Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar - 9/29/25: Dems Vs Trump On Gov Shutdown, Multiple Shootings Across US, Bibi Brags About Social Media Control

Episode Date: September 29, 2025

Krystal and Saagar discuss Dems vs Trump on gov shutdown, chaos as shootings erupt across the US, Bibi brags about social media control.   Ken: https://www.kenklippenstein.com/    To be...come a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show AD FREE, uncut and 1 hour early visit: www.breakingpoints.comMerch Store: https://shop.breakingpoints.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an I-Heart podcast. The murder of an 18-year-old girl in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved for years, until a local housewife, a journalist, and a handful of girls, came forward with a story. America, y'all better work the hell up. Bad things happens to good people in small towns. Listen to Graves County on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. And to binge the entire season ad-free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. Hi there, this is Josh Clark from the Stuff You Should Know podcast.
Starting point is 00:00:50 If you've been thinking, man alive, I could go for some good true crime podcast episodes, then have we got good news for you? Stuff You Should Know just released a playlist of 12 of our best true crime episode. episodes of all time. There's a shootout in broad daylight, people using axes in really terrible ways, disappearances, legendary heists, the whole nine yards. So check out the stuff you should know true crime playlist on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Jorge Ramos. And I'm Paola Ramos. Together we're launching The Moment, a new podcast about what it means to live through a time as uncertain as this one. We sit down with politicians, artists and activists to bring you death and analysis from a unique Latino perspective.
Starting point is 00:01:33 The moment is a space for the conversations we've been having us father and daughter for years. Listen to The Moment with Jorge Ramos and Paola Ramos on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey guys, Saga and Crystal here. Independent media just played a truly massive role in this election, and we are so excited about what that means for the future of this show. This is the only place where you can find honest perspectives from the left and the right that simply does not exist anywhere else. So if that is something that's important to you, please go to breakingpoints.com, become a member today, and you'll get access to our full shows, unedited, ad-free, and all put together for you every morning in your inbox. We need your help to build the future of independent news media, and we hope to see you at breaking points.com. Good morning, everybody. Happy Monday. Have an amazing show for everybody today. What do we have, Crystal?
Starting point is 00:02:23 Indeed we do. Government shutdown possibility this week. We will break down the details of what exactly this fight is over. Also, there was a rash of mass shootings over the weekend. Truly horrifying stuff will break down for you what we know about those killers and the loss of life therein. Bebe bragging about acquiring TikTok. You guys are definitely going to enjoy that segment. We've got Eric Adams officially dropping out of the New York City mayoral race. And some people calling on Sliwa. also to get out of the race, so it's a head-to-head. Spoiler alert, Cuomo would still lose to Zoron, but some interesting stuff there. We've also got Zoron going back and forth with the ADL. Trump announces invasion of Portland. Ken Klippenstein is going to join us with the latest reporting with regard to their national security crackdown and comedians flocking to a big payday in Saudi Arabia and a lot of dissent within the community. So that's an interesting one for sure. Yeah, there is some things to say about it. And I'm excited actually to cover. that and at least get some culture in the news. Thank you to everybody who's been supporting
Starting point is 00:03:27 the show, Breaking Points.com. We've had Banner Month here on YouTube, so thank you all as well for those. If you can't support the show, no worries. Just please go ahead and hit the subscribe button on YouTube. And if you're listening to this on a podcast, please just go ahead and rate us five stars and send an episode to a friend. It really just helps us grow. Word of mouth is the best advertising there is, and we don't spend a dollar on any of that. All right, let's go ahead and start with the government shutdown, as Crystal said. Tomorrow is the official deadline at midnight. And it does look. All roads currently lead to a shutdown, although we will talk soon about whether the Democrats will cave or not. But here we have the
Starting point is 00:04:04 initial word from the House Speaker Mike Johnson basically saying, we're not negotiating at all, calling the Democrats bluff. So we'll see what happens. Let's take a listen. So just to be clear, there's not going to be any negotiation at this meeting. This is just going to be you and Thune and Trump telling Jeffries and Schumer, we're not giving you anything. Look, I'm not going to get in front of the president and tell you what he will do, but I've talked with him, you know, a couple of times even yesterday. And I'm telling you where his head is. He wants to bring in the leaders to come in and act like leaders and do the right thing for the American people. It's fine to have partisan debates and squabbles, but you don't hold the people hostage for their services to allow yourself political cover.
Starting point is 00:04:48 And that's what Chuck Schumer and Hakeemper's are doing right now. So basically saying, we're going to go to the meeting and we're going to tell them, not negotiating. This is going to be them telling us, we are not giving you anything. Mike Johnson, that is where the president's head is at. And so the Republican strategy is kind of interesting. This has been telegraphed now for quite some time. We're talking about it a bit before the break. And there is the biggest question in Washington is, are the Democrats going to cave? Because for years, they went after the Republicans for manufactured shutdowns. They called them reckless. They said they were holding the government hostage. But the thing is, now the Democratic
Starting point is 00:05:23 basis, like, yeah, I want to do some of that. They're like, give me some of that. Let's screw over Trump. But the X factor here is that Trump, and we'll get to this in a little bit, is also like, listen, if you guys are going to shut the government down, then I'm going to do some crazy stuff here. And I'm going to fire a bunch of government employees. I'm going to do whatever I want with the government. You know, the president has a ton of unilateral authority on how to actually execute a shutdown. The Obama, I remember the 2013, the quote, Boehner shutdown, as Obama called it at the time, they were furious. Because the Republicans shut the government down, and Obama was like, all right, I'm going to close all the national parks.
Starting point is 00:05:58 And they were like, well, you didn't actually have to close the national parks. He's like, yeah, but I can to show the public what you're doing. Eventually, you know, they did cave. To be fair, there was a government shutdown under Donald Trump. I covered that day in and day out. He caved completely to Chuck Schumer and to Nancy Pelosi. It was over border wall funding. But after a while, he folded completely to the pressure.
Starting point is 00:06:19 And, you know, a lot of the public was actually pretty upset about it, too. So shutdown politics are very, very hard to predict. but yeah, the big question, are the Democrats going to fold? No idea. Well, and so it really rests on Chuck Schumer's shoulders because the dynamics here are, you know, they need to pass a funding bill. The funding bill, because Republicans have control of the House, has already passed the House. So that's done and dusted. Now it needs to get through the Senate. The Senate, you need Democrats help because of that 60-vote filibuster rule. So that's why you have this dynamic. And, you know, there's no doubt that Schumer wants to cave. I think he didn't want to
Starting point is 00:06:53 do this to begin with, to be totally honest with you. And he's, but he's feeling the pressure from Democratic base that's like, when are you all going to actually fight? And, you know, the dynamics for Democrats are pretty grim. They don't have, you know, they don't have the House. They don't have the Senate. They don't have the presidency. So this is one of the only times that Republicans need them. There was another time earlier in this Trump administration where the base, again, really wanted leaders to fight. The Democratic leadership decided not to fight at that time and to completely stand down. They have been raked across the coals from their own people ever since that moment. And so that's why they feel pressure to do something this time.
Starting point is 00:07:33 So what they've decided to draw the line around is these health care subsidies. So they're really making a stand saying we're not going to vote for this bill unless you restore these Affordable Care Act subsidies that are set to expire at the end of the year. And the basic dynamic is you've got Republicans kind of divided on what to do about those subsidies. I think that's why Democrats see this as a winning issue, not to mention, obviously, is very popular to continue the subsidies because if you don't, you're going to have millions of people who ultimately will be unable to afford health care through the ACA exchanges, and you're going to have premiums spike dramatically for some 22 million Americans.
Starting point is 00:08:11 So there are a lot of Republicans, including actually Trump's pollster Tony Fabrizio, who have warned about these premium spikes saying, hey, Republicans, if you guys let this happen, is actually going to be a political problem for you. You have some Republican moderates who want to extend those subsidies. Some were hardline, like fiscal hawk types, who don't want to extend those subsidies. And so that's why they kind of pick this issue for the fight because they feel like it's a popular one and one where the MAGA base is divided. No, it's smart. I would, I'd give it to him as you, by the way, two ACA members here, right? Small business owners. So looking at 18% increase. It's already plenty of expensive. Thank you, President Trump for that one, especially when you have a
Starting point is 00:08:49 child and your premium goes up by 50%. And you're like, oh, wow, okay. All right, now imagine having a couple of them. I can't even put myself in that headspace. But the point actually around this is I think they backed their way into a shutdown. And that's very much the same way that the Republicans back in 2013. And also, I'm trying to remember a few of the initial Tea Party waves is, look, they just wanted a shutdown. Like at the end of the day, and then they would pick the issue of which they were going to fight and try to mobilize the base on. At the end of the day, it's like the Seinfeld thing. It's like a shutdown about nothing, but it's a shutdown for the sake of satisfying all institutional politics. I do really wonder, though, how this rubs up against
Starting point is 00:09:27 Democrats, because they really were the party of norms and of perpetuating them. And that's still where the Senate broadly is, right? Like, that's who Schumer, Schumer and a lot of his 65, 70-year-old colleagues, these are institutionalists. They don't like to see what the Republicans did. They hated Mike Lee and Ted Cruz and the new bomb throws. And the thing is, because we're not yet in the post-20206 period, where some new blood of some sort is going to come into the Democratic Party who would really be rallying this. The Republicans right now, or the Democrats right now, are so torn. And you see this in Schumer's comments. So here was already had to say recently just yesterday on Meet the Press.
Starting point is 00:10:08 Let's take a listen. The bottom line is very simple, Kristen. It's up to them. If they come into the meeting to seriously negotiate, and the reason we've been pushing for months, we've been resolute that we need a meeting, that we need a real negotiation, that you don't do this by one party putting together a completely partisan bill and saying take it or leave it. So they felt the heat. The president at first said no. Remember, he first said yes for a meeting. Then he said no for a meeting. It went on a rant against Democrats. But I think they felt the heat and they now want to sit down. But the fundamental question hasn't been answered yet. And we'll see on Monday. I mean, you know, we need a serious. It's just kind of weak. In my
Starting point is 00:10:48 opinion. Did you see his answer when they asked him, like, oh, what are you going to do? We're going to cover Trump threatening Portland with invasion, full force if necessary. And they're like, what are you going to do about this? He's like, well, I would hope there are some Republicans who would have. Like, dude. And you were laying this out. Like, this is really kind of the fundamental divide between where democratic leadership is and where the basis. Leadership is still in this like sort of normal politics mode. Like, I'm going to reach across the aisle and we're going them get a bipartisan deal done and we want to maintain the norms and the institutions. And the base is like, no, fucking burn it down. Like, even if there are consequences, even if it's
Starting point is 00:11:24 risky, we want to see you fight. And even on the health care thing, like what the base would really want them to fight on is health care, yes, but also you need to get your troops out of American cities. Like the sort of fascist crackdown aspect of the Trump administration is what the base is what, yeah, is where the base would really want them to pick a fight. I'm under Dole. illusion that Chuck Schumer's going to pick a fight over Israel. But, you know, those are the areas where I think the Democratic base is most inflamed and would like to see them fight. They're like trying to be, I think you said this, too cute by half with the health care thing. Yes, it's a really important issue. Okay, we're talking about millions of people, cost of
Starting point is 00:12:02 health care. This is critically important. But you can also kind of see just the like the political machinations are a little too naked of like, we poll tested this and this is what our focus group said. And this is where we know that the MAGA base and the Republican elected are divided. And so that's why we're picking this particular spot as well. Absolutely. We should also think back to the way the Republicans did. I mean, look, if you want to take a page out of political effectiveness, the Republican Party has been very good at this over the last decade or so. The 2013 shutdown was broad. It's not just the 2013 shutdown because some of that was ACA. But to be fair, that's where the Republican base was, right? They were like, no, we're done
Starting point is 00:12:36 with Obamacare. The future fights that the Republicans picked with Obama were all on illegal immigration, which, by the way, the polling was not necessarily like on their side, quote unquote. But that's where the base was, and they listened. I think that's, though, the reason why is because they had Tea Party. Like, the Dems have still not gotten truly smacked with reality about where their base is. Eventually, you know, after the Dave Bratt stuff with Eric Cantor, they're like, all right, it's a matter of political survival. They're like, this is what we have to do. Brat beat Cantor purely on the issue of immigration. And obviously, Trump comes in 2016, wins the primary, probably based on that message more than anything. And so when you put that
Starting point is 00:13:12 together. And you can also see that's what fight and being, you know, that's what fight and with the base politics and trying to move the country looks like. That's what a real political, effective party ultimately is all about. And so with Trump, though, and this is where the norms thing is all going to come into play, because Trump doesn't care about norms. So let's go and put A3 up on the screen. He just gave an interview to CBS 60 Minutes. It was by the phone. So we're just pulling some of the quotes. He says, quote, I just don't know how we're going to solve this issue. Trump said, a source close to Trump told CBS, the president privately welcomes the prospect of a shutdown because it enables him to wield executive power to slash government programs and salaries.
Starting point is 00:13:50 And so that kind of leads into A4. We can put that on the screen. Behind the scenes, the White House is very happy about a shutdown. They say that they can just use it as an excuse for mass layoffs, for deregulation, and for military deployments. Because, you know, one of the things with shutdowns is they always pay the troops. So it's one of those where, you know, everybody pays the troops, everybody to make sure Social Security goes out, everybody else kind of comes down. But the thing is, is that because of their extraordinary powers, as I said, the executive under a shutdown, while technically is not supposed
Starting point is 00:14:18 to be able to do whatever it wants, it basically can do whatever it wants and declare whoever they want essential. So for them, they're like, oh, okay, cool. So we don't have to run this department of education. We'll just do ICE, the military, and social security. They're like, good luck, Democrats, right? And so, I mean, kind of smart, to be honest, because, you know, they borrowed that page from previous shutdowns under Clinton and under Obama, where as they continually had to, as the executive started to grapple with what shutdown means, they became very good at saying, all right, we're going to use it for political purposes. We're going to do whatever we want. I think the Democratic response is Trump does whatever we wants anyways, right?
Starting point is 00:14:56 That's exactly right. Yeah, I don't know. It's funny there. Put that headline back up on the screen because it makes the point. They're like layoffs, deregulation, and military deployments. He's literally already doing all of those. So that's why I think, you know, the base in particular feels like where's the threat? Like this is all, you're already doing whatever you want with your executive power.
Starting point is 00:15:19 You're already acting like a king and have zero checks on you. So this is the only bit of power that Democrats can wield whatsoever. So that's why they're like, you have to structure where you have to fight. You have to do something here. And, you know, I mean, the problem for,
Starting point is 00:15:36 Democrats is that their leadership is extremely weak. They're extremely poor messengers. Trump is an extremely effective and relentless messenger. And that's what the shutdown politics end up usually boiling down to. Like, who can message the public better, you know, which side? And look, the Democrats have a decent hand to play because they can say, listen, just give us, just make sure American's health care premiums aren't going to go up. That's it. Like, that's all you have to do and we'll go along with your thing. Why is this so hard? Many of you are saying you want to do this anyway. So they have a decent plan to play. Do they have a decent player to play that hand? Really not so much. Yeah, let's go. Let's go through the history of the government shutdown.
Starting point is 00:16:12 So the most recent government shutdown was the one, I believe, under, well, prolonged government shutdown. There's been mini shutdowns, you know, 24 hours or whatever. They didn't really matter. But in January 2018, there was a three-day shutdown. That's when they did a filibuster over DACA, but ultimately they caved. So you could see that it wasn't particularly successful. The big one was the 35-day shutdown. I have the timeline right now in front of me. That was December 22, 2018. I remember because Trump was in the White House all alone.
Starting point is 00:16:40 And he was like, I'm all alone here in the White House, Democrats. He's like, please. That was wild times. But that one, again, was over border security. And even though Trump dragged it out for a month, he ultimately caved because what happens is, and this is all about timing as well. The longer it goes, the executives seems to get some of the blame. even with good politics or good messaging just because people get sick of no government services.
Starting point is 00:17:08 Or, you know, here in Washington, I mean, we feel it the most, right? Because we have all these federal government workers. But in general, like, the federal government is the biggest employer. You never know. Listen, we're heading into hurricane season. Like, you really want to have a shutdown with a hurricane. It could be politically disastrous for the administration. Prior to that, so this was a 2013 shutdown, that was the ACA one.
Starting point is 00:17:29 That was 16 days. And then obviously President Clinton had a 21-day shutdown with Gingrich. I'm not as familiar with the details of that one. I've read a little bit about it. But broadly, it looked like Clinton was the victor in that shutdown. In the 2013 shutdown, I think it's pretty unambiguous that Obama was the broad victor on the politics there. If you think with Trump, he was definitely the loser against Schumer and against Pelosi. There's no honest assessment because he literally gave up nothing after 35 days.
Starting point is 00:17:57 So that's what I mean. We just don't know where these things were going to be. go, I think it'd be smart for the Democrats shut down. I mean, look, it's not only where the base wants it, but also because the base has already pissed off at Trump for, like, extraordinary action, and he does it anyways, it's like, okay, whatever. And look, it's kind of in a bidirectional. The Republicans' base would also love it, too.
Starting point is 00:18:17 They're like, great. You know, now we get to do whatever we want. So I don't see as much. And I don't know. Right now, I'd put my money on Dems caving at some point, either immediately. I don't know if they'll cave immediately, but a 72-hour shutdown, and then they're like, Oh, my God, Trump just fired 15,000 employees. You could see it.
Starting point is 00:18:38 All I know is what I've been told, and that's a half-truth is a whole lie. For almost a decade, the murder of an 18-year-old girl from a small town in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved, until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story. telling you, we know Quincy killed her. We know. A story that law enforcement used to convict six people and that got the citizen investigator on national TV. Through sheer persistence and nerve, this Kentucky housewife helped give justice to Jessica Curran.
Starting point is 00:19:18 My name is Maggie Freeling. I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, producer, and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to find. I did not know her and I did not kill her. or rape or burn or any of that other stuff that y'all said it. They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her. They made me say that I poured gas on her. From Lava for Good, this is Graves County,
Starting point is 00:19:45 a show about just how far our legal system will go in order to find someone to blame. America, y'all better work the hell up. Bad things happens to good people in small towns. Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to binge the entire season ad-free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. Hi there, this is Josh Clark from the Stuff You Should Know podcast. If you've been thinking, man alive, I could go for some good true crime podcast episodes,
Starting point is 00:20:30 And if we got good news for you, stuff you should know just released a playlist of 12 of our best true crime episodes of all time. There's a shootout in broad daylight, people using axes in really terrible ways, disappearances, legendary heists, the whole nine yards. So check out the stuff you should know true crime playlist. On the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Jorge Ramos.
Starting point is 00:20:53 And I'm Paola Ramos. Together we're launching The Moment, a new podcast about what it means to live through a time, as uncertain as this one. We sit down with politicians. I would be the first immigrant mayor in generations, but 40% of New Yorkers were born outside of this country. Artists and activists, I mean, do you ever feel demoralized? I might personally lose hope.
Starting point is 00:21:16 This individual might lose the faith, but there's an institution that doesn't lose faith. And that's what I believe in. To bring you depth and analysis from a unique Latino perspective. There's not a single day that Paola and I don't call. or text each other, sharing news and thoughts about what's happening in the country. This new podcast will be a way to make that ongoing intergenerational conversation public. Listen to The Moment with Jorge Ramos and Paola Ramos as part of the MyCultura Podcast Network on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:21:53 One thing to mention about the previous shutdown that you said, you know, Trump lost and Pelosi and Schumer 1. Pelosi and Schumer. Pelosi is a much better tactician. Much fiercer, much better messenger. Think and feel however you want about her. She is a much better politician that Chuck Schumer is. I think that much is totally clear. So this now resting on the shoulders of Chuck Schumer and like kind of Hakeem Jeffries is like,
Starting point is 00:22:17 shouldn't be too confidence inspiring here in terms of, you know, have the Democratic base being able to pull off something that approaches a victory. The other thing that's worth saying is, let's say that we're wrong, that it's actually Trump that case. That's like, oh, you know what? I want to make sure everybody has their health care. We're going to do a great thing for the people. We're going to make sure everybody has health care. Right.
Starting point is 00:22:39 Let's say that he does that. There is nothing that would require him to keep that deal because you just had a Supreme Court, once again, shadow docket ruling that essentially allowed them to go forward with what's called a pocket rescission, meaning that Congress can author. let's say the ACA subsidy extension, and then he can just decide not to do it. The Supreme Court now hasn't ruled officially fully on the merits of that, but until they do, and God only knows when that will happen, he can do whatever he wants. He is not obligated, and this is very, this is completely different, okay? Power the person is supposed to be with Congress. Supreme Court has, at least for now, greenlit him being able to back out of whatever deal that he strikes here and say, no, you know what, I change my mind.
Starting point is 00:23:25 I don't want to do the health care subsidies ultimately. So that's an important dynamic to keep in mind here as well as we move into these negotiations. Yeah, let's put A5 on the screen. I've seen this, a lot of progressive Democrats passing this one around. Oh, my God. So you can't make it up. In the midst of shutdown planning, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has circulated an invitation for a, quote, Napa retreat on October 30. The wine cave is back, y'all.
Starting point is 00:23:48 That's what I was going to say. The wine cave, the infamous wine cave. Should the government shut down, the retreat would fall on what might be day 12, of the shutdown, the itinerary features accommodations at the Hotel Utenville with a resort and spa that extends a Tuscan-European vibe at a wine tour and dinner at the Stagland family vineyards and amidst its wine caves. The plan for the luxury trip comes amidst Trump administration's threat of mass firings for federal workers. A Democrat briefed on the event tells us is also slated to include Representative Haley Stevens, who is campaigning for a state's open Senate seat as a gritty daughter of the Midwest.
Starting point is 00:24:22 So, and that's important. What is it with these Michigan dams? Slotkin recently talking about, remember when she was on Colbert after our show and she was like, it's just corn fed folks? No, they're not. Okay? Like, CIA people are not corn fed folks. Well, they're Yale, Harvard graduates, nerds.
Starting point is 00:24:40 You know, just stop. Well, the other thing that's just a little note there is, so this is a DSCC, so that's a Democratic senatorial campaign committee. And they invited Haley Stevens. who's running in the Democratic primary for that Michigan Senate seat. But she, you know, she's up against two other significant contenders. That would be Abdul al-Said and Mallory McMorrow. So this is also the DSCC putting their sum on the scale for Ms. Haley Stevens,
Starting point is 00:25:08 who, by the way, has received some $5 million in Israel lobby funding. So just so you know. Yeah, that's, I don't know. Dems need to get their act together with the base. Like, you guys need to fight. And I know, look, it's coming from me, just, you know, whatever. But I don't see, like, at this point, the Tea Party action people were barnstorming the country in this point in the Obama administration. They were everywhere.
Starting point is 00:25:32 Yes, the cope is always like, oh, but that was all billionaire funded. Oh, yeah, there's no Democrats who fund the billionaires. Like, come on. Like, what are you guys doing? Yeah, but the billionaires don't want this fight. But then, why not? I mean, it's just like, do something. Yeah, they don't want the, you know, pro, the, like, pro-Palestine, you know, tax the rich.
Starting point is 00:25:50 that's where the energy is the party and that's not where the billionaires are. Then get your shit together because at this point you need to organize you need to do something because you are not currently on track to deliver the type of success
Starting point is 00:26:02 that the Tea Party was able to because that was about money plus grassroots that's ultimately and I think the grassroots everyone always tries to say the Tea Party was AstroTurf sorry it wasn't
Starting point is 00:26:10 it was like actual mass outrage yes there was a lot of money backing in that helped you know all that stuff this is the truth with all grassroots style movements there's money in all kinds of special
Starting point is 00:26:20 interest groups, it's only when you have an issue that actually resonates. Are you able to do anything? So if the Democratic base does not going to have their billionaires, then do something about it. Like you need to form your political action committees, get out there, create the litmus test for candidates, actually just hammer the shit out of them, create and find your slate of issues and where you, and then you have to hold the line. You're like, if you do not support that with issue, we will not vote for you. Like if you do not commit immediately to making sure, that we're no longer with Chuck Schumer, that we're going to defund Trump or whatever, pick your issue, then you're not going to do anything.
Starting point is 00:26:57 Because in the absence, these Haley Stevens people can always come around. This is what the pro-Republican establishment politicians would do. But I'm fighting against Obama. And they're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, yeah, but we need you to fight against Obama on our terms. You don't just get to say fighting Obama. Same thing here. You can't just say, oh, Drumpf is bad. It's like, is that it?
Starting point is 00:27:17 Because that's the easiest possible slate. I don't think the Dems have gotten their act together, period. Obviously, it's not going to come from the national level, but I don't even see it at the grassroots level. Like, people need to show up. You know, there's some campaign canaries in the coal mine. You've got Zoron being most important. He's an extraordinary politician versus just different circumstances.
Starting point is 00:27:35 Very, very liberal city and base. Like, what made the Tea Party extraordinary was we're going into the blue dogs and we're blowing them out. You know, we're going into the primaries. We're primaring people. We're making their life hell. Eric Cantor spent more on steak here at a steakhouse in Washington than Dave Bratt spent on his entire campaign. Like, you've got to fight back against that. Yeah, I hear you on all of that, and I do want to see more.
Starting point is 00:27:59 But I will say also with Dave Brat, it's not like you would have said, oh, there's this organized, like, Dave Brat. It came out of nowhere. And there are a lot of things like that that are happening. So just to name a few, obviously Zoran, obviously, Graham Platner. We already named checked Abdul al-Sayyad who are drawing really hard lines and saying, we're not going to vote for Chuck Schumer. We are, you know, pro-Palestine. This is genocide, like going hard. You also have Cory Bush has jumped back into the race.
Starting point is 00:28:26 Oh, really? Yeah, against Wesley Bell, who's one of the top, like, A-PAC recipients in Congress and constantly shilling for them, just signed a letter against recognizing a Palestinian state. You've got Shoycott Chakrabati, who was AOC's chief of staff, who's running against Nancy Pelosi. I actually don't think Pelosi has officially announced that she's running again. But he just released some internal polling that showed him actually faring pretty competitively with her, which is a, that is a shocking turn of events that anyone could even be in the race. So, and there are more, many that I don't even know their names.
Starting point is 00:28:57 So you do have these dynamics playing on in primaries. You're right. And I ran in that 2020, 2010 Tea Party year. So I can tell you for sure. The energy was real, right? There was funding, you know, from the top, there's no doubt about it. But there was also a genuine, like, backlash to Obama that was being expressed at that time. There's no doubt about it.
Starting point is 00:29:16 here you have also that genuine democratic base backlash, but somewhat more inchoate and less sort of like organized than it was. No, it's worth saying too. It is still pretty early. Like we're still, you know, the formation of primary fields is happening right now. And part of why Schumer feels like he has to do this, which is not something he wants to do again. He feels like he has to because he feels the heat from his base.
Starting point is 00:29:45 There's no doubt that if he runs again and AOC runs against him in a primary, like he's going to lose. And he's aware of that polling, I'm sure. He's aware of the way that people perceive him and how they don't see him because he hasn't as being any sort of a fighter. And so even the fact that they're picking this fight is an expression of how they are feeling pressured by their own base. Very well said. I just people don't, if you're too young and you don't remember the Tea Party, here's what happened. plus 63 GOP seats, plus six GOP seats in the Senate, plus six GOP governors, the biggest midterm victory for a party since 1938.
Starting point is 00:30:20 You have that same type of energy. If you want it, if you want it. Right. And I didn't even get into the state legislatures. Which set the terms for redistricting. It was massive. And which set the terms for redistricting, which ended up being, you know, it continues to be consequential.
Starting point is 00:30:33 Very well said. And that's my point is I don't, I just don't see that. Yeah, here, okay, I have it here. 20 state legislative chambers, which flipped, which was specifically important for the 2010 census for redistricting. That's what power actually looks like. I just don't see it yet. It could be right. It could come. You can have some organic, but there's a big difference, let's say, between a 25-point swing and the 60-point swing, like to make it extraordinary and to just like punch the administration, like if you want it in the face. But I don't know.
Starting point is 00:31:04 Right now, there's not enough seriousness of taking control. I think, it largely has to do with the establishment and the way that they think because fundamentally, like to their money, bottom line, issue set, et cetera, it really is an existential threat. But you got to keep in mind, it was very similar for the Republicans, too. Like, for a lot of these establishment Republicans, the way that they did business back in 2009 was completely disrupted and destroyed. Like, you can only teach them by hitting them. There's no other way. So we'll see. I don't know. I personally, again, I think the Dems are going to blink. I just think that they're so married to, like, the federal government as an idea that the mere prospect
Starting point is 00:31:42 of mass firing, like, you're going to put it against, you know, you're going to put it past Trump to fire 25, 30, 40, 50,000 workers, like he will, right? And they're going to freak out about that. That's what a big part of the 2018 shutdown. Part of the reason the Trump cave, but the big Democratic message was, oh, these federal government employees are not getting their paychecks, right? It's devastating. So there's like a religious marriage between the bureaucrat, and the Democratic Party that I'm not sure, at the institutional level, I don't know if they're willing to stomach, you know, what it takes to actually go through. No, I think, like I said, I don't think Schumer wants to do this fight.
Starting point is 00:32:17 He's forced into it. And so I think probably his plan is like, let me put up some sort of show of resistance. And then once, you know, I get cred with the base for having allowed to shut down to go through or stood up to Trump or whatever, then I'm going to find some way to walk. back from the sledge. That would be my guess of his plan. But don't you think a 72-hour cave is worse than it just shut down? If I cave, then just cave. I don't think he,
Starting point is 00:32:43 I don't even have to say I don't think. I know that these Democrats are totally out of touch with where the base is and what they want and how sort of radicalized they've become in this moment. And part of their radicalization is about what Trump is doing, and part of it is about the failures of their own
Starting point is 00:32:59 media apparatus and their leadership. And I say, I know that they're out of touch with this because in particular, you know, one of the manifestations of this frustration is obviously on Israel. And you still see them all out there trying to find some middle ground and tiptoe around it. Hakeem Jeffrey's still not endorsing Zoran. I mean, it's completely insane. And it's like, you all have no idea how loathed you are by your own democratic base.
Starting point is 00:33:25 I mean, Zoran outperformed Hakeem Jephries by like 20 points or something ridiculous in his own district. And I don't think they've internalized that. And I'm not sure what it's going to take for them to internalize that. I don't know what their Dave Brat moment is going to be. But one of those is coming where they're going to realize like, oh, we really are in trouble here with our own people. You know why I hope so? Because politics should matter. You know, the expression of your voters should actually matter.
Starting point is 00:33:52 And, you know, the one thing I think you can say about the Republicans is like they mostly do what their base kind of wants them to do. And they don't really care that much about, you know, the media or whatever. and there's just too much institutional elite worship. And fundamentally, like, that's where my war is with these, you know, kind of that bipartisan Mitch McConnell, Chuck Schumer type style leadership. These people need to go. They're largely the ones responsible for even the reason like where we are, where we are today. So, yeah, I would like to see them be punished and punished badly.
Starting point is 00:34:22 And because the voice of people actually should matter and political leadership is supposed to be broadly reflective. And there's actually no way to solve existential questions. if you don't actually tackle them and if you just kind of put your blinders on and look past it and pretend that it's all fake. So we'll see. I am an accelerationist, though, so that's me.
Starting point is 00:34:42 Are you? 100%. I've always been. I've heightened the contradictions. I think it's good. All I know is what I've been told, and that's a half-truth is a whole lie. For almost a decade,
Starting point is 00:34:57 the murder of an 18-year-old girl from a small town in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved, until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story. I'm telling you, we know Quincy Kilder, we know. A story that law enforcement used to convict six people, and that got the citizen investigator on national TV. Through sheer persistence and nerve, this Kentucky housewife helped give justice to Jessica
Starting point is 00:35:29 Curran. My name is Maggie Freeling. I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, producer, and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to find. I did not know her and I did not kill her, or rape or burn or any of that other stuff that y'all said. They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her. They made me say that I poured gas on her.
Starting point is 00:35:53 From Lava for Good, this is Graves County, a show about just how far our legal system will go in order to find someone to blame. America, y'all better work the hell up. Bad things happen to good people in small towns. Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to binge the entire season ad-free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. Hi there, this is Josh Clark from the Stuff You Should Know podcast. If you've been thinking, man alive, I could go for some good true crime podcast episodes,
Starting point is 00:36:42 then have we got good news for you. Stuff You Should Know just released a playlist of 12 of our best true crime episodes of all time. There's a shootout in broad daylight, people using axes in really terrible ways, disappearances, legendary heists, the whole nine yards. Check out the Stuff You Should Know True Crime playlist on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Jorge Ramos.
Starting point is 00:37:05 And I'm Paola Ramos. Together we're launching The Moment, a new podcast about what it means to live through a time, as uncertain as this one. We sit down with politicians. I would be the first immigrant mayor in generations, but 40% of New Yorkers were born outside of this country. Artists and activists, I mean, do you ever feel demoralized?
Starting point is 00:37:26 I might personally lose hope. This individual might lose the faith. But there's an institution that doesn't lose faith. And that's what I believe in. To bring you depth and analysis from a unique Latino perspective. There's not a single day that Paola and I don't call or text each other, sharing news and thoughts about what's happening in the country. This new podcast will be a way to make that ongoing intergenerational conversation public.
Starting point is 00:37:52 Listen to The Moment with Jorge Ramos and Paola Ramos as part of the My Cultura Podcast Network on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Let's get to the shootings. Okay, very grim situation unfolding over the weekend. Four separate mass shootings. Let me give you the top line for all four, and then we can take a look at the most deadly one,
Starting point is 00:38:18 which was a Mormon, a shooting at a Mormon church. So four dead and eight wounded there. Perpetrator was also killed in gunfight with cops. You had two killed and five injured in a casino in Texas. You had one dead and others injured in a neighborhood in Pennsylvania. And you had a gunman who killed three people and injured five others at a packed North Carolina waterfront bar. That suspect has been taken into custody. So I'll give you some details on all of these.
Starting point is 00:38:48 But let's go ahead and start with this Mormon church shooting, which is absolutely horrific. You can put these images up on the screen. You can see the church was not only, so a pickup truck rammed into this church, the killer then shot indiscriminately at people. We don't have a lot of details about the exact sequence of how this unfolded. Law enforcement is also saying there were IEDs, which were recovered from the scene. As I said before, the death toll has now risen to four killed and eight wounded. this was a Mormon church that was in Michigan.
Starting point is 00:39:23 So truly horrifying series of events here. Let me go ahead and show you some images of the truck that rammed into the church here. You can see it there. People noted right away, of course, the American flights in the truck bed. And then also there was an Iraq War veteran license plate on that truck. And sure enough, we actually put before up on the screen, it turns out that the alleged will say, killer here, who also was, like I said, killed by law enforcement in a gun battle. Pretty quickly, after this all unfolded, by the way, law enforcement is getting a lot of credit
Starting point is 00:39:58 for their rapid response, preventing even additional loss of life from this horrific situation. So looks like this was an Iraq war veteran, Thomas Sanford, IDed as the gunman who attacked this church killing to and setting it ablaze. Don't know a ton about him. He does have a young child, roughly 10 years old. He is married, served in Iraq for, I think, roughly 4. for years overseas. Let's go ahead and take a listen to a little bit of what law enforcement had to say.
Starting point is 00:40:26 This is B3. During this incident, what we know right now is that a 40-year-old suspect from Burton, he's a male, he drove his vehicle through the front doors of the church. He then exited his vehicle firing several rounds at individuals within the church. 10 gunshot victims have been transported to local hospitals at this time, including one who has been deceased. Officers who were trained immediately responded to the area. One was a DNR officer, and then one was a Grand Blank Township officer,
Starting point is 00:41:07 where they met the suspect and they engaged in gunfire with that particular individual, neutralized and that suspect. And that suspect is no longer with us. As I said, it is a 40-year-old male from Byrne. So as I'm an outsider, we have no idea about the motive here. Of course, everyone quick look to see what this guy's political affiliation was. He appears to be Republican. But it also appears like this is someone who was a veteran of one of our wars, who apparently lost his mind. I mean, they're starting to talk to people who knew him. The press hasn't been able to get in touch with the family. Like, they're no responding. surprise there. But the people they were able to speak to were like, I would never in a million
Starting point is 00:41:46 years think that this guy would do that. One thing they're looking at, I have no idea whether this is related or not, but the day before this shooting and attack occurred, Russell Nelson, the oldest ever president of the Mormon church, died at the age of 101. And then this is obviously an attack on the Mormon church. Police are looking into whether that's linked in any sort of a weird way. But it appears that this is, you know, someone who was mentally ill. There was an interview posted late last night of a local politician who was canvassing the area and he actually interacted with the suspect per his testimony. And what he said is that when, listen, anybody who's involved in public life and you and I have been in the situation before, you get to meet
Starting point is 00:42:31 the, you know, bottom 2% of the population who are like mentally ill and schizophrenic, who have kind of crazy ideas. And he apparently cornered this local politician and had that classic side of mental illness. We're on the surface, perfectly nice guy within two minutes is talking about how LDS is the Antichrist, the Mormons. So, you know, it looks like a class. Listen, I mean, the Mormons are a classic target, unfortunately, for a lot of people involved in like these wars over Christian theology. And it's a very easy target in particular for somebody if you're mentally ill and if you're steeped in all of this and look pure speculation but you know it doesn't it's not a bar leap to say somebody who served in iraq you know if you look at the suicide rate mental
Starting point is 00:43:14 illness rate and the effect of what all that takes not to mention i mean didn't seem to be doing particularly well like was living uh in like substandard conditions so you put you put all that together uh with what happened and it's a very you know it's very very tragic incident especially the Mormons always have been targets for people like this. And it's really sad. I mean, you know, it's just these are people who are gathering. Some of the people who were shot were literal children. It's Sunday it's supposed to be like a sacrosaned place. So it's just, it's a horrific tragedy. But it's one of those where when you put it together broadly, and I'm fortunate, you know, I was not here for the ice shooting. You guys did a good job. But but the point around it is just look at these guys. It's like rampant mental illness throughout the country. And in the veteran, case, I mean, look, we all agree, I think, that nobody does nearly enough. It's highly inefficient, even though the VA spends a ridiculous amount of money per patient, the services and the administration that they do is, it's a disaster. Most of the veterans I speak to almost always have a substandard experience. It's very easy for guys like this to slip through the cracks.
Starting point is 00:44:19 And it's obvious, I think it's pretty obvious to me that that's probably what happened here. You know, 0408, some of the worst years to serve in Iraq, then you have, you know, a lot of prolonged period of time. Mental illness can happen very quickly. It can be exacerbated as we've talked about at length, about drug use, online, just periods of time. You know, you can snap. And the slide through that is not a surprise. And the fact that this local politician is saying, I can visit this guy. And within minutes, he's telling me about how antichrist and LDS gives us a little bit of an insight, right? Yeah. Well, and that wasn't the only murderous shooting, mass shooting, by an Iraq war veteran over this weekend. So we can put this next B-5 up on the screen. This was at the North Carolina waterfront. So they say
Starting point is 00:45:03 a lone gunman killed three people, injured five others at a pack North Carolina waterfront bar late Saturday. Police are describing it as a highly premeditated attack. This guy who now calls himself Nigel Max Edge, he changed his name to that, who's 40 years old, detained by the Coast Guard, charged with three counts of first-degree murder, five counts of attempted murder five counts of assault with a deadly weapon. Another, and he's another veteran of our war on. terror, foreign wars. So, you know, we don't know that much about this individual yet. What he was doing and saying, police are calling this premeditated. We don't have a motive for this one either. But again, fits with, you know, the pattern of, look, we send these, you know, mostly men
Starting point is 00:45:50 overseas and have been commit these horrific acts that haunt them. They come back home. They have very little, like, support in terms of reintegration into society. And then downstream from that, you have, you know, horrific acts like this. This is not to, like, I'm not trying to, like, smear besmirch veterans whatsoever, quite the contrary. It's not their fault. They were put in a disaster situation. Yeah, I'm saying that we should be, we should pay a lot more attention to it. First of all, we shouldn't get into these foreign wars. And even outside of these individual violent incidents, There is a long-term societal correlation of after you have a war, when people come back, there's a spike in violence. There's a spike in crime.
Starting point is 00:46:32 Not to mention that then you have in our culture, it's a mass gun culture. One of the things that are in common with all of the mass shootings we've been talking about lately is all of these men were very proficient with firearms and been around them, you know, highly trained on them, et cetera. And, you know, that's one of the dynamics here as well. But, you know, what's interesting is there's been very little journalistic interest in the question of what the blowback has been from what we did to these individuals when we sent them overseas for, you know, the Iraq and Afghanistan war in particular. I had to go back to there was a 2008 New York Times investigation, and they identified 121 homicides that were linked to Iraq and Afghanistan veterans from 2001 to 2008. And they found that was an 89% increase in such cases during wartime compared to before we went to war in Iraq. So they were able to establish somewhat of a at least correlation and an uptick. And, you know, you had similar instances after the Vietnam War as well that were, you know, tracked closely too.
Starting point is 00:47:38 So you have mass, you know, mental illness exacerbated in the veterans population because of what they've seen and what they've done and what they've been through. and the total lack of support and complete neglect. And this is also not to let off the hook these killers, by the way, we're just analyzing here the societal trends. And, you know, we end up with this explosion of violence and looking around and going, why does this only happen with us? I don't think it should be a mystery when you consider the combination of a combustible gun culture, rampant, untreated mental illness, and a society that's kind of coming apart at the seams.
Starting point is 00:48:12 Of course. I don't think you can deny any of that. I mean, I know the gun culture thing is one of those where people really latch on to. And I get it. But, you know, if you look at it practically, like we've talked about, the Charlie Kirk shooting ad nauseum, is a bolt action rifle. It's never getting banned under, quote unquote. It's not going to be banned under even the most extreme liberal gun control law. I am fairly hopeless about any sort of gun control measure that would really deal with the problem for exactly the reasons you're stating. but in analyzing all of these things
Starting point is 00:48:43 and why we have these mass shootings and other countries don't. You have to name it as a factor because I mean, part of why... Yeah, and part of why Tyler Robbins is able to, allegedly, take that shot is because he's raised in that culture. He's very comfortable with weapons.
Starting point is 00:48:58 He knows what he's doing. He's a proficient marksman, et cetera. So I'm just pointing to those facts. Obviously, these are military-trained. No one's going to deny that having 400 million guns in the country does not make it unique. I think it's just frankly,
Starting point is 00:49:11 constant, it's not going to change. And I mean, we've had a lot of debates here. I don't really think it should change. But, and, you know, if, to echo what Charlie Kirk once said, when you have a nation with the Second Amendment, you do accept a certain level of violence that is not going to be seen in other societies. That is a simple constant. Now, of course, you know, everyone always like to post that as some sort of own. It's like, well, you know, if you have other countries, they don't have like even close, they have, you're worried about authoritarianism and fascism and all of that in America, it's like, well, look at a lot of other countries, which are Western, but with no guns. It's very, very different in terms of their culture and the level of subservience that those people
Starting point is 00:49:45 put up with from the government. So that's part of what the check is supposed to be. Now, all kinds of debates about AR-15s and, you know, magazines, et cetera, most of which I think is silly and broadly doesn't work. But dealing with what we're dealing with where we are right now, the veteran piece, the mental illness piece. But also, look, I mean, I was not able to join for that ice shooting, but I'm thank you for bringing up on my behalf, drug use and weed use was a big part of it. And everybody just wants to move past it. And listen, it's one, it's not all of it, but, oh, it just turns out this ice shooter is, quote, obsessed with weed. I've been trying to tell people that the reflections of what we see from legalized marijuana, from just this
Starting point is 00:50:27 culture of degeneracy, turn on football. You know, I've been watching football this season because I can't leave my house from the baby. Everything is just Arby's gammon. and booze. It's like, oh, do we do anything else in this country? Other than get fat as shit and watch TV and drink alcohol? Apparently, that's not what anyone... And the few spare bucks that you should probably save, you're going to put on your shitty parlay, which are 100% going to lose. It's like an opiate of the masses, quite literally. And that leads to a lot of downstream hopelessness. I've talked about this with gambling. If you look at the data, legalize gambling, and in particular, when a home team loses, the data tells us that. us that domestic violence goes up. That's what we're dealing with here. And then out put the actual like money and stakes and all that. Part of the population in a 330 million people, 1% is a lot of people. That's millions of people. They're going to go crazy. That's part of the issue. And everyone's like, well, just because 1% is going to do it badly. It's like, no,
Starting point is 00:51:26 but sometimes the 1% is so bad that we actually should consider what the, you know, societal norms and all of this discussion around it. Like, without, Most people can drink responsibly. One out of seven people cannot drink responsibly. It causes all kinds of crazy downstream effects. Are we willing to accept hundreds of thousands of DUIs and deaths and drunk driving, etc? Me? Not really. I think we should do a lot more to actually reduce alcohol consumption.
Starting point is 00:51:50 Or the health effects, obesity. Well, weed has done more than anything to reduce alcohol consumption. Okay, yeah. Oh, fantastic. It's so great. Now we just have violent schizzoes who are shooting iced detainees. What a great trade that we all make. Both should go down.
Starting point is 00:52:05 That's my point. There are parts of what you're saying that I agree with. And I think, you know, I view it from, you know, from a leftist lens of, first of all, addiction is very profitable, right? That's why the food and the algorithms and the gamble, like everything is set up to addict you and keep you locked into whatever that thing is. So that's number one. And, you know, I see a lot of these things as being downstream from the policy and societal choices. So, you know, I don't know, like the ice shooter, I don't know that his weed use was related. It could also be that's attempted self-medication is often the case as well.
Starting point is 00:52:45 That's not self-medication then. If you're taking something that literally makes a certain percent of his users go violent schizo, then that's not medication. Sorry, I'm not saying it's, like, effective self. But that's, that is what a lot of people who, you know, struggle with, like, weed addiction. Yeah. they feel it is self-medicating. They're trying to check out of a life that feels horrific to them. And so in any case, to say, like, the weed is the cause of the violence, well, the weed
Starting point is 00:53:12 could be a correlation because you have someone who's struggling with mental illness and isn't getting treated and they're treating themselves, and that's what I'm trying to point out. But in any case, with these two dudes, we don't have any sort of weed connection that we're aware of yet. Well, I'm just waiting. Okay, so it's going to come out. But, you know, if you, like, there's a big temptation. to sort of draw a circle around all these things and try to see because we've had this rash of them and try to like tell a story about it, you know, some very natural human impulse. And it could be that there is no real story to tell about all of these disparate shootings and murders.
Starting point is 00:53:45 But if I had to try to tell a story, you know, they all seem to spring out of sort of the societal ills that we're struggling with, right? Disaffected young men, political extremism, the blowback. from our endless, you know, wars and what we subjected, you know, these young men and women to, when we sent them overseas to fight and die in these, like, immoral, pointless wars that only made things worse. All of those sort of chickens are coming home to roost is what it feels like right now. And, you know, to add one that'll, you know, serve some of your points.
Starting point is 00:54:23 There was also put B6 up on the screen. There was also a shooting at this casino in Texas. This one, we really have no idea what the, this is Corian Jones 34, what the motivation was, what's going on here. I don't have any more information for you, but you know, you could imagine what might have been going on, why someone would be angry at a casino. You know, that's certainly a possibility. And then did we put B5B up just so people could see the picture of the, yeah, this is the guy that's accused of murdering the people at the North Carolina waterfront. Now, his story in terms of his service, he was actually injured, I think shot four times in a friendly fire incident and suffered severe, you know, like brain damage because of this. He was actually, as it says here, he once escorted this American Idol star to the country music awards because he was, you know, sort of like a minor cause celebrity because of the injuries that he had suffered, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:55:27 And then after that, you can just imagine, like, a sort of downward spiral and how you, I mean, I can't really imagine how you end up in the situation where you're murdering people, but you can certainly imagine a downward spiral for this individual who already was suffering with this brain injury. We're not absolving any of these people. What we're showing is, like, we're trying to look at the, yeah, on the gambling point. I mean, look, Vegas, anybody who lives in Vegas will back me up on this because I've spoken with people and I was telling you guys about it. The amount of suicides in Vegas parking lots and hotel rooms is shocking. The LVPD and others mostly try to cover it up because they don't want to affect tourism. But the amount of violence, as I just talked about, domestic violence, when people miss their parlays and they end up beating their wives, lots of alcohol use. Use also alcohol and weed use combined.
Starting point is 00:56:14 And, oh, shocking. People start to commit crazy crime. Same thing. You know, there's just something about people who get driven to the brink. I've seen it. Have you ever been to a casino and you see somebody who is gamble? out of literal, like, with a look on their face of absolute sheer desperation, it's like, bro, you've got to get out of here. What are you doing? But, you know, instead, what does a casino do?
Starting point is 00:56:38 That's the most profitable customer, right? Not the guy who's just sitting there betting the pass line having some fun. This guy who's just hoping for the big one and then ends up losing their entire paycheck. Again, we don't know all of the circumstance, but yes, violence in casino, these people have security and all that for a reason because people are crazy. And that's just my final PSA here on gambling, because I was just looking 52% of betters in the U.S., which is some 100 million people. I've now gambled more than $50 per month in this NFL season. That is quite literally, statistically, if you're watching this in your medium household income, that's your margin, all right? Which is crazy in a country like today.
Starting point is 00:57:16 But $600 per year of your aftertax income is quite literally your safety margin. So do you really want to be blowing that to a company, which, you know, Dave Ramsey, I recently saw him say, this, he goes, these people are buying the most expensive advertising, literally in the history of the world. You think they're doing that with charity dollars? It's your money, all right? And so in the meantime, people just get addicted, you know, to the thrill. It has the highest rate of suicidal ideation of any addiction more so than heroin addicts, more so than everyone else. It's the easiest one to cover up, right? Everybody's, it's like the keeping up with the Joneses thing. You have no idea how finance the cars are in the driveway. And then there's a silent light.
Starting point is 00:57:56 of desperation in the back and then people just break. So stay away from it. That's all I can tell you. Especially if you have kids, please, please keep them away. It's bad. It's permeating everything in our culture. Yeah, true. All right, let's get to TikTok, shall we? All I know is what I've been told, and that's a half-truth is a whole lie. For almost a decade, the murder of an 18-year-old girl from a small town in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved, until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story. I'm telling you, we know Quincy Kilder, we know.
Starting point is 00:58:37 A story that law enforcement used to convict six people, and that got the citizen investigator on national TV. Through sheer persistence and nerve, this Kentucky housewife helped give justice to Jessica Curran. My name is Maggie Freeling. I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist. producer, and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to find. I did not know her and I did not kill her, or rape or burn or any of that other stuff that
Starting point is 00:59:07 you all said. They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her. They made me say that I poured gas on her. From Lava for Good, this is Graves County, a show about just how far our legal system will go in order to find someone to blame. America, y'all better work the hell up. Bad things happens to good people in small towns. Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:59:44 And to binge the entire season ad free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. Hi there. This is Josh Clark from the Stuff You Should Know podcast. If you've been thinking, man alive, I could go for some good true crime podcast episodes. Then have we got good news for you. Stuff You Should Know just released a playlist of 12 of our best true crime episodes of all time. There's a shootout in broad daylight. People using axes in really terrible ways. Disappearances. Legendary heists. The whole nine yards. So check out the Stuff You Should Know true crime playlist. On the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Jorge Ramos. And I'm Paola Ramos. Together we're launching The Moment, a new podcast about what it means to live through a time, as uncertain as this one. We sit down with politicians. I would be the first immigrant mayor in generations, but 40% of New Yorkers were born outside of this country. Artists and activists, I mean, do you ever feel demoralized?
Starting point is 01:00:49 I might personally lose hope. This individual might lose the faith. But there's an institution that doesn't lose. faith. And that's what I believe in. To bring you depth and analysis from a unique Latino perspective. There's not a single day that Paola and I don't call or text each other, sharing news and thoughts about what's happening in the country. This new podcast will be a way to make that ongoing intergenerational conversation public. Listen to The Moment with Jorge Ramos and Paola Ramos as part of the MyCultura podcast network on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
Starting point is 01:01:25 you get your podcasts. Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu is here in Washington for this week. He will be having an unprecedented fourth visit to the White House. I guess congratulations to him. But while in the United States for the United Nations General Assembly meeting after having a mass walkout while his speech, he took some time out of his busy day to meet with U.S. content creators, specifically to brief them about the propaganda war over Israel. he was asked specifically, how should Americans, or how should American pro-Israel forces
Starting point is 01:02:00 fight back against the rising tide of what they call anti-Semitism? And here, he now speaks about how one of the most important things is the new purchase of TikTok. Here's what he had to say. We have to fight with the weapons that apply to the battlefields in which we're engaged. And the most important ones are the social media. And the most important purchase that is going on right now is class Tick-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T. Number one.
Starting point is 01:02:31 Number one. And I hope it goes through because it can be consequential. And the other one, what's the other one? That's most important. X. X. Very good. And, you know, so we have to talk to Elon.
Starting point is 01:02:47 He's not an enemy. He's a friend. We should talk to him. Now, if we can get those two things, we get a lot. And I could go on on other things, but that's not the point right now. We have to fight the fight, okay, to take, give direction to the Jewish people and give directed to our non-Jewish friends or those who could be our Jewish friends. The most important purchase is going right now is TikTok.
Starting point is 01:03:10 I hope it goes through because it's going to be consequential. So, Crystal, I once again ask, will you join me in calling for the ban of TikTok? It was important, even for, you know, on the whole China data. thing, but one of the things that people underestimated is that what Trump saw with his victory after 2024 was all the kids here, but it's the power of the algorithm. And what obviously the worry about that was with China, but now, because it's Trump, he's like, oh, we'll preserve TikTok, but we'll make sure that a bunch of pro-Israel forces are involved in the purchase. And it's undeniable that TikTok is very good at shaping culture, which is why
Starting point is 01:03:51 the Chinese ban TikTok in their own country, just to be very clear, for people who don't understand that. And now what they're looking at it is they've already installed this censorship head over there. They get to keep their business. Everybody's, everyone is going to keep scrolling. Don't deny yourself. It's like we just talked about weed addiction and gambling addiction and all that. It's exactly the same thing downstream of the hours a day that people are burning on TikTok and scrolling. Well, now it's going to have the same propagandistic efforts kind of behind the scenes, it's now probably the most overtly, politically controlled a social media platform alongside Twitter. No, I'd say, I'd say alongside Twitter. But the thing is, the only reason
Starting point is 01:04:31 why I think it's more consequential is Twitter is for elites. So it's very important at shaping, you know, elite culture and conversation. Only a couple hundred million people use Twitter globally. Like, in the United States, it's a couple hundred million people on TikTok. Like, actual people who have no Twitter account, don't even know what's going on over there. Not involved. involved in the wars over whatever, you know, some sort of political going on. They're scrolling. That's where a lot of their information is coming from. So by far, in my opinion, the most consequential at a small D democratic perspective for shaping whatever the future conversation. Yeah, so now instead of owned by China, it could be owned by Israel.
Starting point is 01:05:05 Okay, well, great. Great stuff. Should abandon it. Definitely worse. I mean, I just, I guess I don't see it as any worse than X or other social media. I mean, I think it's all poison. Like, that's where I am. I don't know what the answer is. Like, I don't know that a complete ban is the answer, but I'm kind of like at a loss as to what to do about all of these things that are set on colonizing our mind, right? Colonizing our attention, that's what they're, like, that's the commodity that they trade in. And with dystopian outcomes, frankly, but the ones which we can't resist. You know, we were talking about gambling addiction, like the scroll, both of TikTok and, you know, YouTube shorts and Twitter, it's all modeled off of slot machines, like to
Starting point is 01:05:48 keep you endlessly scrolling. That's the whole idea is the endless scroll. And yeah, I mean, it's brain poison. And I just, the one thing I will say, like, I think if Bibi really thinks that this is going to, you know, help him win the propaganda war. Like, the propaganda war for Israel's already lost. That battle is over. It's done. Now they have to operate in the realm of just like pure power politics. Like cracking down on anyone who dissent. you know, using their main ally and most important ally, only ally that matters, the United States of America, to do their bidding in terms of cracking down on our own population, backing them in their endless wars.
Starting point is 01:06:30 Like, that's where they're at. They've already lost the sort of soft power competition in terms of global opinion. I don't think that their ownership of TikTok is necessarily going to change that. In fact, if anything, it's going to further piss people off and enrage them that they feel that heavy hand of stuff. censorship now coming down from their favorite platform? I would hope so. I'm not yet quite sure about our current population and in particular with some of the calls right now for open censorship. Here we have Israeli politician Yair Galan openly says
Starting point is 01:07:03 the next step is strict controls on social media, in particular going after Twitter and saying that they need to ban what he considers to be anti-Semitic voices. Let's take a listen. The next thing I will do, we will do. is to put restriction on the social media in a way that not allowed to make brutal propaganda in the social media. Because this is a worldwide problem and it should be initiated by the United States of America, the place where all the big firms is settled.
Starting point is 01:07:46 Facebook and X and all the rest. This is a major problem for democracy all over the globe, and we need to treat it seriously. We need to take it seriously. Facebook X, they all need to be banned. I mean, does anybody else just think it's so crazy that BB comes to America and assembles a group of social media influencers, including his own son?
Starting point is 01:08:15 Is that the only interaction that he has? has with his own son? Oh, I didn't know. Yeah, you're not doing out. Is there, oh, what? So your son, who, by the way, lives here in America? Why? For what reason?
Starting point is 01:08:25 What's his visa status? Anybody want to call ICE over that one? You know, how exactly? Isn't he draft age eligible? Shouldn't he be fighting in Gaza if he's so patriotic and amazing? And he's sitting over here on our soil, presumably on a, you know, some sort of friendly visa, being guarded by the literal Israeli shinbet as he lives in a penthouse apartment in Miami and firing off tweets from his sunny little balcony
Starting point is 01:08:48 about how they need more censorship of Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens. It's just so naked. It's so unbelievable. And I hope that you're correct that the propaganda war and all of that is lost. But I don't know. I still, like even with all of the sentiment moving,
Starting point is 01:09:06 at a basic level, the politics have not changed. Like at the power level, the Trump administration, they could care less about the... Oh, yeah. Rising tide of, look, even amongst Republican younger voters, it's like the sentiment is lost. They just don't care. They're like, look, this is what we are going to do. The average Republican politician still doesn't care.
Starting point is 01:09:26 The average Democrat politician will pay a little bit of lip service, but at a, you know, power level, they're not doing anything about it. Slotkin here on our show, maybe I'll vote for it. Maybe I won't. Goes on Stephen Colbert, then says she would have voted against it if she was there, but we'll never know because she wasn't there. It's like, what's going on here? Yeah. You know, it's like, does any of this even matter? No, the hard power, like, they still have a lock on a lot of, certainly the Trump administration.
Starting point is 01:09:51 No doubt about that. And most Democrats, but, you know, let's, to the point of whether or not they're winning the propaganda war, should we take a listen to a little bit of the propaganda? And you can tell me if you find it, tell me if you find this persuasive or not, this is C3. These are some of the influencers who were gathered at this meeting to get a, get a sense of some of the content they're putting out to the TikTok world. We were asking him the hard questions that a lot of people from our generation have been raising concerns about. For example, and the same way he listened to us and took in our criticisms, I'm truly hoping that you guys will listen to the answer.
Starting point is 01:10:26 A-PAC is something that I see all the time. Number one, A-PAC is not an Israeli organization. It has no ties whatsoever to the government of Israel. It's not foreign lobbying. It's a lobbyist group that happens to be lobbying for a certain group of people, right? And this is not unique to Israel. There are multiple countries that do this, and there's multiple different groups that do this. For some reason, people just attach on to APEC, despite the fact that APEC makes up less than 5% of the lobbying.
Starting point is 01:10:56 So if you have a problem with lobbying, like me, that's totally fine. I'm against APEC because I'm against lobbying. But you can't just hone in on one specific group. If you're going to be against it, then be against it for everybody. Moving on from that, we were asking questions about these. rumors that Israel has been going out and funding people and no, none of us were paid for that meaning. But I wish, Beebe, if you want to write the $150 million check, go for it. But we asked, we asked about funding. And as he explained, Israel is not offering to fund anybody. They're
Starting point is 01:11:27 not trying to get involved in American political advocacy groups. That has never happened. And if you're concerned about this, who you should be concerned about is Qatar. The last thing that we really touched on was the aid. People don't know this, but Netanyahu's first address to Congress was to say that they didn't want aid. Jimmy Carter, who was a notoriously anti-Israel president, is actually who started this because he saw that Israel was building up their air force and he didn't want them to. So he gave them aid that they could only use to buy military weapons from us
Starting point is 01:11:55 and they had to agree to shut down their manufacturers. So now they're dependent in a way on this aid for military operations that America doesn't want them to lose because we use it as a leash on them. So, Sagar, I just pulled this up on TikTok. Here are the top comments. Number one, on the payroll confirmed. Number two, that APAC paycheck must be insane. Number three, did she just say that APAC's not an Israeli lobbying group with four question marks?
Starting point is 01:12:21 As a conservative, that man is a war criminal. How much are they paying you? As soon as she said APAC wasn't an Israeli lobby, I scrolled, sellout confirmed, unfollowed. We're not buying it, et cetera, et cetera. Yeah, I mean, look, I don't know. I just, I feel very dark about how this is all playing out right now. And the reason why is that as disturbing and preposterous as all these influencers and all that are, they have currency. I mean, they're meeting with the prime minister of Israel.
Starting point is 01:12:51 You know what it makes me think of those, Zogger. It makes me think of, you know, we covered the chorus, dark money scandal with the Democrats where they're paying this like, you know, one of the influencers does some American girl doll like pro-DNC memes. You listen to most of these people content and you're like, okay, good luck. or the DNC started their own podcast. Ken Klippenstein loves posting the views on it. Like, just because you put money behind a thing, doesn't mean anyone is going to buy what you're selling. Doesn't mean anyone's going to be.
Starting point is 01:13:19 And like I said, if anything, people watching that were just like, screw you, basically. It had the opposite of the intended effect. We've got one more we can show you too, which is if anything, I mean, this is the best one. This is wild. This is C4. Take a listen. Imagine supporting people who start wars
Starting point is 01:13:35 just to lose the wars so they can cry about it and then try it all again. You must see anti-Semites are literally obsessed with Jews. Now walk with me. While you must-see-Semites are stacking eviction notices, Jews are out here stacking up businesses. Jews control all the industries. Maybe if you spend more time taking notes from successful people,
Starting point is 01:13:56 you wouldn't have to spend your nights and weekends spreading hate from your anonymous account with an anime profile picture. Do you work as hard as Jews? Do you network like Jews? No, because you're too busy cheering on a group of musty, terrorists who smell like dirty earring backs. And if we're going to keep a real, you're really mad because your income is giving side hustle. Period.
Starting point is 01:14:15 How are you going to hate from outside Shabbat? You can't even get in. Wow. So they have their own sassy gay black guy. Congratulations. Well, and I love the way. Who is that influencing? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:14:27 It's being paid. I mean, look, it's perverse and it's sick, but like pretty clearly they're finding, is that reaching an audience? Probably not. But they're obviously, look, they're doing it for something. Like, they're making some money perpetuating this stuff. I believe that some of these people were present at the Bill Ackman Summit that was there with Charlie Kirk. Both of them were, I know, for sure.
Starting point is 01:14:48 Right. And that's my point. It's like, it still does come with access to power. That's what makes me feel dark, really, about the entire thing. At the end of the day, people's salaries are getting paid. Do I think that influences anybody? No, I certainly don't. I think it's pathetic and ridiculous.
Starting point is 01:15:02 But they're getting meetings with the Israeli prime minister. One of the things is, when you look at Israel, is that at the end of the day, even hard power. So for them, this influencer briefing, everybody can laugh it off. I don't laugh it off because clearly they still think it's important and maybe it's a signal to the future TikTok people that these people need to be boosted in the algorithm or something. And you and I know like there is enough kind of mindless scrolling and lack of information, lack of just attention or whatever that to casually just stumble across and get quote the truth, clearly the Israelis believe this is like an existential existential and very important mission.
Starting point is 01:15:38 for them to try and control. Will it work? No, I don't necessarily think so. But I don't know. I wouldn't put it past them. I mean, I trust their judgment in respect of controlling the conversation. I don't. I mean, I'm glad to not. Because I just think that they have so cocooned them. It really is, I'm not equating the two, but it does remind me a lot of the DNC. Like, they're so high on their own supply. They're so cocooned in their own bubble. And so insulated from their critics because they just immediately write anyone off who has anything negative to say is an anti-Semi. And they don't let it penetrate. And so I think they are completely disconnected from the way that they have just become reviled around the world, around the world, and reviled in the U.S. in a way that has
Starting point is 01:16:21 never been the case. And so, you know, I mean, that, like, that thing was a mess. That was a disaster. I don't think there's one person who looked at that and was like, oh, you're right. Not to mention, it was anti-Semitic, even as they're trying to, like, stand up against anti-Semitism. They're like, the Jews control all the industry and are really good with money. It's like, what are you doing here? So in any case, I mean, there's always going to be shameless hacks who suck up to power no matter what. That's what these people are. They know that they can get into these meetings if they tow the line. They may genuinely have some like ideological belief about it or whatever, but more importantly, there's always going to be sick of fans who circle power. And that's
Starting point is 01:17:01 what's going on here. It is very dystopian. Don't get me wrong. The consolidation immediately media power in Trump-aligned hands and in pro-Zionist hands. That is very disconcerting. And the amount of sway that they can use these social media platforms, they're out there saying, like, look, we're going to tell Elon what to do, and he's probably going to do it because he's our buddy, is also really wild and dystopian. So I don't want to downplay it. I just want to say that I think that their Hasbara efforts have been laughably pathetic.
Starting point is 01:17:33 No one is buying their bullshit anymore. Very few people are buying their bullshit anymore, I should say. And we all have access to reality now. Like, you're not going to be able to stop the flow of the videos of the horror coming out of Gaza. And by the way, your own soldiers post their own war crimes so we can see it directly from them as well. We can listen to the statements that you make about how you're trying to manipulate all of us and buy up the media platform so that there's no dissent. We can listen to them saying in Hebrew, you know, we can hit the translate button and
Starting point is 01:18:05 hear them talking about how there's no innocence and how they want to displace everyone and exactly what the plan is. So, you know, I think it would be very hard for them in this environment to just hide reality and hide the truth and to turn back the clock and then persuade people. Oh, you know what? I was wrong. It's not a genocide. Like actually, this is the most moral army on the plan or whatever nonsense. Yeah. Listen, I hope you're right. Let's go to C5, please, up here on the screen, which shows the list of the influencers that all, like I said. No, there you go. First of the list. Yeah, you're not in Yahoo. He's so crazy. He's an influencer. He's not an influencer. He's a nepo baby living on our country, the poor disaster. Please. Send him to Gaza, all right?
Starting point is 01:18:46 You know, one of the hallmarks of a society, like one of the things that it's, it's easy to romanticize as horrible as it was. But in the First World War, something I've always respected about the British and the Germans and all their societies is that when the leaders went to war, they actually sent their own sons because they believed in it. Like, you had the prime minister of the UK, whose son was literally killed in combat. You had, you know, crowned princes and others in the field of battle. The average life expectancy for a British soldier almost entirely taken from the upper cross, like the lords and others who supported the war was like, I don't even remember exactly the timeline, but it was very, very short. But my point is just that nowadays, you know,
Starting point is 01:19:21 it's the norm of the chicken hawk meme, where you have the congressman and everybody else, this kind of relates to our shootings block, who support the war, their kids get to go to college, get exempt. We don't even have a draft anymore, but it's like very few of them ever sign up for military service. And then it's like the working class men, women of the country who actually have to go abroad and face the consequences. That's like the post-World War II status quo. So there is something very sick about that. And clearly that's also present in Israeli society as well. And by the way, to that point, Paramount has now released a new trailer for something called Red Alert, a four-part mini-series depicting the real-life stories of the victims of October
Starting point is 01:19:58 7th massacre in Israel. Why does that matter? Because Paramount was bought by whom? David Ellison, the guy who wants to hire Barry Weiss over at CBS News, Paramount Skydance, now owned entirely by David Ellison, who also just made an all-cash bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, including HBO Max, so you're going to have two Hollywood studios that are all under control. Who the hell knows what's going to get released nationwide? I don't know. I mean, that's where, again, the ability to shape culture is that from TikTok to the literal movie studios, it's going to be very, very interesting to see like what the divide on that
Starting point is 01:20:35 and whether it can hold and who actually controls everything. I tend to believe a lot of it, a lot of it is a lot more top down than people think to be able to push this stuff out into the ether. But potentially the internet
Starting point is 01:20:47 will still be more powerful. Yeah, I mean, I just would say like they're becoming more overt and more heavy-handed, but like the Western media has been aggressively pro-Israel forever. And certainly, you know, the way they framed October 7th, post-October 7th, our involvement, et cetera.
Starting point is 01:21:06 So it's not like they haven't been trying on the propaganda front and still, like, you have this massive revolt against what they're doing. Democratic Party is lost. Independence are lost. Republicans are divided. Young Republicans are increasingly lost. So I think it's probably too late to put those pieces back together. But they are certainly going to try. They're trying.
Starting point is 01:21:26 We'll see. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, maybe it'll be a boon for independent film. or something. But then how do you get it distributed? See, that's the issue with Hollywood. It's so bottlenecked and so controlled. That's probably the thing I worry about the most. And also, just don't screw up HBO. Please, please, please. It's like, let us just have our tasks. All right, great show. Shout out to that. Don't let them down. Unlock Elite Gaming Tech at Lenovo.com.
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Starting point is 01:22:46 Bad things happens to good people in small towns. Listen to Graves County on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever. you get your podcast. And to binge the entire season, ad-free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. Hi there, this is Josh Clark from the Stuff You Should Know podcast. If you've been thinking, man alive, I could go for some good true crime podcast episodes,
Starting point is 01:23:17 then have we got good news for you. Stuff You Should Know just released a playlist of 12 of our best true crime episodes of all time. There's a shootout in broad daylight, people using axes in really terrible ways, disappearances, heists the whole nine yards. So check out the stuff you should know true crime playlist on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an iHeart podcast.

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