guys, clearly they won't last and eventually I'll be able to make my way
back in, right?
What really happens is he strengthens the Khmer Rouge at a critical moment because again,
people the peasantry feel very strongly about the royalty, right?
And that still has not been busted, even though he really sucked ass when he was actually
running things.
He does this right as the US is starting to pull out their assets and things fall very
quickly.
Think about how long the government of Afghanistan lasted as the US pulled out.
That's what we're seeing here.
On April 17th, 1975, Lon Nol's army collapsed entirely and the Khmer Rouge entered Nampen.
Now you got to remember at this point,
when they take the capital,
the fighting has been going on in parts of Cambodia
for 20 years or more.
People are fucking exhausted.
And is always the case in times like this,
there was an optimism among like a lot of regular people
that like, look, I don't know so much
about these Khmer Rouge guys, but the war's over.
Maybe things will get better, right?
There's this hope and that hope is crushed very quickly because Pol Pot and his comrades,
it's not even that they don't want to go back to normal and their minds going back to normal
is a death sentence, right?
And again, this is kind of what messes with a lot of people's casual understanding of
what's happening because you would think, well, obviously these guys have to hate the US more than anybody else, right?
Not at all the case.
The people, Pol Pot's obsession is Vietnam.
That is the real enemy, not capitalism, not the United States, not the West, Vietnam.
Saigon fell to the to the NVA, far from when Nam Pen did, right? And because
of this, because Vietnam has won its war too, there's this immediate widespread paranoia among
the Khmer Rouge leadership that the Vietnamese are going to digest their meal of southern Vietnam,
and then they're immediately going to take this big army they've got with tanks and aircraft
and all sorts of modern weapons
that the Khmer Rouge does not really have access to.
And they're gonna cross the border
and they're going to invade Cambodia.
And they're gonna take us out
and make us nothing but a tribute state, right?
Like that is the immediate fear.
And the only way to resist this future,
to have a chance of defeating Vietnam
and maintaining Khmer autonomy,
is to rapidly change the country,
both in terms of how food is produced and how,
like to, and to do this kind of,
they're very motivated by these ideas they'd taken from Mao
that kind of became the great leap forward in China of like,
well, what if we do industrialism,
but it's like everybody's backyard is helping to like make
different sort of industrial products, right?
Right. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The, I guess it's just DIY approach to making, you know,
your AKs and your plate armor and such.
And you can kind of do that with guns,
but not like the guns you need to win a modern war, right?
You're not gonna be like making an SPG-9
in your backyard or whatever fucking shit.
Speaking of making recoilless rifles in your backyard,
our sponsors will teach you how.
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Yeah, freedom. Fuck.
Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley Season 1.
I just knew him as a kid.
Long silent voices from his past came forward.
And he was just staring at me.
And they had secrets of their own to share.
Gilbert King, I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott.
I was no longer just telling the story.
I was part of it.
Every time I hear about my dad,
it's, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil.
I was becoming the bridge between a killer and the son he'd never known.
If the cops and everything would have done their job properly,
my dad would have been in jail. I would have never existed.
I never expected to find myself in this place.
Now, I need to tell you how I got here.
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer.
Bone Valley Season 2, Jeremy.
Jeremy, I want to tell you something.
Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley Season 2 on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to hear the entire new season ad-free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lava
for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Soledad O'Brien and on my podcast Murder on the Towpath, I'm taking you back to the 1960s.
Mary Pinchot Meyer was a painter who lived in Georgetown in Washington, D.C. Every day,
she took a daily walk along the towpath near the E&O canal.
So when she was killed in a wealthy neighborhood...
She had been shot twice in the head and in the back behind the heart.
The police arrived in a heartbeat.
Within 40 minutes, a man named Raymond Crump Jr. was arrested.
He was found nearby, soaking wet wet and he was black. Only one
woman dared defend him. Civil rights lawyer, Dubby Roundtree. Join me as we
unravel this story with a crazy twist because what most people didn't know is
that Mary was connected to a very powerful man. I pledge you that we shall neither commit
nor provoke aggression.
John F. Kennedy.
Listen to Murder on the Toe Path with Soledad O'Brien
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, my name's Jay Shetty, and I'm the host of On Purpose.
I just had a great conversation with Michelle Obama. Hey, my name is Jay Shetty and I'm the host of On Purpose.
I just had a great conversation with Michelle Obama.
To whom much is given, much is expected.
The guilt comes from am I doing enough?
Me, Michelle Obama, to say that to a therapist.
So let's unpack that.
Former First Lady Michelle Obama and someone who knows her best, her big brother Craig
will be hosting a podcast called IMO.
What have been your personal journeys with therapy?
We need to be coached throughout our lives.
My mom wanted us to be independent children.
And she would always tell me, stop worrying about your sister.
Having been the first lady of the entire country
and representing the country in the world,
I couldn't afford to have that kind of disdain. What would you say has been the most
hardest recent test of fear? Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey kids, it's me, Kevin Smith. And it's me,
Harley Quinn Smith. That's my daughter, man, who my wife has always said is just a beardless, d***less version
of me.
And that's the name of our podcast, Beardless D***less Me.
I'm the old one.
I'm the young one.
And every week we try to make each other laugh really hard.
Sounds innocent, doesn't it?
A lot of cussing, a lot of bad language.
It's for adults only.
Or listen to it with your kid.
It could be a family show.
We're not quite sure.
We're still figuring it out.
It's a work in progress.
Listen to Beardless **** with me on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever.
You get your podcast.
Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh uhhhhh ahhhh ahhhh a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a Okay, so cities like the capital have no place in Pol Pot's radical view of the future of the country, which needs to be immediately changed on a fundamental level in order to
survive and defeat the Vietnamese.
So there's this plan that's hatched by Pol Pot and the leadership of the party to completely
reform Cambodian society in order to make it capable of surviving.
And Pol Pot names this plan Year Zero. In April of 1975, they declare this openly.
And this Year Zero concept, we talked about this in the earlier episodes,
it's based in part on Pol Pot's understanding of the French Revolution,
right? As well as reading from guys like Thomas Paine, because he does read like American revolutionaries
too.
In 1776, Paine had published this, quote, we have it in our power to begin the world
over again.
A situation similar to the present hath not happened since the days of Noah until now.
The birthday of a new world is at hand.
This is the kind of thing you hear in some optimistic revolutionary tracts, especially
in the headiness of we've defeated the regime.
We have this chance for a total break with history.
You can think about the end of history stuff that was being said when the Soviet Union
fell. history stuff that was being said at the, when the Soviet Union fell, there's this headiness of like,
well, maybe we're done competing with like,
what kind of systems are going to work?
Maybe we've, maybe we can,
we're entering into this fundamentally new world
that's like represents this real break of continuity.
And that means we're never going to have to worry about
like going back to any of the bad old days
or the problems that we had struggled against.
There's no back.
Yeah, there's no way of going back, right?
Yeah. We finally did it.
Oh man.
I mean, obviously in hindsight,
but like never has that sentiment been expressed
and had not been a true psycho saying it.
Right, right, right.
I mean, I love me some Thomas Payne,
but you should look at the rest of his life.
This wasn't, I mean, obviously we, the US became a slave state, right, right. I mean, I love me some Thomas Paine, but you should look at the rest of his life. This wasn't, I mean, obviously we,
the US became a slave state, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm gonna quote from an article
written by Adris Ayers here.
Quote, it is evident that the Khmer Rouge
in deliberate and skillful fashion
drew on history for political ends.
Their leadership made repeated reference
to the importance of grasping the wheel of history
and how history would crush those who stood in the way of development.
I've heard Musk say some similar things.
In 1976, as part of Pol Pot's consolidation of personal power, official party historiography
was revised with an eye to the older Indo-Chinese guerrilla fractions within the movement by
moving the date of the party's founding from 1951 to 1960.
At a meeting of the central committee in March 1976,
it was noted with regard to historiography
that we must rearrange the history of the party
into something clean and perfect.
Do not use 1951.
Make a clean break.
So again, there's this, even our real history
of our real movement that one isn't good enough,
we have to like, and if, if you're ever in a,
if you're ever finding your movement is needing to like alter the very basic
foundation of reality for your ideas to work, maybe bounce.
I mean, I get the B side of all the cool names is like a sort of juvenile
relationship to like your own story, which is kind of weirdly
in evident here.
In evidence here, we're like, why?
Yeah, this is, and this is why like we talk about the reason why I identify more as an
anarchist than anything else isn't because like I have some great plan based on some
thinker for like, this is the perfect way to reorder society.
And if we did this exact thing based on this exact book, it would clearly work without
any problems.
I feel that way because like anarchists have diagnosed the problem in a way that I'd never
seen be wrong.
And the problem is, if you give people lots of power, they do horrible things.
Right?
Like, that's, that's, that's kind of where I get into it from, right?
And now Pol Pot has all the power.
Yeah, every conceivable dimension that that power can be gained from is still bad.
Yes, and when you have all of the power and you have this very strict idea of this,
we need to do this exact thing, and this exact thing is the only thing that can save us. And then the world doesn't sort of change
the way you think it ought to
based on your political beliefs.
Well, you're just gonna start killing people.
And that's sure enough, what's gonna happen here.
So the project to make a clean break with history,
this whole year zero thing is urgent, right?
Because unless they can do this
before Vietnam swallows them up, They're fucked the internal Marxist analysis
Also indicated that Cambodia had to proceed directly from feudalism to communism within four years
Which they called the super great leap forward
We already know this fucking works for Mao and we're like, but what do we make it like the super great leap for it's like
You know Mario Brothers sucked ass,
but once we added a super, it was finally good.
Just do the thing that already didn't work but more.
Yeah, Mao's just sitting there like,
God damn it, why didn't I put a super in front of it?
Fuck the backyard furnaces, would've worked.
Super sparrow murdering.
In policy terms, year zero had a fairly narrow meaning.
The cities, which were dominant, as I stated in the earlier
episodes, the cities have a mat, like they're not
like overwhelmingly Khmer like the rest of the country is.
They have a lot of Vietnamese and Chinese traders.
And a lot of the Khmer that live there are the new people,
right?
They are educated Khmer who come from families with money, who have gone through Western
education, who have often been educated overseas, and have thus been unforgivably tainted by
foreign influence.
Now you may also notice these new people that he's saying we need to expel from the cities
are Pol Pot and his friends, right?
Right. Right? Right.
Still, the new people have to either assimilate
to the base people and the base people
are Khmer peasant farmers or die.
And the distinct preference of the Khmer Rouge
is that they die.
Andras Ayers describes how jarringly rapid this process is.
Quote, money, markets and private property,
schools, institutes of higher education, markets and private properties, schools, institutes of higher
education, newspapers and religious institutions, all were immediately abolished after the seizure
of power.
Early eyewitness accounts relate how the hospital in Phnom Penh was emptied of patients, how
the national bank was set on fire, money burned in the streets.
Immediately after the victory proclamation, book burnings were orchestrated in front of
the National Library and the school of René Descartes.
The country's borders were closed immediately and the cleansing of the country from foreign
influences began by deporting foreigners and domestic minorities such as Vietnamese, Muslim
Khmer, Chinese Khmer, Thais, and Europeans.
It was also officially announced that the individual would be abolished.
The traditional family would be replaced by the movement. In order to create a completely conflict-free society,
revolutionaries were officially instructed not to have a personality. The individual
was continually counterposed to the people, with the former representing division, factionalism,
inequality, bourgeoisie values, and foreign influence. The people, meanwhile, embodied its polar opposite, something entirely pure, redemption,
the extermination of particularity and contingency, and the realization of absolute freedom, equality,
and fraternity through complete absorption into the Angkar.
And that's the people, that's the valk, right?
You know, the Nazis had the Volk, the Angkar is that
for the Khmer Rouge, it's close enough at least, right?
And yeah, revolutionaries are not allowed
to have personalities.
I mean, I know we're coming at this
from a different time and hindsight,
but it's so hard for me to even hear the version
of that speech that's stirring or like motivating. It's so hard for me to even hear the version of that speech that's stirring or motivating.
It's really wild.
And it's motivating to the people
who have been drinking the Kool-Aid,
because again, they've been in these,
they started out in these circles
where it's just them and their friends
continually radicalizing each other further
and not really listening to outside people, right?
And then they moved to the jungle and become rev...
So not only are they all like trauma bonding,
getting bombed together,
but they're continuing to talk out these ideas
and just take themselves like,
this isn't for other people, right?
The point is not to inspire other people, right?
Right, right, right.
Shit.
And it is this, you get, this is an issue I have with like some people that I otherwise
agree with a lot.
There's talk among certain leftist tendencies about the concept of the abolition of the
family.
And what they tend to mean in the modern era is looking at a lot of how much of right wing
policy is based upon the idea that parents own their children, right?
And that literally like anything a parent wants for their kid, that's all that should
matter, right?
Which leads to a lot of heinous abuse.
Some of the worst things that happen in our society is because of our conception of the
family as this thing in which the parents, primarily the father, possesses everyone else,
right?
And wanting to abolish that idea of the family is good.
But when you start framing it as family,
it's going to bring this up.
People are gonna think about what the Khmer Rouge did
as opposed to being like,
I don't think parents should be allowed to poison their kids
because they have autism, right?
Right, right, right, right.
You know?
But anyway, we need to get into a random.
The difference between absolute power
and within the family and this is not a unit that
should exist.
Yeah, yeah.
Optics is not good.
Yeah, yeah.
It's an optical issue, I think.
But that's not, you know, the Khmer Rouge is not wanting to abolish the family because
there's anything similar to the issue we have with the parental rights movement in the US, right?
The Khmer Rouge wants to abolish the family
because all they want to exist is the party.
And this idea of almost like a collective consciousness,
if we can wipe out enough individualism,
then like we will have this kind of pure individual
close to nature, this like idolized,
everyone will be the idolized Khmer peasant farmer,
who by the way, Pol Pot's parents had fought tooth and nail
to make sure he never had to be.
Nah, nah.
Don't worry about that.
So as soon as they start doing all of this stuff,
people begin to starve, right?
There's so much disruption.
There's disruption to the way food is grown
and the way it's transmitted.
All of these networks that had existed.
It's one thing if you're like,
we wanna get rid of capitalism
and we want to get rid of things
being entirely governed by the financial motive.
But you have to account for the fact that like,
well, but that's how all of the food gets places right now.
And like, do you not have a,
you have to have a real granular plan
for how you're gonna make sure food keeps getting to people.
Otherwise, everyone's going to die. And that's what starts to happen.
And people also start to starve to death as they are forced at gunpoint out of the cities.
Nampin had flooded to significantly higher than its pre-war population because of the war going on. And now these people are being marched out and no one's allowed to take anything.
People are being dragged out at gunpoint.
In some cases, their houses are being burnt down.
They don't have a lot of baggage, right?
And it's not like people had a lot, were keeping like food on hand.
This isn't like a prepper culture.
Folks don't have like freeze dried shit in their houses.
So people are just being forced to walk.
A lot of, a number of them have been pulled out of hospitals and they're just dying.
They're dying by the tens of thousands alongside the road.
And as people march out, they're just seeing these piles of corpses of their neighbors
and family members bloating in the sun.
It's just a really hideous nightmare for all of these people.
And these fighters that they're meeting are folks largely who'd come from like rural areas in the jungle.
They're very young.
A lot of them are teenagers who have been raised on this war.
And they, number one, don't have a lot of sympathy for these people in the cities who
they've seen as the enemy.
The capital is what they've been fighting, if you want to think it like Hunger Games
terms here.
And also they've been told these are the new people, right?
These are the enemy.
We do have to get rid of them one way or another. So if you kill these people, if you shoot them by
the side of the road, if they starve to death, you're helping to bring about, you're helping to
save the Khmer people, right? While most of the deaths under the new regime are caused by disease
or famine, they're all intentional. These are all the result of policies set by Pol Pot and his comrades.
The expectation of these policies was mass dying.
The stage had been set for this in the years leading up to the Capitol's fall by a process
of what is called by genocide scholars, toxification, and specifically toxification through Khmer
Rouge propaganda.
Toxification, this is a process you can watch happen right now in your very own country, and specifically toxification through Khmer Rouge propaganda.
Toxification is a process you can watch happen right now in your very own country, presuming
you live in the United States, but well, we're not the only one.
Well, a couple other countries, yeah.
Quite a few other countries.
We can talk about some recent Supreme Court rulings in the UK.
Toxification is a process often seen in genocide whereby groups of people are depicted as inherently
poisonous to the well-being of the
body politic, the real people of a community. Soldiers are not in general born willing to
fill mass graves or to march an entire city out of their homes and die, right? They're pushed,
they're gotten to that point when they have been convinced that doing so is either a form of self-defense
or a way to fight their enemy or both.
That's what toxification does.
There's a very good article on this process called Toxification and the Khmer Rouge Genocide
or Auto Genocide.
You'll hear both terms.
Published in the Journal of Terrorism and Political Violence by Timothy Williams and
Rhiannon Nielsen.
I recommend reading the whole thing.
It's a very good article and it's a very important article.
It will be kind of chilling in light of things happening in our present world, but it ought
to be.
And it details how the messaging from Pol Pot on down through the Khmer Rouge hierarchy
seeded the militant population with the kind of toxic attitudes that are a necessary precursor to
mass killing.
The first people targeted specifically for mass execution were those who had bought into
and succeeded under the capitalist system.
These were the budding intelligentsia of whom Pol Pot himself had been a member.
Professors, lawyers, business owners, government officials.
Pol Pot called them the internal enemy or super traders. You really
like super. You hear a lot of that. Obviously, this includes people who had been in the military
of law and all. Right. And the idea was that and this is Pol Pot's writing, anyone with
money quote, owed the communist party a blood debt. Right. So these are, this is the first
stage and it's pretty easy to get
people on board with killing a lot of these folks. That said, there's not many of them.
And once you start mass killing, you don't tend to stop. So next, in 1976, Pol Pot turned the eyes
and guns of his men on the quote unquote treacherous elements. He accused of causing sickness within the
party. These ugly microbes had to be destroyed before they rotted democratic Kampuchea, which is
what they're calling Cambodia now, right?
Like once the virus takes over, it becomes, goes from the Khmer Republic to democratic
Kampuchea.
And Pol Pot writes of these ugly microbes, quote, what is infected must be cut.
What is rotten must be removed.
It isn't enough to cut down a bad plant.
It must be uprooted.
And you see this a lot in genocidal language, right?
You know, this is like Hitler calling the Jews the syphilitic bacillus, right?
Yeah.
Or, you know, any Thanos line.
Any Thanos line.
It's like, again, it's just so hard to put myself in the mindset
where you hear this and you're like, let's go.
It's you also get this is something we're hearing right now with
the way mental illness and things that are called mental illness is this
is being discussed by the right.
And it's there's big news right now about the fact that
RFK Junior is putting trying. is trying to use government databases
to put together a list of everyone with autism.
That's how it's being spread on social media.
The actual story is even, I would argue, even a little worse than that, which is that they
are attempting to put together a database of everybody who has been diagnosed with any
kind of mental health condition, who is on any kind of medication.
It's even broader than just that.
And part of what's going on here is that there's a big right-wing campaign to blame gun violence
on the mentally ill.
And another part of it is that there's a desire to reclassify being transgender and eventually
even being LGBT as a mental illness, in part because those people can be disarmed.
It's disgusting. LGBT as a mental illness, in part because those people can be disarmed, in part because
you can put those people in facilities or whatever.
I tend to think that the goal that a lot of these people are thinking towards is less
Nazi-style death camps and gas fans and more a Judge Rotenberg Center on every corner,
if you want to go back to our Judge Rotenberg Center episodes, but we'll be talking about
that in other days. But I bring this up to say this is a constant when regimes begin the process that can end
in mass killing.
And I don't think that that's an inevitable state of affairs for us here, but I think
people need to be very aware of that because the similarities between these situations
are not inconsequential.
It's it's necessary, but not sufficient. But it is necessary. Yeah.
For the death camps version. Yeah.
So Pol Pot argued that these diseased elements of the populace had to be purified so that year
zero could ensure a Maoist elimination of contradiction.
Turning in counter revolutionary elements became a way to get ahead, or to protect yourself.
Cadres, which are like members of the party, are rewarded for their ability to purge the
enemy within.
Per that article by Williams and Nielsen, violence became a part of everyday life, and
punishment for infringence of the minutely planned details of society were draconian,
often costing people their lives, particularly as most mistakes, such as foraging for food
or not eating with the collective, were immediately interpreted as evidence of counter-revolutionary
tendencies.
Although anyone could fall victim to the system, prime targets for elimination were ethnic
Cham and Vietnamese minorities, former soldiers or officials under the La Ngo regime, intellectuals
or others deemed not to fit into a peasant society, as well as any person whom the regime
believed to be an internal enemy, mostly associated with being an agent of the CIA, KGB or the
Vietnamese secret service.
And I think it's so interesting, like part of this is there's such a hatred of this concept
of being an individual that even if you're like foraging for food to stop you and your family from starving, that's individualist behavior and you have to be killed for it.
Right?
God.
Yeah.
I mean, but also it's like like all those rules.
I feel like most of those times are asymmetrically applied for, you know, whatever means want
to be accomplished.
And that's key.
And a lot of the people being who these rules are being applied to,
it's not even necessarily that they did the thing
or that they were the only person doing the thing.
A lot of people do the same stuff and get away with it.
It's that they had pissed someone else up
for another reason, someone wanted their stuff.
There's a lot of score settling that happens
anytime this kind of shit's going down.
And this gets me to an important side of fact
about what happened in Cambodia.
You will usually see the mass killing in Cambodia referred to either as the Cambodian genocide
or the Khmer Rouge genocide.
This term is not, I think, accurate to describe most of what happened because the vast majority
of the people who died as a part of these year zero policies, were Khmer.
And the goal of the regime was not to wipe out the Khmer, right?
It was to make them stronger and ultimately more numerous.
And it was just a disastrous failure, right?
The term auto genocide, which was coined by author Jean Lacoutre, something like that,
Jean Lacoutre, something like that, Jean Lacouter.
And auto genocide was coined by this French author
in order to separate the unique circumstances
of mass killing in Cambodia from the Holocaust
and other traditional genocides.
Again, there's some issues with that even
because genocide is not fully the right term
for what Pol Pot and his peers are trying to do
to the Khmer people, right?
Because their goal is to ensure the survival
of their race, right?
You can come down on however you like
on what we should call this, right?
Right.
But I should note that while what the most
of the killing the regime does
and most of who the regime kills are Khmer.
While I don't know that it's right to say that like genocide
is just strictly textually the right way to describe that.
There are genocides that are being committed
by the Khmer Rouge.
Like normal, like straight up dictionary genocides, right?
I mean, I wonder if it just comes down to like,
it's sort of functionally the same type of murder. And I wonder if it just comes down to like, it's sort of functionally the same type of murder,
and I wonder if the argument is sort of like,
every genocide is actually politically motivated,
like at least somewhat external
to the stated aims of the genocide.
So like, what does it really matter?
That's absolutely the case.
I think kind of the issue comes down to like,
well, they weren't trying to wipe out the Khmer, right?
Like they just thought that wiping out these people which wound up being a huge chunk of the Khmer would
strengthen things like what do you call that?
I'd you know, I to a degree doesn't matter
It's certainly not to the dead
But I do want to make a point that there were just straight-up normal genocides occurring too in this mass killing
just straight up normal genocides occurring too in this mass killing. That paragraph I read a little earlier mentioned both the Cham and the Vietnamese ethnic minorities
in Cambodia being targeted.
And I think all of these different kind of non-Khmer people are like five to 10% maybe
of the total number of dead.
But when you look at these as populations, these different ethnic populations that are
being targeted are killed
in a way that makes them some of the most total genocides I've ever studied.
Roughly 50% of Chinese Cambodians, and these are not like necessarily, some of them are
Chinese immigrants, but these are people who are ethnically Chinese and live in Cambodia.
50% of the pre-war population is executed or starved in a three-year period.
And they got off light compared to the ethnically Vietnamese Cambodians.
I'm going to quote from that article again.
In particular, the Khmer Rouge propaganda organs described the Vietnamese as toxic to
democratic Kampuchea by stating that their goal is to swallow Cambodia's territory and
force Cambodia into an Indo-Chinese
federation under its control.
Vietnamese were portrayed as quintessentially evil and lethal to the democratic Kampuchea.
Radio broadcasts described the Vietnamese as living concealed among the population,
infiltrating, sabotaging, and destroying the communist regime, therefore being toxic to
the ideal.
Further broadcasts spoke of the need to weed out and exterminate the enemy planted within the cooperatives, and reminded civilians you
are not fighting only against Vietnamese soldiers, but the whole of Vietnam. So spare nothing
and no one. According to Pol Pot, the Vietnamese are a black dragon that spits its poison.
The overall death toll for Vietnamese Khmer's was nearly 100 percent of the population.
Jesus. Yes.
Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, that this is about the most total genocide
I've ever heard of the Vietnamese Khmer in particular. Right. Right.
Yeah. I mean, that's like.
Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, I guess I still I'm just like not still, but like, like it is like.
It's hard to wrap your head around. Yeah.
It's hard to wrap my head around it, but also like hard to like be like
this can't be the I mean, it just feels like the stated goal
can't be the actual goal, I guess.
But like, I don't I don't know what I think the actual goal is anyway, but
you know what I mean? I'm just like, it's it has to just be sort of a vague notion of power.
It feels like it's it's like killing your enemies like that for the well, because the people at the
top giving the orders live these lives of the mind where their whole ego is in, I am intelligent, I
understand how things really work and I have this plan, right?
And everything about their personality is wrapped up in that plan.
So it has to work and they simply can't accept, they can't even let themselves look at a
reality that would lead to that being questioned.
But then they're passing these orders down to people
who number one, just the desperation of their life,
the violence they've seen makes certain things
just less abhorrent to them,
but also there's room for them to advance.
The more of these people they kill,
the more stuff they get,
the more they move up, the safer they are,
the more food they get, right?
And that's kinda how-
It just creates fucked up incentives that-
Yes, yes.
Yeah, of course.
And the incentives come because of the fucked up beliefs
of the leaders and the desperation of the people
doing a lot of the killing makes them respond better
than the incentives, you know?
Right, right, right.
Which is, by the way, this is not every genocide.
For example, I wouldn't talk about the members
of the SS this way, because they're not, right?
Right, right,
right?
Right, right, right.
But this is what's happening in Cambodia.
Speaking of what's happening in Cambodia, presumably someone in Cambodia is listening
to this podcast.
And if so, look, hi.
Hi.
You didn't say speaking of mass killing or anything like that.
So this is one of the better ad athros.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Visit Cambodia or not.
I don't know.
I haven't been.
I hope, I hear it's nice.
Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed
to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley season one.
I just knew him as a kid.
Long silent voices from his past came forward.
And he was just staring at me.
And they had secrets of their own to share.
Um, Gilbert King? I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott.
I was no longer just telling the story. I was part of it.
Every time I hear about my dad, it's, oh, he's a killer.
He's just straight evil.
I was becoming the bridge between a killer and the son he'd never known.
If the cops and everything would have done their job properly, my dad would have been
in jail.
I would have never existed.
I never expected to find myself in this place.
Now, I need to tell you how I got here.
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer.
Bone Valley, season two.
Jeremy.
Jeremy, I wanna tell you something.
Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley, season two,
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And to hear the entire new season,
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I'm Soledad O'Brien, and on my podcast, Murder on the Towpath, I'm taking you back to the 1960s.
Mary Pinchot Meyer was a painter who lived in Georgetown in Washington, D.C.
Harry Pinchot-Meyer was a painter who lived in Georgetown in Washington, D.C. Every day she took a daily walk along a towpath near the E&O Canal.
So when she was killed in a wealthy neighborhood...
She had been shot twice in the head and in the back behind the heart.
The police arrived in a heartbeat.
Within 40 minutes, a man named Raymond Crump Jr. was arrested.
He was found nearby, soaking wet, and he was black.
Only one woman dared defend him,
civil rights lawyer, Dovey Roundtree.
Join me as we unravel this story with a crazy twist,
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I pledge you that we shall neither commit nor provoke aggression. John F. Kennedy. Listen to
Murder on the Toe Path with Soledad O'Brien on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcast. to a therapist. So let's unpack that. Former first lady, Michelle Obama, and someone who knows her best, her big brother, Craig,
will be hosting a podcast called IMO.
What have been your personal journeys with therapy?
We need to be coached throughout our lives.
My mom wanted us to be independent children.
And she would always tell me, stop worrying
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Having been the first lady of the entire country
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What would you say has been the most hardest
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Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty
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Hey kids, it's me, Kevin Smith.
And it's me, Harley Quinn Smith.
That's my daughter, man, who my wife has always said
is just a beardless, d***less version of me.
And that's the name of our podcast,
Beardless, D***less Me.
I'm the old one.
I'm the young one.
And every week we try to make each other laugh really hard.
Sounds innocent, doesn't it?
A lot of cussing, a lot of bad language.
It's for adults only.
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listen to it with your kid. Could be a family show. We're not quite sure. We're still figuring it out.
It's a work in progress.
Listen to Beardless, me on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And we're back. So the Cham were another non-Khmer ethnic group that was targeted by the regime and to make matters worse
the Chams are Muslim, right and
Pol Pot considered Islam to be inherently
reactionary, right a fundamental enemy of communism.
The large part of the reason why is that Muslims pray five times a day, right?
And Pol Pot describes this as them shirking their responsibility to work, right?
This is an individualist thing and
it's also stopping you from participating in the national project as much as everyone
else. The chams are just thus a drain on the ideal communist state that he wanted to form.
So Pol Pot sent his men to wipe out every cham village they could find and roughly 50%
of Cham Cambodians had been killed by the late 1979.
Now what's interesting to me is that he also targets the Buddhists, or at least the Buddhist
clergy.
This is kind of weird because he had a really good time at the monastery.
He described it his whole life as a positive experience.
But as leader of Democratic Campuchia, he describes Buddhist monks as, quote, parasites
who eat the rice of the people.
Monks are ordered to carry out hard labor and the vast majority of monks who had existed
pre-war are killed by the Khmer Rouge.
Williams and Nielsen cite an internal Rouge document that brags a 90 to 95% success rate
in wiping out the Buddhist monk population. So again, almost totally takes out the Buddhist clergy
within like the Theravada Buddhist clergy within Cambodia.
Yeah.
It just feels like it's also like,
does this sort of thing snowball?
Like once you get started with the mass killing,
then you're like,
well, who else can we throw on the list?
Yeah, of course.
Yeah, once you pop, the fun don't stop.
Right, right, right, right.
Popping here is putting people in mass graves.
Yeah.
Now, and this is why it's so important to start it,
to stop it from starting.
Now again, 90% or so of the people killed
by the Khmer Rouge are Khmer.
Most die as a result of these kind of insane agricultural
and land reform policies, the mass depopulation,
all the starvation and stuff that goes along with it.
But as time goes on, an increasing number of people are being tortured and killed by
the regime.
And past the initial point where they're punishing the capitalists and the members of Law and
Null's government, most of the people being tortured and killed directly are former party
members and communists and stuff, right?
A lot of them are people who had been part of Pol Pot's old reading circle back in Paris,
right?
They are wiping out, you know, every revolution devours its young, but they are doing that
in like famous time here.
For an idea of how deadly it was to have agreed with Pol Pot back when he was Salah Tsar,
or even during the victory of the Khmer Rouge
over the Lanol government,
of the original 22 members of the Central Committee
for the Democratic Kampuchea Party,
which is who officially governed after the end of the war,
six lasted to the end of the regime
without being killed or tortured,
and the vast majority of those were killed.
The very few people who survived owed their lives
to their sworn enemies, the Vietnamese army,
who eventually liberated Tuol Slang,
which was the prison for specifically,
like after a point, specifically the prison
for like party members who were disloyal.
To eliminate confusion, Tuol Slang is more commonly known
as Security Prison 21 or S21.
In terms of its level of fame to people who read about this, tual slang or S21 is the
Auschwitz of Cambodia.
It's not on that scale, it's not that big a camp, but its death toll is is. Yeah, is that like sort of I mean,
I know it's like, as you just said, like, you know, every revolution devourers,
it's young, but that still feels like a high percentage of like, yeah, it is.
Yeah. Like getting that.
And I think part of it's just because none of this is working and someone has to pay and part of it is again just because
Once you start killing like this
Yeah, you keep you can't stop right in part because stopping then you have to deal with the fact that nothing worked
That everything was a failure that your whole life and all of your beliefs are wrong and no one at the top can take so
We there must be someone there must be a trader.
There must be somebody's fucking with us, right?
Is that like unique-ish to Pol Pot as far as like,
yeah, right, it's just how it goes, of course.
Well, it's how it goes sometimes.
Cause like the Nazis don't really,
like the Nazis target other Nazis.
You know, there's the Knight of Long Knives,
but that was more of like a centralizing,
even more power and dealing with like a chunk
of the movement that didn't really agree with Hitler anymore.
This is pretty, it's not unique,
but it's not common for it to be like this, right?
Obviously in the French Revolution,
stuff like this happens,
but the swiftness and the centrality
with which loyal members of the party
are targeted and tortured and executed is
like, noteworthy here.
If you can't be one of the boys, then who can you be?
There's really no safety here, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it was between one of like S21, this prison that's kind of the most famous of the prisons
here, was between one of between 150 and a
little less than 200 torture and execution centers built on Pol Pot's orders by the Santa
Ball, the secret police.
Roughly 20,000 people were imprisoned in S-21 over the course of the regime.
There's some debate on this number between 12 and 20,000.
There's never more than about a thousand to 1500 people at a time though.
An S-21 is built out of a former school, which is I guess extra chilling given that
Pol Pot was a school teacher.
And when I say a thousand to fifteen hundred at a time, twenty thousand total, people aren't
released alive from S-21.
This is a death camp.
And while it started by going after again, like agents of the old regime, yada, yada,
yada, its prime purpose for most of its history is again, agents of the old regime, yada, yada, yada.
Its prime purpose for most of its history is purging members of the leadership cast
as well as members of the party alongside their entire families.
If you are somebody, a mid-level guy in the Khmer Rouge who gets targeted and put in S21,
your kids and your wife are going to, even if they're babies, they'll take your infant
in there and kill them and torture them, right?
And again, it's this like, well, we really have to make a statement, you know, that the
stakes are so high, we really have to scare people away from not being loyal members of
the party.
Now, we're not going to be dealing with S21 in as much length as we ought to, or the prison
system in general.
This is because it really does deserve its own episodes.
Our friend Joe Kasabian of the Lions Led by Donkeys podcast has covered it at length.
I recommend his work.
Given that I'm trying to focus this on Pol Pot, who was a major architect of this prison
system, I hope you'll forgive my brevity as I quote from a detailed fact sheet put together
by the Documentation Center of Cambodia for the Cambodia Tribunal.
And this is talking about the people who were sent to S21.
They were accused of collaborating with foreign governments, spying for the CIA and the KGB,
and hence betraying Ankhar.
Prisoners were also believed to have conspired with others and thus were forced to reveal
their strings of traitors, which sometimes included over 100 names.
The interrogators at S21 based their technique on a list of 10 security regulations which
included, while getting lashes or electrification, you must not cry at all.
Although prisoners often had no idea why they had been arrested, interrogators forced them
to confess their crimes.
If they did not confess, they would be subjected to physical and psychological torture.
However, after having confessed, they were marked for execution.
Initially, prisoners were killed on the grounds of the prison, but as the volume and stench of the
corpses rapidly increased and became unbearable, prisoners were then trucked en masse to an open
field located 15 kilometers away, known as Crow's Feet Pond, to be killed. Waiting at the field was
a group of about 10 young men led by Tang. Tang, in his early 20s and his team of teenagers,
lived in a two-story
house that was built on the field in 1977. They were informed ahead of time of the number
of prisoners that would arrive so that they could dig the graves in advance. The shocking
figures commonly associated with the prison, 14,000 killed and seven survivors, rank the
prison as one of the most lethal in the 20th century.
Jesus.
Yeah. Oh, also, I mean, the detail,
obviously, every atrocity has someone actually doing it. But like, just this dude's job.
Yeah. Yeah. Every day you get told how many corpses you got to dig holes for and you and
your fellow teenagers get out of the house until I guess early 20s. Yeah, and his team was teenagers. Yeah, and just doing it every day.
It's like, you know, it's so hard to fathom
for me as a lazy person.
He's probably like, well, this is a pretty good job
giving things.
I'm probably not gonna get targeted.
They're not gonna go after the gravedigger, right?
They need me digging graves.
Now, while S21 was operating,
Pol Pot himself made regular statements and writings to Western
supporters.
And this is a key aspect of what's happening.
Well, all this nightmare is unfolding in Cambodia.
There's stuff getting out, but not a lot of it, right?
At least initially.
You know, as time goes on, more does start to get out about how horrifying what's happening
is.
But the first stuff that gets out
is propaganda from Pol Pot and the regime to Western supporters where they're talking about
the utopia that we're building. We are finally creating the communist, the agrarian peasant
communist utopia that everyone's hoped would happen. We've made a totally equal society. Here it is in democratic Kampuchea. We've done it, right? And there were a not insignificant number of
Western leftists who believed this bullshit, right? And who would argue that
any evidence to the contrary is the evidence of how hideous what's happening,
of the killing fields as they're called, start to come out. There's a lot of
folks who are like, well, that's just capitalist propaganda. That's the CIA. Nothing bad's happening in Cambodia. One of
the organizations that Pol Pot spread his propaganda towards was the Belgian Kampuchea
Society who interviewed Pol Pot in 1978. He told them, we don't have prisons and we don't
even use the word prison. Bad elements in our society are simply given productive tasks to do.
Dipshits buy this stuff, right?
As they always do, as they do in the present day.
By all accounts, the most famous of these dipshits was an English writer and professor
named Malcolm Caldwell.
Caldwell had been a significant figure on the British left in the 60s and 70s.
He spends two years as the chair of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.
He is an avid anti-Vietnam War protestor, and in that regard his actions were admirable
because the Vietnam War deserved protesting.
He wrote regularly for peace news in support of different anti-colonial
movements and a number of them he was very right to support. Caldwell is a figure who in some ways
resembles a lot of modern genocide denier types on the left, although I think he was a much better
person because again, he's not comprehensively that and he's not being like paid by anybody.
Yeah. This is a true believer who lacks a tremendous degree
of judgment in a very key area.
But also, from his perspective, you kind of imagine,
you're largely right.
I mean, in this case, you're wrong about the CIA propaganda.
Up until Cambodia, you're largely right.
Yeah, most fucking US is doing hella war crimes
and being supported by a lot of people in Vietnam
and doing them.
And yeah.
So like, you're like, yeah.
It's like you see the leg he has to stand on
even though he's wrong.
It is one of, it's very tempting.
And there's a degree to which you should compare him
to folks like the people who write for the gray zone,
which is a faux journalistic institution
that spent years arguing Bashar al-Assad
never gassed its own people,
made fun of anyone who was saying Russia was about to invade Ukraine, right?
They're those motherfuckers.
Right.
Caldwell, there's a degree to which you should compare into them, but also people who knew
him said he was kind and empathetic, and he was in a lot of cases on the right side of
things.
And he gets into Cambodian politics for a sympathetic reason, which is that he's arguing against this nightmarish
US bombing campaign, which is a war crime.
And on the other side of this, by the way,
I found a fucking Washington Post column
looking, writing about this in which the author was like,
oh, it's, you know, what's really fucked up
is the people who slandered the US for bombing Cambodia
to try to stop the Khmer Rouge from coming into being.
That's not why we fucking did it, you dipshit.
Like, fuck you.
For one thing, that's part of what made them possible.
For the other thing, that was never the fucking goal.
Like, fuck you, fuck you.
Just so many people I fucking hate.
Anyway.
Caldwell was loved by his students and it was recalled even by people
who disagreed with him as a gentle person who was tolerant of opposing views. So he was not the kind
of guy who was like, maybe he would have been if he'd had Twitter, but like was a guy who was willing
to talk about his unhinged beliefs about Cambodia with you in a polite manner. So I don't want to
depict him as a caricature, right? Now, because the Khmer Rouge beat the US-backed, law-null government, and because their claims
of agrarian equality and an idealized socialist society gelled with Caldwell's own hope of
where the world might go, he came to support them to the hilt. His friends, who at the
same time saw him as a brilliant economist, also rued his startling naivete. One peer
said, quote, he was a man with very clear theoretical
and ideological views and the empirical basis
didn't seem to worry him hugely.
Always a big warning sign.
But it might be as bad as it should work.
So why bother looking at what's happening?
Now, Caldwell did visit a lot of the regimes
that he extolled and supported.
He took regime sponsored tours of places like the USSR.
That's one of those things where it's like you are going to miss a lot of the bad stuff
the USSR is doing, but the Soviet Union is like a state that functions, right?
And there's things it did that were good.
It got the first person into space.
There were massive improvements in literacy and whatnot, in addition
to horrifying and awful things done by the... It's an actual state, right?
And so it's understandable that you could go there and see, take this sponsored tour
and just see the good stuff, right? That's not really possible in Cambodia because there's
no good stuff, right? There's nothing positive happening under the
Khmer Rouge. Yeah, the silver lining is hard to... I mean, you truly have to be a blind believer to
just go in there. Right. Per the Guardian, quote, three days before Christmas in 1978,
Malcolm Caldwell received an early present. On the final day of a two-week tour of Cambodia,
he was told that he would meet with Pol Pot. This was indeed a rare privilege. Unlike most
other communist leaders, Pol had not created a personality cult. There were no posters
of him. He was seldom seen or quoted. Many Cambodians had not even heard of him. Only
seven Westerners were ever invited to what had been renamed Democratic Campuchia, and
Caldwell was the first and only Briton.
The fact that he's invited at all is this huge honor.
So he comes and he shows up at this place
where there are other journalists,
as we'll talk about with him, there's people with him,
and they're all immediately like,
in Nam Penh being like, where are all the people?
Because some of them had been prior
to the Khmer Rouge taking over, and they're horrified.
They're like, where are the fucking human beings?
Right? Everyone's gone. Something's horribly wrong here. And Caldwell is just like so honored
that like they didn't pick any other British people. Pol Pot wants to talk to me, just me,
you know? So there are a few reasons why he was taken in and received so well. For one thing,
he had been to China. He was on good terms with the Chinese communist government
and that was Cambodia's main ally at the time.
He was also, Pol Pot was kind of in this period.
This is after there had been a series
of provoked border conflicts with Vietnam,
provoked by the Khmer Rouge,
and it was becoming increasingly clear
that Vietnam was going to invade.
And so Pol Pot was really trying
to burnish his international support.
So he suddenly wanted Westerners in, right?
And he's like, well, this guy's probably like blind enough
to ignore all the horrible shit going on, right?
This guy will do.
Yeah.
And Caldwell had just a few months
before he came to Cambodia written an article
in The Guardian in which he had basically said like,
all these reports that the Khmer Rouge
are killing people are nonsense.
One of his main sources was
the Campuchin information minister,
a guy named Hugh Nim,
who blamed the deaths on America, right?
Basically like the bombing,
like all of these people that you're saying have died,
this is due to the bombing campaign
the US had executed, right?
Now, by the time he shows up in Cambodia,
this guy that his whole article denying
the Khmer Rouge genocide is based on,
Hu Niem, has already been executed
and tortured to death by Pol Pot.
So, not a great sign.
But even so, he was aware to an extent
that the Khmer Rouge was killing people and he had
described them as quote, arch-quizzlings who knew well what their fate would be were they
to linger in Kampuchea.
So well, I don't want to caricature this guy.
You shouldn't pretend that like this dude was finding reasons to justify the killings
that he knew about, right?
Including the guy who was the source of his stupid article.
It's so crazy.
Yeah, it's nuts.
Now, there are real journalists on this trip.
And one of them, Elizabeth Becker,
she had been to Cambodia before,
things the Khmer Rouge had taken over.
And she was a very courageous
and talented war correspondent, right?
She was good at her job.
And she argued with Caldwell constantly while they're talking.
She's one of the people being like,
they're supposed to be people in this city.
Like I've seen it before, something's really bad here.
And Caldwell's, you know, giving the same line,
putting out a bunch of nonsense about like, you know,
the bold reformation of society along these utopian lines
and whatnot.
But she still liked him.
He was a very pleasant man.
She called him kind and tolerant and just deeply naive.
Quote, he didn't want to know about problems with the Khmer Rouge.
And that carried over to not wanting to know about problems between Cambodia and Vietnam.
He was stuck in 1968 or something.
Now there's a book out by this point, by the time that Caldwell comes to Cambodia about the
early stages of the Cambodian auto-genocide, whatever you want to call it, called Year
Zero.
Caldwell could have read this book.
If he had, he'd have learned, for example, that one Khmer Rouge saying expressed the
regime's goal as, quote, to completely annihilate diseases of consciousness
that got in the way of their goals.
Doing this meant getting rid of hidden enemies who, as Pol Pot put it, had sicknesses of
revolutionary consciousness.
Now Philip Short goes into more detail here, summarizing information that should have been
available to Caldwell, how he had he done this reading.
Quote, Satyarama meant an individual who failed to focus on the communist cause and was therein
portrayed as toxic to its realization.
Even without considerable evidence or proof, individuals could suddenly be classified as
toxic to the super great leap forward and accused of being class enemies with a sickness
of consciousness.
Enemies were depicted as pervasive and infecting the pure Khmer ideal. The desire to exterminate enemies grew, as did the intoxication of doing so with impunity.
Purging these contaminants was discussed as crucial to the survival of the regime.
According to propaganda, enemies were likened to an impurity that threatened the well-being
of revolutionary society.
These groups were portrayed as a lethal source of pollution that needed to be eliminated. A sort of madness had taken over the country at this point,
particularly among the Rouge cadres doing the hand-to-hand slaughtering. And for an
idea of just how deranged this gets, several militia who were interviewed later claimed
that they would eat the livers of their victims and the belief that it would give them extra
power and probably because they are also starving to death.
One of these guys is cited later as saying, they ate human liver because they wanted to
prevent themselves from being shocked by killing people.
Then they could kill people.
They wanted to change themselves to be able to kill people without pity.
Oh God.
Yeah. I mean, there's probably some level of like
just prion disease that can take over.
Like there's gotta be someone who-
You're okay with livers.
You're okay with livers.
Oh yeah, yeah.
Oh no, no, no.
I mean, just- You're good.
If you're trying to like lose your conscience,
probably giving yourself a brain disease
is not the worst way to do it.
You're generally safe. If you want to eat human beings safely, Yeah, yeah probably giving yourself a brain disease is not the worst way to do it
You're generally safe if you want to eat human beings safely like a liver delivers it like a reasonably okay
Sophie I don't want people to get fucking pre on diseases don't know no spine no bone no brain no bone marrow No brain right you know we all know this folks. I'm Sophie a lot of people
What I'm a believer in harm reduction, okay? You know, we all know this folks. Sophie, a lot of people, what I'm a believer in harm reduction. Okay. You know, all right.
Test your fentanyl. Don't eat people's spines or test your drugs for fentanyl.
Don't eat the spines. Don't test your fentanyl. Don't do fentanyl.
Okay. Um,
Caldwell could have had access to a lot of this information and he rejected it
largely on the basis
that Year Zero had been pilloried
by a critique published by Noam Chomsky.
Now this is contentious people.
Oh boy, the arguing about whether or not Chomsky
supported the Khmer Rouge or was just like,
given the information available at the time,
it's hard to tell what is true.
I'm not gonna, this is not going to be
a lengthy dissection of that
But there were arguments that that he would denied a number of the crimes being committed by the Khmer Rouge
He certainly argued that punchard the author of year zero had exaggerated the horror of what was occurring on the ground
Chomsky described it as what people were saying about the Khmer Rouge as, quote,
an unprecedented propaganda campaign to slander democratic Kampuchea via systematic distortion
of the truth. Right? Now Chomsky preferred a different book. He compared Ponchad's work
unfavorably with another book called Cambodia, Starvation and Revolution, written by George
Hildebrand and Gareth Porter, which basically is taking Khmer Rouge propaganda
and being like, hey, everything's great over there actually.
And the stuff that's bad is not their fault, right?
Right, right.
There was another book written by two Reader's Digest writers
called Murder of a Gentle Land that Chomsky also went after,
which it was not perfect.
None of the claims about what, none of the critiques
and the people talking about the auto genocide
are perfectly accurate because it's still going on, right?
But they are broadly accurate.
And Chomsky is certainly in the wrong
about what books about Cambodia to trust during this period.
Right.
But also if we hadn't, you know, we, the United States and the West hadn't put
out so much lying CIA propaganda, like this would, it wouldn't be, it would be less possible
for, for this, for this disinformation to work.
Yeah.
And this is also why I have a, I have a degree more of sympathy to Caldwell and to other people who doubted
this in this period of time, because it was such a different information environment.
There was just so much disinformation that had been put out about Vietnam, that had been
put out about what the US was doing in Cambodia, that had been put out about what the US was
doing in parts of Latin America.
Again, these people are wrong and that should be stated. But I do have less condemnation than I do about the stuff going on in the 21st century that mirrors this. There wasn't Twitter and there wasn't
more reasonable to be skeptical.
Yes.
And there's certainly, it's certainly reasonable
to initially be skeptical.
Now, again, by the point time Caldwell was on the ground
and these other people with them are like,
this city used to have people.
It's no longer like you should have known, right?
Right.
So it's generally considered or argued at least
that Chomsky is a big part of why
Caldwell
Doesn't like trust, you know punch odds book about the atrocities going on in Cambodia, you know
Whatever the truth whoever you're gonna blame for it
Caldwell at age 47 shows up in Cambodia as a pretty much a true believer, right?
And in fact, he had finished a book before he goes there called Campuchia,
a rationale for rural policy, in which he had written that the Khmer Rouge had quote,
opened vistas of hope not only for the people of Cambodia, but also for the people of other
peoples of all other poor third world countries. We'll come back to that book in a second.
So Caldwell, along with these journalists,
is escorted around the country.
They see some like staged scenes.
And again, Becker is, gets aggressive,
very brave woman with these Khmer Rouge guards
being like, I can see what you're not showing us,
like where you're blocking us from going.
I can see evidence of clear problems
because I've been here before.
What the, and she's like arguing with them.
She said later, it was so clearly awful.
One of the problems was the absence of what I saw, the absence of people.
And that's a different kind of proof to I don't see any people being executed.
Caldwell was not concerned.
He preferred to stay in the car and laugh at the clumsy photo opportunities prepared
for us, Becker wrote in her book on Cambodia.
Now at the very end of the tour, they all go back to Phnom Penh and they're hanging
out for a little bit.
They're not all that far from the S21 center, right?
This is where Caldwell is going to finally have his interview with Pol Pot.
And I'm going to quote from The Guardian again.
Caldwell remained ignorant on the Friday morning in Nampin that he was taken in a Mercedes
limousine to see Pol Pot.
The setting for the meeting was the former governor's palace on the waterfront, built
during the French colonial period.
In a grand reception room replete with fans and billowing white curtains, the two men
sat down and discussed revolutionary economic theory.
Becker had met Pol Pot earlier the same day, and in When the War Was Over, that's her
book, she writes, he was actually elegant, with a pleasing face, not handsome, but attractive.
His features were delicate and alert, and his smile nearly endearing.
The perennially shabby academic and the fastidious dictator must have made for an odd couple.
In any case, Caldwell left the meeting a happy man.
He returned to the guesthouse he was sharing with Becker and Dudman, full of praise for Pol Pot and his political outlook. We went over stuff, says Becker.
He thought he had a good conversation. He had avoided at all costs any discussion to Vietnam,
and he was looking forward to going home." So that night they have another argument,
Becker and Caldwell about Cambodia. They have dinner and they go to bed. And as far as she can
tell, he remained completely convinced that the revolution was a good thing
and that Cambodia was headed in a good direction.
She goes to bed at around 11 PM and in the middle of the night, she is woken up by what
she eventually realizes is gunfire.
She comes out of her room, she sees a young man pointing a handgun at her.
He's wearing, he's got bands of ammunition on his body. He's got a rifle on his back. She flees back into her room and locks
herself in the bathroom. And eventually when they come out, when this ends, Dudman, the other guy
there sees a bunch of guys running along the street and they find Caldwell in his room and he's been shot repeatedly.
He's dead, right?
It's still to this day, not perfectly clear.
Yeah.
Definitely it was, I mean, it's generally pretty clear.
Pol Pot ordered it.
We don't really know why.
What about this guy triggered him?
Why specifically it happened?
The Khmer Rouge doesn't admit to it,
but yeah, this guy gets killed.
And it's just kind of,
it's one of these very famous moments because he's such,
he's one of these like guys who had really been willing
to go to bat for Democratic Campuchia
and then finds himself yet another corpse
in the killing field, so to speak.
Yeah.
I don't know. I mean, you know, the other side is like, we're also living through a moment where,
like, everyone will cozy up to the dictator who demonstrably will stab you in the back
at any given opportunity and they still line up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, people, people are really like, Caldwell, above Above all else is a reminder of how easy it is to blind yourself to obvious reality,
even at your own peril, because.
Because seeing the reality is not even that you don't want to see it, it's that
seeing the reality would mean taking a hit to your ego.
It's the same thing why you've got.
There's a lot of people being like, oh, well, once these tariffs start to hit,
once the economy collapses, all of these Trump supporters will realize, you know, they'll see the light.
And like a significant chunk of Trump's voters who are not hardcore supporters, who were
the people who voted for Biden in 20, you know, who go back and forth or who like made
their decision day of.
Sure, they'll change their mind.
They'll get angry.
But the heart and core of his supporters, recognizing that they've been fucked
means recognizing they're not as smart
as they think they are.
And again, Coldwell, that's a big part of it for him.
He's a scholar, he's a smart man.
He couldn't be this wrong.
Yeah.
So, I mean, you know, they could,
and those people are also the ones doing the worst stuff
when the time comes to do the worst stuff, unfortunately.
Yes.
Because again, they've bought in.
Now, while all this is going on, the end of the regime is getting nearer and nearer because
Pol Pot's also not as smart as he thinks he is.
He had directed his forces in what began as a series of border skirmishes against the
newly unified Vietnamese state.
This was a sensible decision based on their obsessive hatred and paranoia of Vietnam,
but given the comparative state of the militaries of the two countries, it was basically suicidal.
And in short order, this is what brings an end to democratic Cambodia.
Vietnam invades Cambodia in December of 1978, and what follows was not close to a fair fight.
By January, they had taken the capital and put an end to Pol Pot's reign.
Sort of.
So he has to flee, right?
He has to like leave Phnom Penh and Vietnam takes over and administers, you know, for
a while.
Cambodia and eventually Cambodia becomes independent again under a government that
is not the Khmer Rouge.
But the Khmer Rouge doesn't go away.
And Pol Pot remains the head of the Khmer Rouge as they go and hide in the jungle.
They've got some villages and stuff, this little weird fortified section of the country,
tiny section of the country that they're able to manage along,
I think it's the Thai border there. In fact, this government, because in 82, China and the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations pressures the Khmer Rouge to ally with Prince Sahanak's
forces and some Republican forces led by a guy called San San along the Thai border
and create this thing called the coalition government
of democratic Cambodia.
And that remains in the UN,
the legitimate government of Cambodia until 1991.
Even though like they're not actually in power,
the government in power is like the PRK,
but they're only recognized by Vietnam, Lao
and the Soviet Union.
And so that's kind of like Pol Pot's where he is for the eighties, you know, into the
nineties.
There is a lot of guerrilla warfare.
Pol Pot continues to lead the Khmer Rouge to fight against the Vietnamese backed government
of Cambodia.
And this continues massively the suffering of the Cambodian people who do never get nearly
enough international aid.
This situation doesn't really start to end until the Paris Peace Agreement, signed in
October of 1991, the Vietnamese withdraw from Cambodia, and things slowly start to calm
down.
There's a UN peacekeeping force that enters of enters in 1993 and there's like a
free and fair election, you know, that, that yeah, things start to get better at this point.
The Khmer Rouge never disarms, right? They continue to hold their tiny little chunk of
the country and argue that there's Vietnam is still secretly running things. There's
camouflaged Vietnamaged Vietnamese soldiers
that are behind the regime, right?
They boycott the 1993 election
and they basically hole up in Western
and Northern little bits of Cambodia.
They're outlawed in 1994.
And when the Cold War ends,
they don't really have any of the even minimal support
that they had previously had.
At long, long length, Yang Seri, who's the foreign minister, who is again one of Pol Pot's
friends from Paris, as well as a number of other high ranking officials surrender, along
with the bulk of what had remained of the military of the Khmer Rouge, and they are
eventually incorporated into the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces. Pol Pot though stays free for quite a while until he is, basically there's this shit that
goes down in 1998 I think it is, where one of his few remaining friends running the Khmer
Rouge, this guy Son Sen, does something that Pol Pot considers treason. And so he massacres
Sansan along with 14 of his family members, including his like grandkids. Now, Pol Pot
would argue for the other people, the babies, the young ones, I did not order them to be killed.
For Sansan and his family, yes, I feel sorry about that. That was a mistake that occurred when we
put our plan into practice. I feel sorry
This is when he's questioned by a journalist named Nate Thayer who does like his last interview
And this is kind of what brings an end to him leading the Khmer Rouge
Finally after 37 years because for whatever reason this is a step too far to the last people who had stuck around him
And one of his like like his commander in chief,
a guy named Tom Mock, puts him on house arrest, right?
And yeah, and that's kind of the end of Pol Pot
of having even a sliver of power.
Eventually, Pol Pot is brought before a people's tribunal.
He's sentenced to life imprisonment for Sansan's murder,
but he never really faces any actual like justice.
Right. Like there's there's there's nothing like.
There's no way you can pay for this anyway, but he doesn't even.
Not even close.
Yeah, no, he dies under house arrest in 1998.
And that's the story.
Yeah, it's one of those like, like whatever, whatever belief you may have in some sort
of cosmic justice.
This should tip the scales in the other direction.
Yeah, like he is ultimately not punished by the new Cambodian state or the UN.
He's punished by the Khmer Rouge for killing another Khmer Rouge guy.
In his very last interview after he has been arrested,
again, there's this guy, Nate Sayer,
who comes in and does this final interview with Pol Pot.
And Nate does a very good job of this.
He really presses Pol Pot on the stuff that he did
and all of the killings.
And this is, I wanna read this quote
from one of Nate's last articles with Pol Pot,
where he's trying to get him to acknowledge anything about what he did.
I came to carry out the struggle, not to kill people, he rasps, his voice almost a whisper.
He pauses, fixing to his interviewer with an almost pleading expression. Even now,
and you can look at me. Am I a savage person? My conscience is clear. I do not reject responsibility.
Our movement made mistakes, like every other movement in the world. But there was another
aspect that was outside our control, the enemy's activities against us. I want to tell you,
I'm quite satisfied with one thing. If we had not carried out our struggle, Cambodia
would have become another Kampuchea Krum in 1975, he says, referring to the Mekong Delta region
seized by Vietnam from the Khmer Empire in the 17th century.
And that I think says a lot that the end of this guy's life, two million deaths maybe
on his conscience, the absolute destruction of his country in such a way that it still
has not recovered.
And he's like, well, look, if I hadn't have done that,
it could have wound up like this time Vietnam
took the Mekong Delta region from us in the 1600s.
You know, you wouldn't want that, would you?
Like he's still, he's such like,
it's this fucking academic brain shit
where like all that matters to him is these,
this idea he's cooked up about how the world ought to work
when he was like a young student with his friends
that he never gets over. His ego won't let him no matter how many fucking people it leads him to kill.
It's like such a, like holding onto that delusion till the end is so amazing. I mean, I just, you know,
I, I, it's so hard for me to understand that brain.
Yep.
Like, like rationalizing to that degree.
Like totally.
I don't know.
Or just you got to put on a show all the way to your last interview, you know.
Keep the keep the cave up.
Yep.
Fucking Graham.
Anyway.
It's time.
Yep.
Just my plug is just go, go sit by yourself for a second and just think about, you know, the world and what you can do to help someone. And don't, don't take the books you read when you were fucking 20 too seriously.
I mean, look, we're living through the same version of that but just the book is fucking at least shrug
Exactly that that's that is like why I bring this up in the context of like Doge and all of these young people who have
Like fucking reading goddamn Curtis Yarvin and shit on the internet and convince themselves
the shit they read when they're young and like talk with their friends about obsessively in these discord chats and signal loops and
You know
There are the people who are willing to make pole pot style decisions and no number of deaths how many number many tens of millions
Of fucking people die if they get the chance it won't they will not for a second doubt themselves or change their minds
And that's why literally anything that can be done to stop the process
by literally anything that can be done to stop the process that is attempting to be underway is like justified
because these people are going,
they have to be edged out, right?
And I'm optimistic at least about the fact
that Musk who's one of these people
who has the same kind of Pol Pot brain damage,
seems to be pulling back because of how angry
he's made.
He's just not built for criticism, right?
Yeah, but there's more of these guys and these guys.
He's delusional, but he's too thin skinned and thankfully largely incompetent.
Although incompetence has never stopped so many of these folks in the past.
So no, it hasn't.
No, they just fail upwards.
Cold comfort, cold comfort.
But yeah, maybe that's at least a weakness to exploit. in the past, so no, it hasn't. No, they just fail upwards. They just fail. Cold comfort.
But yeah, maybe that's at least a weakness to exploit.
Anyway, I don't know.
Hard to know when it's good to read books or not.
Oh, my God. No, this is this is the lesson for these three episodes.
Don't read books, kids.
We're still the podcasts.
Not the podcast.
Yeah, no, not that podcast either. Yeah.
Podcasts have never led anyone to support horrible things that get people killed.
Just don't ever believe your own bullshit or anyone else's too strong.
Keep an eye out for what's going on in the world and talk to people.
Goodbye.
Goodbye.
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Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley Season 1.
Every time I hear about my dad, it's, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil.
I was becoming the bridge between Jeremy Scott and the son he'd never known.
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer.
Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley Season 2
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Soledad O'Brien,
and on my new true crime podcast,
Murder on the Towpath,
I'm taking you back to 1964
to the cold case of artist Mary Pinchot-Meyer.
She had been shot twice in the head and in the back.
It turns out Mary was connected to a very powerful man.
I pledge you that we shall neither commit
nor promote aggression.
John F. Kennedy.
Listen to Murder on the Toe Path with Soledad O'Brien on the iHeartRadio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I want you to ask yourself right now, how am I actually doing?
Because it's a question that we rarely ask ourselves.
All of May is actually Mental Health Awareness Month and on the psychology of your 20s,
we are taking a vulnerable look at why mental health
is so hard to talk about.
Prepare for our conversations to go deep.
I spent the majority of my teenage years,
of my 20s just feeling absolutely terrified.
I had a panic attack on a conference call.
Knowing that she had six months to live,
I was no longer pretending that this was my best friend.
So this Mental Health Awareness Month, take that extra bit of care of your wellbeing.
Listen to the psychology of your 20s on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.