It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 141
Episode Date: August 3, 2024All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. You can now listen to all Cool Zone Media shows, 100% ad-free through the Cooler Zone Media subscription, available ...exclusively on Apple Podcasts. So, open your Apple Podcasts app, search for “Cooler Zone Media” and subscribe today! http://apple.co/coolerzone See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, everybody.
Robert Evans here, and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode.
So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want.
If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing new here for you, but to in a long stretch if you want. If you've been listening
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Hi, Shereen.
Hi, James. That was alarming.
Yeah, I went into like 2010s YouTube voice.
Wow. Yeah. Hi james is excited today i'm i am excited i'm always excited to make
a podcast you know i love to cast a pod but uh today i am especially especially with an x like
espresso the coffee drink uh i am especially excited to talk to you shireen because we are
talking about a subject which i have wasted far too much of my life reading and writing about.
What are we talking about, Shireen?
Sports.
Sports.
The Olympics.
Yeah, just sports.
I'm going to explain to Shireen sports, why they're fun,
why I did too many of them.
Okay, we're talking about the Olympics, the Olympic Games.
Specifically, I guess they're happening in Paris this year.
They may be happening in Paris this year. They may be
happening in Paris by the time you listen to this. But I want to talk a little bit about the history
of the Olympics because I wrote a book about it. And so I get to drone on about it for half an
hour and you have to listen to me while you drive your cars to work. Cool. The modern Olympic Games
is, it draws links to ancient Greece, right? And it does that because at the time that the modern olympic
games in the late 19th century were being created uh by a guy called baron pierre de cubetta the
aristocracy of europe were obsessed with drawing links to the classical period right this is the
same time when we see all those like neoclassical buildings going up yeah and like people were
trying to draw links between themselves and the ancient greeks
and and to sort of posit themselves as the new kind of greco-roman uh font of civilization
yeah and hey i i took art history and i minored in it so i i know stuff too okay yeah because i
did not take art history that's all i know good job okay i'm sure you know more you can tell me all kinds of stuff about like impressionists and shit i don't understand so if we're looking at like
to understand the olympics we have to understand sport right and to understand sport we have to
understand play so i was right about sports you don't have to yeah no no you're good you're right
on it um right yeah but first we do play right so um if we're looking at like kind of the classic
text on this,
it's a book called Homo Ludens, but we probably don't need to read that. It's not a banger.
Very few academic books are bangers. I like to think mine's in the sort of semi-banger category,
but yeah, it's also overpriced and you shouldn't buy it. Just go to your library and get it
for free. Play is, it's pretty obvious what play is, but it's the difference between
play and sport is that sport is bounded. It happens in a certain place within a certain
set of rules. Play doesn't. So the archetypal kind of example of transitioning from play to
sport would be folk football in Britain. So back in the day in the place where I come from
for holidays, the saints days and other days when people didn't work,
they would have a game of football,
which consisted of a ball,
inflated pig's bladder or a similar device.
And you have to get it from one village
into the other village.
And those are about all the rules, right?
Sometimes they had specific rules against stabbing.
There've been like an outbreak of stabbing incidents.
But other than that, it was pretty much you do what the fuck you wanted, right? You want to go
on a five mile detour and come around people, come in the back way, no problem. You're on a
form of phalanx of all your mates and just kind of go through in a wedge style, not a problem at all.
You want to start hitting people with sticks, yeah, not an issue. It was very loose.
Every village or pair of villages that would play had their own kind of understanding of the rules,
but it wasn't a codified set of rules that existed across all incidences of folk football.
We go from there to association football. That's where soccer comes from right a soccer soccer association becomes a sock
a sock becomes a soccer that becomes soccer well does that make sense fine yeah i'm gonna say yes
it's a very like 19th century posh british effect that takes the word association football and
comes out with soccer that's so funny yeah that's that's where it comes from. So association football codifies the rules, right?
There's a pitch.
The pitch is the same size as a goal.
The goal is the same size.
You can't pick it up now.
And from that comes rugby football, right?
So rugby football is type where you pick up the ball.
There's a kind of founding myth for rugby football
that this guy called William Webb Ellis
with a glorious disregard for the rules, quote uh picked up the ball and ran with it it did i it's a bit weird
that like they've created a founding myth for a dude who effectively just like sucked at football
so he picked it up and ran with it like it doesn't seem like he deserves a literal statue that he has
yeah and that happened at rugby school right Which was one of these English boarding schools
that existed to prepare young men to be officers and administrators in the British empire.
And that is really what's the codification of sport as far as we can sort of create like a,
a reason for it is to prepare young men and just men to be administrators in the British empire, right?
It's supposed to make them physically strong. It's supposed to make them obey the rules and
learn to do what they're told even in stressful situations, right? It's part of an idea called
muscular Christianity. And like, as far as we can attribute this whole combination of things to one
person, it would be Thomas Arnold, right? Thomas Arnold being the headmaster at rugby school.
of things to one person, it would be Thomas Arnold, right? Thomas Arnold being the headmaster at rugby school. And he develops this idea of educating young Christian men and doing so using
sport as well as academia. And sports very quickly develop a set of rules around amateurism.
Amateurism, like sometimes we just use amateur now to mean not very good,
but at the time it specifically meant not paid to do the sport and so yeah this is the early
olympics actually the olympics until relatively recently have an amateurism rule right that
people can't participate if they are paid to do the sport they have exemptions for fencing coaches
which i think tells you about everything you need to know. This isn't there for any purity reason.
It's there to serve as a class barrier. And we see it used as a class barrier. First of all,
in football, that's why we have rugby league and rugby union, because the rugby league people
tended to be working people and they needed to be paid. The rugby league allowed for professionalism,
rugby union did not, and those tended to be wealthier people, right? But it's used at the Olympics extensively to police class.
Probably the most prominent example would be Jim Thorpe. You familiar with Jim Thorpe?
Jim Thorpe's a cool guy, actually. I got to read some of his correspondence. He actually wrote a
history of the Olympic Games, which is very sad when you consider that Jim Thorpe himself, he's a member of the second
Fox Nation, right? So he's indigenous to North America. He won a medal for the United States
in the 1912 Summer Olympics. He won two gold medals, actually, one in pentathlon and one in
decathlon. So decathletes are kind of like the uber athletes, right? You're doing 10 different
sports. You have to just be good at exercising. and jim thorpe was good at exercising uh he also played collegiate
professional football professional baseball and professional basketball uh see he's he's an oran
sports dad unfortunately he lost his olympic title because he had been paid at some point for playing
baseball even though he didn't do baseball in the olympics that's so fucked yeah it's it's very
clearly used as a way to class and race police the games right that's so shitty and i think this
gets to our point about what the olympics are so the early olympics tend to coincide with what are
called world's fairs um you're familiar with world's fairs shireen yeah yeah
yeah people sort of get together and they have these big exhibitions and they show off their
like you know if you're i got yeah paris whatever yeah look what i stole from this this country that
i have colonized and under force extracted uh these the following things uh if you're in britain
like the most famous sort of world's fair site would be crystal palace right crystal palace was
built and burned down but uh it was built for the World's Fair. If you're in San Diego,
Balboa Park, right, was built for 1914. Oh, really? Yeah, yeah. I feel like I knew that
somewhere in my head. Yeah. When you go to Balboa Park, a little niche San Diego diversion for the
millions of you who are not in San Diego, you can just tune out for 10 seconds. There's those
little cottages, like the international cottages.
Yeah, yeah.
And there's like a Palestine house.
Yeah, Palestine house.
Cool that they got recognition in San Diego at least.
Those are from the World's Fair.
Each country would have that little exhibition
in their house, right?
And all down the Prado.
So yeah, that's actually how the zoo started as well.
Someone in their exhibition had lions
and then fucking left them when they left and they
were like ah guess we better start a zoo got a couple of lions on our hands wow yeah incredible
uh incredible vibes so the olympics happen at the same time as world's fairs for a long time
and that is because the olympics are essentially a gathering of transnational bourgeoisie
i'm not that's not not a phrase I came up
with myself. It's from my friend David Goldblatt, who's written a really excellent history of the
Olympics. It's called The Games. And if you're going to read one book about the Olympics,
it should be David's book. He's a lovely guy. I'm sure he's not listening, but hello, David,
if you are. I would recommend his book because I think his analysis is great, right? That
what these become is a place where the sort of the people who make money
from finance capital all around the world
can gather together and share their little ideas
and play their little games.
And we see that, for instance,
in the 1904 St. Louis Olympics.
So in St. Louis, in addition to like the World's Fair,
they have the Olympics
and they have something called the Anthropological Days.
Have you heard about this, Shireen?
I don't believe I have.
No, it's one of the more fucked things to happen in St. Louis,
which I think is saying a lot.
They essentially kidnapped people
from around their various imperial possessions,
brought them to St. Louis,
which in itself is a crime,
and then forced them to compete in events
that they didn't fully explain to them.
What the fuck?
Yeah, Like,
and then concluded from this that like,
uh,
white people were better.
That's like some gladiator shit.
That's like,
yeah.
Yes.
What are you doing?
That's too modern.
That's too hard to happen.
This is 1904.
Yeah.
Not so long ago.
Yeah.
Very.
Yeah.
And this kind of exhibits what the,
what the world's Fairs were
and to a degree,
like what the Olympiads became,
which was like a way
for the colonizing powers
to get together, right?
Right.
Shireen, do you know
what will not kidnap you
from your home country
and fly you to St. Louis
and then force you to compete
in games that you don't understand?
Gold.
Yeah, you're probably right. Well it will you know because as a sort of source of wealth yeah right okay whatever i was
trying to make a trying to think of something that i might hear next yeah it's it's probably gold
you're right we're back and we hope you bought your gold uh the only uh the only uh metal that you can make
an olympic medal out of incidentally really i'm allergic to gold oh really yeah you're turning
green i get like you're like it, it's not good for my skin.
Oh, wow.
I'll get like, not infections, but like an eczema kind of reaction.
Oh, wow.
What do you, do you have an alternative jewelry?
I don't wear a lot of jewelry.
I wear rings the most, but I can't wear earrings anymore.
They're too, my ears are too sensitive.
I usually like stick with silver
if i have to but yeah i don't know i'm not meant to be rich no shame or maybe maybe platinum is
what's oh yeah i can do platinum yeah okay listeners centurion uh platinum doohickeys
uh yeah to to wear yeah gold they gold. The Olympic medals
are not solid gold.
They're just gold coated.
Interesting.
Yeah.
That feels a little cheap.
Yeah, right?
Like you spend your whole
fucking life trading something
and then they disagree
on the medal.
It chips off.
Yeah, you drop it
and it's just plastic
in the middle.
I guess they have more value
as Olympic medals
than they do as lumps of gold anyway.
You can sell them
and people have sold them online because as it turns out, like spending your entire I guess they have more value as Olympic medals than they do as lumps of gold anyway. You can sell them.
And people have sold them online because as it turns out,
spending your entire youth exercising and then getting to a point where you're too injured or old to compete is sometimes not great
for your future career prospects.
And I've unfortunately seen lots of friends take that path.
And so I want to talk about like the olympics in the 20th century and specifically i want to
talk about the olympics in the 1930s right so when the olympics by the time we come to the 1930s the
olympics have really become like they're an american thing the los angeles olympics gives us a lot of
the modern olympics and the rest of the modern olympics we get from friends of the podcast adolf hitler um and his his nazi party of course yeah i knew that you were expecting them we never never
don't expect hitler so 1932 is great like um 1932 olympic village they build this olympic village
they have it patrolled by cowboys just like hollywood cosplay dudes on horses cowboying around it's the first
it's it's very weird it's the first olympic village uh and it's it it becomes a real estate
investment right like as soon as the olympics are done they're in classic los angeles fashion
flipping the houses for more than they were paid um so it also creates this idea of like the
olympics as a mass spectacle.
1932 is sometimes called the Hollywood Olympics, right?
And it really changes the game from rich people getting together for rich people
to a spectator event and a mass spectator event.
In 1931, Spain's dictablanda collapses.
Dictablanda is like a soft dictatorship as opposed to dictadura,
it's a hard dictatorship, right, and Spain becomes a republic. 1931 is also the time when the International Olympic
Committee is meeting in Barcelona. And for geographically challenged listeners, Barcelona,
it's in Catalonia, but Catalonia is within Spain at this time. So the IOC is almost entirely comprised of very rich people.
And many of them are like barons, counts, princes,
other people who like their job is being someone's kid, right?
And they just do things like being on the IOC to occupy them
while they spend their parents' money.
So they're in Spain at the time when Spain has just deposed
a monarch and it has this revolutionary republic, right? The anarchists are in the street. It's
about to begin a campaign of two years of removing the church from its official position,
like anti-clericalism and of land reform. These are things which rich people do not like. And so the vote happens in
Barcelona about where to hold the next Olympics. And the two leading candidates are Berlin and
Barcelona. And after Barcelona, something a little weird happens. The IOC members all go home and not
everyone has come to Barcelona because of the change in the situation. And instead of being
like, okay, well, we had a vote and Barcelona won, the IOC makes an interesting and relatively
unique decision to have another vote by telegram. And in the telegram vote, they, instead of going
for the unstable Spanish second Republic, opt for a more stable and liberal democracy,
which is, of course, Weimar Germany.
Oh, of course.
Yeah.
Good choice by the better rich folks.
They really helped us out there.
And it's very interesting.
Like, I've spent a lot of time with these telegrams,
like the actual paper telegrams
in the International Olympic Committee archive in Lausanne,
trying to ascertain, did they just like, did the vote happen? And then they were like, no,
fuck, we can't go to Barcelona. Like we got to redo, we got to work out a way to jig this,
like we can't go to this Republican place. Or that they claimed that there weren't enough
votes, right? That they didn't have like a quorum. But I've looked at previous and subsequent votes
and there are plenty of other votes
that have fewer participants.
And it was relatively normal at this time
for not everyone to show up at a meeting, right?
Because it's 1931, like traveling is hard.
And so I can't categorically say what's happened,
but maybe that's what I suspect has happened.
I can't really see any
way i could find out now and i so went to every member of the international olympic committee at
the time and looked in their personal archive but either way they decided to give the olympics to
this little place called weimar germany in between 1931 and 1936 uh history fans will know that the Nazis gave to power in Germany.
Nazis, not very nice people.
No.
And no, bad, many people are saying.
Yeah, many people are saying it. The mosquitoes of the world.
No, maybe not.
Sorry, we just recorded the mosquito episode.
Oops.
Yeah, in many ways, like the mosquito could be eradicated.
Maybe it wouldn't be bad.
Yeah.
My favorite George Or orwell line one of
my favorite joints orwell lines i joined the militia to kill a fascist because if all of us
did so then there wouldn't be any of them left wow yeah yeah very prescient so the olympics
when the nazis come to power first they want to do away with it right they want to like fuck this
this is some bougie shit we're not into it we don't want to see other people. We don't care
about other nations. We're Aryans. And then over time, the administrators of the Olympics,
including a guy called Carl Diem, who would be classified according to the Nazis' own sort of
standards as a Jewish person, they persuade the Nazis that having the Olympics will be good for them. It will let them exhibit their shit on a world scale.
And they are not wrong.
The Olympics turn into a massive boon for Nazi Germany.
We don't have enough time in this short episode to explain the whole boycott movement.
There was a substantial boycott movement, including in the United States.
The United States very nearly boycotted the Berlin Olympics,
but in the end, it ended up not doing so.
You had opposition from really interesting groups.
You had opposition, obviously,
from Jewish groups, right?
Because Nazis.
You have opposition from elements of NAACP,
but not from other elements
because they have this very reasonable objection.
They're like, well, America is also racist as fuck, actually.
Like we also, like this is a time when we exclude black folks.
Yeah.
A lot of support.
Yeah.
Like not, not a, yeah.
And so you have black folks boycotting and you have black folks being like,
now fuck it.
Like we'll take the chance, you know?
And then you have the opposition from an interesting group,
like the liberal Catholics, right?
Because the Nazis have their own ideas on religion
and so a lot of catholics were anti-nazi at that point including jeremiah mahoney who was president
of the amateur athletic union at the time who was kind of leading the boycott movement the united
states decides not to boycott lots of other places in the world decide that they are going to boycott
right um lots of other people around the world and that's where barcelona they had a
conference in paris actually the international conference for the respect of the olympic ideal
and that is the conference out of which the barcelona remember barcelona applied in 31 right
okay so they have all their shit together they actually have the site of a formal world's fair
and that's what they're going to use so the Catalans come to this conference in April of 36 and are like, hey, we can have another
Olympics which isn't shit.
They go ahead and have their Olympics which isn't shit.
Now first happened the Nazi Olympics, right?
The Nazi Olympics give us so much of what we consider to be the Olympic tradition today.
The torch relay, you know the torch relay?
They go to Olympia and bring the flame. That's a Nazi thing actually. It comes from the Nazis.
The idea of drawing a link from ancient Greece to Berlin was a Nazi idea.
Why do we still do it?
Yeah, that's a good question. Shireen, isn't it? The good question is we enter the Paris
Olympics. One thing they have done away with is the Olympic salute
because it bears an unfortunate resemblance to the Nazis.
Did that also start in...
No, the Olympic salute predates it.
So you have these interesting people march,
like the parade, the opening ceremony of the Olympics.
And lots of these, the pageantry of the opening ceremony
also comes from the Nazis, by the way.
And we got people walking in and the French come in and they're doing a salute and people like is that the nazi salute they're doing it's at the olympic salute i'm pretty sure it's the olympic
salute i'm pretty sure uh if it's too close i think it's bad yeah i think it's getting confused
for something else i think i think you should stop yeah i just tried to not do things that
look like i'm zeke hyling like that is how i how i live my life you have other uh other nations who
don't do it right uh you have the americans the americans traditionally in the so they're supposed
to dip their flag the americans have never dipped their flag in olympic opening ceremonies so
sometimes you'll see this written as like a yeah, the Americans said, fuck Hitler. They didn't. They just did what they'd always done,
which was to not dip their flag.
And that Olympiad is a great success for Hitler, right?
Like this is where a lot of this like,
oh, but yeah, he's very efficient.
He makes the trains run on time,
kind of shit comes from, right? They use it as a pageant
and they downplay their racism.
They include a couple of Jewish athletes on their team,
which is one of the demands of Avery
Brundage
head of the
American Olympic
Committee
Brundage
Brundage is an
interesting dude
Brundage
you can read more
about Brundage
in my book
Robert did a
Behind the Bastards
on Brundage
I don't think
he begins
the 1930s
as an anti-Semite
but after the
boycott campaign
which he calls
a Jewish
communist conspiracy
well yeah he absolutely becomes an anti-Semite But after the boycott campaign, which he calls a Jewish communist conspiracy.
Wow.
Yeah.
He absolutely becomes an anti-Semite.
Like he grows closer to Hitler than others because like his idea is that politics
shouldn't influence the games,
which is inherently a political choice
when the games have been given to fucking Adolf Hitler.
Yeah.
So the 1936 Olympics go ahead in Germany.
Lots of fascism, lots of Sieg Heilung, a real success for Hitler. So the 1936 Olympics go ahead in Germany, lots of fascism, lots of Sieg
Heil, a real success for Hitler. The 1936 Olympics in Barcelona don't go ahead because
of the Spanish Civil War. The Barcelona Olympics are like an alternative to the Berlin Olympics.
At this time also it should be pointed out that you got the Winter Olympics when you
got the Olympics. So the Nazis already had Garminch-Partenkirchen Winter Olympics
and had predicted we'd had
a bunch of Nazi shit, right?
Which didn't stop anyone
going to the Summer Olympics.
Shireen, do you know what won't do
a bunch of Nazi shit?
What, James?
It's the products and services
that support this show, Shireen.
I found it's easier
instead of trying to come up
with something
just to give you the question right back.
Yeah.
Damn, foiled again.
We're back.
So yeah, these Olympics,
they're supposed to happen in barcelona they don't happen
because the spanish civil war starts at the same time right lots of these anti-fascist athletes go
on to participate as fighters in the spanish civil war about 400 of them the popular olympics are
cool the main reason they're cool is because i've written a book about them but other reasons
include that they had like elite amateur and then provincial races so like
you could just show up and be like yeah man i'm just gonna fucking check my hat in the ring 100
meters let's see how i do and uh there'll be a place for you to compete right it wasn't about
who was a freak athlete they were really interested in working class health so for that reason they
also had like these mass relay events where you'd have like the the 50 by 25 meters or the 10 by 50 meters,
and you couldn't have all runners. The idea was that the country that would win or the
nation that would win, they competed as nations rather than states. The exiled Jews of Europe
competed together for the obvious reason that if you're a German Jew in 1936, you don't
want to compete for fucking Germany. Even at at the popular Olympics, they competed to Jewish workers sports associations.
And you have exiled antifascists from Germany and Italy competing under their own banners.
And you have Galicia, Catalonia, the Basque Country competing as their own little nations.
And the same with the colonized people of North Africa. And you have the women students of the world
with their own little team, which is nice.
They also made a big deal of including women
and allowing women to do sports that men do.
At the time, in 1936, women couldn't run more than 200 meters.
Well, they actually could, as it turns out.
Yeah, yeah.
They just weren't allowed to.
Surprise.
Yeah, shocking, shocking discovery.
They didn't just involve that capacity since 36.
But these Olympics don't go ahead
because the Spanish Civil War starts.
Lots of the anti-fascist athletes who came
stayed to fight, right?
Including people I've written about in my book.
We did a whole cool people who did cool stuff about this.
So you can listen to more if you want to.
In Margaret's feed, I'm sure if you search popular Olympics, it'll be there. By the way,
you'll sometimes see it translated as people's Olympics. I prefer popular because it's inherently
tied to the idea of a popular front, right? Which is a policy of like united front between everyone
from like the liberals to the communists, to the anarchists against fascism. Sometimes the anarchists
don't participate in the popular front because it is dominated by communists. And the communists, in fact, love to kill anarchists a
lot more than they love to kill fascists. And they use the popular front as cover for doing that,
as we see in Spain. But the anarchists did participate in workers or popular sport in
Barcelona, at least to an extent. So these games, as I said, they don't happen. You can read about
that in my book, or you can listen to Margaret's podcast about it. But I want to talk about what the Olympics represent today,
the modern Olympics, right? They have become, as they always were, right? They continue to be a
spectacle that they've been since 32, and they continue to be a vehicle for capitalism as they
have been forever, right? If we look at their recent Olympic Games,
we look at London, we look at Rio. I think Rio is a really great example. The Olympics,
they were able to clear areas of the city using the pretentious Olympics, displace favela
communities, displace poor and excluded and marginalized people and take advantage of incredibly underpaid labor.
And there's probably, it's a bit rarer now, but for like most of the last eight years,
you've met Haitian folks in Tijuana, mostly, right? The US has been especially racist and
bigoted towards Haitians. And I wrote a piece for NBC about Biden's hypocrisy on Haitian immigration.
But there were people who had worked on the Olympic Stadium in Brazil. So they'd gone from
Haiti after the earthquake, the economic and political issues they've had ever since the
earthquake. They'd gone to Brazil, and then they'd worked in Brazil building the stadia,
getting paid fuck all, and doing dangerous work. And then eventually either they weren't able to find work, their visas had run out, or they'd otherwise chosen to come north to
the United States. And they often end up not being able to, they end up stuck in Tijuana
or living in Tijuana and finding work there. So often, Olympics take advantage of migrant they are used as a means of reshaping the city into sculpting it under capitalism.
Yeah.
Pushing folks out of their neighbourhoods. They don't do the Olympics in bougie neighbourhoods.
They use it as an excuse to gentrify a neighbourhood, to remove entrenched working
class communities. Yeah, it's really sad's when I read so much of the stuff about
like specifically the Barcelona Olympic games, like we see these people who are unquestionably
good people, right? Like they genuinely believe that through what they see as the ideal of the
Olympics, they can liberate women. They, the Barcelona organizers. So like they didn't have
much money, right? They were putting people up you i found these forms in the archives they'd go around people's houses and be like hey uh do you
have a spare bedroom and in the form you can tick i have one two three spare bedrooms i can serve
breakfast i can't serve breakfast like and that's how they would bill at the athletes right the
athletes didn't have an olympic village they had a hotel and then any surplus you would just stay
with with a local person it was very different vision different vision of what the Olympics could have been, right?
They really believed in the youth of the world coming together. They really thought that
at the popular Olympics, they could show the strength of anti-fascism. That anti-fascism
wasn't just a talking point, that it was young and it was healthy and most importantly, that
they could fucking kill you, right?
Sport Orwell, again, double Orwell quote episode.
Orwell called Sport war without the shooting.
And I think he's spot on, actually.
It is good.
He's got some bangers, Shireen.
You do say that.
Sounds like he's a writer, yeah.
Yeah, he's a word guy, George Orwell.
People do love to misquote George Orwell,
but I like to quote him correctly.
You know, you can always,
when someone misquotes George Orwell, you can always to quote him correctly. You know, you can always, when someone misquotes
George Orwell, you can always just quote tweet them with the, I had joined the militia to kill
a fascist. Right. Or the other absolute banger from Orwell. I have no particular love for the
idealized worker as he exists in the mind of the bourgeois communist. But when I see a real flesh
and blood worker in conflict with his natural enemy, the i don't have to ask myself which side i'm on oh it's a banger that's that's poetry yeah it is it's great like uh it's something that uh
and when i get around to it i'll have tattooed on my body maybe like uh maybe when i have to uh
cross fewer borders yeah it's not probably not something you want to be showing off to the
intelligence agencies of various countries yeah it's really sad to see this thing and i think it does have potential i think it's a
potential what i want to end on is like i think we can recover that potential like we can take
the olympics away from the people who did 1904 and the people who did 1936 and and like it doesn't
have to use that obviously the ioc is not fucking coming with us
right um you know i've been to the ioc very nice building uh but like this you know the the
interest of finance capital the interest of the ioc are inherently tied right coca-cola every
massive corporation in the world is a massive sponsor of the olympics right um and it's also
been a platform for some really good things. We think about Tommy Smith and
John Carlos at the 1968 Olympics giving a raised fist salute on the podium. I'm sure you've seen
it. There's a statue of them. Several statues of them, I think, actually. But yeah, very famous
Olympic moment. The whole 1968 Olympics actually gave a platform for protest. Parisians have been
protesting against this Olympics, and Angelenos are already protesting
against what is going to happen in 28.
You can look up Nolympics LA
for those folks.
And I think that that is something
that's worth supporting.
I don't think that the idea
is inherently bad.
The idea of coming together to play
and like sports are where we decide
who's on our team
and who's not on our team, right?
And what the popular Olympics did was said working people are all on the same team and they played that out
right the day the games were supposed to start some of those athletes were in the streets
killing fascists and they won right that day the military coup failed in barcelona and a lot of
them left really feeling like they'd got something out of the game so they couldn't have got older
but they came to play and and they saw like what they were playing for acted out and and i think there's still something really
powerful in that but like we can only get there by acknowledging how fucked up the olympics have
always been i see this like liberal narratives that the olympics olympics were once great about
sportsmanship and now they're about capitalism no fuck that like they have always been inherently about capitalism they've been inherently about colonialism about eugenics right
the uh the medal table we don't do the medal table for shits and giggles the medal cable is there to
prove like the superiority of one race like that is why hitler is obsessed with the medal table
right um he's extremely worried that like either the like black folks in the united states or like
god forbid the japanese do well in the olympics it's like and then the olympics trying to sort of
posit itself as inherently pro-human rights i think is very problematic when
yeah we look at like how olympic stadia get constructed by whom they get constructed and
where they get constructed yeah yeah who they affect and yeah and who who they're for and who who they take from them so i know i'm not saying
don't watch the olympics like uh when i was a kid the olympics were like fucking formative and me
wanting to do sport when i was an athlete the olympics was something i wanted to do i have
friends who are going to be at the o. And I guess I wish them the best.
But it's still a bad thing.
And I certainly don't blame folks
who come from resource poor settings
for taking that chance.
Yeah, of course not.
But it is like, yeah,
the way it currently is
and the way it's always been
is just,
doesn't necessarily make the world a better place.
But maybe there's a different timeline where
i don't know barcelona's idealism of an olympics is like true yeah i know i think we can bring it
back i think like anti-fascism is having a moment that it probably hasn't had since the 1930s that's
very true the last four years like when we can get together and we can have our own institutions
too like i don't think we should abandon sport to the chuds just because the chuds have like sport like uh
yeah and there's a way but i also don't want anyone to use it as a way to like
not sports wash but like kind of focus on something that is not as relevant as the
bigger picture does that make sense like yeah totally Like, yeah, it shouldn't be used to distract.
Yeah, exactly.
That's the short word to say.
Yeah.
And like it has been,
like global sports are increasingly going to
like petro-states in the Middle East, right?
Like, and that is a problem.
I think if you're an athlete,
I would encourage you to really consider
what your role is.
I know some of my friends listen
who are still like professional athletes
and just think about
what you can do and like i will tell you that when you stop getting paid to exercise all of it seems
very unimportant uh and like you suddenly realize that in my case but uh there's important shit that
you can do if you have a chance to do it and you should do it uh if you get the chance but yeah
i think hopefully you know if people want to know more
about the popular Olympics,
I will fucking talk your ear off.
So send me an email.
Yeah, my book,
I think it might be on Libcom now as well.
I think it's been pirated,
which is good to see.
You can get it from your library.
I'd love you to get it from your library
because then it's there for someone else.
I love libraries.
Yeah, I do love a library.
Yeah.
We should do a library episode.
Yeah, I was trying to get
the San Diego Library Association
on because we've been
defunding the libraries
here in San Diego
to have more cops
yeah it's fucking great
isn't it
yeah
no I love
libraries are just this
I don't know
pure little place
we gotta do
some library episodes
yeah we'll do them
we'll get them back
we'll get the libraries
if you work in a library
and the police
are taking away
the money you use
to read books to little children,
you can DM me on x.com.
Yeah, and we will fight
the good fight for you.
Yeah.
All right.
That's been the Olympics.
I know.
Go forth.
Do a little decathlon.
Here's a fun Olympic fact for you.
A fun fact to end the
episode general pattern right american war guy entered the pentathlon at the olympics and uh
used such a large pistol that they were unable to determine the size of his grouping of shots
on the target because he just eviscerated the whole target with his hand cannon. Yeah. So embody that, the pentathlon,
a sport that was designed to train officers, right?
You have to run, swim, ride a horse, sword fight, shoot.
Yeah.
So make a better pentathlon.
Make an anti-fascist decathlon.
Yeah.
Send us your, you can tag us with your decathlon ideas
on x.com.
We both use, I write, okay, Prely, we have the same Twitter handle.
But yeah, send us your sporting ideas.
Enjoy your little Olympic viewing
now that I've ruined it all for you, I guess.
Yeah.
No, I mean, it's good to know context,
but yeah, until next time.
Yeah.
Until the next time me and James
talk about something either terrible or fun.
Or somewhere in between yeah
yeah yeah we'll uh yeah we'll be back soon with something else you'll never know what
these are always fucking just these must just come out of left field for people
like what the fuck are they talking about today yeah well i guess we'll never know until you
listen that's it listen every day bye Bye. Bye.
Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular online series, The Running Interview Show,
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Welcome to I Can Happen Here,
a podcast where I,
Mia Wong,
have read Kamala Harris's dad,
Donald Harris's book.
This is the podcast that you're
listening to now with me to experience this actually genuinely fairly interesting work
of political economy is James Stout. Hi, man. I'm so excited to learn what Donald has for us today.
Me too. I'm, you know, I'm of a bunch of minds of this book because I think the actual key element of this book, which is called Capital Accumulation and Income Distribution, is that it is unbelievably technically dense.
who Donald Harris is. So a lot of the focus around, this is Kamala Harris, the presumptive Democratic nominee's dad. So a lot of the media coverage around him is around him being a Marxist.
This is debatable. Obviously, it's the conclusion I'm going to come out of this with.
I am shocked that people in our media today might misunderstand basic things about Marxism and who is and is not a Marxist.
Yeah, I mean, I think, so the thing about this book, so this book is from 1978, which is actually after he had broken up with Kamala's mom.
And so Kamala doesn't like know him super well.
Is he like not present in her younger life?
Kamala's mom and dad divorced when she was like five, so like four or five.
So this is written about a decade after that.
Yeah, much like the new American Communist Party.
Like a lot of divorce guys just love to be communist.
It's a thing about divorce guys.
Oh God, yeah.
So, you know, the sort of,
the thing everyone kind of cites
about like Donald Harris's politics
is that he was in this sort of like Black Studies – I guess proto-Black Studies group that produced a bunch of Black Panthers, produced a lot of very radical people.
But the interesting thing about Donald Harris is that he is not the Marxist that you would expect to see coming out of sort of like that milieu.
expect to see coming out of sort of like that milieu because
those people's Marxism you know I mean
he is very interested in sort of underdevelopment
and you know sort of like
imperialism but he's
he's not from one of the
sort of like Maoist inflected
kinds of Marxism which are the kinds that tended
to be sort of floating around
like that milieu at the time
he in fact he is a
very very rare kind ofxist which is to say
well a he doesn't call himself a marxist he calls himself a marxist in the entire time um but b
yeah intolerable we don't understand what this is so there's a very famous marx quote where he's
complaining about i think it's something the german social democratic party did or something
where he or people are calling themselves marxists And he goes, if this is what Marxism is, then I am not a Marxist. And so for 100 years
since then, 150 years, people have been calling themselves Marxians instead of Marxists.
But this is all over that book. I'm developing a picture of a kind of guy.
Oh, yeah. You're painting me a rich portrait, man.
Yeah. But the interesting part is he's what's known as a post-Keynesian
and weirdly dear listeners you are you are some of the only people in this entire country who
have a prayer of knowing who these people are because we've actually had a bunch of them on
the show um if people remember uh the episodes that I did about inflation uh over the last sort
of like year I guess like two years I don't know it's been it's been a long time but the episodes
about inflation that we did with the folks
over at Strange Matters. Those people
are sort of the, one
of the groups that are the intellectual heirs to
sort of post-Keynesianism. It's a,
you know, I guess
post-Keynesianism is kind of, it's,
I guess it's like the largest of what's called the
heterodox economics
schools. We're going to get
more into what it is later because it's not just
like you know so it's post-kensian after like john bader canes it's not really canes and that that's
that's gonna become very important in a second but you know this this is sort of an issue because it
means that it's actually it's really really hard for a normal person to figure out what the fuck
is going on with this book and this is something that i discovered you know partially just from
reading it and partially also i mean this this like i have a pretty good background
to do this because i know a lot of post-hensian economics and i also have studied a lot of marks
and you need both of those to be able to write about this however comma i discovered two hours
before this recording i discovered that the economist had sent some hack who they refused
to name to write about this book and this person managed
okay on top of just like straight up not like not literally the the their explanation of what
the book is about is simply wrong in in just four paragraphs they managed to make an error
so egregious that i if i had turned this shit into my professors in college it would have failed me
for it so okay okay so one of the things the author talks
about is this thing called the Cambridge Capital Controversy. And this author claims that this
controversy was fought between the neo and post-Keynesians. Now, this is probably gibberish
to like 99% of people listening to this, but in terms of heterodox economics, this is the
equivalent of not knowing who fought in World War II. Like, this is, the Cambridge-Captain controversy is,
it's basically the single moment
in which this kind of, like,
this kind of heterodox economics
appears onto the economic scene
in a way that, like,
they were able to force
the sort of mainstream neoclassical economists
to take, to, like, pay attention to.
And this battle should,
like, intellectually,
should have completely destroyed
all of neoclassical economics, right?
Everything you've ever heard about how price equals supply and demand, like all of those curves, all of that is fucking bullshit.
All of it was destroyed by one single – it happened over the course of a decade between the sort of post-Keynesians, mostly Serafa, but also Joe and Robinson, I think actually started it.
We're going to talk about those people more later.
This is a battle between them and very specifically the neoclassical economists and by the end of it
the neoclassical economists were forced to admit that they couldn't they couldn't figure out a way
to like measure the value of a bundle of like capital goods so if you have two different
machines neoclassical economics cannot tell you the value of the two machines and this this
completely annihilates neoclassical economics all of you the value of the two machines and this this completely
annihilates neoclassical economics all of it is fucking fake because you know they need this for
the production function without the production function like you can't even get to supply and
demand right every literally everything all of their stuff immediately falls apart i'm not going
to like attempt to do an explanation of the cambridge capital controversy what was what it
was actually about here because it's it's a little, it's something that you can understand, but it's a little bit technical
and it's hard to explain in podcast form. If you're really curious about this, the book Capital
as Power, Capital as Power has a really great explanation of it in chapter five. That's pretty
short. You can just literally find a PDF of Capital as Power by just Googling it.
But this is a level of sort of like confusion we're getting with here.
We're like the person, the economist assigned to write this, like knows so little about
it that, and you know, the other thing about this whole controversy is that the Cambridge
Capital Controversy is in the book.
And in the book, Donald Harris very specifically talks about, there's an entire chapter of
the book that is just him using the products of the Cambridge Capital controversy to completely destroy neoclassical economics.
This is an entire chapter of the book, and this guy got who it was about wrong.
This is a book that is very, very easy to misinterpret and very, very easy to sort of not completely misunderstand or bounce off of.
It was hard for me, and I'm pretty well set up to deal with it.
So, okay, what the fuck is this book about?
The shortest answer I can possibly give is
it's an attempt to build a sort of mathematical model
that measures the growth of an economy
and can sort of like
determine based on like different sort of inputs of uh you know we'll get to the board of the
second like in terms of like inputs of capital and like parts of labor like how how you can have an
economy that grows stably over time but in order to like get into really what this is we need to do
something that actually is is the first part of this book we need to do something that actually is the first part of
this book. We need to do a brief survey of the last 230, 240 years of economics.
But before we do that, do you know what economics exists to sell you?
I do, actually. That is a fantastic transition, Mia. Is it goods and services?
It is, in fact, goods and services.
Priceless capital goods.
All right, and we are back.
So, okay, in order to understand literally what this fundamental project is, we have to talk about sort of the three broad categories of economists.
So the first sort of original, and we're not going to, there's a couple, there's some people before this, but like in terms of like economists whose work is important to now there's three broad categories and we're going to
start with the classical economists broadly there's also about three important classical economists
uh this is this is an argument and this one of the arguments that donald harris makes in the
opening of this book is about who these people are so his argument is it's adam smith malthus
and ricardo we don't care about malthus for our purposes um he's most well known for being the
like the the likeof-control population.
Growth will kill everyone on Earth.
We need to slow populate stuff.
That's not super relevant for us.
Everyone, I think, kind of has
a basic familiarity with Adam Smith.
But for our purposes,
the important one is Ricardo,
who is not very well-known at all.
Ricardo is sort of concerned with basically the distribution of surpluses between the classes.
So for him, there's three major classes, right?
There's landlords, there's capitalists, and there's workers.
And he's concerned about how the surplus product of a society, which is like all of the sort of
stuff that's produced in an economy that isn't literally directly necessary for everyone to survive.
How is that sort of surplus distributed?
And how does this sort of impact economic growth?
The post-Keynesian tradition that Donald Harris is in, is in a real sense, they're the successors
to Ricardo, right?
A lot of, I've mentioned Piero Serafa, who is probably the central figure of post-Keynesian
economics.
He's a really interesting guy.
He knows everyone.
He knew Keynes.
He was weirdly friends with Antonio Gramsci, the former head of the Italian Communist Party,
whose enormously influential work knew him.
And a lot of what Serafa's work is is kind of like getting Ricardo's economics to work
properly and then turning that into
sort of a new framework for for how you model economies now the other part of this you know so
okay who is and isn't a classical economist is also a huge source of debate because there's a
lot of people who throw marks in as part of the classical economists that's a traditional way to
view it harris doesn't think that he's a classical economist. He thinks that he's his own thing. So for our purposes,
you know, and Harris is also, I mean, I think he considers himself a Marxist even in this period.
And a lot of this book is an attempt to sort of merge Marxian political economy with like the
sort of Neo-Ricardian stuff that Sarafa is doing does he change later do you know is harris one of these guys who goes on a like intellectual
journey and becomes oh we'll get there okay we'll get we'll get to where all this ends up
at the end of this episode but you know it's interesting because you can actually see it
kind of happening in the middle of this book in ways that we're going to get to
i love that i love a book where the author goes on a personal journey.
It's also very funny
because the economist guy was like,
oh my God, he's so Marxist.
He's concerned with the value form.
And like, okay,
I put my Marxist cards on the table.
Maybe six people will understand this,
but like I was like brought up
in terms of learning like Marxist theory,
like through the value form school.
He is not a value form guy.
He plays really fast and loose
what value is uh it's it's i was reading this and i was going oh god oh no what is this he's so wrong
he's so bafflingly wrong um the uh what did the the economist artist subtitled a combative marxist economist with white house influence which like thanks guys yeah okay so the the the the the basis of marxist marxian political economy
is the labor theory of value we're going to explain this briefly because it actually
winds up mattering a lot to this book so value is the product of the labor time socially necessary
to produce a commodity right it's like how long does it take like a socially necessary to produce a commodity, right? It's like, how long does it take a specific place to produce a watch? Workers are paid enough to reproduce
themselves. They're paid enough to eat, sleep, and have kids so there can be more workers.
But the rest of their labor time is stolen by capitalists and is thus unrenumerated. This
unpaid labor time is called surplus value, and this is what capital is made of. So this is the
very, very basis of what Marxism is. And in Marxism value and this is what capital is made of so this is like the very very basis of sort of what marxism is and you know in in sort of marxism and this is sort of
different than ricardo which is like we work ricardo understands that there are classes and
that they are in conflict to some extent but you know for marx the central dynamics of capitalism
is you know it's the conflict between the bourgeoisie or the capitalist who own the means
of production and then you know and by ownership, like extract surplus value from the proletariat, and the
proletariat or the working class are forced to sell their labor to capitalists, et cetera,
et cetera.
Something very interesting, two ideas run into each other very quickly in Harris's work
because there is a thing called surplus in the tradition of sort of Ricardo and in the tradition of like Sarafa and the post-Keynesians, right?
And that surplus is very critically not the same thing as Marxian surplus value.
So part of what's happening here is that Harris is trying to square the circle basically between these two approaches to what surplus is and what the nature
of value is. So in the Marxist tradition, surplus value is still in labor time and the value it
produces flows through the economy. Stealing this labor time is what turns capital into more capital. In post-Keynesian economics, surplus is – so in sort of like a Serafin work or in this book too, you have basically a production matrix, which is like a matrix that models how production works.
And what it's doing is modeling the entire output of society at one time and in this model so they're they're sort of like you know there's
all the commodity and labor inputs that compose the economy and they come back out and there's
a certain amount of commodities this is the thing we talked about with the card all right there's
a certain amount of commodities you need to produce so that everyone can this the entire
system can reproduce itself and beyond that is surplus so what you're dealing with is this weird
mixture because harris is trying to work with both of these at the same time.
We're like,
on the one hand you have surplus as like,
like stolen value in a form of like stolen labor time.
And then the other hand,
you have it in this Ricard in sense of like,
there's a bunch of commodities that we've produced.
That's like access to our,
like ability to,
to like our need to reproduce ourselves.
And he's trying to square these and it doesn't work
it it just sort of breaks down does he like does he like actively address this like
dual meaning and then explain like yeah well so his basic issue is that... The way he does this mostly is by just moving
back and forward between the two systems
and not trying
to reconcile them. And then the one time he has to
kind of do it, he has to...
Oh, God. Do I want to try to explain the
transformation problem? He has to
do this thing
where...
Okay, so theoretically, if you want to
convert surplus value, like in the Marxian sense, into the sort of like neo-Ricardian thing, you need to turn it into prices.
And there's a long running controversy in Marxism over whether or not you can actually do that, because the math is weird.
It doesn't work very well.
I'm not going to, he doesn't solve it.
it doesn't work very well um i'm not gonna he doesn't solve it he just gives up and says that you can't do it because they're in two separate spheres um which is the most cop-out answer i've
ever seen in my entire life it's i love that yeah it's it's it's it's wild but you know so so back
to the sort of main arc of what the fuck is this book about here.
I promise we're reaching the promised land.
We have to do this stuff first.
Okay, so those are – the two kinds of economics that Donald Harris is trying to work with are this sort of post-Keynesian stuff, which is derived from like Ricardo and classical economists and then like Marxian stuff.
There's also the third school, which is neoclassical economics, which this is all the economics that you've learned in school right this is supply demand this is like your production functions this is your like every time someone
starts lecturing you about how the economy works this is all this stuff um what's very important
for our purposes this is something that har brings up, is the single largest difference between
neoclassical economics and whatever
came before it isn't that
like, I don't know, everything's about
marginal utility or whatever the fuck.
It's that
in neoclassical economics, there are no classes.
They just pretend
that classes don't exist.
Wow.
And in much of American politics. Yeah. Wow. It's been, and in much of American politics.
Yeah.
Germany politics, sadly.
Well, and this is also why, like,
the American conception of class
is so nuts
and why everyone's running around
in circles trying to measure it
by, like, income levels
because all the economics they use
don't have a thing that establishes
what class is.
It is one of the jarring differences
between the United Kingdom and the United States,
how we are hyper aware of class.
And it's something that arguably Britain is obsessed with
to the detriment of other things.
And you go to America and fucking,
if you have a job that pays you occasionally,
you're middle class.
And fucking everyone is apparently.
And like it becomes a meaningless term, I guess.
Yeah, this is very explicitly for political reasons, right?
Neoclassical economics is developed
as an attack on Marxism.
Like this is its actual sort of origin
and its originators are like very explicit about this, right?
Now, and this is where we get back to Serapho
because Serapho's work effectively is an attack on neoclassical economics. And Seraphim in 99 pages literally destroys everything they'd ever produced. But the neoclassical solution to this is basically to get everyone who talked about it fired. And this actually worked. They did this basically massive social cleansing campaign of all of the sort of heterodox economists they got they got them all fired and it worked and harris actually weirdly
was kind of was like one of the last holdouts into the 90s um but he just like retires in like
the late 90s and that's like basically every all of them get ran out uh there's a good we'll talk
about him later there's there's another uh post-keynesian economist named frederick lee who
my friends at strange matter really like who's an anarchist who's in this school. And he has an excruciatingly detailed account of all of these economists getting run out by the neoclassical people.
their strategy is a strategy of capitalism, which is like, obviously we're not right here,
but we have money and we have force.
And so we're going to defeat your ideas
by simply destroying you all
by like actual physical force.
Incredible.
Yeah, the cultural revolution in economics.
Yeah, but it's interesting
because Don Harris is writing this in 78.
And in 78, it's still, the Harris is writing this in 78, and in 78,
the battle hasn't been settled
yet, right? There's still kind of
the fight going on between who
is going to be in control of economics.
And I mean, the answer
is that the post-Keynesians
lose, but
that wasn't necessarily the case at this time. There's also a
really weird artifact of this that I
want to talk about a little bit, which is that you know so remember at the beginning of this i said
that that stupid economist person has said that it was neocansians versus post-kansians yeah so
those two groups are not the same thing uh the post-kansians are the people who we've been talking
about this whole time right like they're they're like they're basically neoricardians right they're
like basing on classical economics the the Neo-Keynesians are just regular
Keynesians, basically, but they had to change the
math to be shittier and make
themselves more right-wing to survive.
Should we explain
John Maynard Keynes and supply-side
economics? Yeah, if you want to
give a brief explanation to that, go ahead.
I don't know. I'm a
historian, but it's
a difference from classical economics,
I guess,
in the idea that the state
can make interventions.
Am I,
you could tell me afterwards
if I fucked up.
The state interventions
can be beneficial for the economy
and it emerges like in the,
I guess,
post Great Depression,
like I guess maybe from,
from like,
you know,
the New Deal
and these,
these,
and then post World War II,
right? Like it's very influential in the kind of build-up after world war ii the idea that like the state shouldn't necessarily be like what's that adam hand the invisible hand the fucking
invisible hand maybe isn't killing it and we need instead the hand of the state yeah and i mean well
you know it's worth mentioning that like in adam smith the hand of the state is explicitly god
probably sorry the invisible hand is explicitly god unfortunately unfortunately there was no god to bail out the markets of the
1920s so kate's was like shit yeah and i mean you know his like in sort of like more detail like his
thing basically is is about like he's he's obsessed with sort of like like like basically
cyclically counteracting crises by using states spending to like you know so like his
thing is basically is that like capital will misallocate resources you have to use the state
to like kick the bastards into line it's like a stable economy and the problem is that but but
the late 70s the keynesians are in crisis because in in original like keynesian theory it wasn't
supposed to be possible for there to be both rising unemployment and rising inflation but that was like happening over the entire world and so they got kind of annihilated and this is
the thing that like the neoliberals used to like take power and it's interesting because the post
keynesians like they use and you know and like the beginning of this book is a bit of of like
keynesian stuff but then he just like you know they go off and do other more interesting things but it's very funny because because this is still um 78 he harris calls himself a neocansian and he
calls all of his collaborators neocansians because the real neocansians hadn't like developed yet
oh so he's just trying to he's just trying to fucking claim it like he's trying to get his
like his stick in the ground first yeah well but well, but I mean, that's the thing.
At that point, they were the neo...
There wasn't...
Their school had as good a claim to it as anyone.
It's just that they got kicked out later
by the sort of more capitalist ones.
Yeah.
It's also...
A thing that's also important about this
for reasons we're going to get to in a second
is that the post-Keynesian tradition
also has a lot of very eclectic Marxists in it. We're going to get to Joanne Robinson,
who's a very close collaborator of a very good Marxist philosopher. She's actually the person
who kicks off the Cambridge Capital controversy. And she's a very kind of esoteric Marxist,
kind of in a similar way to what Donald Harris is. But you know what Marxism, in theory, isn't supposed to support?
Would that be the sale of goods
and services? Yeah, yeah, it's products and services
that support this podcast. We're distributing
them using the price mechanism.
Yeah, we're back. So, there's there's also you know there's got a kolecki who's very important to this too um so there are marxists kind of on the ground of this and they're they're trying to
sort of their their goal is to try to like explain an economy that has monopolies in it because
marxist theory sort of like assumed that there weren't and that there was like actual competition in markets.
And so part of what, but this comes to the sort of
fundamental project of what this book is about,
which is that it's about developing a sort of growth model
that you can sort of, you know, that accounts,
that can be modified to account for all of these things.
So the initial thing that they're trying to produce
is like a model of what they call a golden age which is a thing that's from uh joan robinson
that's basically like it's a golden age is a theoretical like economic configuration you have
you have full employment you have constant stable economic growth and the system can reproduce
itself and you know i'm i'm gonna read a passage from this book so you can understand partially so you
can because it's about this right and partially so you can understand like this isn't even a
particularly technical paragraph here's what i'm talking about hit me steady state uh yeah
golden age is also kind of similar thing to a concept called steady state economies
he's writing about a particular steady state is based on a given set of conditions and interrelations among
them, a given rate of accumulation of capital, given rates of savings from the stream of
net income, a given state of technological knowledge or rate of technological innovation,
a given rate of increase of the labor force, and a given set of expectations.
To ask whether such a situation exists is to ask
whether the conditions which define it
are mutually compatible or self-consistent.
So this is
basically what he's doing, right?
You can build these models
of these sort of Keynesian
models that like, not sorry,
post-Keynesian models that
if you set up
all the elements right you can theoretically
generate stable growth
but then you know obviously his thing is like this doesn't
work right like
no economy will ever generate this
because there's only really like
it's extremely hard to actually get
you know your sort of like
input levels
and your technological development whatever the fuck
like at the same rate to do
this but he's using this as basically the model for as as like as like a sort of toy model that
you can then sort of warp to fit the the rest of the sort of the rest of the capitalist economy
but in order to do this he has to generate a crisis theory and this is where he just like
suddenly all the marks comes back in and he's like, so his, his, the project he's trying to do is he's trying to use a post Keynesian model of
how economic growth works. And then, and then combine that with Marx's crisis theory to produce
basically a model of, you know, what, what kinds of conditions in an economy will cause like crisis
states. Now, okay. The other thing that's very weird about this, right. It's like,
like crisis states now okay the other thing that's very weird about this right is like he doesn't do normal like there's like an entire school of marxist crisis theory and he doesn't do
it he instead like rewrites a bunch of marxist equations and then comes up with his own
like version of crisis theory of like different kinds of crises that are like
what it's it's so weird it's so baffling maybe he wanted to make him make his
mark you know yeah i guess it's weird because it's like this whole thing is interesting but it's like
i don't think anyone ever followed up on it really right it's just like this dead end of academic
theory yeah well i i think it's also you know i mean it's partially like a road not travel thing
it's partially because
as as the post-kensians went on they got less and less marxist so like a lot of the original
people are like so rafa's not a marxist but like a lot of the original joan robinson is definitely
a marxist but they get like less and less over time and so there's less interest in kind of like
folding in marxism to it yeah so he's losing interest in that yeah but this is where we get
to the final question like is, is he a Marxist?
And my answer is, even in 68 and 78, which is pretty early, I don't think he's a Marxist.
I don't think he's a Marxist in this book.
I think he's using Marxist theory, but I don't think he's actually a Marxist, like, politically.
And the reason I don't think this is because, you know, so we talk about surplus value, right?
So surplus value is supposed to be this value that's extracted.
But the magnitude of it, one of the things, like how much value you extract, like how many hours of the day you can steal from a worker depends on how many hours of the day you need to pay them for in order for them to survive, right?
And one of the crucial things about this is that, and Marx is very explicit about this, that rate of how much you need to pay them to survive is determined by social struggle right because like you know what what a worker quote
unquote needs to survive in in like in different places and contexts is different and you can fight
in order for that rate to be higher and this is like an incredibly basic part of marxism right
it's the part of marxism where the economy is also deterred like the the
function of the capitalist economy is produced by class struggle this is like this is like this is
even one of this is marxism zero zero zero like this is this is the shit they hand you on the
floor i'm like your fucking tour of marxism school before you get enrolled in classes
yeah so when you get that very you know there's very short introductions you can get
where it's like like a tiny little booklet that explains so like the sine qua non little little
elements of things yeah and harris writes pages and pages and pages of stuff about like about
about like the rate of surplus value extraction and do you know how many times he mentions class fucking once in like and it's
it's like the 30th thing he mentions after like the technical composition of capital and like
some other crisis like it's all of this shit and he just doesn't mention it and this is this is
the thing that like fundamentally has convinced me that what what he's doing isn't substantively Marxism.
He's using the tools of Marx's political economy,
but he's viewing capitalism as purely a top-down thing,
and not something that's actually...
He acknowledges there are classes,
but he doesn't see them as actors at all yeah so like the struggle
between the classes is is yeah and it's funny because he has this thing that he calls the rate
of exploitation right which is this calculation of surplus value extraction but he's like well
obviously because the rate is going to change over time due to the condition to struggle but
he's like nah screw i'm just putting his one number like it's just like oh it's like one
right yeah and he's like i don't know i don't know how to interpret it i'm too lazy to figure I'm just putting his one number. Like, it's just like, this is like one coalition. Right? Yeah.
And he's like, I don't know how to interpret it.
I'm too lazy to figure that out.
And I'm like, what?
What are you doing?
Like, this is the basis of Marxism.
Yeah.
I mean, maybe he was just an economics guy,
but even still.
No, yeah.
This is the thing that I've been sort of realizing
because one of the issues with Serafa
is that, you know,
Serafa is a genius economist, right?
He is genuinely, unbelievably brilliant, seraphic is a genius economist right he is genuinely
unbelievably brilliant but he's also a pure economist like here's here is how the start
of his most influential book production of commodities on means of commodities starts
let us consider an extremely simple society which produces just enough to maintain itself
commodities are produced by separate industries and are exchanged for one another, etc.
So, okay,
what is he...
He just has created a mental
model, and this is the basis of his
major economic theory, is him just creating a mental
model where somehow
out of nowhere has appeared
a simple society that produces
one commodity, which is just enough
commodities, and produced by separate industries.
And if you think about
Marx, Marx is also a sociologist.
He cares about
the actual
point of production. He cares about the production
process. He cares about the sort of
like that there are, he cares that there
are workers that are doing the production.
He cares about the sort of
historical conditions that created these things don't, like, as Kamala Harris's mom, this is actually very important.
The Kamala Harris you didn't just fall out of the coconut tree, you exist in the context of all that came before you.
That's Kamala Harris's mom, who was, like, I think a better Marxist than Donald Harris is.
And Harris will occasionally, like, Donald Harris will occasionally gesture to this.
He'll be like, well, yeah, obviously this is all determined by historical conditions.
And then he just has no interest in ever
pursuing any of that. He's just like, yeah, this is, we left
a later book that he never wrote.
And what you get to is, this is
like a real issue with sort of post-Keynesianism
is that it doesn't have,
like Marxism, at least in theory,
has politics embedded into it. Post-Keynesianism
kind of doesn't.
And you have to be like, I have a lot of friends who I deeply care about who are post-Keynesianism kind of doesn't. Right, it's just a form of economic analysis.
I have a lot of friends who I deeply care about
who are post-Keynesians, right?
They are political, they're leftists
because they're leftists, right?
It's not something that's an automatic generation
of their theory.
And you can kind of write it that way, right?
This is the thing about Frederick Lee,
who's the guy a lot of the trans-rightist people
sort of learn economics from,
indirectly, but through his book. But Lee is a lot of my, like a lot of the trainwreckers people sort of like learn economics from, like indirectly, but like through his book.
But, you know, Lee is a committed anarchist and that shows up in his work,
but he has to like add that in.
Just pure, like pure seraphim by itself,
you could theoretically like run any form of government you want with it.
Right.
And I think I've been vindicated in this whole process because
Donald Harris writes a couple more books,
one of which
is a book that is commissioned by the
Jamaican government.
Okay.
He's of Jamaican descent, or
he was born himself directly in Jamaica?
Yeah, he's Jamaican. He lives
in Jamaica. Okay.
I think he currently
lives in Jamaica. I'm pretty sure.
He came to the US for his graduate
for his academic
he lived in the US for a long time too because he was at Stanford
but then he kind of left and went back to Jamaica
I'm going to read
so he wrote a book called
this is in 2011
a growth inducement strategy for Jamaica
in the short and medium term
I'm going to read you the bullet points
under a section called Guiding Principles. Unleash entrepreneurial dynamism by unlocking latent wealth tied up
in idle assets. Infrastructure investments as catalyzm for job creation through strengthening
resiliency of the built and natural environment. Build an innovative and competitive modern
economy of big and small firms by
strengthening business networks and removing supply-side constraints. Modernize and improve
the efficiency of government, social inclusion through community renewal, expanded self-agency
and equity, and proactive partnership between government and private sector.
There's also a giant thing in this about crime so what has happened is that these two people
have circled back around and they now have the same politics which is like tough on crime austerity
uh public private partnership fucking infrastructure spending yeah yeah they've
circled back around it's funny because the the person writing the economist was like oh yeah
they actually have circled back around because they're both concerned about wealth inequality. And this book is not concerned about wealth inequality at all. That's not what it's about. It's about capital accumulation, and it's sort of about distribution of surplus is that seraphim economics like doesn't have a fixed ratio like way
for it to be distributed it can be distributed in an enormous number of ways and the trick is
finding out how it's actually done right yeah there's a point in here there's a point in this
book too that like is the thing that like really first struck me about it where he's talking about
how he's talking about surplus value and he's talking about how he's talking about surplus value, and he's talking about how this is an objective measure
of exploitation. But then he
goes and he says,
contrary to vulgar readings,
this does not actually
indicate who deserves, like,
it's not a moral argument
about who
should have the value that's been stolen.
And this,
this right here, this, this is the road.
This is the road that is going to lead this man
from a kind of interesting book about, like,
the dynamics of economic growth and, like,
building economic models and, like, using Marxist theory
to sort of make it work, to straight up,
I'm writing investment documents for the Jamaican government.
Yeah, like, he seemed like it's very, in a way,
like, you know, there are lots of like Ed Miliband's dabbers and Marxists, right? But
like, it reminds me a lot of like the new Labour thing in the UK, you know, which grew out of a
party which genuinely had a commitment to socialism and became like, yeah, this sort of very neoliberal,
like sort of really like peak neoliberal kind of yeah there was some keynesian
influence i guess but certainly nothing the one would call communist or even really socialist
yeah yeah and i don't know it's it's sad because it's like this because the interesting thing about
that was 2012 he wrote the growth inducement strategy fuck me me okay he's still in the game like yeah but he's
still in the game in the sense that he's doing like this is you know reading that it very much
felt like i was reading like a modern chinese five-year plan except with like less weird slogans
yeah i mean it reads like a like a fucking like a new labor policy document like a think tank
it's a lot of like uh analyst guy think tank guy kind of talk right like
which was extremely like it looks like he left stanford in the late 90s which is when this shit
was fucking everywhere right like uh yeah um what's he called joseph stiglitz is that right and like yeah yeah yeah like yeah this was the
economic fucking uh theory of the day you know this was very popular then but it is absolutely
just like this this is not like uh black panther black panther inflected marxism this is this is
not what is characterized as by the economist here yeah no this is this this is this is something
genuinely very sad because it doesn't have to go that we we know that it's possible to like do this
kind of economics and not be like this because frederick lee was an iww member until the day he
died like he's he's like out there at occupy give like like in the first days of like not first
he's out there like there are videos of him giving speeches to crowds at occupy right like you don't have to do this but he did and this is also like
you know i think that this kind of political trajectory is kind of also you you can see in
it like how his child even though he wasn't in her life much is going to end up as the person she is
and i think that's my that's my final conclusion from this is he's not a marxist and him and his child are libs yeah these are the things that tenure does to a
motherfucker they uh you start to hang out with a bunch of other rich people who have tenure and
you begin to identify with them and uh yeah stripped you away from who you were uh yeah so
this has been a kid happenting Here. Don't become
a doddering capitalist bastard
in your old age.
Or your young age.
Yeah. Hey guys, I'm Kate Max.
You might know me from my popular online series,
The Running Interview Show,
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After those runs, the conversations keep going.
That's what my podcast Post Run High is all about. It's a chance to sit down with my guests and dive
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You know that rush of endorphins you feel after a great workout? Well, that's when the real magic happens. So if you love hearing real, inspiring stories from the people you know, follow pretty crazy, and very fun. Listen to Post Run High
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Hey, I'm Jack Peace Thomas, the host of a brand new Black Effect original series,
Black Lit, the podcast for diving deep into the rich world of Black literature. I'm Jack Peace Thomas, and I'm inviting you to join me
in a vibrant community of literary enthusiasts
dedicated to protecting and celebrating our stories.
Black Lit is for the page turners,
for those who listen to audiobooks while commuting or running errands,
for those who find themselves seeking solace, wisdom, and refuge between the chapters.
From thought-provoking novels to powerful poetry, we'll explore the stories that shape our culture.
Together, we'll dissect classics and contemporary works while uncovering the stories of the brilliant writers behind them.
Black Lit is here to amplify the voices of Black writers and to bring their words to life. Listen to Black Lit
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. and entertainment with some of the biggest names in the game. If you love hearing real conversations with your favorite Latin celebrities,
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Hello and welcome to It Could Happen Here. My name is Shereen, and today is the first part
of a two-part series where I'm going to give you all a general Palestine update and also talk about
how Joe Biden's legacy that will endure long after the end of his shitty presidency and his life
is first and foremost the genocide in Gaza. On Sunday, July 21st, Biden said that he was ending
his presidential re-election campaign after weeks of pressure from party officials, donors,
Democratic Congress members, voters, and pro-Palestinian organizers and advocacy groups.
members, voters, and pro-Palestinian organizers and advocacy groups. This move comes months after organizers led a nationwide campaign to vote uncommitted during Democratic primary elections
to push Biden to end his unconditional support for Israel during its genocide in Gaza or risk
losing their vote in the general election. In several states, uncommitted or no preference received far more votes than other
candidates challenging Biden. And so Biden dropped out. Surprise. Ever since his announcement to
withdraw, Democratic politicians and commentators in the U.S. have come out to heap praise and
laud the president's character and draw attention to all his contributions over the years.
None of that matters to me, though, and it shouldn't matter to you, because for me and
many others, Biden will be remembered for nothing else than his support for Israeli crimes.
But let's hear from our ridiculous public servants, shall we?
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said,
Joe Biden has not only been a great president and a great legislative leader, but he's truly an amazing human being.
His decision, of course, was not easy, but he once again put his country, his party and our future first.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called the president, quote, one of the most accomplished and consequential leaders in American history.
Representative Maxine Waters
called Biden a kind and decent man. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi praised his vision, values,
and leadership. She said in a statement, his legacy of vision, values, and leadership make
him one of the most consequential presidents in American history. She also called Biden,
quote, a patriotic American who has always
put our country first. I did find it a little funny that multiple people described Biden as
consequential because out of all the words you can choose to describe him, that one doesn't
necessarily scream positive to me. So that did amuse me quite a bit. Former President Barack
Obama issued a statement acknowledging the difficulty of the
decision that Biden faced. Quote, for him to look at the political landscape and decide that he
should pass the torch to a new nominee is surely one of the toughest in his life. But I know he
wouldn't make this decision unless he believed it was right for America. It's a testament to Joe
Biden's love of country and historic example of a genuine public servant
once again putting the interests of the American people ahead of his own that future generations
of leaders will do well to follow. Democratic governors also lauded Biden. Michigan Governor
Gretchen Whitmer called him a great public servant who knows better than anyone what it takes to
defeat Donald Trump. California Governor Gavin Newsom thanked Biden, calling him a, quote, extraordinary, history-making president.
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear said Biden's decision is, quote, in the best interest of
our country and our party. Several Democrats who had publicly called on Biden to step aside
also issued statements praising the president's decision.
Representative Jerry Nadler said, Joe's announcement today reflects what we've known all along.
He is an American patriot who is willing to put America's interests over his own.
Senator Sherrod Brown from Ohio thanked Biden for his years of committed service.
And his son Hunter Biden issued a statement lauding his father as a selfless leader, writing,
Well, yikes!
I also wanted to mention and end with how his wife, the First Lady Jill Biden, responded,
which was with a hearts emoji in response to his announcement on X. But while political leaders and I guess his family showered Biden with compliments,
bombs continued to rain down on Gaza, killing dozens to add on to the nearly 40,000 Palestinians
killed and sparking another wave of mass displacement in Khan Yunus. For many Palestinian
rights advocates, the carnage and
abuses in Gaza will define Biden's place in history books, especially as the U.S. remains
steadfast in its support of Israel's onslaught on the Palestinian land. Nadine Keswani, an organizer
with the Palestine Advocacy Group Within Our Lifetime, said, nine months of saying Genocide
Joe has got to go, he finally got the message,
but not before committing a heinous genocide against the Palestinian people. Abed Ayyub,
the executive director of the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, the ADC, said,
he'll be remembered for the hundreds of thousands killed, injured, and displaced in Gaza. There is
no way around it. Genocide Joe is what he's going to be
remembered as. And before continuing to shit on Biden, because trust me, I would love to do that,
let's talk about what is currently happening in Gaza. Since Israel's genocide in Gaza started on
October 7th, well, really it escalated starting October 7th, because the genocide of the
Palestinian people has been ongoing since Israel's inception in 1948. But since October 7th and well before that, Biden has
offered the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu unconditional military and
diplomatic support. Only once did Biden withhold a shipment of bombs to Israel over humanitarian
concerns, and even then, he released part of that cargo a couple
months later amid pressure from Netanyahu. Israel's genocide, meanwhile, has killed at least
39,000 Palestinians, displaced hundreds of thousands, and fueled a man-made famine,
and also has destroyed nearly all of the territory. United Nations experts and other
observers have outright
called what is happening in Gaza as a textbook case of genocide. And the cumulative effects of
Israel's genocide could mean that the true death toll is much, much more. According to a study
recently published in the journal Lancet, the death toll could reach more than 186,000 people.
death toll could reach more than 186,000 people. The study pointed out that the death toll is likely higher because the official death toll does not take into account the thousands of dead
buried under rubble and indirect deaths due to destruction of health facilities,
food distribution systems, and other public infrastructure.
Conflicts have indirect health implications beyond the direct harm from violence,
the study said, and even if the Gaza genocide ends immediately, it will continue to cause
many indirect deaths in the coming months and years through things like disease. The study said
the death toll is expected to be far larger given that much of Gaza's infrastructure has been
destroyed. There are shortages of food,
water, shelter, medicine. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees, UNRWA,
has also seen its funding cut. Israel's relentless bombing has collapsed Gaza's healthcare
infrastructure, and the destruction of Gaza's water infrastructure in particular is more than just a little significant.
One reason for this is that Israel just reintroduced polio to Palestinians, but of course,
Israel is only providing vaccinations to the Israeli army. And this is according to Heretz.
Polio is a fecal-oral disease, and infections can be linked to contaminated and poor sewage systems, and it can lead to paralysis.
On June 23, 2024, samples were collected from two environmental surveillance sites in Khan Yunis and Deir el-Balakh.
Polio variant 2 was found in six wastewater samples.
According to the Polio Global eradication initiative, currently only 16 of the 36 hospitals are
partially functional and 45 out of 105 primary health care facilities are operational.
The impact on health systems, insecurity, inaccessibility, population displacement,
and the shortages of medical supplies, coupled with poor quality of water and weakened sanitation,
coupled with poor quality of water and weakened sanitation, have contributed to routine immunization rates and an increased risk of many vaccine-preventable diseases, including polio.
The World Health Organization considers there to be a high risk of spread of polio within Gaza
and internationally, particularly given the impact that the current genocide continues to have on public health services.
And even if vaccines were able to be given to Palestinians in Gaza,
the continued bombing and a decimated healthcare system,
coupled with the intentional devastation of water and sanitation infrastructure,
would render the vaccines close to useless.
Without an immediate ceasefire, the threat from polio being reintroduced in Gaza
will disproportionately affect Palestinian babies and eventually Israeli babies as well.
In November 2023, the World Health Organization warned Israel of diseases spreading due to
Israel's indiscriminate bombing and attack on healthcare infrastructure. And then on July 22,
and attack on healthcare infrastructure. And then on July 22nd, 2024, three days after the news came out about polio being reintroduced to Gaza by Israel, the Israeli parliament voted to declare
UNRWA a terrorist organization. And UNRWA is a key partner in vaccine campaign distribution.
With this and with many other things, Israel has shown its genocidal intent, calculating the destruction of Palestinian life in Gaza.
Because if there is any war on Gaza, it's an epidemiological war, weaponizing health and medicine and the incidence, distribution, and control of disease.
Back to the Lancet study, it said,
of disease. Back to the Lancet study, it said, quote, in recent conflicts, such indirect deaths range from 3 to 15 times the number of direct deaths. And after they applied a conservative
estimate of 4 indirect deaths per 1 direct death, they said it is not implausible to estimate that
up to 186,000 or even more deaths could be attributable to the Gaza quote-unquote
war. Such a number would represent almost 8% of Gaza's pre-war population of 2.3 million people,
half of which, may I remind you, are children. The Lancet study also noted that Israeli intelligence
services, the UN, and the World Health Organization all agree that claims of data fabrication leveled against Palestinian authorities in Gaza
over its death toll in particular are implausible. It pointed out that the toll is likely much higher
because the destruction of infrastructure in Gaza has made it extremely difficult to maintain a
count that is not lower than the actual death toll. It said, quote, documenting the true scale is crucial for ensuring historical accountability
and acknowledging the full cost of the war. It is also a legal requirement. The study pointed out
that the International Court of Justice said in interim rulings in January in a genocide case
brought against Israel that it needs to, quote, take
effective measures to prevent the destruction and ensure the preservation of evidence related to
allegations of acts under the Genocide Convention. Before we continue on, let's take our first break
and we'll be right back.
And we're back.
I was talking about the International Court of Justice earlier.
And speaking of the International Court of Justice, on July 19th, 2024, the ICJ said Israel's presence in the Palestinian territory is unlawful and that Israel's policies in the Occupied Palestinian Territory amount to annexation.
It ruled that Israel's continued presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory is unlawful and should come to an end as, quote, rapidly as possible. The judges pointed to a wide list of
policies, including the building and expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East
Jerusalem, the use of the area's natural resources,
the annexation and imposition of permanent control over lands, and discriminatory policies against Palestinians, all of which it said violated international law. As of July 2024 and since
October, Israel has killed 143 Palestinian children in the West Bank, on Palestinian land that is occupied by Israel.
Because since Israel began committing genocide in Gaza over nine months ago,
it has been attacking and killing hundreds of Palestinians in the West Bank,
including these 143 children.
UNICEF reported that Israel has killed an average of one Palestinian child
every two days in the West Bank.
UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell said,
We are seeing frequent allegations of Palestinian children being detained on their way home from school
or shot while walking on the streets.
This report by UNICEF came out just days after the International Court of Justice
confirmed that Israel is committing the crime of apartheid against Palestinians
and that its occupation of the West Bank is illegal and must end.
The court went on to say that Israel has no right to sovereignty in any of the territories
and it is violating international laws against acquiring territory by force
as well as impeding Palestinians' right to self-determination.
It said that other nations were obliged not to, quote, render aid or assistance in maintaining
Israel's presence in the territory. It said Israel must end settlement construction immediately,
and existing settlements must be removed. And this is all according to a summary of the more
than 80-page opinion read out by the
court president Nawaf Saddam. The court said, Israel's abuse of its status as the occupying
power renders its presence in the occupied Palestinian territory unlawful. Israeli settlements
in the West Bank and East Jerusalem and the regime associated with them, have established and are being maintained in violation of international law.
Mind you, Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem have always been illegal under international law,
but that has never stopped Israel from continuing to expand its illegal settlements.
Since 1967, when the borders of what is currently seen as occupied Palestine,
which are the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and East Jerusalem were established, Israel has since built settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem and steadily expanded on them.
It also had settlements in Gaza before a 2005 withdrawal.
And I said what is currently seen as occupied Palestine because in reality, the whole of Israel is
occupied Palestine. But as far as the UN and the majority of the international community goes,
they consider the Palestinian territory as defined in 1967 as Israeli occupied.
Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad Baniki told reporters in The Hague that the ruling signaled
a, quote, watershed moment for Palestine, for justice signaled a,ity, no money, no arms, no trade, no nothing, no actions of any kind to
support Israel's illegal occupation. Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian ambassador to the UN, said the
ruling was, quote, a significant step in the direction of ending the occupation and attaining
the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, including the right to self-determination,
statehood, and the right of return. The right to return, for those who don't know, is a demand that Palestinians who
were forced from their homes in the 1948 Nekba as well as the 1967 Nexa be allowed to return to them.
Mansour said his team would study the entire opinion and dissect every sentence.
We will consult with an army of friends at the opinion as fundamentally wrong and one-sided.
Netanyahu's office issued a statement in which it called the ruling a decision of lies
that distorted the truth and asserted that the jewish people are not occupiers in their own land
jeffrey nice a human rights barrister told al jazeera that it will be hard for world leaders
to completely disregard the icj ruling even though it is non-binding. This is one part of the legal system
saying enough is enough, he said. He also said it would be difficult for the interested, informed,
concerned public not to say, it's time Israel put its house in order. Al Jazeera's senior political
analyst Marwan Bishara said, there is a case brought by South Africa, the ICJ is also considering allegations that
Israel is committing genocide in its war on Gaza.
And yes, a preliminary ruling has been made in that case,
with the court ordering Israel to prevent and punish incitement to genocide,
and to increase its provisions of humanitarian aid. And of course, Israel has done nothing to do this.
In May, the ICJ had also ordered Israel to halt its offensive on Rafah,
the border city in southern Gaza, citing immense risk to hundreds of thousands of Palestinians taking shelter there.
But Israel has continued its attacks on Gaza, including Rafah, in defiance of the UN court.
Israel doesn't give a shit about international law, but it's also clear that no one is doing anything to actually stop them from continuing their genocide on the Palestinian people.
Before I forget, let's take our second break here and we'll be right back. Let's go back to Abed Ayyub, the executive director of the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee,
who said Biden will be remembered for the hundreds of thousands killed, injured, and displaced in Gaza,
that Genocide Joe is what he's going to be remembered as.
He told Al Jazeera that despite Biden's domestic achievements,
the president will rank among the worst in U.S.
history due to his unconditional support for Israel. The U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights,
the USCPR, echoed that comment, saying, nothing will erase the fact that Biden's legacy is and
always will be genocide. And the U.S. president has been an annoyingly loyal supporter of Israel throughout
his too-many-decades-too-long political career. Biden frequently calls himself a Zionist proudly
and argues that Jews across the world would not be safe without Israel. He infamously said in June
1986, over 37 years ago when Biden was just a young chap of 43 that, quote, were there not an Israel,
the United States of America would have to invent an Israel to protect her interest in the region.
The United States would have to go out and invent an Israel. I want to just throw it out there that
even in this quote, Israel exists to protect America's interest in the region, not to protect the
Jewish population, because it never has done that in the first place. But I digress. Biden put his
worldview into policy during his presidency, as he pushed on with former President Trump's
pro-Israel doctrine. Biden kept the U.S. embassy in Jerusalem, and he refused to reverse the Trump-era decision to recognize Israel's claims to the occupied Golan Heights in Syria. He also aggressively
pursued formal ties between Israel and Arab states, a goal that Trump advanced with the 2020
Abraham Accords. That push for normalization, however, came without progress toward the
recognition of an independent Palestinian state
or the dismantling of the systemic anti-Palestinian discrimination that has existed since the jump,
aka apartheid. And then the outbreak for the genocide in Gaza further underscored Biden's
pro-Israel policies. And then mere weeks after October 7th, Biden traveled to Israel and publicly embraced Netanyahu in what many critics described as a bear hug.
And that sign of friendliness was widely understood to be an endorsement of Netanyahu's response in Gaza.
Even early in the conflict, human rights groups accused Israel of horrific violations rising to the level of genocide,
a push to destroy the Palestinian people. And within the first week alone, the Israeli military said it had unleashed 20,000 strikes across Gaza, a strip of land, may I remind you, that is roughly
the size of Las Vegas. According to AP News in January 2024, the Israeli military campaign in Gaza now sits among the deadliest and most destructive in modern history.
In just over two months, researchers said that the offensive caused more destruction than the raising of Syria's Aleppo between 2012 and 2016, Ukraine's Mariupol, or, proportionally, the Allied bombing of Germany in World War II.
Israel has killed more civilians than the U.S.-led coalition did in its three-year campaign against
ISIS. An analysis was done of data from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 satellite by Corey Schur
of the CUNY Graduate Center and Jamon Vanderhoek of Oregon State University,
both of whom are experts in mapping damage during wartime.
Corey Schur said,
Gaza is now a different color from space.
It's a different texture.
And he has worked with Vanderhoek to map destruction across several war zones,
from Aleppo to Mariupol.
across several war zones, from Aleppo to Mariupol. They say the visible damage in Gaza is worse than they have found in both places. But how does the destruction of Gaza stack up historically?
By some measures, destruction in Gaza has outpaced the Allied bombings of Germany during World War II.
According to Robert Pape, a U.S. military historian, between 1942 and 1945, the Allies attacked 51 major German cities and towns, destroying about 40-50% of their urban areas.
Pape said that this amounted to 10% of buildings across Germany, compared to the 33% across Gaza, a densely populated territory of just 140 square miles.
Pape said,
Gaza is one of the most intense civilian punishment campaigns in history.
It now sits comfortably at the top quartile of the most devastating bombing campaigns ever.
The U.S.-led coalition's 2017 assault to expel the Islamic State group
from the Iraqi city of Mosul was considered at the time one of the most intense attacks on a city
in generations. That nine-month battle killed around 10,000 civilians, a third of them from
coalition bombardment, according to an Associated Press investigation at the time. During the 2014-2017
campaign to beat ISIS in Iraq, the coalition carried out nearly 15,000 strikes across the
country, according to Air Wars, a London-based independent group that tracks recent conflicts.
By comparison, the Israeli military said itself that in a single week in January, it conducted 22,000 strikes in
Gaza. Again, compare that to the 15,000 in the three years the U.S. was fighting ISIS. Three
years compared to one week. One week had more strikes in Gaza than three years in Iraq.
To further put it in perspective about how alarming
this is from the jump, that what is happening is not fucking normal warfare and instead it is
genocide, on October 12, 2023, merely days after October 7, the Israeli Air Force had dropped about
6,000 bombs throughout the Gaza Strip. At the time, military experts stated that the number of
strikes carried out by the IDF since the outbreak of hostilities was, quote, striking, and it said
it was greater in number than the U.S. military used in the month of the campaign against ISIS
in Iraq and Syria. Mark Jarlsko, a Dutch military advisor and former U war crimes investigator in Libya, said,
In less than a week, Israel dropped the number of bombs that the U.S. dropped in Afghanistan in a year, in a much smaller and denser area, where the margin of error increases.
During the most intense year of the American fighting in Afghanistan,
a little more than 7,423 bombs were dropped. During the entire war in Libya, NATO reported
dropping more than 7,600 bombs and missiles from aircraft. And not even a month after October 7th,
on November 2nd, 2023, Euromed Human Rights Monitor said in a press release that Israel
had dropped more than 25,000 tons of explosives on the Gaza Strip, equivalent to two
nuclear bombs. The press release said that due to technological developments affecting the potency
of bombs, the explosives dropped on Gaza may be twice as powerful as a nuclear bomb. This means
that the destructive power of the explosives dropped on Gaza exceeds that of the bomb dropped in Hiroshima,
noting that the area of the Japanese city is 900 square kilometers,
while the area of Gaza does not even exceed 360 square kilometers.
The rights group's statement underlined that Israel uses bombs with huge destructive power,
some of which range from
150 to 1,000 kilograms, and they cited a statement at the time, in November, by Israeli War Minister
Yoav Galant that declared that more than 10,000 bombs had been dropped on Gaza City alone.
And then Israel's use of internationally banned weapons in its attacks on the Gaza Strip has been documented, said Euromed Monitor,
especially the use of cluster and phosphorus bombs, which are waxy toxic substances that react quickly to oxygen and cause severe second and third degree burns.
The Euromed Monitor team also documented injuries among Gazans due to Israeli airstrikes that are similar to those
caused by the aforementioned cluster bombs. These small, high-explosive bombs cause penetrating
shrapnel wounds and explosions inside the body, leaving victims with severe burns that lead to
skin melting off and sometimes to death. Fragments from these bombs cause unusual swelling and poisoning of the body,
plus internal injuries from transparent fragments that do not even appear in x-rays.
Euromed Monitor said Israel's use of highly explosive bombs in densely populated areas
poses the single greatest threat to civilians in modern armed conflicts, and explains the complete
leveling of residential neighborhoods
in Gaza and the overall severity of the widespread devastation there. According to Euromed Monitor,
which is a Geneva-based human rights organization, the Israeli army has admitted to bombing over
12,000 targets in the Gaza Strip, with a record tally of bombs exceeding 10 kilograms of explosives per individual.
It highlighted that the weight of the nuclear bombs dropped by the U.S. on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
in Japan at the end of World War II in August of 1945 was estimated to be about 15,000 tons of
explosives. The rights organization further stressed that Israel's destructive and arbitrary
attacks are in violation of international humanitarian law, which stipulates that the
protection of civilians is obligatory in all cases and under any circumstances, and that killing
civilians is considered a war crime in both international and non-international armed conflicts, and may amount to a crime against
humanity. The Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 and the 1949 Geneva Convention both regulates
fundamental human rights in times of war to prevent lethal health effects from weapons that
are prohibited by international law, some of which because they have the potential to cause, quote-unquote,
genocide. According to Article 25 of the Hague Regulations relating to the laws and customs of
land warfare, quote, the attack or bombardment by whatever means of towns, villages, dwellings,
or buildings which are undefended is prohibited. So think of all of that as you listen to this next bit. Biden has
since authorized continuous arms transfers and more than $14 billion in additional aid to sustain
Israel's Gaza offensive. Moreover, Biden's administration has vetoed three UN Security
Council proposals that would have called for a ceasefire.
Hatem Abudeya, the chair of the U.S. Palestinian Community Network,
said Biden will be remembered, above all, for enabling Israel's crimes against humanity.
Quote, He could have turned the tap of money and weapons off in October,
but he allowed this genocide to happen.
He is complicit, and that's what will be written on his tombstone.
And with that, we'll be continuing this discussion in the next episode,
where we will talk about the relationship between Biden and Palestinians.
And we'll also cover Netanyahu's deranged speech that he gave in Congress last week.
Until then, free Palestine. Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular
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After those runs, the conversations keep going. That's what my podcast, Post Run High, is all
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It's where we take the conversation beyond the run and get into the heart of it all. It's lighthearted, pretty crazy,
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original series, Black Lit, the podcast for diving deep into the rich world of Black literature.
I'm Jack Peace Thomas, and I'm inviting you to join me and a vibrant community of literary
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Listen to Blacklit on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast,
and we're kicking off our second season
digging into how Tex Elite has turned Silicon Valley
into a playground for billionaires.
From the chaotic world of generative AI to the destruction of Google search, better offline
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This season I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel winning economists to the leading
journalists in the field, and I'll be digging into why the products you love keep getting
worse and naming and shaming those responsible. Don't get me wrong, though. I love technology. I just
hate the people in charge, and want them to get back to building things that actually do things
to help real people. I swear to God things can change if we're loud enough, so join me every
week to understand what's happening in the tech industry, and what could be done to make things
better. Listen to Better Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, wherever else you get your podcasts. Check out betteroffline.com.
Hello and welcome back to It Could Happen Here. My name is Shireen, still. And today is part two
of our two-part series about a Palestine update as well as a testament as to why Biden's legacy will forever be genocide.
In the last episode, we talked about the amount of weapons that Biden has been sending to Israel and what this destruction has caused, as well as the reactions to his withdrawal from his campaign.
So I want to get into a brief history of Biden's history in politics,
as well as what his relationship has been like with Palestinians in general. So let's start in
1970. Following his entry into politics in 1970, Biden quickly rose from local to national
prominence, mounting a successful dark horse campaign to represent Delaware in the U.S. Senate
in 1972. After nearly four decades in Congress,
he became vice president under Barack Obama, and in 2021, he won the presidency himself.
So the current president does not hail from a political dynasty, and he is not an exceptional
orator. His success in politics is often credited to his interpersonal skills and his ability to project empathy.
That sense of compassion, however, has never extended to Palestinians.
After Biden's announcement of withdrawing from the race, Jewish Voice for Peace Action said in a statement,
For nine and a half months, President Biden has funded and armed the brutal
Israeli genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, making the U.S. directly complicit in the killing of at
least 39,000 people, including over 15,000 children. Americans have watched in horror and outrage as
Biden sent to the Israeli government the weapons it used to wipe out entire
generations of Palestinian families, to destroy hospitals, bakeries, schools, mosques, churches,
universities, refugee camps, homes, and Gaza's entire healthcare system, and electricity and
water grids. And beyond policy, even Biden's rhetoric at times seemed dismissive of Israeli
atrocities and Palestinian suffering. Last October, he said, I have no notion that the Palestinians
are telling the truth about how many people are killed. I'm sure innocents have been killed,
and it's the price of waging a war. It's terrible. Fucking terrible. But that stance has clearly caused
Biden issues, both domestically and abroad. Even before Biden delivered a disastrous debate
performance on June 27th, he had started to trail Trump in public opinion polls. Parts of his
Democratic base, including young people, progressives, Arabs, and Muslims, voiced for
months their frustration and anger over Biden's support for Israel. Groups like the US CPR,
the US Campaign for Palestinian Rights, argued that Biden's age and debate performance were only
one factor in the pressure that forced him from the presidential race. I'm going to read their statement because it's quite
good. Quote, nothing will erase the fact that Biden's legacy is and always will be genocide.
It was not Biden's failed debate that showed he is unfit to lead. It was the tens of thousands
of bombs he sent to kill Palestinian families. It was his callous, dystopian disregard for
Palestinian lives as he ate an ice cream cone while speaking of a potential ceasefire that he
took no action to make Israel agree to. It was his condemnation of thousands of student protesters
on college campuses demanding an end to the genocide in Gaza. Other commentators likewise argued that
Biden failed to show enough concern for the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza. Aaron
David Miller, a veteran former U.S. official, described the situation bluntly in an interview
with The New Yorker in April. Do I think that Joe Biden has the same depth of feeling and empathy for the Palestinians
of Gaza as he does for the Israelis? No, he doesn't, nor does he convey it. I don't think
there's any doubt about that. Additionally, Biden's withdrawal from the race followed a
particularly deadly month of violence in Gaza. Two Israeli airstrikes killed more than 60 people the week leading up to his withdrawal,
including in Israeli-designated quote-unquote safe zones and at a UN school where families
were sheltering. And then the ICJ, the UN's top court, ruled only a few days before his withdrawal
that Israel must end its illegal occupation of the West Bank,
East Jerusalem, and Gaza, removing settlers from the Palestinian territories, and pay reparations
to Palestinians. The court also found that Palestinians under occupation suffer, quote,
systemic discrimination based on race, religion, or ethnic origin, and it urged other states to
stop supporting Israel in
maintaining the current situation, which is also called apartheid. US CPR Action Executive Director
Ahmed Abuznid said in the group's statement,
The millions of people who have mobilized in the streets and the voting booth demanding a
permanent ceasefire and an end to military funding to Israel have been clear.
There is no going back to the status quo. It remains unclear how differently the next
Democratic nominee might approach Israel. Harris, the most likely nominee as of now,
obviously, has repeatedly asserted Israel's right to defend itself while expressing sympathy for Palestinians
when calling for at least a six-week ceasefire in March, which is a little hypocritical. But she was
also part of the Biden administration that sent all those bombs to Israel. She does not get a pass.
She does not get to be distanced from that. And on the other side of things, Trump called Biden,
to be distanced from that. And on the other side of things, Trump called Biden, quote,
a very bad Palestinian during the first presidential debate on June 27th for not helping Israel, quote, finish the job in Gaza. During Trump's presidency, he moved the U.S.
embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, and he recognized Israel's sovereignty over the
occupied Syrian region of the Golan Heights,
where Netanyahu named a Jewish-only settlement after Trump. But as the genocide in Gaza continues,
organizers are quick to point out the Democratic Party's complicity as a whole.
Hutaifa Ahmed, spokesperson for the abandoned Biden campaign, said,
We don't think this is solely a Joe Biden problem.
This is an institutional problem.
In an online statement, the group invited Harris to meet with its organizers.
The Abandoned Biden campaign was one of the first coalitions to call for Democrats to replace Biden.
We were mocked, denigrated, spoken down to, he said,
but organizers stood firm in
their principles as they gain momentum. And they will continue to do so as the, quote, disastrous
and criminal approach to Gaza continues under the Biden foreign policy with officials like
Antony Blinken, Jake Sullivan, and Brett McGurk. Ahmed said abandon Biden means abandoning this legacy and the decisions Biden
made surrounding Israel. Given the Democratic Party's lionizing the president since his exit
from the race, it's quote, becoming increasingly clear we may have to extend this to whoever
becomes the next nominee. He indicated that they will continue to call on voters not to support any candidate who maintains Biden's blanket support for Israel.
The abandoned Biden group released a statement referencing the June debate, during which Biden at times was non-coherent, to say the least.
It was largely his performance that triggered a wave of calls, including from prominent Democratic Congress members, for Biden to step aside. The statement read,
It is clear that the DNC machinery pressured Joe Biden to step down only after losing confidence
in his ability to lead due to his cognitive decline. This action came not when he was
enthusiastically supporting and sponsoring the genocide in Gaza, but when his
declining capabilities could no longer be concealed. Biden's departure from the race comes ahead of the
party's upcoming national convention, which is slated for August 19th through the 22nd in Chicago,
and now with just under three months before the general election. Harris, whom the Clintons and other
Democratic leaders have also endorsed, will need to gain the support of the majority of the nearly
4,000 delegates to win the party's nomination. But for many voters pushing for an end to the
Gaza genocide, the path forward remains the same. A coalition of more than 125 anti-oppression organizations said in a statement that it is still preparing to gather tens of thousands to march on the Democratic National Convention on August 19th.
The coalition to march on the DNC said,
When it comes to the genocide in Gaza, there is no difference between Biden, Harris, or any of the likely candidates for the nomination.
They are all complicit.
This protest is about more than the name at the top of a ballot.
It is about stopping the most horrific crime against humanity that we have seen this century.
The statement said that the organizations that joined the coalition, quote, recognize the links between the Palestinian
liberation struggle and their own struggles involving issues like police accountability,
immigration, labor, reproductive rights, and LGBTQIA plus rights. They also recognize that
Democratic Party higher-ups often neglect their communities in favor of serving the rich and
powerful. Quote, those responsible for
the genocide, and not just Biden, are often obstacles to progress in the same movements
they pay lip service to in order to boost their campaigns. US CPR Action said, the masses of
millions of Americans protesting in the streets will certainly not wait for the next president The group called on all members of Congress to disrupt or protest the Anyahu's planned address to Congress, which happened last week, and they urge lawmakers to pass an arms embargo against Israel. The group said, quote, as Israel kills a Palestinian
every four minutes and escalates regional war, justice cannot wait another day.
Let's take a break right here before we jump into the speech that Netanyahu gave last week.
So, be right back.
And we're back.
So, I had written the bulk of both of these episodes before Prime Minister Netanyahu gave his deranged speech at Congress last week,
but of course I had to mention it because it was worse than I ever imagined, actually.
This speech was Netanyahu's fourth appearance before the legislative body of Congress,
and several high-profile Democrats were noticeably absent, in apparent protest to Israel's war on Gaza
and the humanitarian crisis that it sparked.
Rashida Tlaib, though, the representative for Michigan's 12th congressional district,
was present. She is, may I remind you, the first Palestinian American woman to serve in Congress
and one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress. She was there, sitting during the
speech, wearing a kofiye, and holding a sign that read
war criminal on one side and guilty of genocide on the other side. And she was holding the sign
up throughout his speech. July 24th, the day of Netanyahu's speech, also happened to be her
birthday. So if my blood was boiling thousands of miles away watching on my little computer screen,
I can only imagine how she felt sitting in that room as everyone cheered and applauded and stood up for this war criminal
who was spewing lie after lie in the entirety of his speech as our tax dollars are supplying him with more weapons to kill innocent people. The almost certain
Democratic nominee for president, Kamala Harris, was also not present, though she would ordinarily
preside over such a speech in Congress as vice president. Her campaign cited scheduling
conference. I guess she gave a speech in Indianapolis earlier that day. I also just
wanted to highlight quickly the hypocrisy
of the vast majority of Democrats right now, especially the ones that criticized the speech
that Netanyahu gave at Congress or said that he should have given a speech at all. How much
stronger would it have been if they sat by Rashida in that room instead of leaving the only Palestinian
member of Congress sitting by herself
on her fucking birthday, listening to the person that has genocided her people. It would have been
such an amazing demonstration of support and strength to have her colleagues sitting with her,
but instead she was alone. Netanyahu gave this speech seeking to rally support for continuing
Israel's military campaign, aka genocide, in Gaza. He was greeted by anti-war protesters
outside the capital, understandably so. The day before the speech, over 500 Jewish people
flooded the capital building, demanding arms embargo to Israel and demanding a ceasefire.
flooded the Capitol building, demanding arms embargo to Israel and demanding a ceasefire.
They shouted things like, let Gaza live, free Palestine, not in our name, and stop genocide.
And then during Netanyahu's speech, he blasted these protesters from his podium, calling them Iran's useful idiots and calling pro-Palestinian protesters broadly as Hamas supporters.
And as Netanyahu praised Israeli military members as lions of Judah,
Capitol Police was using pepper spray against pro-Palestinian protesters just outside the doors.
The irony of this speaks for itself.
And we all know by now, I hope, that our police trains with the Israeli military.
Adam Ebusaleh, an Arab Arab American activist from Dearborn, Michigan,
said it is a shame that the Enyahu was invited to speak to Congress.
It's a disgrace that members from both parties have invited him to speak here.
It's a disgrace that Kamala Harris,
the presumptive nominee for the Democratic Party, will meet with him.
Ebusoleh told Al Jazeera this at an anti-Nainyahu protest that was near the Capitol. He said, we are here to say enough is enough.
As Americans, we will not stand for that. In his speech, Nainyahu praised the U.S. Congress as a
citadel of democracy and described the genocide in Gaza as a clash between barbarism and civilization.
described the genocide in Gaza as a clash between barbarism and civilization. He said and repeated lie after lie, and people stood up and applauded after practically every sentence. He repeated
proven, untrue Hasbro propaganda lies, repeating false claims about October 7th about how men were
beheaded and babies were burned alive. Investigations, including those done by
Israel, have found that little evidence has emerged to substantiate some of the most gruesome
stories pushed by Israeli leaders like Netanyahu. And these lies were a part of a methodology that
was designed to bolster a false notion of Palestinians being an inherently subhuman
people. I'm going to play this clip from Mehdi Hassan
about the most egregious lie, in my opinion, that was spread around for months and is still
being spread around today, as we see from Netanyahu's speech, but it's about the 40 beheaded
babies. 40 beheaded babies. How can we forget the most emotive and most offensive lie of this
entire conflict? A lie that went viral and was repeated by the President of the United States, who falsely said he saw pictures of beheaded babies, even though there weren't any.
Nor were their babies burned in ovens, as Israeli newspaper Haaretz proved in their investigation.
They were all lies. In fact, according to data released by Israel's Social Security Agency,
tragically, there was one baby killed on October the 7th, 10-month-old Mila Cohen,
may her memory be
a blessing but in the interests of facts she was not beheaded now one baby killed is one baby too
many a tragedy a crime but 40 beheaded babies is just a cynical reckless repulsive lie that was
then used to justify the killing of hundreds of Palestinian babies Al Jazeera released a documentary
called October 7th that goes into the potential source of a lot of these lies.
It's a man named Yossi Lindau, who is an ultra-Orthodox first responder who operates throughout Israel and occasionally in South Florida.
He was interviewed in this documentary, and he is the original source of the beheaded baby's lie.
And he was a source of what formed the basis of the New York Times' now-debunked investigation into the alleged systematic sexual abuse perpetrated by Hamas on October 7th.
In these interviews, Lindau comes off as almost like a used car salesman.
One of his claims is that he found a pregnant woman whose, quote, stomach was butchered open and whose baby that was connected to the cord was stabbed.
And he insists to the reporter that if you want to see their picture, I have a picture of it. And then the reporter apologizes when looking at this photo
because they can't see a baby there. And then Landau stammers and tries to cover his tracks
because the photo, as it turns out, depicts what the narrator of this documentary describes as a
quote, unidentifiable piece of charred flesh, which as it happens is not so unlike many of the bodies that fill Lindau's
accounts of unspeakable depravity. And as the documentary further notes, the IDF has repeatedly
debunked those stories on the basis of basic forensic evidence, most notably when it revised
its total death count by 200 because it realized that some of the dead bodies were Palestinian.
And even though the IDF lies a lot,
it does concede eventually, with enough pressure, the truth.
By November, the IDF conceded that it had actually deployed Apache helicopters
and tanks to the Nova Music Festival
that may have killed some of the Nova Festival concert goers
in accordance to something that is called the Hannibal Directive,
which I will also mention in a bit. But it's a doctrine named for a general who poisoned himself rather than be
questioned by his Roman captors. And in a similar vein, this directive is basically when the Israeli
army is ordered to fire upon its own troops to prevent the enemy from taking those troops hostage.
Around noon on October 7th, according to Israeli newspapers that were cited
in this documentary, the IDF may have invoked a version of the Hannibal Directive and expanded it
to include Israeli citizens, and in accordance to this, began to blindly open fire with rockets and
helicopter gunships on any person or vehicle seen moving across the border to Gaza. In particular, the documentary visits
Kibbutz B'Eri, where a munitions expert demonstrates very strong evidence that some of the houses had
been hit with IDF tank fire. It was Israeli troops, not Hamas murderers, according to one resident
who killed 12 long-time residents there. But let's go back to Netanyahu's speech.
He also lied about civilian
casualties and Israel's deliberate starving of Gaza. He said in his speech, this is not a clash
of civilizations. It's a clash between barbarism and civilization. It's a clash between those who
glorify death and those who sanctify life. For the forces of civilization to triumph, America and Israel must
stand together. Because when we stand together, something very simple happens. We win. They lose.
Of course, he didn't mention the most damning part of October 7th, the Hannibal Directive.
Earlier this month, Haaretz reported that the IDF ordered the Hannibal Directive on October 7th to prevent Hamas from taking soldiers captive.
It said there was a crazy hysteria, and decisions started to be made without verified information.
Documents and testimonies obtained by Haaretz reveal the Hannibal Operational Order,
which directs the use of force to prevent soldiers being taken into captivity,
and it was employed at three army facilities that were infiltrated by Hamas. which directs the use of force to prevent soldiers being taken into captivity.
And it was employed at three army facilities that were infiltrated by Hamas.
And this potentially endangered civilians as well, which we know Israel has killed.
We know Israel killed some of its own citizens on October 7th.
And now we know that it killed some of its own soldiers.
And of course, these deaths are lumped into this overall death toll that keeps being repeated as being due to only Hamas's attack. I highly recommend reading
the Haaretz report in full. It is damning and important, especially as you see these leaders
spouting lies. And then the Anyahu praise the families of captives being held in Gaza.
And these families are a group that has consistently expressed frustration with the Enyahu back in Israel.
But they of course figure prominently in his messaging overseas.
Because he uses them for his own benefit.
Believing this whole genocide, or a war if you want to call it that, was ever about the hostages is disingenuous at
best at this point. Several reporters who cover Israel reported that relatives of captives were
arrested for wearing shirts calling for a deal that would bring the remaining captives home,
an effort that critics of Netanyahu have accused him of working to sabotage.
So you have his own people criticizing him and accusing him
of lying. I'm getting heated. Okay, let's take our second break and we'll be right back.
And we're back. So Republican House leader Mike Johnson had previously warned that anyone who attempted to disrupt Netanyahu's speech could face arrest.
Jacob Mageed, a correspondent with the Times of Israel, reported that several relatives of captives held in Gaza walked out of Netanyahu's speech.
In a social media post, he said,
Several relatives of the hostages being held in Gaza have walked out of Netanyahu's speech. In a social media post, he said, several relatives of the hostages being
held in Gaza have walked out of Netanyahu's address to Congress. The PM goes on to pledge
not to rest until the hostages are home, leading the vast majority in the room to stand and applaud,
save for roughly a dozen or so hostage families. Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid bashed
Netanyahu's speech in a social media post,
saying that the Israeli leader went through his speech without endorsing a deal to bring the remaining captives home.
On X, he called the speech a disgrace, and he used an exclamation point for emphasis.
Disgrace! That's how it read.
Netanyahu also said that a regional alliance must be forged to counter the
influence of Iran, and he thanked Biden for his efforts to that effect, and for calling for an
extension of the so-called Abraham Accords. The Abraham Accords were signed on September 15,
2020, during Trump's presidency, and it's something that Trump, of course, often takes credit for.
The Accords, in brief, normalized diplomatic relations between Israel and the UAE, as well as Bahrain,
and then later a renewal in ties with Morocco. So as part of the two agreements, both the UAE
and Bahrain recognized Israel's sovereignty, enabling the establishment of full diplomatic
relations. During his speech, Netanyahu said,
I have a name for this new alliance. I think we should call it the Abraham Alliance.
And then he also thanked Trump, of course, for Trump's efforts promoting normalization efforts
between Israel and other countries in the region. And as I mentioned, his speech was filled with
nothing but lies, some that I've already mentioned.
Here are some more highlights. Netanyahu said the majority of Americans support Israeli actions,
but polling says otherwise. He said, quote, the vast majority of Americans have not fallen for
this Hamas propaganda. They continue to support Israel. But a recent Gallup poll showed that 48% of people in the U.S.
disapprove of Israel's actions in Gaza, compared to the 42% who are supportive. A May poll by
Data for Progress also found that about 70% of all voters support a permanent ceasefire in Gaza,
which Netanyahu has firmly rejected time and time again. And many things
Netanyahu said made me pray that I would get an aneurysm, and one of those things is when he said
that Israel is going, quote, beyond what international law requires to avoid civilian
casualties. Meanwhile, of course, numerous rights groups have said Israel is
flaunting international law and targeting civilians in Gaza, where it has systematically cut off
supplies of food and water, displacing more than 90% of the population and wiping out entire
neighborhoods and generations of families. And then you have media outlets reporting that the
Israeli forces in Gaza see large swaths of the Strip as, quote, free fire zones. And then there
was a U.S. doctor who volunteered in Gaza who recently spoke to a reporter, and he accused
Israeli snipers of targeting Palestinian children. He said the children were being shot right in the heart
and in the head. So much so that a stethoscope was unable to go over their heart. That's how
precise these shots were. I'm talking about Dr. Mark Pearl Mutter, about his medical mission
in Gaza. And I want to play a clip of him here because I think what he has to say
is very important and needs to be heard. All the disaster zones you've seen, how does Gaza compare?
All of the disasters I've seen combined, combined,
40 mission trips, 30 years, ground zero, earthquakes,
all of that combined doesn't equal the level of carnage
that I saw against civilians in
just my first week in Gaza.
And when you say civilians, is it mostly children?
Almost exclusively children.
I've never seen that before.
Never seen that.
I've seen more incinerated children than I've ever seen in my entire life combined.
I've seen more shredded children in just the first week.
Shredded?
Shredded.
What do you mean?
Missing body parts, being crushed by buildings, the greatest majority, or bomb explosions, the next greatest majority.
We've taken shrapnel as big as my thumb out of eight-year-olds, and then there's sniper bullets.
I have children that were shot twice.
Wait, you're saying that children in Gaza
are being shot by snipers?
Definitively.
I have two children that I have photographs of
that were shot so perfectly in the chest
I couldn't put my stethoscope over their heart more accurately
and directly on the side of the head in the same child.
No toddler gets shot twice by mistake by
the world's best sniper. And they're dead center shots.
So yeah, there's that. And again Netanyahu slammed college protesters and administrators in his
speech. Leaning into the attacks on student protesters who demonstrated against Israel's
genocide in Gaza.
He blasted college administrators who resisted calls to crack down on the protests.
He also mocked queer activists who support Palestinian rights and accused them of ignorance,
comparing them to chickens who support the restaurant of KFC.
And this bit might have been my favorite quote,
just because the level of stupidity reached a level I didn't know was possible.
Quote,
And then, of course, after he said this, nearly every member of Congress stood up and clapped.
this, nearly every member of Congress stood up and clapped. Netanyahu, for whom the ICC prosecutors are currently seeking an arrest warrant for, for his alleged war crimes, has said that pro-Palestinian
protesters stand with evil. In his speech, he said, they stand with Hamas, they stand with rapists and murderers, adding that they should be ashamed. He also said,
quote, the outrageous slanders that paint Israel as racist and genocidal are meant to delegitimize
Israel, to demonize the Jewish state, to demonize Jews everywhere. And no wonder, no wonder we
witnessed an appalling rise in anti-Semitism in America and around the world.
And of course, Netanyahu praised Biden for his heartfelt support for Israel.
In his speech, Netanyahu said, quote,
After the savage attack on October 7th, Biden rightly called Hamas sheer evil.
And then he played up their more than 40-year relationship.
Because they're both fucking old and shouldn't
be in power anymore. I guess one of them won't be. He said Biden dispatched two aircraft carriers
to the Middle East to deter a wider war, and then he came to Israel to stand with us in our darkest
hour, a visit that will never be forgotten. And yeah, it won't be forgotten, because Biden's
legacy will forever be his complicity and assistance in the genocide of Palestine.
After the speech was concluded, Hamas said that the speech shows Netanyahu's lack of interest in a ceasefire.
Hamas senior official Sami Abu Zuhri said that Netanyahu's remarks demonstrate that he is not interested in ending the war,
and this is according to the U.S. news outlet Reuters.
interested in ending the war, and this is according to the U.S. news outlet Reuters. He said,
Netanyahu's speech was full of lies, and it will not succeed in covering up for the failure and defeat in the face of the resistance. He added that the address would also not, quote, cover up
for the crimes of the war of genocide his army is committing against the people of Gaza. In a statement, Izat El-Rishk,
a member of the Palestinian group's political bureau, slammed the speech by the quote-unquote
criminal Netanyahu as a party of lies. Alaa Youssef, a 32-year-old Palestinian-American,
told Al Jazeera that she traveled to Washington, D.C. from New York to voice her concerns about
Netanyahu's address to
Congress, and she called the prime minister a, quote, war criminal who should stand trial.
Yes, he should. That's what an international, quote, wants. She said, quote, we are just here
to cause a disruption. Shut it down and say, not in our names, not with our consent.
not in our names, not with our consent. She called Netanyahu's invite to Congress disgusting. Yes, yes it was. She said, I don't get how people get to a level where they detach
themselves so much from their humanity that they can't see what's been happening in Gaza.
She also expressed surprise that U.S. lawmakers still continue to entertain Netanyahu and invite him here.
And I'm really hoping this next part is true, because while Netanyahu's speech sought to shore
up support for Israel, Al Jazeera correspondent Rosalind Jordan reported that it is unlikely to
alter the political landscape in the U.S., where the opposition to the war in Gaza slash the
genocide in Gaza is widespread.
She said,
It's not going to change the political reality here in the United States.
There are many millions of people who are disgusted by what they see happening in the war in Gaza.
They see the mounting death toll nearing 40,000 men, women, and children, and many thousands more injured, the entire population essentially homeless
inside Gaza. She also added that schisms have emerged within the Democratic Party over support
for Israel, while the Republican Party remains largely united around calls for continued and
even increased support. My good friend and yours, Robert Evans, said about Netanyahu's speech at
Congress, this is both the most resistance to Israel I have seen from U.S. political leadership
and the most public embrace of Israel I have seen. And he's right. It's disturbing and baffling
behavior that is so divided it seems impossible to bridge. It's hypocritical and frankly quite dangerous.
To normalize the support of someone who the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court,
Kareem Khan, announced that he was seeking an arrest warrant for, to allow this man to address
Congress in any way is dangerous. The Center for Constitutional Rights has also urged the Justice Department
to investigate Netanyahu for genocide, war crimes, and torture, which have all been well-documented
and plentiful. But that doesn't matter, though, because Netanyahu still gave his ridiculous speech and bombs are still raining down on Gaza. And with that,
we have concluded this two-part series about why Biden's legacy will forever be genocide.
Until next time, please continue to talk about Palestine and what is happening there and for
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Grinder? I hardly...
This is It Could Happen Here, where today the it is gay flirting and or harassment.
And the here is Milwaukee, Wisconsin, during the 2024 Republican National Convention.
I'm Gare, also known by my undercover alias, Garrison Davis, and I was lucky enough to
be one of our on-the-ground RNC correspondents.
A few weeks ago, we provided daily coverage of the GOP Coronation Festival based on our
conversations with delegates, lobbyists, and think tank
ghouls, and reported on the general trends in rhetoric used by popular speakers at the
event.
We'll have some more in-depth episodes about those topics in the weeks to come, using more
of our recorded interviews we collected at the convention.
But on top of our regular coverage, I also had a special assignment that I more or less
assigned to myself.
On this show, we often talk about right-wing extremism and issues facing gay and trans people,
including the various ways conservatives and Christian nationalists are trying to make life harder for queer people,
whether through legislation, online harassment, and physical violence.
As these are two of our most frequently covered topics,
being at the Republican National Convention provided me with the perfect opportunity to investigate the intersection between conservatism and homosexuality.
flocking to the gay hookup app Grindr to get laid during the RNC.
Whether they be 20-year-old Republican twinks from Miami,
or 53-year-old self-hating closeted gay men from Idaho trapped in loveless marriages.
Curiosity has often gotten the better of me, and I needed to know how many homosexual Republicans were actually logging on to Grindr.
know how many homosexual Republicans were actually logging onto Grindr. In case you're unfamiliar, Grindr is technically a dating app that serves the LGBTQ community,
but in actuality, it is a mediocre hookup app that mostly serves as a way for strangers
in their 40s to completely unprompted send you unflattering pictures of their penis.
Grindr was launched in 2009, and is arguably the largest and most popular gay dating
app, especially among men. Grinder has only been around for two in-person RNCs prior to this point,
2012 and 2016, since all convention activities moved online during 2020 for the pandemic.
So this July, for the first time in eight years, Republicans from all around the country could
gather in one city, and once their wives fell asleep, log on to Grindr. And this episode,
I'm going to tell you about my RNC Grindr experience. Before traveling to the city that
was about to be invaded by all of the weirdest Republicans in the country, I needed to do some
prep to help ensure safety and success
in my investigative endeavor. I hope you queers liked that terrible pun. Based on the massive
increase in violent anti-trans rhetoric coming from the GOP, I already knew that I would be
dusting off my old boy motor skills and going undercover as a cisgender male. Although my
ability to pass as a straight male is debatable,
I can at least easily pass as a not-quite-straight male. My trans-feminine fashion taste has been
skewing more masc-lesbian in recent years, so clothing wasn't really an issue. I packed up
basically all my button-up collared shirts, three ties, two black suits, and a beige London Fog
trench coat. Basically, the vibe I was going
for was half young Republican, half Roman towel boy dressed as a 1950s FBI agent. I refer to this
as Dale Cooper moding. I was unwilling to cut my hair to match most of the young Republican frat
boys, so I settled on styling my wavy blonde locks like Baron Trump meets Tilda Swinton in Constantine.
I was kinda Gabriel Maxing for most of the convention.
And though most attendees were unable to pick up on my dykish undertones,
the one day I wasn't wearing a tie, I did get she-heard by the Secret Service
when entering the convention through a security checkpoint.
They're going woke!
So that was my general look for the
convention. I also completely remade my Grindr profile for the RNC. For simplicity's sake,
I thought to emphasize my twinkish past and removed the explicitly non-binary transgender
aspects of my profile, replacing some of my more trans-coded photos with pictures of my Light Yagami and Dale Cooper cosplay.
Perhaps next RNC, I can experiment with discovering how many of the RNC attendees are chasers,
but for safety's sake, I went to more stealth both online and in person at RNC-related events.
For my main profile picture, I chose a pretty basic photo of me with disheveled hair,
wearing a light gray shirt and
thin black tie, looking just frankly exhausted. I chose the simple yet elegant username Twink,
and for my bio wrote Gen Z in town for convention, which I thought was pretty funny and signals to
people that yes, I am here for the RNC, but leaves the exact reason why still a bit mysterious.
So this was my bait. On my way to the airport, I was already dressed for the part, as I suspected
the flight from Atlanta to Milwaukee would be part of the whole RNC experience. I arrived at
the gate, and the vibe shift was immediate. Older white men with even whiter hair, wearing a mix of
poorly tailored suits, and country club polo shirts fit for the driving range. They all kinda
looked like my Republican grandfather. The women, meanwhile, regardless of age, were all cosplaying
their favorite female Fox News anchor with bleached blonde hair. There were a handful of delegates,
Fox News anchor with bleached blonde hair. There were a handful of delegates, as well as Republican superfans wearing Trump buttons and mega hats, just really excited to be going to
the convention, the way a nerd would be excited to go to San Diego Comic-Con. Others at the gate
were more subdued, perhaps not wanting to attract too much attention in the Atlanta airport. But I
could still overhear them getting into quiet small talk about their RNC
expectations, and in hushed tones asking others at the gate if they were going to the convention.
And that's what everyone called it. Not the Republican convention, not the GOP convention,
or the RNC. The convention. As I was boarding the plane, an older woman with straw-like blonde hair,
sitting a few rows in front of me, waved to me and asked, young man, are you going to the convention?
I gave my best, yes ma'am, took my seat, and then heard her remark to her friend about how happy she
was that more young people are attending the convention, and I would suspect she would be
quite disappointed to learn why I was attending the convention. And I would suspect she would be quite disappointed
to learn why I was attending the convention
and what I was doing there.
Mainly trying to collect as much information
about these weird RNC grinder Republicans as I can.
And you will hear more about those weird
grinder RNC Republicans after the break.
This episode is brought to you in part
by the Top Gun soundtrack,
which I was listening to as I was coming out from Adderall while writing the second half
of this episode, as well as these products and sponsors.
Okay, back to the grind.
Most convention activities took place in the Pfizer Forum,
which it took about four days to learn how to pronounce.
This venue is usually home to the NBA team, the Milwaukee Bucks,
and this is where I would do most of my grinder cruising, so I could see other profiles within the radius of the convention area. Every time I walked into the Pfizer forum, which was multiple times a day for four days in
a row, I would find a little corner or a place to sit and discreetly boot up Grindr and refresh my
feed to see what profiles were in my proximity. Now, if you're unfamiliar with Grindr, one of
its more terrifying features is the proximity detector, telling you what users are near you, whether that be five miles away or five feet away.
Every night when I got back to the hotel, after recording with Robert and Sophie, I would once again check a grinder to see if any unlucky delegates were put up in the hotels by the airport.
The hotel we were staying at was also home to the Idaho and North Dakota delegates, and
though I don't believe anyone from our hotel was on Grindr, save for maybe an anonymous
profile or two, there definitely were RNC attendees at some of the nearby hotels, roughly
1,500 feet away from my bed.
The Grindr proximity detector was quite useful to me in locating profiles active
around the footprint of the RNC, as well as when sorting through all my messages back home to
confirm who attended the RNC from out of state. Because Milwaukee is about 650 miles away from
Atlanta, if someone's distance marker was substantially different from that, I could
assume that they were in Milwaukee for the RNC from out of state, even if I wasn't able to confirm through any brief text exchange. I've
also done my best to follow up with certain profiles to rule out possibilities of secondary
traveling or other random reasons for why their distance markers might not line up exactly,
and I think I have it narrowed down pretty well. Okay, you've been very patient, and now I think it's time to read through the
highlights from my Grindr inbox. And I gotta say, I think I started off pretty strong. While
attending the RNC kickoff party the night before the convention officially started, I got one of
the very first messages I received from a 21-year-old Republican with the profile picture
that's just a close-up picture of a dark suit
with a dark blue shirt and magenta tie. Already horrendous vibes. He asked me if I was quote
unquote with the GOP. And I said I was attending with friends and then I got no further response.
I saw this guy online throughout the convention and then after the convention was over, he moved like 300 miles
away. So I'm pretty sure he was there for the RNC. I got a message from someone who identified
himself as a local conservative, quote, but not a hardcore Republican, unquote. And he was excited
the convention was in town, hopeful that he would, quote, meet my future husband, unquote.
that he would, quote, meet my future husband, unquote. The first chaser I encountered with the bio looking for some lady dick to feel in my ass saw through my cisgender disguise and messaged me
cock? Question mark. I got one other message from a chaser who was pretending to be T for T,
who asked me if I was in town for Kitsu-Kan, an anime convention in
Green Bay. A nice local messaged me, quote, hope you're finding what you're looking for,
smiley face, which was very nice and just kind of amusing if you consider that he thought I was
just a gay Republican looking for some other gay Republican. Another local with the name
older for young sent me the message quote boomer who will talk politics
with you or we can just fuck i asked him if the quote-unquote talk politics pickup line works very
often and he replied quote less often than i would hope for on here unquote. He mentioned that he had noticed some convention attendees on the app telling me that they have infiltrated Grindr.
He then asked me what exact hotel I was staying at.
So that was the end of that conversation.
A minority of the Milwaukee locals who messaged me identified themselves as conservatives
and were largely excited that the RNC was in town.
They vicariously questioned me about how the convention was going,
as most were disappointed that they themselves could not attend.
One such fellow, who described Trump's first RNC entrance as electric,
and a very emotional moment for him and the entire crowd, unquote,
would have liked to attend, but he was busy working at the hospital
because they needed,
quote, extra staffing just in case, unquote. Now, the worst profile picture I found was an older
guy wearing a baseball cap and one of those half-face skull masks like Adam often used to
wear. He said he was from Florida and claimed to be in town not for the RNC, but to visit family,
and mentioned that Vance had completely sold out his morals for the VP spot.
This guy's politics were impenetrable.
Maybe this was just like your average Florida independent.
Very baffling fella.
A younger guy messaged me asking,
you're a Republican?
And I said, not really, putting it lightly,
and he never got back to me. I did find a 31-year-old chaser named Greg, who I do believe was attending the convention, and his bio read, quote, Anon, come drain me. Trans CD, that's
crossdresser. Sissy, femme, to the front of the line. I asked, you like trans? And he responded, yes. We had no further
conversation. I did talk with two other people who happened to be covering the convention,
including one guy who thought I was with CNN because the Grindr proximity sensor put me near
the CNN area when I was actually using Grindr at the Heritage Foundation party. And lastly,
really the only guy I saw who openly claimed to be attending
the RNC in his public bio was a 32-year-old from Shreveport, Louisiana with the username
SuckMeOff. One word. He described the convention as exhausting but awesome and told me he was
quote, proud to support President Trump, unquote.
And called Trump's speech on the final day amazing.
A lot of the RNC speakers, including Trump, talked about Cory Comperator,
the man who was killed at the Trump rally during the attempted assassination.
So after Mr. Suck-Me-Off talked about how awesome Trump's speech was,
I just replied to him,
poor Corey.
And he messaged me back, Corey who?
And then he told me what exact hotel he was staying at.
Now, part of the danger of trying to use Grindr directly in the middle of the RNC, even discreetly,
is that even if I'm hunched over on my phone, there is a non-zero chance that some
passerby or person sitting right above me might catch a glimpse of an unsolicited dick pic that
fills my phone screen as I try to check my messages. And this is simply a non-negotiable
part of the Grindr experience. Whatever you do, grainy, unflattering, bizarrely angled photos of some balding 43-year-old married man will appear in your inbox.
Ordinarily, I would check the profile first to see whom might be sending me a photo to weed out the undesirable prospects before even considering to open up a DM.
Unfortunately, multiple factors prevented me from doing this.
For one, this was research, so I needed to collect the most amount of data possible.
prevented me from doing this. For one, this was research, so I needed to collect the most amount of data possible. But moreover, even if I still wanted to vet for applicable profiles in my DMs,
this was impossible without opening up each DM individually and clicking through to their profile
from the chat log due to one of the many glitches I experienced using Grindr at the RNC. About
halfway through the week, the app started crashing pretty frequently.
But the main glitch I had to deal with, which has since been fixed, is that I could not access
anyone's profile from the DMs page. I had to click into each individual chat log to open up a user
profile, which meant I had to look at a lot more unsolicited dick pics before even being able to check anyone's profile.
So there I was watching Ted Cruz's speech sitting underneath about 50 Republicans
and right next to both of my bosses, scrolling through an endless stream of dick pics to see
who was local and who was here for the RNC, hoping that whatever Republican voter from Alabama
wasn't looking over my shoulder at the plethora of dimly lit hog.
But I was far from the only one reporting issues with the app during the RNC. Around midday on
Tuesday, the second day of the convention, over a thousand users reported a Grindr outage in the
Milwaukee area on the website DownDetector. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel wrote on the final day of the RNC that,
reports of the Grindr app crashing increased by more than 90%
in the past 48 hours across the country, unquote.
The DownDetector heat map showed Grindr outages in Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York,
as well as a hotspot of outages in Milwaukee near the end of the convention,
indicating users were experiencing
issues with the app, possibly due to an increase in activity. And you will hear more about that
activity after this ad break. This episode of It Could Happen Here is brought to you in part by
the Challengers soundtrack remix by Boyz Noize, which I was listening to as I wrote most of this episode while on the plane
back to Atlanta. This episode is also brought to you by these products and services.
We once again return to the grind.
We gotta keep on grinding.
We're almost done, but we gotta grind a little more.
Just one more grind.
Bro, I swear I'm not addicted.
Just one more grind, bro.
Just one more grind.
During the influx of reports about the Grindr app breaking during the RNC,
a post from the Twitter account for the Halfway Post went extremely viral,
bolstering claims of a massive increase in activity. Quote, Breaking, an executive of the gay dating app Grindr, says the Republican
National Convention is, quote, basically Grindr's Super Bowl, unquote. This quote from a Grindr
executive went super viral, prompting discussions all over the internet about five different
articles, and even disgraced former New York Congressman George Santos commented on the So, Grindr executives are calling the RNC convention the Grindr Super Bowl.
Folks, look, I'm openly gay.
No qualms about it, proud conservative Republican.
I met my husband on Grindr and we've been together for six years going on seven, married for almost three.
Let me tell you something. Just come out the closet, boys. Come on. It's fun.
You can be gay and conservative. But look, Grindr's already outing you anyway based on the hits,
and guess who's in town?
It's all you conservatives. Bye!
Now, I certainly did observe a lot of blank or anonymous profiles,
at least more than I'm used to.
I also received messages containing variations of
HeySexy from at least five accounts that have since been deactivated.
And this does line up with a report from a Milwaukee area Grindr user
who spoke with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel,
saying that he noticed a major bump in anonymous users.
Quote,
On any given day, you'll go on there and see a headless torso or a blank profile,
said the source, who did not want to be named.
The Grindr user said on a normal day,
you'll encounter maybe 10 users with no public profile. But Thursday, when he checked the source, who did not want to be named. The Grindr user said on a normal day, you'll encounter maybe 10 users with no public profile.
But Thursday, when he checked the app,
he said he stopped counting at 50 blank profile photos, unquote.
Now, we don't have any official data yet on Grindr usage near the 2024 RNC,
only the down detector reports, which our users submitted.
But we do, at least, have data from the last
in-person convention in Cleveland, Ohio, all the way back in 2016. A Vice article by Candace Bryan
spoke with sources from Grindr and wrote that, quote, Grindr usage near the Quicken Loans arena
showed a 66% increase during the RNC. Other active destinations, including Times Square,
Capitol Hill, Disneyland,
South Beach, and Trump Tower, showed no comparable increase in active users, unquote.
Many of the local twinks and trans folks certainly were concerned about possible RNC freaks hiding on
the app. People would often first ask me if I was a Republican or why I was in town before trying to
hit on me. One such twink told me, quote, I would be surprised if you were a Republican or why I was in town before trying to hit on me. One such twink told me,
quote, I would be surprised if you were a delegate or something, but I had to check, unquote. As the
week progressed, more locals told me that they had found a handful of out-and-proud patriots online,
but really not many. In fact, multiple Milwaukee locals I chatted with on Grindr
did claim to notice an uptick in users,
but mostly recognizable local users who were online for the same reason I was,
to see if there was an influx of closeted Republicans.
Someone told me, quote,
For the record, it's like three times busier here than normal.
Everyone is out to see what the Republicans are up to.
And the chasers have come out of the woodwork.
Unquote.
Far from being the app's Super Bowl, according to Vice, the 2016 RNC's 66% bump in activity
is less than one half of the increase in grinder activity that was seen at the last in-person DNC,
an event which was also a whole day shorter. I'll read from Vice, quote,
It's also worth noting that, of that 66% increase in activity around the 2016 RNC,
only about 40% of those users were visiting Cleveland. Most were locals. Meanwhile, 60% of Grindr users active near the
DNC in Philadelphia were visiting the city. Oh, and that quote from a Grindr executive calling
the RNC Grindr's Super Bowl, as well as George Santos' other claim about Grindr purposely
outing gay conservatives, both of those claims originate from Twitter satire accounts.
It's an urban legend that never happened. So no, the RNC is not Grindr's Super Bowl.
I got messages from over 150 different people.
Over 90% of the messages I received and profiles visible online,
even while inside the Pfizer forum,
were from locals completely unaffiliated with the RNC.
And any boost in activity that can be attributed to
people visiting for the RNC is a minuscule drop in the bucket compared to the proverbial orgy
festival of out-of-town gay Democrats who travel to the DNC. And, like, if you think about this
logically, this shouldn't at all be surprising. The Republican Party has spent the past two years
screaming about how all drag
queens are child groomers. And though this was the first year the GOP has removed opposition to gay
marriage from their party platform, they have massively increased their opposition to and
attacks against trans people and really any display of visible queerness. Like, come on,
this is the Republican Party. There's this kind of fucked up cultural conception that homophobic politicians must be so because they are secretly gay. And while there is the occasional, like, Lindsey Graham or repressed homosexual preacher, this is not the driving force of legislative homophobia. It is an ideological
drive, largely in furtherance of hegemonic Christian nationalism. And now for people like
Elon Musk and more young Republicans, a fascistic notion of reproductive futurism built on fears
that young people, white people, aren't having enough white babies, which they partially attribute
to society becoming more accepting of gay and trans people, resulting in people having less reproductive or heterosexual sex.
Never mind the fact that queer and trans people oftentimes can and do have children,
which still doesn't seem to please these conservatives, as it doesn't align with
their traditionalist view of the family unit. So no, Grindr wasn't flooded with closeted
Republicans because there simply isn't flooded with closeted Republicans because there
simply isn't that many closeted Republicans that are going to be attending the RNC.
And while there may not be as many Republicans as I thought there might be, I do believe that
I have the bump in activity, albeit a smaller bump than rumored, basically figured out. Based
on my anecdotal experience and the reports of a handful of
local Grindr users and journalists I talked with who were online during the 2024 RNC,
and considering the 2016 Grindr data, I can report that merely a small minority of activity
was due to ordinary RNC attendees. The majority of activity was from locals who either regularly used Grindr or were
specifically curious about who might be online during the RNC. I observed two more groups that
would contribute to any noticeable increase in activity. Not everyone who attends the RNC are
guests or delegates. A lot of people work at the convention center or work tech. And a sizable chunk of people
are like myself, researchers, pollsters, or journalists who attend conventions like this
for work. And lastly, the final group that fills out the bump in Grindr activity, one that I for
some reason didn't really expect to see upon arrival, but in retrospect, it makes total sense, are cops. So many cops. There were so many cops online at
the RNC. Just like delegates or reporters, they are coming into town from all around the country.
There was cops or state troopers from Texas, Ohio, Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina, California,
Indiana, and many more states, as well as US CapitolS. Capitol Police, Secret Service, TSA, DHS, and FBI.
They were all in town as a part of the security detail.
A few of the guys that messaged me, I can absolutely confirm, are 100% police or some
kind of military police.
A 33-year-old cop or military guy, quote, looking for sexy bottoms with the tags jock,
military, discreet, and weightlifting,
as well as many pictures of him in the gym,
said in his bio that he was, quote,
really into slim, skinny, toned, and muscular people.
He messaged me saying, hey.
Now, I got a lot of hey's in my inbox, which is not unusual for Grindr.
You will probably mostly get Hay as a message,
as well as just a picture of someone's penis. But between a penis and Hay, those are probably
the two most received messages you will get on Grindr. There was another guy with a username
DL Military, who said in his bio he was working security for the week, and that Grindr messages had completely broke for him,
and to instead message him on Snapchat. The DL in DL Military stands for Down Low. It's a tag that only the worst people on Grindr will use, mainly like self-hating gay men who are closeted,
and it's down low because they don't want to be like publicly seen being gay. Just absolutely the worst.
We do not fuck with DL, both literally and figuratively. There were a bunch of other non-locals who I would describe as cop types. I can't 100% say for sure that they are cops,
but they have like the look, you know, like the look, the cop look. I don't know. They could also be like a bodyguard or
working private security. But one of these cop looking guys messaged me asking if I was a trans
guy, which I always love to see. It means I'm doing gender very well. And a few other cop types
sent relatively boring messages. So yeah, a lot of cops, which is not completely surprising,
considering the fact that basically half the cops in the country were at the Republican National Convention in some form or another.
A few final notes. Now, this didn't really make up a sizable chunk of the Grindr population,
but after saying I was just covering the RNC, a couple people on Grindr just completely unprompted
told me that they were attending the protests against the RNC. Please do not do this. That's a horrible idea for multiple reasons.
You gotta stop talking about your political activities on dating apps, especially Grindr,
especially at the RNC. Horrible idea. Do not do this. And despite my lazy attempt at a young
Republican disguised online profile, a few too many people did recognize me from Twitter or the pod, but they were very nice.
They gave me some recommendations for what gay bars to check out after convention hours.
And one person told me this interesting anecdote that I'd like to share.
Quote, I don't think Trump is going to win.
I canvassed for Hillary in 2016, and at least here, it doesn't feel the same. Unquote.
I thought that was a little interesting tidbit that I received at probably around 3am on Grindr, so there you go.
Anyway, that was my RNC Grindr experience.
I'm sorry to report, it is not the hotbed of closeted Republicans that we meme it to be.
It's mostly local gays, a few reporters, and a few more
cops. I do not think I'll be reporting on the DNC grinder, but I am curious to see if there is a
sizable increase in activity as compared to the RNC grinder. So I guess I will maybe post about
that on Twitter, at Hungry Bowtie, if you want updates on that. Anyway, stay safe out there, be careful if you're ever on Grindr, please. Especially don't tell someone covering the RNC that you're attending any protests, but in general, be careful on these types of dating apps, and I will see you on the other side.
Message from quickie grinder said you were super close yesterday wasn't stalking i promise
message from birthday present emoji i almost thought you were josh thomas message from
anonymous wait are you pro or anti-republican i'm not gonna lie i mainly asked your politics
because i thought you were cute but i didn't want to hit on a Trumper.
Message from Older4Young.
Aren't all the delegates propositioning you?
You're cute.
Message from Anonymous.
Why establish a totalitarian state if I can't breed its dictator?
Message from SuckMeOff.
I'm down for anything.
LOL, are you supporting Trump?
Haha.
Hey, we'll be back Monday
with more episodes every week
from now until the heat death of the universe.
It Could Happen Here is a production
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updated monthly at coolzonemedia.com slash sources. Thanks for listening.
Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular online series,
The Running Interview Show, where I run with celebrities,
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