It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 142
Episode Date: August 10, 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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Call zone media.
Hey, everybody.
Robert Evans here.
And I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode,
so every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat less
ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want. If you've been listening
to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing new here for you, but
you can make your own decisions Trudeau musky to a noise fit intro how do we do that
that's why you get big you can't hear them okay
okay yeah yeah here we are that's it that's the introduction that's all you're getting
and and you will be grateful for it it's it's me and Shireen. Hi, Shireen.
Hi, James.
Hi, Shireen.
Are we doing vegetables today?
Are we doing genocide?
Which part of the vegetable to genocide spectrum are we on?
I feel like we're closer to vegetable than genocide.
But you could argue the opposite as well, because I get eaten alive by these things.
So, I don't know.
I think we're kind of in the
middle here i think it's a good even middle yeah yeah we've already split the difference
look at us go yeah yeah it's right it's things that eat shereen alive uh today is
flesh eating bacteria day uh it's not it does not have a flesh eating bacteria
off the episode i thought we were doing it. I like to surprise you sometimes.
We're doing mosquitoes, actually, Shireen.
Mosquitoes?
Little friendly guys.
They're not friendly.
They're not always little.
Some of them are absolute chonks.
I've seen some big dogs recently.
Did you know the mosquito, Shireen,
is the most deadly animal in the world?
Really? It's an animal? Yeah, it's in the animal kingdom right i suppose
it's an insect nuisance no it's not it's not an insect it's not an animal it's a nuisance um
i guess i didn't realize it was considered the most deadly animal why is that just from
like malaria yeah and all the other diseases it vectors right it can do parasites bacteria and
viruses so it's really like a triple threat when you can get like chukungunya dengue i've got a whole list of them why are they still
around that is an interesting question shireen i've always wondered that like bees have benefits
like they make they're they're cute little guys and they make honey and they just want to
pollinate around lots of mosquitoes do too lots of them also or they don't make honey
lots of species of mosquito just feed off flowers.
They're not out there to get you.
It is just the lady mosquitoes of certain species.
It's always the lady insects, man.
It's the queen bee.
It's the black widow.
I don't know.
Yeah, it's true.
Yeah, I guess maybe they're a matriarchal society.
I guess technically a spider is not an insect, right? It a arachnid yeah i don't want to correct me
on the reddit yeah yeah please please post your genus and species stuff on their on their reddit
i would love that so yeah you get mosquitoes they're stacking some bunnies about three quarters
of a million people a year in fact which is quite a lot of people. That is a lot.
Yeah.
I guess we're closer to the genocide on the spectrum in this case.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, sadly.
I don't know.
The mosquitoes don't have so much agency, so I don't feel like they're quite as evil, you know?
The word, of course, a mosca.
A mosca is a fly in Spanish.
You're saying, of course.
Like, why?
I don't know that.
Yeah. I don't know that. No why i don't know that yeah so you
might know that you know i don't know i'm just gonna look this up mosquitoes or origin word
una mosca is a fly ito is a diminutive ending so it means like a little fly oh little fly yeah
a flylet and there's also a spanish word that means long-legged. Hold on. From mosquito?
The Spanish call the mosquitoes mosquetas,
and the native Hispanic Americans call them zancudos.
Mosquito is Spanish or Portuguese, and it means little fly,
while zancudos is a Spanish word that means long-legged.
Ah, okay.
There we go.
I'm learning the etymology today.
Yeah, I learned. I didn't know that.
I just had little fly based on it being little fly in Spanish.
I mean, that's kind of cute.
Yeah, I like the long-legged.
Well, we have daddy long legs, I guess, but he's not a mosquito.
Yeah.
So technically, mosquitoes are actually micro predators,
which is kind of a fun word.
I feel like I've met some micro predators in my time,
but they were not mosquitoes.
And that is because some of them thrive by drinking human
blood tell me about it yeah that is the reason shireen that you have encountered mosquitoes so
i want to i want to talk first about their life cycle and then about their predation on shireen
so mosquitoes lay their eggs in stagnant water uh that's water that's not moving right i i know
some things james okay okay not everyone knows
about stagnant water shireen i did there are listeners too okay they might not know so
their eggs hatch into lava and the lava become pupa these stages are all aquatic right they all
happen in the stagnant water right and then the adult mosquito hatches from the pupa
and uh it hatches on the surface and then it flies off and it fucks up your evening
i didn't realize they had anything to do with water yeah that's why like did this not happen
in la um a few years ago they this council was like sending people around san diego to like scope
out your garden to see if you had standing water i don't remember if that did happen i have no memory but it was during like garden peak yeah let's see uh maybe that's why like it
was peak like zika panic oh that makes sense that that would happen yeah yeah it does and
we definitely get them like i have to put a little uh ovicide like a thing that kills the eggs into
my chicken water if i'm having a big standing thing of chicken
water yeah i try and have smaller and i refresh it more frequently now uh but yeah you definitely
have to be careful of stagnant water and as we'll see like one of the main ways to control them is
like limiting the amount of water for some species only the females of those species are the blood
suckers and in some cases they don't need the blood.
And in other cases, to lay their eggs, they need to have a blood meal, as it's called.
Which is a nice word.
That's unsettling.
Okay.
Yeah.
So the mosquitoes that are vectors for human diseases, so they're like the transportation
vector vehicle for the disease between one person and another.
Those are the guys who often need a little blood meal to lay their eggs.
They don't only attack people, actually.
They sort of have a preferred species, but in a pinch, they'll go after anything with blood.
I've seen them get really thick on cattle and stuff in the summer, or horses.
Yeah, I can imagine that.
Yeah.
Because cows just sit there.
I mean, if they're
being mosquito attacked they get pissed off but there's only so much they can do in some cases
i think um it's horses equine encephalitis is spread by mosquitoes so like they can actually
get it they can get diseases from two terrible little guys and they can like literally die
uh from being overbitten and if they get like completely swarmed
on wow yeah that's like if they're unable to get away from them because if you have a water tank
right and then mosquitoes are breeding in a tank it's where you want to keep that tank moving like
right so it's not stagnant water because stagnant water means it's not moving there you go look at
that shireen fitting knowledge into action for you. It's like one of those
Duolingo things
where you learn a word
then use it in a sentence.
Exactly.
All I do is use that word, yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah,
mosquitoes come out
at dawn or dusk,
which is to say
they are crepuscular,
another word that
everyone already knows.
I mean, I did learn that word.
I did like an audio book
and I had to look this word up
and so I know what it means
only because of that,
but it's a very interesting word, I say it is isn't it sounds like creepy like
i i would have no idea what it meant if i didn't look it up like there's nothing that
clues me in yeah crepuscular it sounds like yeah kind of gross because like diurnal nocturnal you
can kind of if you know one you can work out the other but crepuscular just coming out of
fucking left field that's crepuscular does that mean which remind me it means that they're active
dawn and dusk or that they're eating don i think it means that they yeah they are i'm not actually
sure if it means active or they're eating that's a good question because i feel like i've heard
cats are also described as that yeah cats are definitely that way animal appearing active in
twilight active and wow that's very poetic the first animal i see
here is a cat yeah lion american woodcock firefly short-eared owl cool yeah the real uh pantheon of
animals so they do the feeding at dawn or dusk and they actually use compounds in your exhale
breath to sniff you out so they So they are hunting for people.
And they specifically prefer to feed on people who have type O blood,
an abundance of skin bacteria, high body heat, and pregnant women.
If you fit one or all of those criteria, I guess.
Because people definitely, I feel like I have typo blood yeah me too i feel like i'm victimized like uh more than most people by the mosquito
and they choose me yeah i feel like me and my mom are both typo and we get you know live so that
makes sense yeah they somehow they can smell that on you i'm always cold though so i don't think i
have high body heat not always cold but i can i don't know i have bad circulation i'm not pregnant i guess i must have an abundance of skin yeah it's gotta be your
skin bacteria they're doing it shireen by process of deduction no but typo makes sense i think like
that is enough i suppose yeah they uh because they're like when there's a lot of them you know
and when they're one of them starts feeding on you that's going to trigger more of them to come feeding on you.
How?
Because they're like, look at this idiot.
Let's go feed off of him.
Yeah, yeah.
Look at this delicious blood that is type O.
Yeah, got it.
Yum, yum, yum.
And then they're giving off their little feeding sort of vibes.
And then other mosquitoes come, which can be useful to trap them.
Oh, that's a fair point.
The trapping of mosquitoes as i learned
when i was doing this very fucking interesting actually oh okay tell me more actually maybe not
now but whenever you get to it yeah we'll get to it soon uh they have a very interesting set of
mouth parts and including the uh the labium which is like a gutter shaped tube mouth tube okay i
guess and it's super sharp and they can use it to soar through your skin painlessly.
So that's why you don't feel.
So that's the needle-looking thing.
That's like the little thing they poke you with.
Well, they do that,
and they have little needle-looking things
that are contained within the gutter shape
that they use to suck out your blood.
Fucking gross.
Their saliva stops your blood from clotting,
and it prevents vascular constriction
in the area where
they're biting so they can get a little bit extra blood before it clots i guess some people can
become desensitized to their bites over time if you're getting bitten all the time others can
become more sensitive and the increased sensitivity is known as skeeter syndrome skeeter syndrome
yeah i gotta look this up and what what it looks like because i'm very sensitive to them
okay maybe we've got two diagnoses in one episode we got skin bacteria and skita syndrome i don't
know what what i need to have to have skiter syndrome but i will say i'm extremely sensitive
to mosquito bites uh when i get bitten they become gigantic i won't even i won't itch them
because i know not to at this point but i'll get these like gigantic welts essentially and they're bright pink and then over the course
of like a week or something they become bright red and they look like someone put paint on my
like it's like it's a crazy color of of of red and then when they eventually do stop itching
i'll have that welt there and that red mark for like months damn months it's
like it becomes like this weird scar yeah you could be a skito syndrome i guess so yeah yeah
i will say when i was a kid in syria when we would go visit there um they have so many mosquitoes
i got in alive because we'd go there in the summer too but there was one time i got bitten on my eyelid like this that sucks and so i genuinely couldn't open my eye for like a week and a half that was
the worst one i think i met that with bee stings like they uh they swell up like crazy like i don't
think i'm like uh anaphylactic but a couple of times one time I was racing in Laguna Seca, which is like a car racing track in Monterey.
And I'm racing along and I guess I'm riding along with my mouth open.
Just like,
you know,
thriving.
And a mosquito flew in and bit me.
I don't know,
mosquito,
a bee.
And my whole face just was like.
In your mouth?
Yeah. It was crazy. It was bad. Holy shit, in your mouth yeah it was crazy it was bad shit james yeah it was fucked um and one had just stung me before like the extent to which i swell up when bees sting me
i got stung in the leg on a training ride and i had to upgrade to like xl shorts because like my
thigh just become like elephant isis man yeah um and then one got me in the mouth
it was a bad day i had epi pain i had uh i think i had some iv benadryl at some point
yeah it was fucking wow i mean i i'm glad you're not anaphylactic but that's pretty close i guess
yeah yeah it's pretty close you can get one time i got i got stung in a face when i was trying to
go to lecture as well and uh like walked in with like elephant man face and my students were just like dude it's like those photos or videos you see of
like animals like a dog ate a bee and their face is like gigantic yeah yeah it is uh dogs do love
to eat bees I will say I don't know if you've ever done 23andme but I did it years and years ago for
another show I was on and on 23andMe you can select
if you want like health traits as well as
like ancestral traits or whatever like
and on that it said I
am more likely to get bitten by mosquitoes.
There you go. Maybe it just knew your blood type.
But I didn't give them my blood. I gave them my spit.
Oh yeah. I don't know. Yeah that's crazy.
Maybe there's something in your spit that tells
no blood type. I don't know. I don't know. We've just
discovered that Shereen was on a eugenics podcast no it was for my podcast that was about ethnicity
yeah some real problematic folks do love uh 23andme it's very funny when the white nationalists go on
23andme and find out something that upsets them yeah i love that it is always fun to see so the
real problem with mosquitoes is not just that they make you atriot,
but they're vectors for disease.
They infect 700 million people a year with their little bitey mouths.
They can spread all kinds of diseases, including viruses, parasites, and bacteria.
Some of their greatest hits include yellow fever, dengue, malaria, tularemia,
Zika, chukungunya, and West Nile virus.
Speaking from experience, some of those are really shit and you are best avoiding all of those uh that's gonna be my advice to you as a doctor in
modern european history it really fucking sucks to get some of these i've uh i've had some diseases
from some mosquitoes and i would not recommend yeah the mosquitoes don't actually get sick
themselves uh and it's like its immune system can
destroy the virus but um if if it bites someone else and then bites you before its immune system
destroys the virus's genetic code you can get sick and at some parasites apparently malaria
can make mosquitoes more apt to go biting so interesting it kind of turns them into zombie
brain mosquitoes is how i like
to think about it with malaria which is kind of the main mosquito vector disease i guess that we
think about uh the parasite replicates in the liver cells and then moves about by the bloodstream
if you get bitten again the blood could then pass that malaria to the next victim of the mosquito
i'm going on a trip soon for work uh i'll probably be on it when you all
hear this and like because people are traveling more these different diseases are becoming more
common right because they're endemic in one area and then people come from that area to another
area and then mosquitoes are hopping around when they're in a new area that they're now spreading
in that area so uh i was talking to some folks like on the areas where migrants travel north,
all the types of malaria are now currently present, which is great
because you've got people from all over the world, right?
And then the mosquitoes are hopping from China to someone who's come from Mauritania
and spreading their little mosquito vector diseases around.
So that is bad.
Do you know what else is bad um i'm sorry my mind went so blank but ads are are not no no they're not bad ads are great
ads are so good yeah we love them uh yay ads okay we're back and uh i want to talk about how we stop the the mosquito menace please help uh so
i'm going to talk about eliminating them and then i'm going to talk about some products and services
actually that you can avail yourself of i've been thinking about this a lot recently for work
reasons right yeah doing some jungle travel in the next few months.
So how do we prevent them from biting us?
First of all, we can stop them having little useful pools of stagnant water to replicate in, right?
Like this means, like, if you're like me, one of my friends refers to my garden as a, quote, Alaska yard,
which I think is a way of saying that it's a mess and there are lots of like car parts and uh like little little things that i am fixing soon you know and i guess having an
alaska yard is bad for the mosquitoes like especially things like tires right like you
know if you have a big car tire water pools in there and they can have a little breed in there
same as buckets um in marshy areas what people do is they dig
ditches that allows water to move so the water doesn't sit completely still and then introducing
certain fish it can also help certain fish will eat including the mosquito fish will eat the lava
of the mosquito okay tilapia also do this so like you can have a nice little if you're a person who
eats fish a nice little situation where you're you're reducing the disease burden and also like providing a food source which is something they're working on that you can drain
swamps of course donald trump famously has drained the swamp right yeah what a hero no malaria in dc
anymore because of donald trump but doing so obviously destroys an important habitat so you
don't want to just be draining swamps i was reading about something in florida they do called
rotational impound management,
where they kind of allow water levels to fluctuate.
And then they have these clever little gates that mean that other species,
like the fish and the crustaceans, can move about.
They're keeping the water moving to stop the little mosquito eggs from forming.
The other way to do it is to try and kill them, right?
So there are various ways of doing it.
One of them is to create an environment where they would want
to lay their eggs but then have that environment kill their eggs so there are there are various
at home ways of doing this so like you could uh like make a stagnant water thing and then
blitz up the eggs or filter them out or you can put things called oversides in there which
kill the eggs some of them also kill the mosquitoes when they come and lay their eggs you can also use their little hunting senses against
them right so you can create an environment that attracts them either by seeming like a person or
by seeming like a good place for them to breed and then you can filter out the eggs from where
they lay them right or you can kill them when they come on in there are things called lava sides maybe that's what i'm using with my chicken thing actually they destroy the lava
they're just like little bricks that you dissolve in your water and there are some pretty low risk
insecticides that you can use and there are also high risk insecticides or at least under popular
insecticides and this is where a friend of the of the cool zone media network ddt
comes in are you familiar with ddt shereen no they're our friends yeah they're our friends we
love ddt big appetizer on pod we love them because until about 60 years ago the u.s government
fucking loved ddt right it's an insecticide they would put it in walls, in mattresses. People rubbed their pets with it.
For a while, people thought it treated polio.
They would even go through towns spraying down whole neighborhoods with DDT, right?
And people kind of became aware that DDT actually isn't a great idea,
both for ecological and health reasons.
About 60 years ago, Rachel Carson published a book called silent spring it's
kind of one of the foundational texts of the modern environmental movement right and i think
people often credit like rachel carson with being the only person that that's not necessarily true
like you can look at migrant farm workers actually and see that they have been for a long time being
like uh i don't think it's great that you're dosing us with this pesticide all the time like
maybe maybe stop spraying us with the DDT.
Stop playing the places.
I want to quote a really good piece there in the New Republic on DDT.
We now know that DDT causes tumors in mice and rats.
It thins birds' eggs to the point that mothers inadvertently crush their gestating offspring.
It may disrupt birds' sense of orientation, sending them out to sea to die.
It fundamentally alters the reproductive
organs of an array of critters. It can poison animals even decades after spraying has ended.
Further, a growing body of evidence has linked DDT to numerous forms of cancer in humans,
especially breast cancer. Studies have shown how the levels of DDT in our bodies track
inequalities in human society. For instance, there are higher DDT levels in black people
than in whites, and higher levels in black people than in whites
and higher levels in poor people than in rich ones sounds like you were lying to me when you
said that there are friends yeah i feel like within the cool zone media network of making
podcasts about evil shit uh ddt i think fits perfect that's terrible yeah it's terrible
there's there's recently like a resurgence in, I guess, like people standing DDT again and questioning some of it.
Like research around it, but we know for sure that it's ecologically damaging, right?
And what we don't know is the consequences of wiping out a bunch of species in the ecosystem.
So we probably don't want to use DDT.
One thing we can do to kill them is introduce predators, which is kind of cool.
Tilapia is one predator.
Dragonflies are another.
I love a dragonfly big interesting flies so like in bikini faso they're working on a fungus with a
mosquito specific neurotoxin which is kind of cool it can just grow and kill the mosquitoes
the world mosquito program is also trialing a bacteria that when mosquitoes carry it it amps
up their immune system so like they kill the virus
or the parasite or whatever it is right more quickly so then they're less likely to be vectors
there's also programs which introduce male mosquitoes which are not able to have kids
either they're sterile or their breeding results in eggs that won't hatch so that's kind of
interesting right trying to control the population that way uh they also
have these really interesting genetically modified mosquitoes that need antibiotic tetracycline to
grow so they raise a batch in the lab and gives them the tetracycline that they need right and
then they let them out to breed and then when they breed because they're young don't have
tetracycline they don't grow and they don't make it it's really interesting to think about like some folks are advocating for completely eradicating them just wiping them off
the face of the planet which would seem to have many benefits right with all these diseases that
they vector i'm one of those people yeah you're a mosquito genocider i found this interesting thesis
that they're like a forest defense mechanism against humans like if we look at the like the ecosystem's way of uh
being like get out of here yeah like leave this place alone yeah which is interesting but like
i know it's hard because the people who mostly die from mosquito vector diseases are the people
with the least access to resources right right yeah like even things like you know when you're
very sick with some of these things you you need to be you know
kept hydrated and kept cool as your temperature gets up and stuff you don't have ac and you maybe
you can't get an iv or whatever like a very preventable death could occur right and so right
it's hard real hard for me sitting in america to be like no we shouldn't but right i guess i
understand that argument uh but if we go about it by fucking dousing whole areas
in ddt again then that's not great either right that can have its uh that can that can have its
downsides you know what else has this downside shereen what dreams it's having to pivot to ads
every 10 to 15 minutes in this job that we do so we're gonna do it now we're back we are entering the final trimester of our podcast
and um yeah do you like that i like to i like to think of them as trimesters. The last slice of this little podcast cake for you guys.
Yeah.
So I wanted to present some little strategies that I like to use.
Please.
When I am going to places where I am worried about being eaten alive by the little flies.
Wait, okay.
You see all these like DIY, like this is how track mosquitoes somewhere else.
But like none of those have been mentioned.
So is that all bullshit?
What do they talk me through it? I don't know. I have to look it up. But i feel like i've seen like little things where it's like put this bucket of water here or like put like lemon or honey or like
something to attract like general insects and then mosquitoes or like even like light can attract
mosquitoes so you put like a light somewhere but this sounds all like bullshit now yeah you can do
that you can even use a fan right because i don not actually very good flyers like they uh you can just kind of blow them away from
you uh so yeah in terms of like small scale mosquito prevention yeah i'm gonna get into
some of those okay cool the most useful thing for me is mosquito nets actually so like in the jungle
i like to sleep in a hammock this one called the jungle nest uh that eagles nest outfitters make
that has like a built-in mosquito net that's nice yeah it's really nice like i like it because i don't
have to fuck around with like draping it and worry about like little gaps right yeah and i use that a
lot i use a whole little system that they make and it's really nice if i'm in hotels see to summit
makes a sleeping bag liner a i like to take sleeping bag liner when i'm going places like i i got fucking fleas from a
hotel bed in rwanda oh no yeah it was bad like if you think mosquito bites i had to try having
and like i'm for people who haven't seen me i'm a hairy person like i have long hair and
had a beard and fleas were just upon me and it was bad so i like to take a little uh sleeping
bag liner now that's treated with a
mosquito repellent but it must be safe for skin and stuff though right yeah yeah it's safe it's
embedded in the fabric called permethrin we'll talk about it in a second it should be the last
thing i use is a head bug net i'm a massive advocate for the the head bug net i know you
look like a complete lemon but like it's just i don't like to be bitten in the face
no i have been bitten in the face so yeah it's not fun yeah take it from shireen uh bite survivor
if you have a brimmed hat it's much nicer because it sort of hangs in front of your face then but i
wear these all the time if you like to like see wildlife it's nice too because it's kind of
camouflaging like it takes the glare off your face you get really bad insects up in scotland like when i've been out there in the summertime i've
worn one and i wear a lot in california like there are some places i like to hike where we
have year-round water here but it's definitely pretty gross by like the end of the summer you
know like it's been sitting for a while but water is a big constraint on your on your hiking out
here right so you kind of need it so i'll go down there and filter my water but i wear my little bug face net yeah and it works
great i love it right so after that you can also do repellents they're these come in two forms so
one that you put on your clothes and the ones that you put on your body right the one that you put on
your clothes is called permethrin the thing with permethrin
is that it's a neurotoxin for cats which is very bad for cats so soya makes a little spray bottle
of it and you can spray it on your own clothes and treat them right but if you have cats you
have you must do this outside like you can't do it in your house with your cats it's safe once
it's dry so that you can spray them let them be on your washing line or what have you.
And then when it's dry, you can bring them inside.
Then it's safe.
Honestly, you can also send them off to a company.
I think it's called Insect Shield.
And they'll spray them for you.
And the way they do it somehow bonds it for much longer.
Normally, it lasts for about six washes.
But with them, you can get like 10 times as many washes.
You can also buy shit uh like i
just got a like a hoodie from a company called first light who make like fancy hunting stuff
that has the insect stuff built in yeah i like that because then if you have a hoodie as well
you can put you know you get like a lot of coverage but like if a cat like sat on this
clothing it's fine now because it's bonded yeah your cat could like go curl up in it and have a
sleep and things even if it gets wet that's okay it's when the permethrin itself is wet the first
application that's when it's risky okay i see i see if you're gonna do that you want to do your
socks as well because they fucking love to bite around the ankles yep my legs are their their
prime target yeah that's their their favorite area to bite in here. I don't know why.
I mean, they're probably easier to
access and you're less likely to see them, I suppose.
Like, and also, I feel like if you're sitting,
you're moving probably
your upper body more than your lower body, so it's
like, I don't know. Yeah, still, they can
sneak in there, little bastards.
So things to, like, repel them.
One of them is, um,
have you seen the thermocels?
Are you familiar with them?
No.
There's a brand called Off that makes them too.
It emits something called methafluthrin.
And methafluthrin is like a non-toxic.
I was looking at the EPA guidelines for this.
It's mostly non-toxic.
It should be fine in your house.
But it is toxic to aquatic invertebrates fish and bees because with all
these things i don't want to just be spraying an insecticide into the world right like yeah and
damaging like innocent non-micro predators so what the thermosol does you know when people
have those little things in their houses where they put an essential oil in and it puffs and
it makes your house smell nice yeah it's like that it's like that okay and uh it does that but with this methafluthrin and uh they work
okay like if you're in your tent and stuff they work like they don't work if it's windy they don't
really work but they can be nice like if you set them up and let them get going for a while and
then come into a space they can be really nice and then you have other things like a fan you can
have the electric traps right which uh kind of bring them and electrocute them but how do how do those electric traps
attract them just just the light or like i think it's a uv light because yeah it has that really
bright i actually don't know but i think they electrocute some like when they land on it right
yeah i think it's the light yeah those seem to be like a more multi-purpose insect zapper though
right so look i've not preferred those i don't want to be
killing everything else like just uh try and you know leave no trace and then the last thing is
for some reason i've become obsessed with this recently the different creams you can put on
yourself uh to stop mosquitoes going away ideally you can kind of layer up all the things right to
limit you know like the amount of just chemicals you have to rub on your skin deep is the most
popular one people are probably familiar with d it was developed by the u.s army in the 40s
the big thing with deep is it's really hard on plastics so i i'm not a contact lens or glass
wearer i don't know a contact lens is made of glass or plastic you're asking the wrong person
man okay yeah i've i've worn both and I have no idea.
I was going to say, look at us with our perfect vision.
I've worn neither, so I don't know.
I mean, I don't think it's crazy if it was made out of glass or plastic, right?
Hold on.
What are contact lenses?
Welcome to the Portioning Podcast.
We're sharing Googles, I think.
I guess they are types of plastic, but not the kind of plastic that comes
to mind when you hear the word high-tech polymers that allow oxygen to flow through
to reach the cornea body body blow so i guess yeah sure yeah be careful with your d okay actually
there's a question that says are contacts glass or plastic so i guess i'm a dummy because that's
a legitimate question no it's a good question that just like sounds crazy to me anyway i don't know if the deep can get to them it can definitely oh yeah it does contact lenses
there we go uh it can damage your contact lenses it definitely will mess with your rain gear your
tent your sunglasses especially in higher concentrations um so like deep you can get
10 deep you can get 100 deep you you get maximum protection at 30 deep so after
that it's just uh you're buying yourself more time between applications also if it gets more
concentrated you're risking damaging your gear and like i don't like the way it makes my mouth feel
like with the spray if you spray it you get this like metallic dry mouth it seems like you're killing yourself when you uh you walk into a cloud of
deep okay cool cool cool i like picardin it's a synthetic version of a element that's found in
pepper plants yeah that's what i usually use when i go camping yeah their little um soya makes a
really nice picardin actually it's got like a blue label on the bottle yeah that's the one i use yeah
so yeah we like soya i got to try the reason i've
suggested so many soya products is because uh the soya foundation were there in the martial islands
when i was there oh nice i mean i like their shit so yeah i do i think they're a really cool company
actually they seem to make stuff that like solves problems and then just like keep making it they
don't like make a new thing every year a different color and try and rehype it you know like uh right
and they did really cool shit in the marshall islands it was cool to see
and like yeah as companies go i think they're pretty right on they also gave us some water
filters to help the migrants the other day which is very nice of them we uh we needed some water
filters for folks crossing the border and they gave us some so they are my friends but yeah
their one is good they make a nice sun cream actually as well so you can you can double dip there i'm sure it's not up to the standards if you're you're imported
sun creams but just fyi that means sunscreen it's a british translation yeah yeah if you can't make
the logical leap from sun cream to sunscreen uh yeah that is that is what i'm talking about
in the british defense though it is definitely a cream and not a screen
so yeah that's on us yeah another uh incidence of british defense though it is definitely a cream and not a screen so yeah that's on us
yeah another uh incidence of british excellence oh my god i'll cast over yeah to be fair one of
the few what have we got we got that uh we have the baking show and uh that's about it yeah can't
think of much else so there are also like natural ones you know like citronella is the one that
people like but i have just found that
those don't work very well i feel like it's a hit or miss yeah i was gonna say i feel like it's like
kind of for fun yeah like you'll feel great that you've done something um yeah i think they just
work by being strong smells that kind of mask your other smells and you can get synthetic and natural
plant oils and there are people who will sell you bracelets with like a little thing that's supposed to secrete the citronella oh i i use i've used those the ones i have used look like
like phone cords that are all spiraling yeah but they're little bracelets and i have i put them on
my ankles put them on my wrists sometimes they work and sometimes i look like a dummy but uh
i don't know so it was worth i've tried everything yeah sometimes i just burn incense and that kind
of works again i think just kind of it's a strong smell and the mosquitoes don't like it okay that
makes sense having incense and a box fan is not a bad solution like i've done that in places where
you know nothing else was available and that's pretty good but yeah if you're in a place where
this is a problem and like and it's becoming a bigger problem right the world is getting hotter
the climate is changing uh these swampy marshy areas are drying up so we're getting more stagnant
water and less through flow like this is becoming a bigger problem and our healthcare system is
continuing to be fucked and getting worse certainly in the united states but it's the united kingdom
and other places so yeah be careful of the mosquitoes remember to do your sun cream before your before your mosquito cream
or lotion or whatever you're using screen your mosquito screen that's not about i got on
mosquitoes shereen you got anything to add no i think that's a good a little summary about what
to do for mosquitoes i hate mosquitoes so much and i'm one of those people that don't think they
should be around but since they are i guess I guess we've got to deal with them.
It's nice to know that I use a good thing.
I think if I use something that you use, I'm like, wow, I did something right by myself.
That's only true.
You're way ahead of me on the sun cream.
But no, I think it's helpful to know i'm sure many people
out there are sensitive to mosquito bites and anything will help if they i don't know yeah
it sucks it's getting so hot and they're everywhere and now the what's really bothering
me is that they're getting smaller and harder to see but they're just as annoying yeah the bite
still hurts even if they're
smaller yeah yeah you got to get a really fine mesh for your mosquito nets for that you can't
be using other products yeah i don't have a mosquito net i should get one yeah get a mosquito
net i love a head mosquito net it's great it serves you some it stops the mosquitoes biting
you it stops other people talking to you wow and it's a great that's great thing to have yeah i
have seen these videos of like someone having a mosquito net on them and then like the mosquitoes you see it poking and not
being able to reach it's kind of funny like mosquito armor it's very funny yeah yeah exactly
but yeah cool yeah thanks james yeah that's fine it's a podcast brought to you by me hyper focusing
on things which is what i do this is the way i deal with my anxiety about
going to places which aren't necessarily uh places people go for fun word all right bye see ya
hey guys i'm kate max you might know me from my popular online series, The Running Interview Show,
where I run with celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more. 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 even deeper into
their stories, their journeys, and the thoughts that arise once we've hit the pavement together.
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, and admire?
Join me every week for Post Run High.
It's where we take the conversation beyond the run and get into the heart of it all.
It's lighthearted, pretty crazy, and very fun.
Listen to Post Run High on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline Podcast, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. and at times unhinged look at the underbelly of tech from an industry veteran with nothing to lose.
This season, I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel-winning economists
to 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.
On Thanksgiving Day, 1999, a five-year-old boy floated alone in the ocean.
He had lost his mother trying to reach Florida from Cuba.
He looked like a little angel. I mean, he looked so fresh.
And his name, Elian Gonzalez, will make headlines everywhere.
Elian Gonzalez.
Elian.
Elian.
Elian.
Elian.
Elian.
Elian Gonzalez. Elian. Elian. Elian. Elian. Elian. Elian Gonzalez.
At the heart of the story is a young boy and the question of who he belongs with.
His father in Cuba.
Mr. Gonzalez wanted to go home and he wanted to take his son with him.
Or his relatives in Miami.
Imagine that your mother died trying to get you to freedom.
At the heart of it all is still this painful family separation.
Something that as a Cuban, I know all too well.
Listen to Chess Peace, the Elian Gonzalez story,
as part of the My Cultura podcast network,
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Carapamere. I'm Andrew Sage from the YouTube channel Andrewism, and I'm joined today by...
James, it's me. Hi, Andrew.
So James, just before the show, we were talking about a couple of different places that we've either been to or would like to visit.
Have you ever been to the Andes?
No, I don't think I have, actually. I'd like to. I like mountains.
Yeah. The Andes is one of my bucket list destinations for sure. They've always
enticed me, you know, as a place of settlement, a center of culture, a place of political struggle.
So, you know, I had to do an episode on the development of anarchist cynicalism in Peru,
sort of continuing along with my previous research on anarchism in other parts of the
world.
Much information I've gathered is thanks to the work of Stephen J. Hirsch and Lucien
van der Waals, particularly Anarchism and Cynicalism in the Colonial and Post-Colonial
World, 1870-1940.
And you know, people don't usually think of Peru
when they think of anarchist-syndicalist struggles, not even in the context of Latin America.
Folks familiar with that history would quicker consider Brazil or Argentina as sites of anarchist
syndicalism. You know, in Brazil, the roots of anarchism can be traced back to the late 19th
century, to the influence of European immigrants, and by the early 20th century had anarchist ideas gained traction across the working class,
with the establishment of various associations and newspapers like the Brazilian Workers'
Confederation, founded in 1906.
Anarchists would play, of course, a crucial role in the general strike of 1917, and then unfortunately with the rise of Getulio Vargas and his Estado
Novo regime in the 1930s, there was a very severe repression of anarchist activities.
In Argentina, you also had anarchism taking root in the late 19th century, again largely
due to the influence of European immigrants, and by the early 20th century, Buenos Aires
had become a hub of anarchist activity, with numerous anarchist newspapers, clubs, and by the early 20th century, Buenos Aires had become a hub of anarchist activity,
with numerous anarchist newspapers, clubs, and unions. The Argentine Regional Workers' Federation,
founded in 1901, was a leading anarcho-syndicalist organization that advocated for workers' rights
and direct action. Sadly, the movement reached its peak during the first two decades of the 20th
century, and fortunately, similarly to Brazil, due to the repression they endured, particularly
during the infamous Tragic Week in 1919, where a major workers' strike led to violent clashes
and a crackdown on anarchists and labour activists, the overall movement went into a decline.
Peru during this period was predominantly an agrarian society with a large and economically
marginalized indigenous population. It hardly resembled a nation in the throes of industrialization.
So although there was significant capitalist growth in Peru's export sectors, chiefly mining,
sugar, cotton, and wool, vast areas of the country remained largely unaffected by these capitalist changes.
Aside from Lima and its adjacent port city, Calau, which served as the nation's administrative,
commercial, and financial hub, sizable urban economies were conspicuously absent. This lack
of urban centers, typically associated with industrial growth, posed a unique challenge
for the development of a robust labour movement.
But a labour movement would still arise.
The working class in Lima Cala would emerge beginning in the 1890s and early 1900s, spurred
by the export boom that invigorated the urban economy.
Profits from the export sectors were reinvested into new financial institutions, infrastructure
projects, utility companies, and consumer goods industries
by native and foreign capitalists, and this economic growth led to a dramatic rise in
the urban labour force.
In Lima, the number of manual workers grew from about 9,000 in 1876 to nearly 24,000
in 1908, making up 17% of Lima's estimated 140,000 residents. In Calao, the workforce grew at a slower pace, doubling in size between 1905 and 1920 to
around 8,000 out of a total population of 52,000.
So this is not a bustling industrial heartland by any means, and peasant-based societies
are not exactly known for their cynicalism, but despite its unlikelihood,
Peru was indeed also a place of anarchist cynicalism, though most notably within Lima
and Calao. The 1910s and 20s were the heyday of cynicalism in Peru, as anarchist ideas and
publications were circulated by a small handful of radical immigrant intellectuals, alongside the
labour-organising efforts of craftsmen and machine tenders, who were inspired by Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin,
and Malatesta. Thanks to their efforts, anarchist-syndicalism would come to dominate
the still-fledgling labour movement in Peru, spreading its influence beyond Lima Calao
to the working classes along Peru's northern coast and central and southern highlands.
classes along Peru's northern coast and central and southern highlands. Workers in factories, crafts, transportation, and rural settings all found appeal in the
ideals and practice of the ideology.
Of course, at the size of the movement at the time, the anarchists may have dominated
the movement, but the movement itself and the anarchists within it constituted a minority
of Peru's urban and rural working classes. Keep that in mind as we
proceed. So the emerging Peruvian working class was highly diverse. You had workers of different
origins, gender, race, ethnicity, age, skill level. And despite these differences, they all
were dealing with long working hours, often between 12 to 16 hours a day, in poor conditions
for meager wages that barely covered basic
living expenses.
Seeking to improve their dire working and living conditions, workers began to turn to
anarchism because the elite-dominated political system in Peru was simply not taking them
on.
But there was a handful of sympathetic, disillusioned elites.
Like Manuel Gonzales Prada, an upper-class intellectual who became an anarchist after
interacting with French and Spanish anarchists during a self-imposed European exile between
1891 and 1898.
González Prada founded the first anarchist publication, Los Parais, in 1904.
And this was soon followed by other anarchist newspapers like La Semiente Roja, El Ambriento,
Humanidad, and El Oprimido.
Anarchist slogans like Kropotkin's Liberties Are Not Bestowed, They're Seized
were primarily featured in these newspapers.
And these publications, mainly produced by radical intellectuals such as
Glicerio Tassara, Angel Origi Cali, Carlos del Barzo, and Inocencio Lombarosi,
introduced workers to European anarchist ideas
and perspectives on the state, the bourgeoisie, the church, property and class relations.
Anarchist study circles further promoted these ideas among workers. Operated by both workers
and radical intellectuals, groups like the Centre of Socialist Studies, First of May in Lima and
Love and Light in Calau provided spaces for discussing anarchist principles, and these study circles, like
the anarchist press, emphasised workers' self-emancipation and cultural advancement.
And somehow, this man manages to come up in practically every single one of my explorations
of anarchist history, that being being Spanish anarchist Francisco Ferrer.
He was the guy who kickstarted the modern school movement in Spain and led to the creation
of anarchist schools worldwide. And he was also unjustly executed by the Spanish state.
Yeah. Ferrer is, uh, like a guy I like to a lot. Um, I like to, if you're in Barcelona,
you can visit him along with, uh, Ascaso and Durruti on Mujweek.
They're in the cemetery there.
They have like a little area with the three of them.
Oh, I was wondering for a second there.
He said, oh, you could visit him.
I was like, well, really?
Pretty sure he's six feet under.
Yeah, he's immortal.
They've reanimated him.
It's like zombie for that.
Yeah.
I feel like the Simpsons did an episode of that with Lennon.
Fortunately, I'm trying to think, I'm pretty sure that anarchists have, we have spared the world the embalming of our leaders.
Fortunately.
Yeah.
Fortunately.
I mean, his death, though, despite not being embalmed, his death still continues to reverberate across these
historical episodes. Across the world upon his death, anarchists went out in their numbers to
protest his execution. And Peru was no different. On October 17th, 1909, the Centre of Socialist
Studies, 1st of May, organized a public protest in response to the execution of Ferrer by the
Spanish government. And these sorts of demonstrations were in response to the execution of Ferreira by the Spanish government.
And these sorts of demonstrations were not new to the workers in Peru at the time.
In the previous year, an anarchist musical group associated with the center held a performance to commemorate the 1907 massacre of Chilean mine workers.
Furthermore, annual May Day celebrations in honor of the Chicago martyrs
were also supported by the study circles and the
anarchist press. The first May Day celebration in Lima, organised primarily by the Federation of
Bakery Workers, Star of Peru, took place in 1905, highlighting international working-class solidarity
and the struggle for the eight-hour workday while honouring Peru's first worker martyr.
And through the dedication of anarchist leaders, publications,
and study circles, the early years of Peruvian anarchism and labor organization laid the
groundwork for a movement committed to justice and dignity for all workers. We can say that
by 1911, anarchist cynicalism had truly firmly taken root. Why? Because this was the year of the first general strike in Peru by the
urban working class, spearheaded by anarcho-syndicalists. In March 1911, 500 workers at the U.S.-owned
Vitarte cotton mill initiated a strike, demanding higher wages, a reduction of the workday from 13
to 10 hours, and the elimination of the night shift.
And I found these demands very interesting because I'm imagining even now people back then saying,
you know, how lazy can you be?
You know, you only want to work 10 hours.
Like, come on, some of us are putting in 16, 17, 18 hours. Pick up the slack.
Yeah.
And it's always like these early anarchist demands,
you just realize the unfathomable misery
of being like part of the industrial working class
in the late 19th and early 20th century.
Yeah, it's like, can you ease the boot off my neck
for like two seconds a day?
You know?
Yeah, it's people fighting and dying, right?
To work like the amount of hours that most of us are awake in a day.
They would work that much without taking care of any of their family or personal or other needs.
It's like, can I please see my family for more than an hour a day?
Yeah, absolutely not.
No, you must.
And then the Pinkertons come out and like...
Yes, exactly.
Like, yeah, people are asking for a 16-hour day
and their response is to send out someone to murder them.
Yeah, it's ridiculous.
Yeah.
But I am impressed by their tenacity, you know?
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
Even with what I would consider to be rather soft demands
i mean a 10-hour workday higher wages and the elimination of the night shift i mean those
things that some people take for granted today right yeah um but that's something they had to
fight for and their strike lasted 29 days oh wow that's very impressive yeah this has reminded me
of like i'm working on a on a book
right now and i've been reading this biography of dhutti for a while that abel paz wrote and uh
in paz's book where dhutti goes into exile for a way to and travels across south america and uh
these these anarchist schools are being set up along the the modern system as uh envisaged by
if not just for there and uh they
don't have any funding right because everyone's so dirt poor that like that there isn't much
surplus to contribute to their children's education and when they have once they've
taken care of their subsistence needs and uh there's this line in the book which for whatever
reason it's just like a line i aspire to write something this beautiful it's daruti was very fond of children and so he risked his life robbing banks to fund their education
which is like i just love the pivot from like he liked kids and and therefore he conducted
armed bank robbery throughout the world yeah yeah it's like oh you know put the money in the bag and
maybe some textbooks while you're at it. Yeah.
And like he, at this time, like the anarchists were so pure at this time and like in their sort of aspirations and in their actions in many ways and other ways not, of course.
They could not rid themselves of some of their gender assumptions, but they would make an accounting of everything they stole, which is really not like if you're involved in crimes and you're listening it's not a good idea yeah don't write down the exact exact amount you stole yeah but he would do it to to like
prove to everyone that he wasn't stealing for his own personal benefit they'd be like we gave this
to this school and we bought some textbooks and like that you know they needed school lunches so
we got some sacks of rice and bananas and like as you can see the
entire money from this bank heist has been redistributed and we're off to another country
to do the same now i'm just imagining this guy like he's keeping all these records because the
anarchist auditor is gonna come and you know check all his accounts yeah yeah exactly like i'm not
sure who who would like, doubt the commitment
of the man traveling around the world robbing the banks.
But apparently they felt that, like, no one should be above reproach,
which is admirable.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what's not admirable, Andrew?
Ads.
Yeah.
It's our obligation to include products and services in these podcasts,
but we have to.
So here we go.
Okay, we're back.
And you were telling me about their 29-day general strike,
or their strike rather, not general strike.
Yeah, their strike.
But you're close because the strike started in March as a regular strike.
It lasted 29 days and it eventually escalated into a general strike on April 10th, bringing Lima's business and transport to a complete halt.
And so the following day, President Leguilla intervened and forced the mills management to meet the workers' demands.
That's a win.
It is. A win of a 10- 10 hour workday but a win nonetheless yeah i guess
it's a proof so you can force them to change and then you can you can continue from there
yeah yeah and so to save safeguard their hard-won victories textile workers in vittorio established
the textile workers unification of vittarite in May 1911, dedicated
to defending the rights of all workers. Inspired by Vittarite's example, workers at other major
mills in Lima began forming their own resistance societies, dedicated to serving and defending the
rights of the proletariat in general, and the textile workers in particular. The movement
continued to gain momentum in 1912 and 1913. In October 1912, the La Protesta group succeeded in forming the first Workers' Regional Federation of Peru,
united various worker-resistant societies.
Modeled after Argentina's Workers' Regional Federation, the FORP, as it was also called,
advocated for both immediate improvements and long-term social revolution,
aiming to unite workers across Peru.
Unfortunately, as is the case with many worker struggles in this time, economic instability and
state hostility during World War I led to the dissolution of the FORP in 1916. Thankfully,
this setback was temporary. Between 1916 and 1919, anarcho-syndicalists redoubled their efforts,
focusing on organising
both urban and rural workers. Following the death of Manuel González Prada in 1919,
worker-run union presses emerged, spreading anarcho-syndicalist ideas and replacing earlier
anarchist publications. This renewed activity strengthened the labour movement, leading to the
establishment of new labour federations and the revival of the FRP.
And with the deteriorating conditions during the war years and real wages falling sharply,
there had to be a wave of strikes in 1918.
The most significant strike occurred in December 1980,
when nearly 2,900 textile workers demanded an eight-hour workday.
Finally, we're making some progress.
Yeah, yeah, we're getting there. What I find so interesting about the demand of an eight-hour workday finally making some progress yeah yeah we're getting there
what i find so interesting about the demand of an eight-hour workday is if we look at their first
demand 1911 they fought to reduce their workday from 13 hours to 10 hours right and then a mere
seven years later 1911 to 1918. I mean, seven years later.
Yeah, they get them down to eight.
They go from 10 hours to eight hours.
And by the way, by January 1919, they organized a general strike.
They moved on to a general strike that led to street clashes and business shutdowns.
And despite the arrests and the torture of strike leaders,
the strike continued until President Pardo conceded to the eight-hour
weekday so in seven years they went from 10 hours to eight hours yeah and then we've all collectively
as a global society been stuck on eight hours for the past century over a century at this point i
mean it's 2024 this was 1919 yeah wow putting it that way that is bleak we should we should be down to an hour
this point yeah yeah we give extrapolate right we we take two points and draw the line that's what
happens when like they see the success of the people in the streets right and they know they
have power and they can keep going yeah yeah because they wouldn't have felt so bullish to
demand the eight hours if they didn't fight and win that 10 hours at first, just a couple of years before.
Yeah.
Like it's why we have made a first as international workers day, right?
Like, because like the number of rights that we enjoy vis-a-vis our employers and the state, we're all fought for and won by people who sometimes died in the process and like yeah we ought to remember that i think like sometimes now
organizing forgets how hard fought those were but also like they won yeah we have not had many dubs
in in the intervening period of course the state like the state has grown exponentially stronger
yeah yeah i mean the situation has changed we have to acknowledge that yeah but it's just it
is very fascinating the way that you know these small wins was able to embolden bigger wins yeah
later down the line and that keeping that momentum really is vital yeah definitely like it still
works that way when i like you know in the last couple of years i've been to rajava and to myanmar
and like they have done things that would have seemed inconceivable to them 10 years before they
did them and in both cases it's by staying in the streets right or staying in the jungles or the
mountains or wherever you're fighting and refusing to like accept that the state can tell you what to
do even when the state tries to bring its coercive
violence against you and like that's how all of these these wins occur but it doesn't happen
without organization without community without like all the things that they had built in peru
right like before they did their first strike they had to have confidence that their strike
would succeed and presumably a strike fund and a means to collectively support the people who weren't getting paid and they had to build all that
and then like these things can kind of cascade once the once the movement has a strong base
exactly there's a reason that i'm going through these histories you know these are the sort of
lessons i want people to be able to glean yeah totally i think it can be frustrating otherwise
like it can be frustrating to to be it can be frustrating to be people.
I'm not saying people right now aren't trying because people do a lot and they're working hard.
But it can be frustrating until you see that it takes years of building that base.
And then things can seem to come quickly.
But there's years of work sort of behind the scenes that has to happen first.
Absolutely.
So in the months following the general strike, workers continue to protest the rising cost of living. Organizers like Adalberto Fonken and Nicolás Guitara formed the
Committee for the Cheapening of Prime Necessities, mobilizing thousands. I think we definitely need
a committee for the Cheapening of Prime Necessities necessities today yeah that's an amazing group like i was just what a great thing yeah fantastic name when the demands were ignored and you know
here we go again a general strike was declared in may 1919 resulting in violent clashes with
the state and the arrests of gutara and another figure carlos Barba. Upon their release, resolve unshaken, Gutara and Barba
defiantly addressed President Liguia, stating in part that the populace of today was not the
tame one of yesterday, which had silently borne all tyrannies. Sounds like a threat.
Two days later, FORP was reactivated with a mission to dismantle capitalism and create a society based on mutual aid and equality.
The anarcho-cyticalist movement had dissolved any lingering passivity among Lima Calau's
workers.
The passion, hunger and aggression towards state and employer threats had reached a crescendo
by this point.
For example, in September 1921, textile workers seized el inca mill in response to management's plans
to close the factory although they were eventually dislodged by troops their act of resistance
demonstrated their determination and boldness and isn't that fascinating these workers were
willing to seize the mill they had worked at because the management plan on closing it down
they were willing to take control of that place and work at it and you know
quote-unquote contribute to the economy but the troops were mobilized to ensure that they did not
exercise autonomy as workers to self-organize their own labor it's either you're under management
or you're out of a job there's no working for yourself or working as a collective yeah also in 1921 the forp was replaced
by the local workers federation or fol which lashed out against the government's legal ruse
against strikes so in 1920 president leguia put forward a new constitution with very strict provisions to regulate this wave of strikes and to put the labor conflicts under arbitration by the state.
And so the local workers' federation, the FOL, which had replaced the FORP in 1921, lashed out at this government's legal ruse and vowed to completely ignore it.
At the time as well, alongside the labor struggles, anarcho-syndicalists were struggling
to transform culture. Contrary to the idea that the FOL neglected cultural issues, evidence shows
that they actively developed a distinct working-class culture. Their strategy was a war of
position against the ruling elite,
aiming to create a counterculture that challenged the dominant bourgeois values.
At the 1921 FOL Congress, workers affirmed the importance of both economic improvements and cultural uplift, which led to the establishment of initiatives like a workers' daily newspaper,
a popular library, and various cultural associations.
One key example was the Centro Musical Obrero de Lima, founded in 1922,
which used music to promote workers' rights and solidarity.
Workers also participated in social events like the Fiesta de la Planta,
a secular festival designed to compete with Christian holidays and promote class unity.
They also held May Day celebrations and organized tributes for fallen comrades.
Moreover, the FOL supported the creation of popular universities to educate workers
and foster cultural and political awareness. Meanwhile, also in the late 1910s and 1920s,
the southern highlands of Peru saw the emergence of a dynamic network of anarcho-syndicalist
movements. This network thrived amid the burgeoning world
export economy. The world trade's expansion spurred economic links and infrastructural
development, which turned Arequipa into a key economic centre and the hub of the anarcho-syndicalist
network in the region. Anarcho-syndicalism in Arequipa was influenced by four major factors.
A radical liberal press, the labor movement in Lima,
immigrant anarchists, and cross-border connections with Chilean anarcho-syndicalists.
Influenced by thinkers like Manuel González Prada, intellectuals and artisans critiqued
Arequipa's conservative society through radical publications such as El Ariete and Bandera Roja.
These radical ideas spurred significant actions like Arequipa's first major
strikes in 1902, the inaugural May Day celebration in 1906, and the establishment of pivotal
organizations such as the Workers' Social Center of Arequipa and the Workers' Coalition of the
Neighborhoods. The labor movement in Lima, along with influences from Argentina and Chile,
further inspired Arequipa's workers. By December 1918, motivated by reports
of worker struggles abroad, artisans and workers in Arakipa found the Society of Workers and Mutual
Assistance, the SOSM. In July 1919, following Lima's example, Arakipa's main labor organizations
established a committee to combat the rising cost of living. When the demands were ignored,
they too launched a general
strike, which lasted eight days and received widespread support. While some wage and benefit
demands were met, many of the committee's requests remained unaddressed. So after the general strike,
Arakipa's workers founded the Arakipa Worker Federation to advocate for their rights and
demands further. That federation was one of numerous unions and federations,
another being the Local Worker Federation of Arequipa, or FULA,
which emerged between 1919-1926 in response to calls from the FORP
to enhance the workers' capacity for direct action against capitalist and state oppression.
Like their counterparts in Lima, Arequipa's anarchist-syndicalists
employed direct action to achieve both immediate and long-term goals. Their protests against a railway tariff hike in 1923 pressured the
government enough to suspend the increase. But 1925 was perhaps their most pivotal year,
because the Popular Workers' Assembly, which was an ad hoc coalition of anarchist-syndicalist groups
from Arequipa and Lima, called for a general strike against the road conscription law,
which required adult males to register and to work on unpaid state infrastructure projects for
upwards of 12 days per year. For the Assembly, this was more than just an unfair law, this was
a symbol of the state's utter disregard for the working class. As the strike unfolded, the
authorities sought to crush the movement, arresting labour leaders and attempting to dismantle the anarchist organization's influence.
But even with only a small industrial sector and a relatively small population, Atikipa's
labour movement demonstrated a remarkable level of class consciousness and solidarity.
Beyond strikes, they used a variety of methods to build solidarity and consciousness among
workers, from worker libraries to football clubs.
One key figure in this movement was Ramón Rosiñol,
a Spanish architect and passionate anarcho-syndicalist.
Arriving in Arequipa in 1919,
Rosiñol turned his office into a hub of anarchist thought and activism.
His influence was profound as he trained future leaders
like Jacinto Leandro
and Francisco Ramos, who would become central figures in the labor movement.
Rusignol's efforts extended beyond traditional activism. He also founded a popular university
in the footsteps of Francisco Ferrer, and it served as a place for workers to receive education
and become politically conscious. In Hjendo, a key port city
in Peru, the influence of the international workers of the world was particularly strong.
Luis Armando Triviño, a key Chilean IWW leader, published a series of influential articles in a
newspaper called La Protesta in 1922. He extolled the virtues of the IWW's methods and called for international solidarity among workers.
He was best received right in Moyendo, where by early 1925, maritime workers from Chile had established close and secretive ties with the local Peruvian workers.
Under the cover of darkness, they held clandestine meetings in an old house on Islay Street.
These meetings would lead to the formation of a local IWW branch right in Moyendo.
But it wasn't just a meeting of the minds, but of the shared struggles and victories
of the workers that cemented these ties.
In February 1925, a popular general strike in Moyendo saw workers fighting back against
unjust practices by British-owned companies.
The strike was a
massive success, and the solidarity from Chilean IWW members bolstered the Peruvian workers' resolve.
The government's response to the anarchist-syndicalist movement was severe.
Fearing the spread of what they saw as Bolshevik ideas, they cracked down hard on the Mayendo
labour movement. Security forces were deployed to suppress protests,
and activists were arrested or deported to Chile.
Of course, government repression efforts were not fully successful
due to the resilience of loose, flexible and decentralised organising.
The seeds of anarcho-syndicalist thought had already taken root.
Throughout 1926 and beyond,
the labour movement in Mayendo continued to be a site of struggle
and resistance. Workers engaged in protests and work stoppages, driven by the ideas of
direct action and social justice that had been nurtured through their interaction with
Chilean Wobblies.
Do you know what was almost certainly not nurtured through interactions with Chilean
Wobblies, Andrew?
Ads?
Yeah.
And we are back from the ad break.
Beyond the cities, anarchist cynicalism had a profound impact
on the rural indigenous communities.
In Cusco and Puno,
internal migration and the exchange of ideals led to the rise of a
new political consciousness among the peasantry. Carlos Condorena, an indigenous peasant from Puno,
became a key figure in the Tijuana-Tisuyo Pro-Indian Rights Central Committee, the CPIT,
where he championed indigenous labor rights and the struggle for better working conditions.
His work, along with that of other provincial migrants like Ezequiel Urviola, bridged the
gap between the urban anarcho-syndicalists and the rural indigenous communities.
Urviola was a passionate advocate for both indigenous rights and the broader anarcho-syndicalist
cause, pushing back against the paternalism of the state toward the indigenous community
and connecting the struggles of workers and peasants alike.
He spoke out against bourgeois pigs, Yankee imperialism,
all while encouraging pride in one's indigeneity.
Alongside Urviola, Salazar and Ayulo would also guide the CPIT
and the Peruvian Regional Indian Workers' Federation
toward anarcho-syndicalist ideology, organization, and tactics.
Even after his untimely death in 1925,
Urviola's legacy continued to inspire anarchists and indigenous movements.
Indigenous leaders and activists have been growing fed up
with the abusive practices of local authorities and the gaminales,
the rural bosses who exploited the peasants.
Pedro José Rada y Gama, the minister of government and police at the time,
blamed these uprisings on known agitators.
He claimed that these agitators were convincing the indigenous people
that the road conscription law and other municipal laws were designed to oppress them.
Even though the indigenous people could see for themselves the effects of the law,
both the anarchists and indigenous organizers had laid the groundwork, but it was the people
themselves who chose not to accept such state impositions.
Uprisings broke out across Cusco and Puno.
District authorities had to suspend the conscription in several provinces due to the intense resistance. The sheer force of the crackdown was so extreme
that the city mayor and the municipal council had to appeal to President Liguia for the suspension
of the law, and they succeeded at least temporarily until July 1926. And as soon as the law was
reinstated, the popular assembly reignited the resistance. They even went as far
as issuing direct threats to the officials enforcing the law, noting that they had the
home addresses of the conscription council and was not responsible for any potential consequences
of their actions. They also sent delegates to Lima to organize a nationwide campaign against
the law, which led to their arrest and sparked even more protests in Arequipa and Lima. Throughout
late 1920s, despite increasing state repression, the anarchists, anarcho-syndicalists did not let
up for as long as they could. So, over the first three decades of the 1900s, anarchist syndicalism in Peru spread thanks
to a mix of factors.
The distribution of radical ideas through publications, the influence of activists from
other countries, and most importantly, the work of local organizers, most prominently
in Lima, Calao.
Despite facing immense challenges and a significant decline by the end of the 1920s,
the movement laid the groundwork for future labour politics. Former anarcho-syndicalists
joined new political parties in an effort to carry forward their ideals, compromising along the way.
So the influence didn't fully disappear, but it did transform.
Still, their spirit lived on somewhat in the ongoing fight for justice and equality in Peru.
One that continues to this day. Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular online series, The Running Interview Show,
where I run with celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more. 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 even deeper into their stories, their journeys, and the
thoughts that arise once we've hit the pavement together. You know that rush of endorphins you
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that's when the real magic happens. So if you love hearing real inspiring stories from the people,
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and very fun. Listen to post run high on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
AI to the destruction of Google search, better offline is your unvarnished and at times unhinged look at the underbelly of tech from an industry veteran with nothing to lose.
This season, I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel winning economists to 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
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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,
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Check out betteroffline.com.
On Thanksgiving Day, 1999, a five-year-old boy floated alone in the ocean.
He had lost his mother trying to reach Florida from Cuba.
He looked like a little angel. I mean, he looked so fresh.
And his name, Elian Gonzalez, will make headlines everywhere. Elian Gonzalez. Elian. Elian. Elian. Elian. Elian. Elian Gonzalez, will make headlines everywhere.
At the heart of the story is a young boy and the question of who he belongs with.
His father in Cuba.
Mr. Gonzalez wanted to go home and he wanted to take his son with him.
Or his relatives in Miami.
Imagine that your mother died trying to
get you to freedom. At the heart of it all is still this painful family separation. Something
that as a Cuban, I know all too well. Listen to Chess Peace, the Elian Gonzalez story, as part of
the My Cultura podcast network, available on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, podcast fans.
It's me, James, and my friend Shireen, and also Shireen's cat, Bunny.
Yes.
Yeah.
She is here.
She is here.
And ready to pod.
Yeah, she loves to cast a pod, and so do we.
Today, Shireen, we have the great pleasure of talking about the border again,
which is something I talk about a lot, something that politicians also talk about a lot.
Today, what I want to talk about is the difference between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump
when it comes to the border.
Because, shockingly, there has been a lot of crap reporting on her border stance.
There has been some good reporting.
And there's always going to be right-wing disinformation any time you talk about the border.
Just today, Border Patrol released video of a woman falling to her death from the border wall.
Border Patrol agents stood there for 24 minutes watching her struggle.
There was a ladder and they decided to watch her struggle until she died as
she fell and then she died well watching this like objectively tragic thing right like when we think
about how we get to fascism we get to fascism when my taxes pay people to stand there and watch a
woman die rather than do a single thing to help her and then a bunch of fuckwits on the internet
immediately start excusing this like it's it's so predictable that was going to happen and
i don't know i'm just once again disgusted by the whole fucking apparatus that is the border i guess
yeah so i want to talk about the things that have changed right and i want to talk we'll sort of
start by outlining who kamala is with respect to the border so everything she took over from biden kamala has been sort of offering more platitudes
than specifics right like her campaign is mostly based on vibes like i went to her campaign website
to see what her stances were on the border it is not mentioned i think that's notable but recently
in some speeches she did offer some concrete ideas of what her border policy might look like. So I'm going to start with her campaign ad. This ad, incidentally,
opens with what I'm pretty sure is a drone shot from Campo, California. I've taken pictures
in reverse of that shot hundreds of times. You can find them on my website. Slate bought some
of them off me maybe a month or two
ago no not even like maybe maybe two or three weeks ago i guess i watched a mother breastfeed
her five-month-old child maybe a couple of miles from there it was 105 degrees we were able to give
them water i saw someone in severe hypothermia right like very hot we were able to to cool them
off i spoke to a sudanese family who
were really struggling with making this long walk they have to make out there none of that shit
made it into the kamala border advert right no of course not so i'm just gonna play this advert for
you shireen on the border the choice is simple kamala harris supports increasing the number of
border patrol agents donald trump blocked a bill supports increasing the number of Border Patrol agents.
Donald Trump blocked a bill to increase the number of Border Patrol agents.
Kamala Harris supports investing in new technology to block fentanyl from entering the country.
Donald Trump blocked funding for technology to block fentanyl from entering the country.
Kamala Harris supports spending more money to stop human traffickers.
Donald Trump blocked money to stop human traffickers. Donald Trump blocked money to stop human traffickers.
Kamala Harris prosecuted transnational gang members and got them sentenced to prison.
Trump is trying to avoid being sentenced to prison.
There's two choices in this election.
The one who will fix our broken immigration system and the one who's trying to stop her
a cop or a clown who should we vote for president and that's exactly it right she's leaning really
heavily on this like i am a cop thing and like we have spent and continue to spend billions of
dollars on border cops that is not the fucking solution it never
will be the solution we cannot make this giant border so full of cops that it's impossible for
people to cross it people will still cross it because cops ain't going to go to the middle
of the desert because you know inherent in being a cop is also being lazy so i want to play some
stuff that she said in atlanta this week so here is my pledge to you as president i
will bring back the border security bill that donald trump killed and i will sign it into law
and show donald trump what real leadership looks like.
Oh, fuck off.
Yeah, so I'm going to subject you to some Kamala and some Trump today.
That's OK. I signed up for this.
OK, so here's another one of her.
And this, I think, is really telling, right, where she is bragging about the most conservative Republican supporting her bill. Donald Trump, on the other hand, has been talking a big game
about securing our border, but he does not walk the walk.
Or as my friend Quavo would say, he does not walk it like he talks sick.
So look, our administration worked on the most significant border security bill in decades.
Some of the most conservative Republicans in Washington, D.C. supported the bill.
Even the Border Patrol endorsed it.
So I'm going to read some transcripts from that speech as well.
Just this is pretty much the only point of data we have on her proposed border policy.
So we're going heavy on this speech that she gave in Atlanta at a rally, right?
I went after transnational gangs, drug cartels,
and human traffickers that came into our country illegally.
I prosecuted them in case after case, and I won, Harris said.
Donald Trump, on the other hand,
has been talking a big game about securing our border,
but he does not walk the walk. That's what you just heard, right?
And then she goes on to reference Quavo which which is cool and normal so let's talk about that
leadership and let's talk about the bill she's proposing right this is a bipartisan bill that
was proposed last year and that didn't succeed right it's the one that democrats are making a
big fuss about republicans getting the border bill It's one of the only good things they've ever done, actually, because it represented a massive rightward swing from where Democrats have previously been on immigration.
In the bill, DHS could close the border if Border Patrol encountered 4,000 or more migrants on average over a seven-day period.
The border would then have to be shut down if encounters reached a seven-day average of 5 000 or if they
exceeded 8 500 in a single day does that happen are these numbers like realistic yes well a really
important thing to remember when we talk about these numbers is did you notice that it was
phrased as encounters not people so this is a thing that is apparently impossible if you write
for a fucking broadsheet corporate legacy newspaper to understand.
An encounter does not represent a unique individual.
Border Patrol do not give us data on unique individuals.
They give us data on encounters.
This is important because under Title 42, which I made a series about last year that you can listen to.
I would like it if you did.
People can be returned to Mexico.
And as you'll see under this proposal, people can be returned to Mexico. And then they
will try and come back because most of the people coming to our border are not from Mexico, nor do
they have roots in Mexico, nor can they be safe in Mexico. So they will try and come back and they
will try and come back in a different place, in a more remote place. And that will result in a higher risk to their lives making that journey.
Right. So 8,500 individuals across the whole border doesn't mean 8,500 people.
But yes, those numbers are reachable.
That's just so that's so disingenuous to word it that way.
Yeah. Border Patrol just had like, I don't know, they had so much success with doing this under Title 42.
Like, we're flooded with migrants.
And, like, I've spoken to people who have tried seven times to cross, you know.
It's extremely disingenuous.
And I think we're going to get onto this,
but this is a debate about the border happening by people
who never go to the border and don't understand what it's like here,
both in the media and in politics.
And I think that that is a problem so when it's closed
quote unquote now we can't close the border right like a physically we cannot be we're not going to
close the border and be like okay mexico no tomatoes okay no tourists can come into orlando
now right that that is not what it's about it is open to capital and is open to wealthy people
all we're doing is closing it to the people who most need our help, that being people seeking asylum.
So when it's quote unquote closed, they would still process 1,400 migrants through ports of entry.
That would presumably be people arriving using CBP1, which is a fatally flawed app, which doesn't work for black folks, which has been hacked. All
the appointments are sold, booked up a month in advance. You can only use it north of Mexico City.
It's a complete mess. Every single migrant I have encountered has tried to use CBP1 and given up.
It's not even available in that many languages, right? I think it's English, Spanish and Haitian
Creole right now. It's it's ludicrous
to suggest that this is accessible and it doesn't work very well on samsung phones um i have a pra
a foil i guess a foyer uh out to cbp about that but you know maybe in six years after like several
court cases i'll get it back but i know that people are buying iphones migrant advocates both in mexico city and north of there
to allow migrants to access the app they're trying to help them overcome these hurdles right but like
fucking come on you know we've got the entire u.s government here and then it's my friends
trying to get five bucks from from you know whoever to buy an iphone so migrants can share
it like it's obscene only unaccompanied minors will be processed
if they entered between ports of entry, right?
So that's people under the age of 18 without their folks.
Anyone who tried to cross between ports of entry.
So port of entry is when you cross the border
with your passport and you go through an office,
that's a port of entry, right?
So if you cross in another fashion over a river,
over a wall, around a wall, under a wall,
through a wall, just across a desert
where there isn't a wall. That's between ports of entries. If anyone tries two or more times,
then during a border emergency, they will be barred from the United States for a period.
I think it's a year. I should note that this bill didn't pass, but Biden did write an executive
order setting an arbitrary cap at 2,500 encounters per day, which you will notice is lower. And it removed the requirement that Border Patrol
ask migrants if they fear persecution.
So this is really important.
It's called a shout test.
And the difference here is between me saying,
Shireen, you've just come across the border.
Are you here because you fear persecution?
Can you not safely go home?
And me just saying, get in the fucking van
and you having to articulate that you fear persecution
right which is that requires them to know that they have to articulate it it requires them to
be able to articulate it in a language that's intelligible to the officer or whoever's interviewing
them right it's a much higher barrier and in both cases right you could have the same person
and they could be rejected because they didn't pass this so-called shout test that's ridiculous
it's a really bullshit
workaround for someone who is clearly eligible for asylum right yeah and like any good faith
actor wants to find out if that person is going to be persecuted when they go home and so moving
to a shout test like you are consciously saying some people we're going to send home they will
fucking die or they will be tortured or they will face persecution of other means.
Right. Because they didn't articulate in the right words their fear of persecution.
And it's just there is not a good faith argument for this.
It's just getting numbers down at the cost of human suffering.
Yeah. So in this case, right, I have met migrants with pretty rock solid claims.
I don't want to go into the details of their cases too much.
I will in the future.
But like, you know, I'm out of the border a lot.
And I'm out in the back country there a lot.
And I try and help people whenever I can.
I talk to them about their claims.
And I'm not going to ask someone to justify their trauma to me with 17 documents.
But some of them have shown me things which I do believe would would be a very cast iron asylum claim and they seem to be since biden's executive order just
getting booted back across the border so he kind of worked around that part of the bill failing
but let's look at what else is in it so if the bill that harris is saying she will reintroduce
of course she herself can't right it's a legislative act so senator or however the house would the bill would limit border closures to 270 days 225 days and 180
days for the first three years which there's no there's no limit in the biden executive order so
i guess that's that's better i guess i mean fucking 270 days when you can't claim asylum
that's a lot of days there's also funding a lot of funding
for more border patrol agents of course and more asylum officers as well as more than 100 judges
we do need to move people through the immigration system but a lot more pressingly we need to open
legal pathways that are not walking across the desert and passing a shout test it would mandate
detaining migrants if they try to enter the u.s outside of ports of entry pending their asylum
claim so this is really big actually it's going to result in a massive increase in
the amount of asylum detention beds we need. The bill contains funding for another 10,000 more beds.
We'll probably end up needing more than that. But all of these beds are not in state-run
facilities, right? They're in private facilities that ICE coordinates with. It's core civic.
It's people who
when biden first came into office he wrote an executive order about getting rid of private
prisons these are the private prisons this is how we reallocated money to those same people
doing this terrible thing right which is locking people up for profit i've heard terrible stories
about the conditions in some of these detention centers and this is the guy who ran on and bragged about
closing down private prisons sending more money to private prisons just for migrants not citizens
because apparently their rights don't matter as much their lives don't matter as much talking
of things that don't matter shireen should we take an ab break that was beautiful james thank you
Should we take an ab break?
Sounds beautiful, James.
Thank you.
So, we're back.
And I want to talk about what Harris has done as VP,
which is they put her on this root causes beat, right?
Where she's supposed to go after the root causes of migration. So I want to start with this message that she sent to the people of Guatemala.
I want to be clear to folks in this region who are thinking about making that dangerous trek
to the United States-Mexico border. Do not come. Do not come. The United States will continue to enforce our laws and
secure our border. There are legal methods by which migration can and should occur. But
we, as one of our priorities, will discourage illegal migration.
And I believe if you come to our border, you will be turned back.
Do not come.
Yeah.
I think I've seen that before.
Yeah.
She took a lot of shit for that one.
Rightly.
Understandably.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is not the only time the Biden administration said this, by the way. They were tweeting do not come in Haitian Creole in 2021 from the embassy of the United States in Haiti. This has been their message and continues to be their message.
Now to the ongoing crisis down at the southern border, the focus of Vice President Kamala Harris's first overseas trip since taking office. She heads to Mexico today after spending yesterday in Guatemala,
where she announced several initiatives and delivered a message to potential migrants there.
Do not come to the United States.
The vice president also sat down exclusively with NBC's Lester Holt,
who began by asking her about that warning.
In the news conference here in Guatemala City, you had a message for would-be migrants.
Don't come.
Why should they believe you when they know that people are getting in? I've been working on this issue for a very
long time. And the kind of violence and danger that is associated with that track, especially
when we're talking about from Guatemala through Mexico to the United States.
It is extremely dangerous.
We are looking at a situation where people are fleeing because of hunger,
because of the hurricanes, because of the pandemic.
So the reason I am here is to address those issues,
knowing that the people who are here for generations, they want to stay.
They don't want to leave, but they need opportunity.
They need assistance. They need support.
Americans don't see a lot of that on a daily basis.
What they do see at their own border, children being lowered over fences,
children coming in with phone numbers stenciled on their hand.
And so the question has come up, and you heard it here, and you'll hear it again, I'm sure.
It's why not visit the border? Why not see what Americans are seeing in this crisis? Well, we are going to the
border. We have to deal with what's happening at the border. There's no question about that.
That's not a debatable point. But we have to understand that there's a reason people are
arriving at our border and ask what is that reason and then identify the problem so we can fix it.
Okay, so all of this was while the Biden administration continued to defend and
enforce Title 42. If people haven't listened to the series I made about Title 42, I know I've
said that twice, but like, that's like two, three hours of me explaining Title 42. So that would
explain it better than I can in 20 seconds here. Title 42 is a public health law.
And the idea of Title 42 is to prevent people with tuberculosis coming into the United States.
An element of Title 42 of the United States Code contains this. The idea was never to use it as a de facto block on asylum, which is what the Trump administration did for a year and the Biden administration did for nearly three years.
The Biden administration did it for much, much longer.
This ended in May of 2023.
And it was used, they called it catch and release, right?
It was used to bounce people straight back, as we spoke about before.
Catch and release.
It's like you're literally like an animal practice, you know?
Right, yeah.
Like these people are fucking fish.
Yeah.
And I don't like doing that to fish personally.
Like I shouldn't stress out a fish.
It's just vibing down there.
Don't ruin its day.
So later in that same interview,
she was very defensive about her failing to visit the border.
But I think there are very reasonable questions.
Sometimes these criticisms are used in bad faith by Republicans.
So is everything, right?
It doesn't mean that we shouldn't talk about this.
We should.
I didn't see a single elected official from the Democrat Party.
I guess fucking Jim Desmond turned up, but I wish he wouldn't.
He turned up, told lies about who paid for the aid,
and then forced his intern to apologize for it
when a bunch of people turned up at his office. Really great integrity. I didn't see a single Democrat for
the months that Border Patrol held thousands of people in open air detention without food,
water or shelter. And for the months that my friends and I took care of them. Instead,
what Harris was doing was trying to connect business leaders with economies in Central America to, quote, create jobs.
Right. She had some success with a Japanese car factory in Guatemala and a Swiss coffee processor buying more beans and committing to more more coffee purchases.
Right. But this shit does not work and it has never worked.
Right. Obviously, my position on global economics is not the same as as hers but we can't trickle down the causes of migration we can't do this with like a rising
tide levels or boats gdp stuff even if we do buy this kind of freakonomics tier bullshit
it doesn't matter because the change is going to take decades to come right you can't just just change a national
economy change deals with unemployment with violence with state violence with non-state
violence overnight and it's very likely that the pace of climate change alone will outstrip any
benefits that these programs provide right because we are seeing increasingly people coming from
countries that are the most impacted by
climate change to countries like the United States one of the countries that has made the
largest contribution to the climate change right but this idea of like trickle-down economics to
stop migration it doesn't address the issue that most of our migrants are no longer coming from
the places she's going right so she's worked pretty extensively in the Northern Triangle, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.
These are places which sent a lot of migrants maybe in the early Obama administration.
But that's not the case anymore.
Those are not typically places I see migrants from.
I see migrants from Venezuela.
We're going to get a lot more of those.
I see migrants from Turkey, many of them, but not all of them Kurdish.
I see migrants from North Africa. I see migrants from turkey many of them but not all of them kurdish i see migrants
from north africa i see migrants from the sahel i see migrants from india i don't particularly see
people from the northern triangle so the idea that like lifting the economy the northern triangle is
going to it's going to move the needle it's just not yeah even if we buy the idea that it's possible
i don't think it is. So that's Kamala.
Let's take a look at Donald Trump.
I guess I should give people a trigger warning.
I'm only going to include a little bit of Donald Trump audio here,
but you can tap the skip button if you don't want to hear Donald Trump talking.
So Donald Trump's policies largely are in response to things that are not real or proposing things that the president or Congress cannot do or that the president cannot do without the support of Congress.
So his first thing is talking about ending birthright citizenship.
This is not a thing that he can do by executive order.
This is an amendment to the Constitution that requires an amendment to the constitution to pass it back now you can amend the constitution but i don't think you'd ever get
support for ending birthright citizenship right this has been the case since after the civil war
and it exists to stop people disenfranchising the children of formerly enslaved people
under biden's current policies even though these millions of illegal border crossers have entered the country unlawfully, all of their future children will become automatic U.S. citizens.
Can you imagine?
They'll be eligible for welfare, taxpayer-funded health care, the right to vote, chain migration,
and countless other government benefits, many of which will also profit the illegal alien
parents.
This policy is a reward for breaking the laws of the United States
and is obviously a magnet helping draw the flood of illegals across our borders.
They come by the millions and millions and millions.
So another thing that Donald Trump wants to do is do away with the diversity visa program.
Are you familiar with the diversity visa um no i'm
gonna say no okay well i guess i'm familiar with it but not enough to like know what it is in detail
so please tell me james okay i would love to tell you shireen the dv program i will avoid using that
acronym actually because uh it could be an unfortunate misunderstanding yeah we're just
sending cops all over the world.
That's funny.
Yeah.
No, the diversity visa program,
better known as the green card lottery,
allows about 55,000 or exactly 55,000 in theory,
immigrant visas a year for individuals from countries
that are underrepresented in the US immigration system.
I remember that.
Wait, that sounds familiar.
Yes.
Okay.
Yeah.
So like you'll meet people almost everywhere I go.
I tend not to go to countries that are highly represented in the U.S. immigration system. Right.
Those being countries that find it easy for people to get visas like H-1Bs. Right.
Because they are more economically maybe close to the United States and have educational credentials that translate across.
So the Trump administration had made the diversity visa program
it's such a massive clusterfuck that it effectively didn't work and the way that this happened was
because you don't just win the green card lottery and they mail a green card to your house so like
come on over bud you win the lottery and that gives you the right to go to the embassy to do
an interview and then you make the application right then they check check
you off on any checklists you might be on all the stuff that would normally apply to a migrant
it's not like an amnesty visa and what the trump administration did was make it very hard for
people to get these appointments especially during covid and this has been the case with
the biden administration as well they get the lowest priority now. They can book an appointment, but other people's stuff gets to sort of overtake them in the line.
Because you only have a year from receiving it to claiming it.
De facto, this means that people don't get it.
So 55,000 people are not coming because of the diversity visa.
Even if they were, this is not very many people.
It's just trump i don't maybe he saw the phrase diversity and became triggered but it's a weird little bug
bear like which i guess if you can focus on weird little things but still the diversity visa is
great the people i know who often most deserve visas people who can't even afford to make the
trip right to walk here or you know if you're not in the continental Americas,
it's a lot more expensive.
You have to fly.
I guess you could take a boat.
But some of those people, I mean,
my friend who drove me all around Iraq is applying for a diversity visa.
And like, I really hope he gets it.
Lovely man.
Trump also has this bug there about DHS paying benefits to quote illegal aliens.
Crooked Joe Biden is running a nonstop conveyor belt importing illegal aliens from all over the
world into our country. And the Biden Department of Homeland Security is abusing its so-called
parole authority to give them more governmental benefits than many law-abiding citizens,
including our vets. Our vets are being taken advantage of. Our citizens are being taken
advantage of. It's very unfair, and it's not going to stand. The Department of Homeland Security
doesn't pay any benefits to anyone. I guess it pays like border patrol agents and people who
work for it, but it's not giving anyone public benefits right undocumented
people are normally ineligible for most benefits even people who do have legal status and he
consistently conflates asylum seekers with undocumented people right maybe because he
genuinely doesn't know the difference and it doesn't care to learn the difference even people
who have legal status face a range of hurdles like sometimes they have a 40 quarter work bar for example right
so that means you have to have been working for 40 periods of three months consecutively
again this is kind of he might be talking about something called the public charge rule
which can interfere with your citizenship or visa application if you've taken certain times
of benefit so maybe he's looking to make that a little bit broader.
But again, it's really unclear, and it's kind of a lot of identity politics grifting.
The next thing is we're getting towards QAnon territory now.
Great.
I will use Title 42 to end the child trafficking crisis by returning all trafficked children
to their families in their home countries and without
delay. And I will urge Congress to ensure that anyone caught trafficking children across our
border receives the death penalty immediately. And that includes also for women, because women,
as you know, are number one in trafficking. Children are actually number two.
This is some weird shit, first of all, right?
But he talks about using Title 42.
This is not, as I've talked about three times now,
what Title 42 is for.
It's very obvious that he thinks Title 42 is immigration law because he very obviously used it as that, right?
He was not using Title 42 to stop people getting COVID
because he did square root fuck all stop people getting COVID, and there were not exemptions for vaccinated people it's very obvious that they
use title 42 cynically as an immigration law that is not what it is also deporting someone back to
the situation they were trafficked from maybe not smart like maybe maybe especially a minor who is
trafficked here maybe we could help them you know one of the richest countries humanity has ever seen maybe not just bumping them straight
back to that country yeah maybe showing a little bit of compassion human trafficking is a problem
but this is not the solution so harris kind of touts her prosecutorial experience when she talks
about human trafficking she's actually been better than some not punishing
people who were trafficked right so i was reading that one point she asked prosecutors not to use
the term teenage prostitute because like that's not really a thing what we're seeing there is
somebody who is being trafficked right or somebody who has been victimized taken advantage of
manipulated and seeing them as perpetrators is fundamentally missing the fucking problem and this is what the
legal system does far too often right is it goes after the people who are the victims not the
criminals she twice bought criminal charges against backpage.com which is a website i guess
where people can like find escorts I'm not familiar with these things,
but I know that some sex workers were opposed to that
because they felt it drove them kind of onto more underground platforms,
which were even more risky to them.
But obviously, people were also being trafficked on this platform.
So her record, I guess, is somewhat mixed.
You know what else is somewhat mixed, Shireen?
What, James?
It's the products and services that we get to support this show.
You know, sometimes it's the cops.
Sometimes it's terrible coffee.
Sometimes it's gold.
You never know what you're going to get.
Ooh.
We are back.
And we are back to one of Donald Trump's oldest chestnuts.
And that would be his stupid wall, right, that he wants to build.
We created the most secure border in U.S. history by far,
dealing a major blow to the cartels and traffickers.
We built hundreds of miles of wall.
We renovated hundreds of miles of wall. We never had anything
like it. And then I got Mexico free of charge to give us 28,000 soldiers to protect us from people
coming into our country illegally. He talks about building hundreds of miles of wall. He says that
a couple of times, right? We've renovated hundreds of miles of wall. You know, did they build
hundreds? Maybe just technically that they really fudged the numbers. I found a lot of freedom right we've renovated hundreds above the wall you know did they build hundreds maybe just
technically that they really fudged the numbers oh yeah i filed a lot of freedom of information
requests for that i guess what's more relevant is that biden also built the wall right
carmen is not talking about it but as we've documented numerous times biden has continued
to build the wall he's continued to build the barrier. He's continued to build the barrier, which is a wall.
He has repaired other sections of wall.
He has upgraded sections of fence to wall.
They're both doing this, right? Maybe Donald Trump would do more of it.
But sometimes I feel like his general incompetence might prevent him from doing any more than Biden's competent migrant, if they call it deterrence, right?
Deterrence through death is probably a better way of phrasing it.
Trump also talks about a total ban on taxpayer dollars to give legal aid to undocumented people.
Again, I'm not sure if he knows what he's talking about.
I don't know what he's talking about.
He might be referring to that.
We have a program in San Diego County where San Diego County pays for some people to defend migrants who are detained by ICE, right, so they
can have access to a lawyer. ICE has responded to that by moving those people to Texas. Oh,
that makes sense. Yeah. Yeah, totally normal. Good. I'm glad we voted for the anti-fascist guy.
Everything's going great. Exactly. You can listen to my episode about that if you want to know more
about that. But I don't know if he means that they don't get public defenders if they're accused of a crime certainly isn't it just true that he can also
just like use these trigger words to make people mad like yes yes that is what he's doing yeah yeah
it's not necessarily something that has to be based in fact no yes as we found with donald
trump this doesn't matter and then finally talking of stuff that doesn't have to be real
his absolutely batshit insane idea of fucking invading Mexico to kill members of cartels, which...
That's, yeah, unhinged.
Yeah, that is unhinged.
That will result in more violence.
It will result in more instability.
It will result in more death.
I think Kamala's pretty much in the clear when it comes to that one.
Like, she is not proposing invading Mexico.
So much of what donald trump says
is insane and it doesn't make sense so i wanted to look at some of the people who kind of lean on
trump some of the people who might be a little bit more coherent right when it comes to crafting
that policy right couldn't get steven miller on the podcast sad but we did get these people from
the texas public policy foundation who ro Robert and Gare spoke to at the Republican National Convention.
So here's them talking about visas and immigration.
I've tried to hire people from other countries.
It takes months and months and months to get that done.
They usually spend a lot of money doing it as well.
And so the system is disincentivized to do that. So, you know, actually during the last Trump administration, they started looking like, let's reduce the number of visas and have broader categories.
Right. So I think they're trying to get down to about 17 visas, get to a more merit based program to fit the needs that we have.
Make sure that you can you know, it's not about like what is the total number.
But if we are needing labor, we need people in these areas,
you can,
you can kind of like as a dial,
you can turn up and down in certain areas on certain visas.
And so I think if you do have to first like stop the problem and then you also
have to make systemic changes that,
that will overhaul the system and make it a lot easier so that people are
incentivized to actually do it the right way.
Yeah.
So these people aren't stupid,
right?
They won't just spew hate yeah
they're much more competent in their fascism so i think what we're seeing here right is this
undoubtedly is a way to reduce what they see as undesirable migration which is to say poor people
and brown people you can phrase it however you want right but i mean in in the republicans eyes
and maybe a lot of people's eyes,
all migration is undesirable migration, I feel like.
Yeah, well, people will talk to me.
I'm, for those of you who have just listened to me,
I guess, a white person.
British. You're not white, you're British.
Yeah.
It's hard to make me laugh.
Which is more like a kind of translucent, really you think about it yeah so yeah just i am a
british person which is important i guess because people will talk to me about immigration like i'm
one of the good migrants and they can't go fuck themselves yeah that position right that like
it's a like implicit white people are okay yeah no absolutely that's all that means it's like oh yeah you speak english
and you're you look like me great come out come on into my racist country yeah exactly yeah i'm
like funny foreign as opposed to like evil foreign i guess i think it's also just like they don't see
you in whatever in their mind is a threat right like to i don't know it makes no sense logically but yeah it does
if you understand it through a lens of race yes yeah but i mean their perspective makes no sense
to me no yeah same people who are barking about my fellow british people being a threat because
they happen to be muslim right or brown or seeking people that understand that seeks are not muslims
so what we actually need is more legal pathways.
He is correct that the visa system needs changing and we need ways that people can apply and come here safely and not have to be trafficked and not have to take massive risks, right?
I wanted to see what Robert and Gare had asked about this mass deportation thing,
because I'd seen some people holding like mass deportations now sign at the RNC.
And that's always a good sign that we're not sort of
sidestepping into fascism. So let's hear what's said about that.
Is that plan kind of the mass detention and expulsion of undocumented migrants in the US,
something that you think is a good idea, something you support as the Heritage Foundation?
Yeah, generally, you know, obviously, you got to look at implementation, right? And how you
actually go about doing that in the right way. But yeah, absolutely. Generally, yeah.
And in what kind of timeframe then? Because you just said this is something you have to like lay some groundwork on. And don't even know how many people are here and you
don't you don't know where they come from and so it's not like you're just trying to deport them
all just to mexico or something like that southern border right like you you you have to first get
your arms around the problem that's the first step and then i think from there you can actually
understand figure out what a reasonable time frame to do that is. Yeah, so this is pretty fucked.
Like, I should point out that the bill that Harris is proposing
also proposes bumping people back to Mexico
without the permission of Mexico, right?
I think so many of these policies just rely on Mexico
being kind of a sponge for US policy.
Like, oh, they'll be fine.
Like, God forbid Mexico act as a sovereign country.
But this one seems different right
we had i feel like pretty good liberal support on abolish ice under trump uh that has completely
evaporated under biden but because we solved we solved racism and everything right yeah we we
fixed it i've forgotten about that yeah that was that was the big crunch point so what this means is
taking people who have homes lives jobs and families and tearing them away from all of those
things and sending them back to a country that they may not have been to in decades that they
may never have been to at all a place where they will undoubtedly face hardship if not persecution
right and certainly having lived here having family here will make them more likely to be ransomed or blackmailed or any of these things that happen to migrants
when they're deported right and this is pretty bleak like i guess harris hasn't advocated for
this which seeing the amount of the amount of people who fucking respond to my tweets with
you're going home to like i am a u.s citizen and b fuck you uh
yeah all the time all the time yeah it's so funny okay got a life but yeah it does seem that there
is a wing of the trump and like i talked to trump people i was in the mountains this weekend like i
was in wyoming mincing about in the mountains it was lovely but and talk to some people
and i've never really come across anyone who can like in the flesh maybe it's just because
those people are so repulsive i wouldn't talk to them and it's probably quite likely but
advocated for this right like this idea of mass deportations like like i said at the start of
this show like how does a country get into full-on fascism it is this it is my taxes and your taxes and some of the
people who are listening taxes paying for people who have done nothing wrong right who have lived
here who haven't done any crimes who haven't hurt anyone to be at our expense expelled from their
home detained in a private prison whose owner company makes massive donations to politicians
and then flown across the world at
our expense and then dumped into a country where they they no longer belong and that is as close
as we get i think to like someone saying like send them to the camps without saying that like
yeah look what was the armenian genocide the armenian genocide was a mass deportation right
of people forced to walk across the desert and and die on the way like if you don't think this trump shit is is fascist like
i really don't know what it doesn't matter if it's fascist or not right like like
this is the kind of rhetoric that's genocidal like i don't want to argue about like robert
preston and and like different definitions because that doesn't matter like this shit is
it is genocidal it is dehumanizing
migrants which has been a project of the right-wing news media and increasingly the liberal news media
and also the uh democrat party now apparently as well as the republicans but this is
a marked step to the right both of these are right the overton window has moved so far right
on migration in the last eight years that it's almost an unrecognizable place and i guess what
i want to end up by saying what i always say about this is like the solution is not within the
argument about who to vote for yeah like these are state policies um these are also often set
by the legislature as we saw when biden's border bill failed right and that would require a change of the legislature like there isn't a third party
that can get a majority in the legislature right now yeah so the way we fix this is ourselves
right like we are seeing in the uk right now like violence towards muslim people violence towards
mosques violence towards islamic cultural centers
and people stepping up to defend them like that is the only way we fix this is by stepping up and
shouldering our responsibility to our communities and people did that in the trump administration
to a degree like when i in 2018 when i was down in in tijuana looking after folks who were part
of the caravan that trump made a big spectacle in the midterms. People showed up, churches showed up, a soccer mom showed up in minivans and helped us. And it
was cool. The thing was fucked, but I respect that we look after those people. And that hasn't
happened to as much of a degree since, right? And we've had more people than we had in 2018
in the open air detention sites. And so i guess where i want to end is whoever wins
it's still our responsibility to take care of migrants because neither of them is going to
and we are continuing with policies that will accelerate climate change we are continuing with
policies that will impoverish people all over the world and enrich people who are already super wealthy and and those
things will continue to drive migration we can't change those things in an actionable amount of
time but what we can do is try our best to meet people who come here with kindness and so yeah i
would urge you to do that i guess if you want to volunteer you can email alotrolado can email alotrolado.org.
Border kindness, always need your money.
Borderlands Relief Collective, always need your money.
And those are always things that you can volunteer with
or places you can sell your money if you don't have your time.
But you can also organize in your own neighborhood.
I'm speaking to some people today who are organizing in Maryland
to take care of some kurdish refugees who i know
like and they weren't doing anything a year ago right they saw a need and they saw it being
unmet and they realized that they could meet it and they've made a huge difference to people's
lives so like wherever you are there are migrants in your community and you can do that too hey guys i'm kate max you might know me from my popular online series the running interview show
where i run with celebrities athletes entrepreneurs and 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 even deeper into their stories, their journeys, and the thoughts that arise once we've
hit the pavement together. 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, and admire,
join me every week for Post Run High.
It's where we take the conversation beyond the run and get into the heart of it all.
It's lighthearted, pretty crazy, and very fun.
all. It's lighthearted, pretty crazy, and very fun. Listen to Post Run High 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 tech's 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 is your unvarnished
and at times unhinged look at the underbelly of tech
from an industry veteran with nothing to lose.
This season, I'm going to be joined by everyone
from Nobel-winning economists
to 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.
On Thanksgiving Day, 1999,
a five-year-old boy floated alone in the ocean.
He had lost his mother trying to reach Florida from Cuba.
He looked like a little angel.
I mean, he looked so fresh.
And his name, Elian Gonzalez, will make headlines everywhere.
Elian Gonzalez.
Elian, Elian, Elian Gonzalez.
Elian, Elian, Elian Gonzalez.
At the heart of the story is a young boy and the question of who he belongs with.
His father in Cuba.
Mr. Gonzalez wanted to go home and he wanted to take his son with him.
Or his relatives in Cuba. Mr. Gonzalez wanted to go home and he wanted to take his son with him. Or his relatives in Miami.
Imagine that your mother died trying to get you to freedom.
At the heart of it all is still this painful family separation.
Something that as a Cuban, I know all too well.
Listen to Chess Peace, the Elian Gonzalez story, as part of the My Cultura podcast network,
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here. I'm Garrison Davis. And today I'm joined with authors Shane
Burley and Ben Lorber, who have a new book out called Safety Through Solidarity,
A Radical Guide to Fighting Antisemitism. Shane reached out to me to talk about both the book
and a variety of issues revolving around this topic. Thank you for coming on, both of you.
Yeah, thanks for having us on. Yeah, thanks for having us.
So a few months ago, I put out an episode looking at a genuine uptick in anti-Semitic
incidents that have happened in the United States and Europe.
And sometimes it feels kind of like a tricky thing to talk about in some ways.
It's like you're threading a very difficult needle.
It's like you're caught between a rock and a hard place when discussing this topic.
Because if you point to an actual trend that you're seeing, showing a genuine spike in
anti-Semitic incidents, there's like a subset of people who are very focused on the genocide in Gaza, very rightly so,
but they might push back since claims of anti-Semitism have been so conflated with any
display of anti-Zionist politics, or even worse, they might even question why are you talking about
this when there's this other horrible thing going on, right? The actual genocide in Gaza.
Now, I think, meanwhile,
if you avoid this as a lesser or a non-issue, if you don't talk about these things,
I would argue that actually strengthens the Zionist political project of tying Jewish safety solely to the state of Israel. And in some ways, I think ignoring this entire issue legitimizes a
degree of criticisms that are being leveled against these massive protests and calls for a ceasefire and justice in Palestine. So I guess, how long have you been putting together
this book? And how much did the war in Gaza this past year kind of change the scope of it as you
were writing this? Yeah, I mean, we started, I think Ben and I started talking about this in
2019, beginning of 2020. So it's a totally, it was a totally different context when we started working on
the book. And what we had been wanting was actually to sort of like drive a wedge into
what you're talking about here, which is like that there isn't really good discourse on what
anti-Semitism actually is that takes it seriously, that doesn't just kind of deflect and project
onto anti-Zionism. Since Ben and I both come from a history of organizing a Palestine
solidarity movement, me with Students for Justice in Palestine on campus, Ben with Jewish
Voice for Peace.
So we had seen basically firsthand how accusations of anti-Semitism basically leveled just constantly
at Palestine solidarity protesters.
And then also in researching covering the far right, seeing obviously the growth of
antisemitism and white nationalism, both in the US and internationally, and that only increased
over time. So we wanted to work on something that took that seriously and also sort of revive
different traditions from the left that talk about antisemitism, whether it's anti-fascism
or different kind of Marxist trends or the Jewish left, kind of bring it to one place,
talk to other folks who are also taking it seriously and weave that together. All of that
is different. And before October 7th, because we were turning in the draft of a book like a matter
of days after October 7th happened. Oh, wow. Like we went and talked to the publisher and we're
like, well, the whole world just changed. I mean, we have to make changes about it. And so we've
made some and basically like address some questions there. And I think you can kind of see at the, in the
conclusion of like the very end of the book, kind of where we cut it off in November, December area
and sort of kind of acknowledge that things are different here. But I think that there's also
bigger questions that we're talking about now that like we're doing interviews and writing
articles and stuff afterwards about how that's changed. a lot of this really i think one thing that's important is that because we
make very clear like very incredibly clear the anti-zionism is not the same as anti-semitism
in a way the conversation is the same as before because we're actually talking about where real
anti-semitism lives and if you look at the way that discourse is now particularly from groups
like the anti-defamation league is it's basically built entirely around, you know, attacking college protests, right? Attacking these
mass anti-genocide demonstrations, right? And since that's so foundationally different than
how we understand anti-Semitism, there's a way in which, like, the conversation that has the book
is sort of the same. And what do you think about this, Ben? Yeah, no, I mean, I agree that it
really hasn't changed that much, even though it's just a lot bigger and more prominent.
And the forces that are trying to attack the movement for justice in Palestine are stronger.
They're trying to pass legislation, taking away our free speech rights.
They're trying to restrict academic freedom.
They're trying to go after the IRS status of justice organizations.
So the stakes are really high. They're trying to go after the IRS status of justice organizations.
So the stakes are really high.
But I think the intervention that we've always been wanting to make is to really put the conversation back where it belongs, like on the rise of the far right, on the rise of white Christian nationalism. Right. Antisemitism is part of the right wing worldview.
is part of the right-wing worldview. It's just like the other systems of oppression,
like anti-Blackness, anti-LGBTQ bigotry, Islamophobia, anti-integrity, xenophobia.
Anti-Semitism is deeply connected, right? These George Soros conspiracies are being used by authoritarian leaders like Donald Trump and J.B. Vance and the rest of them, to build up the MAGA base and to
attack the foundations of our multiracial democracy. And we've seen it have deadly results for Jews
and for other groups, you know, white nationalist, you know, mass shooters who are motivated by
anti-Semitic conspiracy theories have attacked synagogues, have attacked Latinx communities,
have attacked Black communities.
And so yeah, antisemitism is part of that machinery of oppression. And so our book tries to reframe the conversation and give justice organizers a way to take back the conversation
away from the right. Would one of you be willing to give like a workable definition of antisemitism?
Because this is a word that's certainly been used a lot, but I think it's a word that signifies
possibly a lot of different things.
And I guess, what is the definition of anti-Semitism that you are using in your book? of Christianity in Christian Europe, and that essentially sees Jews as the root cause of evil
or the root cause of the world's problems kind of behind the scenes. It trades in images of a cabal
lurking behind, you know, government or the media or the economy. And these conspiracy theories are
core to an authoritarian and nationalist worldview that mobilize, you know, millions really away from examining and confronting the root causes of oppression and convinces them to chase, you know, kind of illusory shadows instead.
Why do we have a harder time kind of pinning down this term?
I think people have a general idea and a pretty easy way to see what's Islamophobic, right?
What's racist?
There's a few points in your book that you talk about,
instances of people maybe unintentionally spreading anti-Semitism,
that if they were instead talking about Muslims or trans people or black people, they would like easily identify as like,
oh, this is very clearly a form of like xenophobia. This is very clearly like based on some kind of
like conspiratorial discrimination. Yeah, I mean, I think there's a few reasons for this. And we
talk about this in the book. I mean, one of them is that the way that antisemitism has operated
is generally a narrative about punching up against power versus a lot of narratives of oppression,
which are basically about how various groups are subhuman or lesser than dominant population.
That's slightly different with Jews, though that has been a component of some pieces of it.
It historically is basically a narrative that people who feel disempowered then use to sort
of like reclaim a sort of kind of populist energy. In a lot of ways, it ends up being a place where folks are directed by people in power to put their class anger away from the actual ruling
class. So I think in a way, when people see antisemitism, they also recognize that there's
legitimate class anger, legitimate like disenfranchisement. And I think that's actually
troubling to sort of, people don't want to undermine that feeling always necessarily.
I think there's also just the complexity of Jewish identity that's shifted over time,
different populations, different communities, different politics, sometimes religious, sometimes
more cultural, sometimes more ethnic.
That can make it confusing.
So it's hard to use one model for understanding oppression and then project it onto this.
And so in a lot of ways, you kind of have to come at this question distinctly from a kind
of other forms of oppression that's actually true of most forms of oppression they have a lot of
distinctiveness but i think like you have to kind of learn about those contours and then again i
think part of it is also that this hasn't been a big part of the left conversation the last 20 or
30 years it used to be more frequent that this would be like you know maybe trainings and left
spaces where people would talk about that it just simply hasn't been the case that much recently.
And so I think there's actually a big lack of just understanding of how to like notice those
things and to talk about them. And then I think weaponization has become such, it's not just
such an overwhelming part of it. It's actually the dominating conversation on antisemitism,
particularly in the US. So when you hear about antisemitism, it's actually the dominating conversation on anti-Semitism, particularly in the US. So when you hear about anti-Semitism, it's overwhelmingly going to be directed by the
center or the right or firm institutions directed at Palestine solidarity movements. And again,
people get hard and skinned to that because they don't want to like give an inch on those sorts
of things. And I totally understand why. And so I think that also has created that boundary of
where examination would normally take place. It is interesting looking at like how much the right wing has been able to weaponize
claims of antisemitism against the left. I think the term that you use in the book is
selective outrage on antisemitism. Because I mean, I was just at the RNC and you're hearing
Marjorie Taylor Greene talk about how there's like antisemitic protests happening around the
country. And you're like wait
a minute you're the jewish space laser person what are you talking about and i i think it was
desantis who just called all university protesters hamas right not saying that they're like hamas but
just literally saying like these people are like are hamas like hamas took over university protests
and meanwhile you would be hard-pressed to find anybody
on this camp talking about, you know, the strong degree, especially considering DeSantis,
the strong degree of anti-Semitic people either involved in their own campaigns or like their
actual supporters. It was just a year ago where DeSantis' campaign staff released a video of him
with the sonnet rad. It's like, come on, buddy.
So it is interesting how they've been able to try to weaponize those claims while completely
ignoring the structural anti-Semitism baked into this new wave of nationalist politics that we're
seeing in the United States. Yeah, no, totally. The example of Marjorie Taylor Greene is so
striking. I mean, she, I believe in the same day once, she called the protesters on college campuses of anti-Semitic,
and then she said that they were funded by George Soros, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And she's using them both for the same purpose. And it's not only DeSantis and the right. I mean,
Jonathan Greenblatt, the head of the EDL, I remember a few months ago,
said that students on college campuses were Iranian proxies.
And when you use that language, you're basically like authorizing military counterinsurgency
against, you know, protesters. It's just, it really puts Jews in danger, you know, not to mention
Palestinians and Muslims, you know, basically all groups, right? Because sure, there's occasionally
a stray anti-Semitic comment that
shows up at protests because anti-Semitism is part of our world. There's anti-Blackness,
injustice movements, anti-LGBTQB history, and anti-Semitism, sure. But that's no comparison to
when you have like Elon Musk, the richest person in the world, one of the most powerful people in
the world, saying that Jews are engaged in hatred against whites, right? There's no comparison in terms of power and threat level.
So it's really making Jews less safe. Yeah, and we also talk about the fact that
because anti-Semitic conspiracy theories are such a foundational part of the right's form of
populism, it's sort of how they explain kind of class anger and energy from the base that there's really no way to detach it.
And so it ends up being this foundational piece that even when they talk about Israel consistently, the way that they've built a connection with their base is by trumping up George Soros or Rothschild's conspiracy theories or basically presenting kind of us and them populist narrative around theories about globalists and things like that. So, there's really no comparison that we're talking about antisemitism when it shows up on the left versus the really deeply
inlaid way that it exists on the right. And like Ben was saying, right now we have a situation
where the right is overwhelmingly united in support of Israel and using that as their evidence
of support for Jews and then pushing great replacement theory claims, which are inherently anti-Semitic on the one hand,
or really kind of mobilizing Jews in their rhetoric for their own kind of geopolitical
aims, which again, is not based out of like a deeply held love for Jews. It's either built on
sort of a Christian Zionist eschatology or just simply opportunistic use of this minority group
to sort of push their own political values, which itself
is kind of a deeply held anti-Semitic way of treating the Jewish community. And so when we're
looking at this, we can't let the rhetoric that's become the dominant actually stand for how we
understand anti-Semitism because it's been so politically motivated. Yeah, I mean, as a researcher
it has been quite frustrating because I've used to, you know, a lot of people used to be able to rely on some degree on like data aggregates like the ADL map and the amount of like equivocation between
just a standard pro-Palestine protest, protests that I was present at.
And I was like, this was a Jewish led protest.
And having that be equivocated with acts of like actual like neo-Nazi terrorism, as well
as acts of like genuine anti-Semitism from people on the left.
Basically, it's resulting in like
data poisoning, which makes it really hard to actually unpack some of these like larger issues
that are that are facing both like Jewish people, people who are very concerned about Palestine,
and people who take like the threat of like, you know, far right nationalism quite seriously.
Yeah, I went through all of the ADL's 2023 anti-Semitism data with like this project
with Jewish Currents.
And the reality is, is that the standard they use on sort of like left-oriented Palestine
protests is to have almost any measure of support for Palestinians or any kind of global
call for justice in Palestine that is de facto anti-Semitism.
And like you said, it then overwhelms the data,
it sort of shuts out other things. And the way that they even set up the reporting system just
privileges those kinds of protests. So people, it teaches, for example, they'll partner with
other organizations and show people how to report. And so they'll end up mass reporting these protest
events and then under-reporting white nationalist incidents or like violent incidents.
So what you end up seeing in their data is that they've actually undercoded white nationalist
events because of the way that they kind of set up the data.
Yeah.
And they don't really track things like housing discrimination, workplace discrimination,
and issues.
Those kind of things really don't fit into their model.
So what you end up with is this kind of map that just privileges people saying from the
river to the sea
is like this inherently anti-Semitic meme. And then undercounts, like what often Jews will report
as what makes them feeling unsafe, you know, comments at work or actual pressures when buying
homes, things like that, like that doesn't really show up. You've experienced as a Jews in prison,
those don't show up. So you end up with this really skewed image of what it is where you
assume that
the left is overwhelmingly the responsible party. And then it actually invisibilizes a pretty
growing force on the right and even institutionally, just like in structures of kind of like
American culture. So it's really hard then to say like, well, how do I know what's actually
happening here? The ADL is the largest organization. Every organization then uses their data. Where am I going? It leads you in a really big kind of a gap in how to understand
what's happening. So we can look at, you know, pretty clear evidence that there's a rise in
anti-Semitism, you know, by looking at things like street attacks or by looking at the rhetoric on
the right. But it's hard to get like a clear picture of it because every organization is
this oriented looking at the left. Like I was i was just gonna say like this goes way back to the adl like you know in our book we talk about how even in the 1970s and the 80s the
adl was like spying on left-wing activists as part of their pivot towards seeing the most important
side of anti-semitism on what they call the radical left right in? In the 1970s, as global criticism of Israel's occupation mounted after the 1967 Six-Day War, Group 60 ADL really pivoted further from whatever
original mission they may have had about genuinely countering bigotry to really becoming Israel
defense organizations. And so in the 70s and 80s, you saw them spying on anti-apartheid activists.
in the 70s and 80s, like you saw them spying on anti-apartheid activists. You saw them attacking Arab American, you know, professors at universities. You saw them spying on ACTA,
even left-wing Jewish groups like New Jewish Agenda, you know. And so it's not only Jonathan
Greenblatt. It's not only since October 7th. ABL has been playing this role for a long time,
along with a whole lot of Christian Zionists and both sides of the
U.S. political establishment.
And yeah, like we were saying, the stakes are extremely high.
The right and the center are trying to legislate their definition of anti-Semitism to destroy
free speech and to protect Israel's genocide.
So the stakes are very high about this right now.
I think one of the most troubling notions about how there's groups like the ADL
and others that are kind of,
like you said,
like lobbying for legislation
and trying to encourage
like extreme crackdowns
on human rights protests and anti-genocide protests,
is that this is also like materially harms a whole bunch of Jewish people who are involved in these protests and in organizing.
You're trying to get the FBI to investigate Jewish people who are protesting against a genocide.
And we saw this with the campus university protests.
aside. And we saw this with the campus university protests. We saw this, you know, especially at Columbia of like a lot of these kids are Jewish people who are heavily involved in these protests
and in calls to do a very extreme crackdown and investigations. It's hard to see how that's not
just like calling for our government to like further oppress these Jewish people who don't agree with one side's opinion on something.
Yeah, yeah.
You see it in the most kind of ironic twist of history in Germany,
where the state, those once a Nazi state,
is enforcing some of the most brutal crackdowns on Palestine solidarity speech,
and Jews are disproportionately represented among the crackdowns on the Palestine solidarity speech, and Jews are disproportionately represented among
the crackdown there. And so you have, you know, German police pulling people with kippahs and
arresting them, you know, shutting down events with Jewish speakers, right? So it's really like
literally policing Jewish thought, right? Like we know there's over a century of Jewish opposition
to Zionism and Jewish solidarity with Palestinians from the very
beginnings of the Zionist movement, which was originally a Christian movement in Christian
era, by the way, you know, and we've always had long traditions of Jews who have resisted it.
And so when the state is legislating saying only like a certain expression of Jewish identity is
valid, that's also an antisemitismemitism, right? And we see it
not only from Trump, right? Trump will always say, oh, Jews who are Democrats, Jews who are
quote-unquote disloyal to Israel are problematic. You also see it from Biden, who says, without
Israel, there's not a Jew in the world who's safe, right? So I think Jews who dissent on Israel
are rapidly becoming enemies, in a way,
of the right, you know, and of forces aligned with the right. And I think that's an aspect of
anti-Semitism that's not talked about enough today. Yeah, and there's a lot of examples of
this, too. During the Labor Party controversy around Corbyn and anti-Semitism, it was Jewish
members who were overwhelmingly expelled from the party. I think it's almost like a dozen times more likely to face kind of consequences there, right? So, like, those ended
up being the centerpiece of it. But I think even when you broaden out, this ends up being the case,
and we kind of talk about this as like a good Jew, bad Jew distinction, where, like,
antisemitism ends up being mobilized against whatever kind of the culture decides is a bad
Jew or whatever the organization decides is the bad version of a Jew, the kind of Jew they don't want to actually deal
with. And this happens in this pro-Israel consensus, whereby Likud, Netanyahu, basically
the far-right coalition running Israel right now, builds alliances that they need around the world
with far-right parties in Hungary, in South Asia, India, with Hindu nationalists, and with other
places. And then those movements are pretty explicitly anti-Semitic, therefore making Jews
in various countries around the diaspora less and less safe, right? And so, this sort of model of
making Israel the bottom line on defending against anti-Semitism is one that strengthened the right,
helped to build up Christian nationalism domestically, and then that creates
this kind of general culture of unsafety for Jews, where the only Jewish voices that are then held up
are the ones that, you know, justify Christian nationalism on the one hand, like you'll see at
the National Conservatism Conference, or ones that are so aggressively pro-Israel that they're
totally willing to partner with Christian Zayas groups or the far-right wing of the Republican
Party or National Conservative Parties in Europe. And so so this ends up as a situation where, like, an increasing number
of Jews, particularly in the U.S., or Jews around the left, which, again, is still disproportionately
Jewish, feel increasingly targeted by the political consensus. And at the same time,
this pro-Israel rhetoric ends up being the de facto measure by which anyone's kind of set to.
Yeah, I did like there was this part in the book where you were talking about the good Jew, bad Jew
binary, specifically on the left, where there's like a minority of Jews who identify as anti or
non-Zionist who are very like celebrated, sometimes maybe even in like a tokenizing kind of way,
while the rest of Jewish people who do not identify as such are belittled as unworthy or like untrustworthy, or their opinions are dismissed or seen as morally compromised on like an inherent
level. And this can also be coupled with this assumption that like every Jew is a secret Zionist
until proven otherwise. And you have to like get every new Jewish person you meet to like prove to
you that they're not secretly a Zionist, which is, you know, very anti-Semitic.
And we also do have this good Jew, bad Jew binary mirrored in like an inverted form on the right
with Zionist Jews, you know, being seen as the good ones and anti-Zionist Jews have their like
Jewishness questioned or are seen as like untrustworthy or inherently evil. And I do believe it is worth discussing kind of the flip
side of this. And I think avoiding talking about actual antisemitism on the left, I think,
only serves to harm all of us. Because it is something that I think is happening,
and I think should be talked about, even if it makes people uncomfortable. And I think it is a
mistake to assume that just because you're on the left, that you're like somehow immune to antisemitic thinking, whether purposeful or not. Like, like,
like both of you have mentioned, like we live in a society that has a great degree of structural
antisemitism. And a lot of these people, I think who might be attending some of these protests or
might just be posting online, who knows, might not even be intentionally spreading antisemitism,
right? But in action, that's kind of what they're invoking through like ideas of like,
you know, the Zionist cabal that secretly controls all of the media, all of the government,
you know, those types of things. We're starting to like invoke these like larger secretive
organizations that are pre-planning this whole thing. And to some degree, from a lot of the discourse that you see,
I feel like some people think they can just control F Jews to Zionists.
And if you're able to control F Jews to Zionists
and the sentence still works, that means that you're doing it wrong.
That means that you're probably approaching this from a problematic standpoint.
There's a whole bunch of aspects about this sort of thing
that you do talk about in the book, like, you know, including identifying Judaism with Zionism
and how that also only hurts all of us, including this like weird uptick in like Jewish race science
that you're starting to see more and more of claiming that like all modern Jewish people
only come from Europe. And it's like, there's just a whole bunch of this kind of claiming that like all modern Jewish people only come from Europe. And it's
like, there's just a whole bunch of this kind of stuff that we're all kind of pushing to the side.
But I do believe it is like worth talking about in some degree, because this is going to not only
harm people who are calling for an end to the genocide in Gaza. I think it does like strengthen
this notion that a lot of the Zionist project is built on, which is saying that like we need
Israel as a way to like secure safety for Jewish people around the world.
Yeah, I think we talk about this, you know, we have a couple chapters that talk kind of
explicitly about this at different points in history. But I think there's a tendency,
and I kind of get where this comes from, to basically see any ally or any kind of voice
in support of a movement as like a
partner particularly when you're trying to build like mass support against something that basically
has kind of mass opposition on the other side like liberating palestine but what you see oftentimes
when you see a movement grow really dramatically really quickly is that there's just not a kind of
like common baseline understanding always of that and conspiracy theories are a great way to fill
the gap on them yeah and that's true of really any movement. It's just that in particular,
in this case, we have this long history of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories about Jewish
power in particular, and then we're talking about sort of like powerful political actors
on the other. And so, making clear distinctions is just not there necessarily. So, you know,
we talked with lots of folks that have been sort of litmus tested when entering kind of left spaces of Zionism.
I talked to folks where other organizers asked to see their passport before they're allowed to come to me.
It's crazy.
It's wild.
And you think in most of the cases, people would kind of identify that as being kind of wild.
We make a lot of distinctions. We talk about the sort of difference between talking about an Israel lobby organization like AIPAC and its power, or kind of a vague, diffuse Israel lobby that controls Western politics, that kind of thing.
Like a parenthesis, parenthesis, parenthesis, Israel lobby.
Exactly, exactly. And instead talk about why would we understand Israel as part of a Western imperial project rather than the flip side, this kind of small country controlling Western foreign policy, that kind of thing, and make a
lot of those clear distinctions. And again, I think it's been sort of suggested, like, these
ideas, anti-Semitic ideas, are a part of the culture. And, you know, I've been around the
left long enough to see, like, virulent transphobic ideas show up, to see, like, queerphobic ideas in
general be very, very present. There's no reason to believe that anti-Semitism wouldn't show up here either, where folks are sort of consumed by anger,
what people are looking for clear answers, what people are trying to dignify that.
And I think the easy answer is often to paper over it. And I think what we talk about here is that
that exactly is what sort of pro-Israel voices want in this case, is to know that the left isn't
going to deal with it.
And so the alternative to that is to both like create like a sense of like, how would we confront
anti-Semitic institutions and where structural anti-Semitism comes from? And then also,
how do we deal with that internally? And we talk with a bunch of social movements that have done
that, right? Anti-fascists are actually pretty used to talking about anti-Semitism when it shows
up on the left. That's pretty common. The Jewish left has talked about this historically. There's other voices. So
bringing that back and sort of making that a safe place to confront and then figure out then
where is it like, you know, just a bad idea that you deal with and you talk about, you have like
education and where do you draw lines where like, you know, this is now not a person that's not
allowed in, or these are voices that we can't partner with that kind of thing. I think that's
something people work out on the ground.
No, and you make a really good comparison in the book
about how like anti-Semitic conspiracy theories
inhibit a actual understanding
of like the mechanisms of capital, right?
Like it makes you unable to actually like analyze
how capitalism operates.
And similarly, having like an anti-Semitic conspiratorial
view of anti-Zionism, that also will mask the root cause of Palestinian oppression by distracting
from the very real geopolitical mechanisms that have caused this situation to take place,
and distracting from that with these tales of like you describe it as like innate
jewish wickedness or a global zionist power and i think that's a really good understanding because
people will often like i think have a general idea that like yeah anti-semitism is like in a
lot of ways used as a way to not fully confront like the mechanisms of capitalism and realizing
how you know it's kind of it's kind of like a similar situation with Palestine is a way for people
to understand that a little bit easier. And to reiterate the point about how you're not immune
to antisemitism just because you're on the left, right? Something else you also bring up in the
book is like, Marxist-Leninism has a very mixed history with their relationship to antisemitism.
And I think you do see this with the degree of the discourse on this issue.
You know, if you compare, you know,
anarchist viewpoints on like statism and anti-Zionism
to a whole bunch of Marxist-Leninists
talking about this issue,
I do believe there is, you know,
generally maybe more antisemitic undertones
among some of the more like statist communists.
And I think you talk about
like the soviet union's own oppression of of jewish people and kind of the continued pogroms
that happened even after the end of world war ii yeah i'd say like in the history of the 19th and
the 20th century left i think the record of both camps has been fairly mixed i mean i think it was
anarchist like you know bakunin who
maybe like means sure yeah totally and you know like i guess i have to also have to say you know
the the with the 1917 october a revolution that was like probably one of the first times that a
left even led society did pass you know laws outlawing anti-semitism and then like they did
you know defeat the nazis so that i have to give them some credit where it's due, but yes,
there's also like a very mixed record,
especially in the thirties and the forties and beyond.
And certainly yeah, today I would completely agree with you that like the more
statist camps on the left are the most kind of aligned with the
conspiratorial thinking, with campism. And yeah,
I really liked the way that you
broke down just how these conspiracy theories can distract us from the root causes of power.
And that's really, I think, where if you want to develop like a structural understanding of
antisemitism and how it connects to capitalism and all the other systems of oppression, that's
where you got to go, right? Seeing how, especially in times of crisis and mass discontent,
like today, with the rise of nationalism, with, you know, widespread alienation, that's when
antisemitism really rises and is mobilized by authoritarian and nationalist, you know, leaders.
When there's millions of people who are fed up that they don't have a job, they don't have any
When there's millions of people who are fed up that they don't have a job, they don't have any savings, they know the media is lying to them, they know that politicians don't represent cultural Marxists, right? And I think the more that, you know, the left can advance our own understanding of why the world is so
fucked up and how to make it better, then we can really undercut the root causes of anti-Semitism
and move more people into our coalitions. So yeah, that's really key, I think. I have two examples I'd like to kind of bring up as ways to like springboard discussions on like
how we can actually like handle this going forward whether that be you know if you hear someone say
something at a protest that makes you think yeah eh, that's a little questionable, or as ways to like actually just like continue like your own
like active participation in calls for ceasefire and ending the genocide in Palestine and whatever
justice in Palestine might look like. So a few months ago, I was at the Emory University campus occupation. And maybe like a week in or so,
enemy of the pod, Jackson Hinkle, showed up in person, along with Haas and a few of those kind
of like cronies, right? These are people who are like conservative communists, mega communists.
They're basically like Duganists or like third positionists. And they basically become influencers
that monetize the genocide in Gaza for their own
like personal political profile.
So this guy showed up one night and no one really knew what exactly to do.
Like people knew who he was.
There was people talking with organizers and like organizers tried to talk with him and
be like, hey, can you like not be here?
And he's like, well, no, I want to be
here because blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And, you know, certain people would try to get
into like political arguments with him, which I think is completely useless. And it was it was
kind of a weird situation. And then we learned that he was slated to speak at an event the next
day. Now, it's unclear if he was kind of hijacking this event or if he was actually invited to speak, but regardless, he was going to show up and make some kind of speech at an event
later that next day. So some people put together this flyer kind of going through Hinkle's politics,
his history of anti-Semitism, rabid queer phobia, racism, all these things that explain kind of who
he actually is as a person. And these flyers were distributed that morning like before before he was slated to speak around the venue
as he went up on stage a decent number of people in the audience who had these flyers
protested to be like no like you you can't you can't be here he was escorted out of the building
and then he was escorted off of campus. I think this was a very effective way of
handling a situation like this. It didn't give him an opportunity for extra clicks. It wasn't a super
volatile way to handle this. It was very simple. It was kind of elegant. There was just no way for
him to really weaponize this effectively. So we have something like that as a way to like, you know, clamp down
on people who are either disingenuous or just actually anti-Semitic who are trying to like
infiltrate or take over in some degree this kind of general call to stop the genocide in Gaza.
Meanwhile, a few weeks ago, there were protests in DC as Netanyahu was speaking to Congress.
And there was this video going around of people, like,
graffitiing the fake Liberty Bell with, like, just pro-Palestine slogans and stuff. And, like,
everyone was freaking out about this. Not everybody, you know, a certain section of political
people were freaking out about this. A whole bunch of other people were like, okay, well, it's
graffiti on a fake bell, who cares? But I actually watched that whole video. And after they look at the Liberty Bell, it pans over to this other monument nearby, where
in big red lettering is written, Hamas is coming.
And I see this as a pretty bad way to handle a situation like this.
Because from what I can tell here, all that matters is just being like edgy and freaking
out libs.
And it kind of destroys any ability to cultivate forward momentum. It's like they're doing it just so that Democrats will
be pressured into condemning it to reinforce like their own hopelessness, performative spiral of
doing nothing but edgy graffiti as political praxis. And I see this as kind of a general
pattern of people trying to establish themselves as like the most radical and using that as a weapon
against anyone else. And it's just like a form of political posturing. It's hardly any different
from posting a black square on Instagram. They don't want any actual movement or any actual
change. They want to be the coolest, most correct people as the world ends. It's kind of like a
cowardly way out. Because as you point out in the book, it's kind of hell to actually have to deal
with and work with people who have some degree of like morally compromised politics and that actually requires
like caring about the ends but it's the means that make you look cool things like this are
kind of bound to happen at any kind of protest that has more than like you know 50 people right
there's going to be someone who does something that the main protest is not aligned with.
And on that note, like, what advice would you have to people who are attending these protests?
And you see someone who maybe does something that's a little bit questionable, whether that be, you know, like harassing just a random, like visibly Jewish person or, you know, writing graffiti on a synagogue, right? These types of things that are like really not helpful and actually kind of do display a degree of maybe like, uh, like, like coded antisemitic motivation.
Yeah.
So I think the spray painting of Hamas on the statue, I think it's an interesting example
because that was just brandished all over right-wing media.
You know, Tablet Magazine did an article about how these folks should be deported.
It was all over Instagram.
It was like a trending thing on Instagram and it did very little like protest wise, right? And
actually at that same demonstration, there's a number of rabbis, particularly kind of like
movement elder rabbis, Linda Holtzman, other folks that were arrested by cops pretty brutally and
then detained, right? So there actually was police attacking like a Jewish contingent of like
religious figures. Totally. I think also there's been a number of examples, I think, where folks really just aren't prepared
for something.
And I think this is actually sort of a long conversation people should have on the left.
I remember years ago, I was with a group that created sort of like an accountability document.
The idea was, is that if something happens in an organization, it often just destroys
the organization.
If there's interpersonal issues, if there's's interpersonal trauma or assault, things like that. And so getting out in front of
it and just having a sense of how you want to deal with things and having consensus amongst folks of
this is appropriate behavior, this is how we want to handle stuff, that's always a strong thing to
do. But at the George, I think it was the George Washington University campus at the end of April,
Patrick Casey, who's formerly of Identity Europa and the American Identity Movement, showed up at the encampment and wanted to talk to people, wanted to ask them questions and that kind of thing.
And people were totally obliged to him.
They were in photos with him, let him take video.
That's because they didn't know who he was.
Yeah.
Right.
In reality, he didn't actually find anyone that was going to basically support his vision.
He stopped.
People asked, you know, will you allow right-wing anti-Zionists here?
They basically said no.
He did find one person with a hat that said Israel did 9-11, who then told him that the Jews rejected Christ.
But he was also kind of on the edges of the encampment.
The reality is what happened was a white nationalist came into an encampment and took photos of Jews and posted them on a white nationalist website.
That's what happened. You know, so there actually was anti-Zionism. It affected the Jews at an encampment and took photos of Jews and posted them on a white nationalist website. That's what happened.
You know, so there actually was anti-Semitism.
It affected the Jews at the encampment.
But no one knew who it was.
And I think the flip side of that is having partners with groups that actually do know who Patrick Casey is and be able to say, oh, that guy is not here.
It's not legitimate.
I think with someone like Hinkle, MAGA communists, that's really confusing to people.
Yes.
I mean, that's why he does it.
of communists, that's really confusing to people. I mean, that's why he does it. Like it's a Dugan and kind of gray zone types and this kind of version of authoritarian kind of like right
leading, right coded, so-called communists. It's there literally to confuse people and to bridge
the gaps between the right and the left. And so again, building that base of people talking to
them, having like internal trainings about how this stuff works and like what these groups are,
I think that's always going to be a good thing.
You know, we talked with one organizer who had an organization that had put together
a training for other groups on antisemitism and invited all these groups to come and,
you know, wanted to get feedback on the training.
So they did the training and everyone kind of like thanked them and then went on to ask
them questions.
And the questions were exceedingly antisemitic.
It was things like, well, how do you talk about the new york housing market when clearly jews no no and these were
major major organizations and so basically they had like a choice like are we going to deal with
this here are we going to cut these relationships and they basically were like okay let's talk about
this let's deal with it yeah yeah and it moved the organizations huge like they were like we don't
want to make these kind of decisions we want to to realize where we made mistakes. That's not true of everyone. Do not be polyamorous about it
and assume it's always going to go over well. But I think we have to actually attempt to make those
changes. And the reason is, is that the left and building kind of left social movements build on
solidarity and equality. That's the only option we have to do something about anti-Semitism.
The right has never made jews safer
we have right now a system where israeli nationalism is supposed to be the primary vessel
for jewish safety i don't know about you but when i look at israel i don't think to myself what a
tremendously bunch of safe jews like this we have a situation that i don't think the political
solutions actually offer jewish safety and instead just create like more and more social division and
more and more social hierarchy so we have to kind of look at the left and how to build a left that can confront anti-Semitism.
And that is really the only option we're being given.
Yeah.
I think like avoiding this whole issue out of fear is that like it like it like somehow
like takes away from other bad things that are happening in the world.
Like somehow it takes away from the genocide in Gaza, I think is so misplaced thinking
because I view this as all part of the same struggle
and actual like active efforts to combat
any degree of antisemitism that is witnessed,
I think will serve to only like strengthen
a general like overall united call
to stop what's going on.
And I think people have this inclination that maybe we shouldn't talk about it.
Maybe we should just try to ignore it because it's uncomfortable or it might hurt the cause.
And I think that's just absolutely reversed.
I think, like you said, making inroads with anti-fascist researchers to help identify
when these things are happening, who bad actors might be, you know, people that might try to Trojan horse certain
issues to kind of alter a popular movement is all great ways to start. Ben, do you have any other
kind of thoughts on how to handle this like unique political moment? Yeah, no, I mean, I've been
around Palestine solidarity movements for like you know over a decade i
remember like a decade ago i was at a rally and you know most of the the signage there was like
really inspiring and awesome but at one point i saw like a sign that showed like kind of like a
hook-nosed israeli soldier who was like feasting on children's blood and it was like okay this is definitely
like there's some anti-semitism here and i actually like went up and like talked to the
person and they were like really nice and you know i explained to them like you know there's
a thing called the bud bible which is a anti-semitic myth that's harmed jews for centuries that the
jews like feast on christian children's blood blood. And it seems like that image of the Israeli soldier seems to have a big nose.
And that's kind of like a stereotype from Europe.
And they were like, oh, I didn't really know these things.
They took the sign down and left feeling like it was a good conversation.
And so things like that, I think there's some understandable fear among Jewish people that you might see signs like this at rallies.
And when you do, I think just trying to have conversations, it doesn't always go well, but often it does.
And I just think for any marginalized group or form of oppression, the more the people just deepen their understanding of what anti-Semitism is, how it shows up, what some of these tropes
are, the more that it becomes normalized, the more that it will become second nature to people,
and people won't be as afraid to talk about it. There won't be this weird silence around it.
And there's some anti-Semitism in that silence, to be clear. For any kind of oppression,
if you thought, oh, people don't want to talk about like anti-black racism in the movement that's that itself is like is part of
anti-blackness right so we should be clear and i also think like you're saying the fact that
so often like accusations of anti-semitism are weaponized against our movements makes people
not want to talk about it makes people think oh like this is just a right-wing issue or if we
talk about it or we're just lending credence
to the right. But I think that's changing, especially with the growth of the Jewish left,
and with an understanding that anti-Semitism is real and needs to be tackled. And so I think,
yeah, the more the things keep changing, this conversation will be a lot easier.
Is there any other thing that you would like to mention near the end of this piece?
Anything on the Jewish left? kind of closing thoughts that didn't
get brought up?
Oh, the only thing was I can say we spent a lot of time talking about the stake that
non-Jewish folks have in this.
And I think there's a couple of things that are worth considering, like we've sort of
talked about, you know, anti-Semitism.
One of the key features of anti-Semitism is that it's not true.
Like it's a bad actual analysis about power, state, empires, and capitalism work.
So if that is sort of seeping in, and this is true of conspiracy theories broadly, if
that's seeping into politics, that's just a failure right there.
And so it's really incumbent on people to sort of try and move past that and confront
those things, because that's the only way that social movements can actually gain kind
of efficacy.
And the other thing is that
they're directly tied to other forms of oppression. If you look at like the all out assault on trans
healthcare and trans institutions right now, it's overwhelmingly using anti-Semitic conspiracy
theories as sort of the scaffolding to hold it together. Absolutely. And this has been historically
true about anti-blackness in the US and the other forms of oppression. And so these things are
intertwined. So I think it's important just to acknowledge that like antisemitism is not like just a Jewish problem
or affecting Jewish people.
It's really baked into these kind of interlocking systems
of oppression.
So we should see it as a way of confronting
other things as well.
And to make that kind of give it value
or value to confront on its own terms.
Yeah.
And I think this book came out really at a moment
when like these conversations are needed more than ever came out really at a moment when like these conversations are
needed more than ever. And also at a moment when the Jewish left is just growing by leaps and
bounds. And I think to end on a hopeful note, and that gives me a lot of hope along with the growth
of the left, you know, more broadly, right? Surging to the streets in support of Palestine,
we're seeing like new generations
and folks across all generations in Jewish communities
who are building new ritual modalities,
new modes of Jewish identity, new politics,
who are really questioning old ways of doing things
and really building a Jewish future
beyond nationalism and militarism
and connecting our struggles with all other struggles
as they've long been connected. You know, like the Jewish left has been around for a long time.
And so, yeah, we're really living at a historic moment, both around this issue and around all
of our movements in general. So that gives me a lot of hope. Thank you both so much for coming
on to talk about these not very fun topics. I spent two hours this morning reading through the book.
It was very good.
I strongly recommend people read it,
especially considering everything that's happened
like these past eight months.
I think there's a lot of very good insights in there.
Where can people find a copy of Safety Through Solidarity?
I think you can pick it up anywhere.
Appreciate the kind of words.
Appreciate you having us on to talk about it.
We've been directing folks to sort of like movement bookstores and we've been partnering
with a bunch of them you know so i think like local rad bookstores are always a great place
we have to like actively sustain those places and be a part of them so i think that's a great place
to do it and also kind of requesting them at libraries sort of like pointing folks to both
of those things so that's a great way to support the book. Great. Really appreciate you having us on Garrison.
It's been a great conversation and we appreciate all the work you do.
So we need to be connected.
All right.
Thank you so much.
Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular online series, The Running Interview Show,
where I run with celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more. 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 even deeper into
their stories, their journeys, and the thoughts that arise once we've hit the pavement together.
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, and admire? Join me every week for Post
Run High. It's where we take the conversation beyond the run and get into the heart of it all.
It's lighthearted, pretty crazy, and very fun. Listen to Post Run High 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 Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. and at times unhinged look at the underbelly of tech from an industry veteran with nothing to lose.
This season, I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel-winning economists
to 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.
On Thanksgiving Day 1999, a five-year-old boy floated alone in the ocean.
He had lost his mother trying to reach Florida from Cuba.
He looked like a little angel. I mean, he looked so fresh.
And his name, Elian Gonzalez, will make headlines everywhere.
Elian Gonzalez.
Elian Gonzalez.
Elian.
Elian.
Elian Gonzalez. Elian. Elian. Elian. Elian. Elian. Elian Gonzalez.
At the heart of the story is a young boy and the question of who he belongs with.
His father in Cuba.
Mr. Gonzalez wanted to go home and he wanted to take his son with him.
Or his relatives in Miami.
Imagine that your mother died trying to get you to freedom.
At the heart of it all is still this painful family separation.
Something that as a Cuban, I know all too well.
Listen to Chess Peace, the Elian Gonzalez story, as part of the My Cultura podcast network,
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to the Kid Apple Hero Podcast.
Once again, I have forgotten to write an intro for.
I'm your host, Theo Wong, with these chains.
I'm here.
It's great to be here.
Intro or not.
Yeah, and this intro-less episode is, I think, the first episode that, well, can I promise it's the first episode
that was recorded after we learned
that Tim Walls was going to be the vice presidential nominee
defeating the sexual assault guy
and then the other sexual assault guy
who probably covered up a murder.
Yeah, don't slack on the also covered up a murder there, Mia.
Yeah, that was a truly impressive,
truly impressive sort of set of candidates yeah that party elite
were choosing from it's still somewhat surprising that they didn't like fumble i mean that they will
still fumble we have months to go but uh that's true yeah i mean to be fair i think oh god we
figured out this guy covered up a murder is probably the kind of thing that like
even the dems like dog shit opposition research people were like hmm okay we shouldn't run that
guy yeah yeah they're tweeting about his murder cover-up let's leave this one yeah that's shapiro
out of pennsylvania who's one of the other candidates by the way yeah suck shit but you
know so the guy we ended up with this sort of folksy Midwestern. Actually, I think it was just a defensive coordinator or whatever, the defensive
coach for his football team. He's a very sort of folksy guy. We're going to get more into him
next week. But the thing that I wanted to sort of start our discussion about the vice presidential
candidates with is attempting to reconcile something that
I've seen a lot of discussion about, and sort of, I don't know, kind of confusion to some extent
about, about how do you actually make sense of the sort of two halves of Tim Walz's record,
right? Which on the one hand, he's signing a bunch of extremely progressive sort of welfare
legislation while being the governor of minnesota including things like
universal free school lunch i said it was lunch or breakfast i don't remember i think it was both
it was both it was both yeah yeah yeah and you know on the one hand you have this sort of sparkling
record and then on the other hand you have you know him calling in the national guard and deploying
it to suppress the uprising in 2020 which lest we forget started in minnesota yeah that's where third precinct
burned and also using the police to sort of like horribly brutalize protesters against line three
which is an oil pipeline through a bunch of indigenous land that probably i don't know we're
probably two years out from like an unbelievably horrific oil spill coming out of it that everyone's
gonna go how can we possibly have predicted this it only had spilled a million times before etc etc and that walls like rammed through and had people
who were resisting it like horribly beaten by a cop so how do you sort of reconcile these two halves
of this guy's record and there's like a local politics explanation which i see bandied about
a lot,
which is true to some extent.
And that explanation is that he's not really a progressive,
and he's mostly kind of a moderate
who's just going along with a fairly progressive
Minnesota legislature,
and he's getting credit for just like signing bills.
And that's kind of true,
but it's also, I think, ultimately a cop-out.
Because we are on year about 140 of the welfare state,
and this shit keeps happening every single time.
And what's really sort of at stake here, analytically,
is that the relationship between the welfare state and violence
is significantly deeper than the record of one guy.
And so today, what we're going to be doing is not really talking
about Tim Wall so much. What we're going to be doing is we're going to be going back through
some of the history of social democracy and trying to understand how it became entangled
with the sort of use of force and with police violence. Because I think there's a story there
that's been completely buried by the tidal wave of just like i don't know whatever walls
takes and you know i think presidential elections are something that has a tendency to just destroy
everyone's analytical capacity for like two years so let's resist that and go do something
interesting yeah okay yeah so i think the place to start with this is this is a place that we start
i think not infrequent amount on this show, or at least I do.
And that's the sort of original debates from, you know, about the 1830s through roughly the 1870s, early 1880s when it changes about what socialism was going to be.
There's always been, to some extent, like a bunch of different kind of understandings of it, but something that,
you know,
you'd call the sort of left wing of the Democrats,
which is like everyone at that point.
Right.
And the anarchists kind of agree about,
and this is the Marx agrees about with sort of the anarchists at the time
is that socialism is,
you know,
it's the free association of producers,
right?
You know,
it is the working class abolishing itself,
but then also like being the people who
directly run the new society that's sort of brought about by this thing without sort of the state or
sort of political mediation etc etc and even you know people like angles who are like arch statists
right like angles you know uses a theoretical justification for like every time a socialist
picks up a machine gun to shoot someone and that social works for the state, like that's angles is justification for,
but even he's talking about how like one day the state will be like put on a
shelf in a museum and people will walk past and look at it and then like walk
by it because it's like,
it's a tool of a by-be-gone era that nobody needs anymore.
And in this period,
it's very clear that socialism is workers directly controlling the means of production, and it's
directly democratically managing their lives. But this becomes less clear as the 1800s go on.
Something that David Graeber points out, and I think I've quoted this on the show before,
but it's important here. While this is sort of going on, there's two kind of trends in the
development of the state and the development of socialist ideology. One is a move in the 1870s and 1880s. Socialists start watching
states build railroads, and this drives them completely nuts. It just obliterates their
brains. It's like this and the post office just like absolutely nuke their brains. And they start
going, okay, hold on. But what if instead of workers directly managing their affairs
and having workers coordinating the production of society,
what if instead the state did that?
And socialism was literally when the state did things.
And this is something that even Engels is pretty hostile to
in the sense that he's a statist to some extent,
but he also is very wary of doing things like calling state-owned enterprises socialism right because like well no obviously that's not
necessarily true because like you could just have capitalist state-owned enterprises like lots of
places is includingly importantly sort of bismarck's germany in this period which we'll come
back to in a second yeah and lots of the places that people on twitter think are socialist paradises
today yeah are just these soe like state-owned enterprise hellholes.
We've talked about this extensively with China elsewhere.
And this sort of like shifts the conception of what people think socialism is.
You get these more sort of reformist trends in sort of socialist circles.
You get your Kotskys, you get your Bernsteins, people who think that like you don't need
a revolution.
You can sort of just like, you can vote your way into the state owning property. And that will somehow
achieve socialism, or you can sort of like stabilize capitalism and make it not bad anymore.
Now, that's what's happening on the socialist side. So there's this sort of project of like,
autonomous workers control over everything, right? That had been the original socialist
project is being eaten away,
on the one hand, from its own parties. But then on the other hand, as sort of David Greber points
out, the capitalist class realizes that all of these sort of autonomous institutions that the
working class is building, like your unions, your giant political parties have their own sort of
welfare system. The state realizes that you can replicate these and use it as like a direct buy
off to stop these people from revolting.
I'm going to read a passage from David Graeber's The Utopia of Rules.
Audubon Bismarck's reaction to socialist electoral success in 1878 was twofold.
On the one hand, ban the socialist party, trade unions, and leftist newspapers.
On the other, when this proved ineffective, socialist candidates continued to run and win as independents to create a top-down alternative to the free schools, workers' associations, friendly societies, libraries, theaters, and the large process of building socialism from below.
This took the form of a program of social insurance for unemployment, health, and disability, etc., etc., free education, pensions, and so forth.
for unemployment, health, and disability, etc., etc., free education, pensions, and so forth.
Much of it watered down versions of policies that had been part of the socialist platform,
but in every case carefully purged of any democratic participatory element.
In private, at least, he was utterly candid about describing these efforts to buy out working-class loyalties to his conservative nationalist project. When left-wing regimes
later did take power, the template had already
been established, and almost invariably, they took the same top-down approach, incorporating
locally organized clinics, libraries, mutual banking initiatives, workers' education centers,
and the like into the administrative structure of the state. So there's two interesting things here.
One is that the development of the things that are going to
become the body of welfare state, this is implemented not by all these sort of policies
that we're talking about Walls doing now. These were originally implemented not by the left,
but very deliberately by Otto von Bismarck, the arched late 19th, early 20th century conservative,
the guy who was literally responsible for the foundation of Germany, right? Like that's his project. He is the guy who creates the nation of Germany and thus will forever live in infamy
as one of the most evil people in human history. The line directly from him to Hitler is incredibly
straight. But the second part of this is what social democratic politics turns into, right?
Which is this effort to sort of centralize all of the sort of autonomous institutions
that the working class had constructed and to centralize all of that activity into the state,
right? You know, this is like having your sort of clinics be state-run, having your libraries be
state-run, having your like mutual banking things, like all of these things that had been independent
institutions are folded into the state project.
By folding these things into the state,
Graeber's interested in the extent to which they become bureaucratized and the sort of democratic elements vanish entirely.
I am less interested in that here,
and I am more interested in the extent to which it ties
all of these things to state violence.
Now, James, do you know what else is tied to state violence?
That was a masterstroke, Mia.
Did not have that one written down.
Came up on the cuff.
Absolutely fantastic.
Please tell me, Mia, what is connected to state violence?
It is the products and services that support this podcast.
We are back.
So we've gotten into sort of how these things that used to be mutual aid, right?
These are the sort of programs that were developed by working class institutions to support each other were sort of folded into the state.
And now we have to get into the reverse of this process, which is how violence was folded into social democracy.
how violence was folded into social democracy.
In the 1800s, this is something I think is kind of well-known among the extremely nerd left,
but I don't know if it's very well-known outside of that.
But in the late 1800s and early 1900s,
everyone who is like a Marxist in any stripe is a social democrat.
And this is true equally of reformists like Bernstein
and also people like Lenin, right? Like the Bolsheviks and the Mensheviks both are split from like the Social Democratic Labor Party. Is it Social Democratic Labor Party? see reflected in the ways that they come to power and in the ways that they sort of govern,
Leninist communism and social democracy are both just two variants of the same thing.
And you can see this most clearly through the ways they come to power, the way they embark
on this project of centralizing power, violence, production, and the organization of society into
the state.
Both of them take power by machine gunning their enemies on the left with the newfound power of the state. Alongside the Russian Revolution, there is the German Revolution. And the German
Revolution is defeated when the Social Democratic Party of Germany, which had been the party of
angles, right? Like Marx writes stuff about their platform like this is the premier social democratic party
in the world they take power by stopping the revolution slaughtering the communists and using
the sort of proto-fascist fricor to like just kill them all this is this is how Rosa Luxembourg is
killed so the first social democratic government to like come to power in Europe since I guess
technically there was about two months in 1848 when there were
social democrats in France.
But that lasted a very, very brief amount of time.
But, you know, so the first time they come to power is in Germany.
And in Germany, they come to power in this bloodbath that, you know, sort of destroys,
like, the rest of this, like, armed left and attempting to centralize politics and military
power in the hands of the state.
This is how they defeat the revolutionary movements.
In Russia, basically the same process happens, right?
There's the first revolution, which is the February Revolution, 1917.
And then the Bolsheviks take power in the second revolution.
And the moment the Bolsheviks take power, they spend basically the entire rest of the
Russian Revolution and the Russian Civil War just straight up slaughtering every single other left-wing
faction in the entirety of Russia,
which ends in sort of the massacre.
And beyond. Oh yeah, oh yeah.
A lot of Ukrainian leftists, they are killing anarchists
from like Azerbaijan
to like fucking
Spain. Make a prominent appearance
in Spain killing anarchists in May 1937.
Yeah, in the sort of immediate
Russian context, right? This is solidified by the massacre at Kronstadt where the bolsheviks sealed their sort of opposition to
any kind of like autonomous working class right for the bolsheviks the working class is going to
be directly subordinated to the bolshevik party and to that platform and any deviation or any
attempt to sort of like manage yourself like autonomously, it's just going to be stamped out, right? And Lenin's attempt to do this is going to be sort of
like followed by Stalin doing this even more. Yeah.
And so what you have here, right? What collective ownership is in social democracy, and this is true
of both the German social Democrats who are what we think of social Democrats today, right? They're
sort of like electoralists. They're like capitalists. And also the Bolsheviks. What collective ownership is, is the state owns things, and if you try to do anything about this, they shoot you.
forms of this right like fdr does not conceive of himself as a social democrat like he thinks of himself as a liberal but the american liberal tradition is a bizarre one but you know we
actually talked about this in my episode about the time that wizards of the coast the creators
of magic the gathering deployed the pinkertons against the guy for revealing what was in a magic product too early.
Amazing. I think it also has some roots, I think, in this kind of... I mean, the examples I'm most
familiar with are British, post-1832 Reform Act, of this paternal state benevolence, right? They all lie in the same thing, right? Which is state trying to buy
off co-op resistance and doing so in a way that like, it's carrot and stick, I guess.
Yeah, there's elements of this in Leninism too, right? Like Lenin's like great theoretical
contribution to whatever is when Lenin talks about like trade union consciousness, people bring this
up a lot because like, yeah, like there is obviously issues with just like, all of your
organizing being you make a trade union and then your trade union
becomes the AFL-CIO and tries to, actually not even tries to, successfully overthrows
Allende and installs Pinochet, right? Like there's a thing there. But when Lenin is talking about
trade union consciousness, the thing that Lenin believes is that they need like middle-class
petite bourgeois, like fucking theorists to come in
and teach them what socialism is and this is an explicit part of their theory right this is that
same sort of paternalism that they have to be like led even the sort of vanguard working class
needs to be led by these like theorists who i don't know emerge from like lenin's friend group
in exile in Switzerland or whatever.
And FDR's sort of policy works, I think it's not really understood how similar FDR's stuff is to like how the New Deal scene at the time, even by people like outside of the country
as compared to like the others from massive social upheavals that he placed as opposed
to sort of Soviet communism or even like fascism. Like Nehru, the guy who was going to become like the founding prime minister
of India, has this whole thing in like 1941 where he's looking at the New Deal and he's going,
this is either going to produce communism or fascism. So like the New Deal is a fundamental
rewriting of the American social contract. And a big part of it is he's doing the same thing that
the Social Democrats are trying to do, which is he's doing the same thing that the social Democrats
are trying to do, which is he's trying to centralize everything into the state. He's
trying to centralize partially this is welfare benefits, right? He's trying to centralize like
unions very specifically into the state. And he's also trying to centralize violence into the state
because before this, the US, I mean, we've talked about sort of Blair Mountain on Behind the
Baskets before, right? Like there are just open wars between the literally capitalist armies and sort of union
armies.
Armies formed by labor unions, not like the union army.
Yeah, yeah.
I feel like I need to clarify this.
Yeah, the great anti-capitalist of the union army.
And a big part of what FDR is like running on, like part of his platform is like, okay,
we need to end this like era of gun thugs, right?
Like we can't have these fucking like robber barons running around with their private armies killing people. And like, yeah, that need to end this like era of gun thugs, right? Like we can't have these fucking like robber barons
running around with their private armies killing people.
And like, yeah, that's obviously good, right?
But his solution to this is, again,
we're going to centralize all of the violence into the police.
And unfortunately for sort of the rest of us, right?
If you're going to maintain like a capitalist system,
somebody has to be pulling the triggers.
And that's now the police instead
of these sort of private armies. And the other part about this bargain is that the unions also
have to basically disband their armies, right? Because the miners are blurbing out, right? They
have like 17,000 guys. All of them have rifles. They will go out and they will fight. They have
machine guns. They have cannons. Yeah. And it's FDR who begins the gun control in the US for the National Firearms Act
of 1934, right? They talk a lot about prohibition era violence, right? But what happens at Blair
Mountain is why you have the NFA. Yeah. And so what you have, it's the same process,
the process of sort of turning mutual aid into state programs, right? Walls is very explicitly
doing this, right? I saw people talking about how like,
oh, he's achieved the dream of the Black Panthers
like free breakfast program by like making it into the state.
And it's like, no, you don't understand.
The reason the Panthers were doing that
was to build the roots of an autonomous society.
The reason the state is doing that
is so that you don't fucking revolt
and you don't do 2020 again.
Yeah, these are different things.
Yeah, and this is something that as the U.S.
welfare state cycles through, you get various versions of it. There is another version of this
that is the products and services that support this podcast by centralizing all of your money
into their pockets and then using it to hire security guards.
we're back so the great society which is johnson's sort of like big we're gonna end poverty thing you know he's doing the vietnam war at the same time yeah so you know there's this sort of domestic
kind of returgency stuff in the central station state violence is now being projected projected out. And in the U.S., it's always happening, right?
The U.S. fundamentally is a project of colonial expansion going from fucking one coast to the other, killing everyone near path and seizing their land.
And the contradiction of this, right? welfare state also normally are like revolted at the fact that they're burning millions of people
alive in like vietnam cabodia and laos like this contradiction is kind of what tears apart of
social democratic politics and what replaces it is you know like if social democracy is a carrot
and a stick right neoliberalism is just the stick it's just more prisons that hit you with the thing
instead of this sort of like more genteel process of well we're that hit you with the thing instead of this sort of, like, more genteel process of, well, we're still hitting you with the stick, but also here are these handouts if you don't, like, oppose us.
Yeah.
So we've talked about these examples.
I wanted to kind of move into some more modern examples of this because I think everything I've been saying is old, right?
But this stuff is still happening today in the social democracies that exist, right? Like one of the biggest examples of this is there's two kinds of social democracies that
people point to depending on where on the political spectrum they are.
One is like the Nordic countries, right?
And this never worked on me because one of my foundational experiences, like as an activist,
when I was like a little baby, 15 year old in 2013, was talking to someone who had a
mounted cavalry charge done against them by the swedish
police because they were doing an anti-fascist action and they got trampled by fucking horses
because that's that's what the state is and you know so like that's like kind of on the one hand
but the thing that we're seeing right now is you know the remains of the welfare state being paired
with this incredible like rabid anti-immigrant violence
right and this is the thing you see in places like france too right we still sort of have the
welfare state it's also this unbelievable violence against sort of non-white people and anyone who's
trying to like enter the country yeah i think it's was it sweden or was it denmark that had
these laws were like they would like seize the property of any immigrant who like came into the country jesus i don't remember that i know more people who have migrated to sweden i think it might have
been it might be denmark i'm not familiar yeah they're also part of the sort of broader like
european border project which is unbelievably violent and you're getting this with walls too
right he's signing on to sort of kamala harris's like fucking terrifying fascist border violence
and that's again because like all of this project is tied in with state centralization well okay so
what happens when you centralize a state the answer is it starts enforcing its borders
yeah in order to sort of like create underclasses of incredibly dispossessed and incredibly
battered and brutalized people who can be split in for labor. Yeah, like people who are insecure with respect to the state, right?
And so they can be excluded by the state or by capitalism that supports the state.
Yeah, and you know, obviously, like the US is sort of one of the global pioneers,
but like the Nordic social democracies are also really sort of part and parcel of the system.
The other things I want to turn to here is Latin American social democracies, because I talked about this at length in the Brazil episodes, right? Brazilian social democracy, Lula's first term, right, has simultaneously this massive sort of push in social spending, and then also enormous budget increases for the military. There's this incredible, unbelievable spike in police police violence like rate of police killings is way worse than the u.s yeah and this is true in like
fucking all of these places right like this is surely how the coup worked in 2020 was because
the bolivian government kept just like handing money to the police over and over again and the
police like did a coup against them right this is also true in venezuela which is like unbelievable
rates of police killing like terrifying oh yes i was there
after the revolution but i saw some of this happening right the revolution going from
spontaneity and workers control and people's control to a degree to like being caught which
happens in almost every revolution that we've seen right it begins with the people and it becomes
corrupted by the state it's wild to see like the equipment and weapons of their police
on one hand and then the poverty of yeah folks that they are policing on the other and then this
has also been omlo's thing in mexico right like even though he came in on the like hugs not bullets
campaign which for some incomprehensible reasons you still see like the fucking washington post
writing about omlo talking about how he was doing like hugs not bullets like he never he there was
not a single
day where he implemented that shit he came in and immediately was like hey the army do you want
control of even more of the country yeah like it was very funny when umla came in right and he was
doing it like hugs not bullets english translation and then simultaneously i was getting press
releases being like we have deployed several thousand more troops to the tijuana area come to the parade and i was like no look are they huggers they sent in their tactical
cutler does this exact same thing in haiti where he goes to haiti he plays soccer with these kids
and he says we will show them another way and then just like in the background are all the
armored vehicles for the brazilian occupation of haiti and she's like well oh my god they're
showing him something yeah and so the time between this
absorption of of socialist politics into the state you know and this sort of centralization
and increasing of state violence is something that continues to today and you know we're now
kind of in the last decades probably too strong but roughly decade we're we're kind of seeing
social democrats like who want to break out of
this in the form of the kind of like moderate abolitionists. So this is the people who are,
you know, whose thing is like, okay, we're going to defund the police and we're going to like
reallocate their resources to like funding welfare programs. And this is like, obviously this would
be good, but if you know anything about what happened after 2020, none of this stuff ever happened.
No one ever defunded the police.
There was no sort of movement.
We defunded the libraries instead.
Yeah, but even on a fundamental level, I don't believe that this can work.
And the reason I don't believe that this can work is because in order to have a state that functions, you need an apparatus of violence.
It can inflict on its subjects.
Oh, I'm going to turn here. Oh, this is a joke you're probably not going to get oh no i'm going to
turn here to famed political philosopher brennan lee mulligan quote laws are threats made by the
dominant social economic ethnic group in a given nation it's just a promise of violence that's
enacted the police are basically an occupying army you know what i mean i was just to see i'm aware
of this dude he uh he plays dungeon dragons on the internet occasionally he says something that's
right and you know the important thing about this is that you know without without the threat of
violence behind it right laws are just suggestions you can't have a state without an apparatus of
violence you can't stay in power without one And this has always been the sort of central contradiction of social democracy, right? In order for Wallace to have
his sort of like pretty sparkling programs, he needs to have the cops to destroy you if you
attempt to do anything different. And this is what 2020 was, right? 2020 was the most serious
uprising in the US, like the most serious challenge to the authority of the sort of draconically
anti-black settler American
state, right? And it was something
that promised something different.
And even, you know,
and that meant that everyone,
whether you were a fucking
hardline fascist
or, you know, you were Tim Walz,
your one goal was to smash
it and was to deploy state
violence the state violence you had in your hands which in this case
was a National Guard was to send them
in to make sure that these people never fucking burn
another police station again and that's
what happens
it's like
obviously like the ability to have it's I've been
thinking about this a lot because I've been writing a book
and I'm really trying to get it
fucking finished so I've been writing it book and I'm really trying to get it fucking finished. So I've been writing it a lot. And like when a conflict, be it one within a country or between
countries stops being between states or about what the state should do and starts being about
where there's a state should be, then we see the entire state system pivoting on all its
suggesting morals. And just being like no we cannot
allow this to happen and i think we've seen that domestically to a degree in the u.s right but like
the state can't abolish itself state won't abolish itself the sine qua non of the state its ability
to like lock you up beat you up or shoot you up if you do what they don't want and that will always
be the state doesn't matter if it's got like a hammer and sickle or like your based fucking Bashar al-Assad or whatever.
Like the state will still come and kill you
if you become a threat to it.
Yeah, and that's the solution to what hopefully
will be the title of this episode.
Why did Tim Walz call the National Guard?
And the answer is to make sure
that you're never going to be free.
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