It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 152
Episode Date: October 19, 2024All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. Sources can be found in the descriptions of each individual episode. Hurricane Conspiracy Theories The 2028 Gener...al Strike and Climate Change Israel's History with UN Peacekeepers in Lebanon Anarchism In Argentina, Pt. 1 feat. Andrew Anarchism In Argentina, Pt. 2 feat. Andrew 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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On Thanksgiving Day, 1999, five-year-old Cuban boy Elian Gonzalez was found off the coast of Florida.
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CallZone 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 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. Welcome to It Could Happen Here. It is a beautiful sunny day in Atlanta,
Georgia, which means I think they're all lying about the weather. They said this hurricane was
going to come and I'm fine. I don't believe them. It's all fake.
Joined with me today is Mia Wong. I'm Garrison Davis. Welcome to It Could Happen Here.
Welcome. And it's, hey, look, it's cloudy in Portland, so clearly they were telling the truth.
I don't know what's going on in your reality, but...
I can't believe that the Republicans have hijacked the weather control matrix and are aiming it at portland oregon to wipe it off the map to give oregon to give oregon's vote to donald trump in the next election you know one of my
foundational early political memories was discovering that like the two the mid-2010s
era mayor of ankara thought that nato had an earthquake machine that they were setting off
off the coast of turkey in order to cause tsunamis during hurricane season so that because so deep nato could destroy the turkish economy god i hope so and i always thought
that was very funny and now every every single like major politician in america believes some
shit like that now and i was like oh everyone has something not everyone has the same thing but
everyone has something crazy that they believe and that's what we're talking about here today. So, oh boy, it has gotten bad, folks. As Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton brought
widespread devastation to the southeastern United States, politicians, TV anchors, and influencers
have been trying to weaponize the tragedy and the disaster relief effort for their own partisan
electoral gain, particularly via the use of disinformation.
While the government's response to Hurricane Helene can certainly be criticized,
bad faith attacks originating from the far right have spread wildly online and have been boosted
by Trump and Fox News. Many of these focus on the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA,
with some of them connecting to decades-old
conspiracy theories about the agency.
Yeah.
So this episode, we're going to go over some of the conspiracy theories and misinformation
circulating about these hurricanes, but not necessarily to debunk them, because I know
who's listening to this, but I think it's actually more helpful to place them into the
larger tapestry of conspiracy thinking
leading into the election and discuss how modern misinformation has presented a whole new problem
that simple fact checks aren't equipped to handle. Hey, Garrison, you are very confident about that,
but I personally know leftists who I have been friends with who believe the weather weapon shit,
so you never know. Well, I mean, I do believe that fact checks aren't going to be the main solution here.
Oh, no, they're not going to help that. I'm just saying, look, there are believers
everywhere for the eyes to see. It's great. That's kind of what I'm saying here. Yeah.
Now let's start by talking about Donald Trump and FEMA. Oh, God. So some of the misinformation
spreading about FEMA right now
includes the claim that the agency is only providing $750 in aid
to individuals affected by Hurricane Helene,
when actually the $750 payments are just the initial relief funds
to help with immediate needs.
There's also been claims that FEMA only issues loans
and any relief money received has to be paid back.
This isn't true.
Only in rare cases when someone receives duplicate funds from FEMA and insurance does money have to be returned to FEMA. There's also been claims that if victims fail to pay back FEMA, they will then
seize your property. This is also false. More on this later. Now,iktok video with over a million views claimed that fema is
raiding people's homes to seize supplies this isn't true fema doesn't raid people's homes
on a more racist note it's claimed that fema has run out of money for hurricane victims because
kamala spent billions of fema dollars on housing for illegal immigrants.
At a campaign rally, Donald Trump said, and I'm not going to do the voice,
the Harris Biden administration says they don't have money because they spent it all on illegal immigrants.
They stole the FEMA money, just like they stole it from a bank,
so that they could give it to their illegal immigrants, unquote.
This lie was also shared by Sean Hannity on Fox News. And even when confronted with facts that discredit this claim, commentators on Fox still insist that even though
it's not technically true, it still feels true. It may not be actually true that FEMA resources
that could have been available in North Carolina have been given to migrants, but there's no
question about the broader orientation of FEMA under the Biden-Harris administration, which has been to channel huge
amounts of money to communities and to non-governmental organizations to help with the
massive influx of migrants that they themselves have created. And this is a fun one, too, because
like there is FEMA underfunding. But the reason there's FEMA underfunding is that Republicans
keep voting not to give it more money. Yes.
Which, like, oh boy.
I mean, again, this is a big part of the
Republican strategy, just making life worse for
everybody so that everyone's more angry
so that people will vote Republican.
And that is the strategy they
want, because as long as their
base is doing badly
and upset and angry,
they will find some way to blame it on the
opposition and then vote in republican this has been the conservative governmental strategy for
decades yeah do all the terrible stuff and then blame the stuff that you did on immigrants
which yeah good times love this country great stuff happening a famously reliable strategy
trump's also lied about the governor of georg Georgia not being able to get in contact with President Biden to coordinate disaster relief efforts when in fact they had spoken the day
prior. Trump also claimed that the federal government and the North Carolina Democratic
governor have been, quote, going out of their way to not help people in Republican areas, unquote.
This is also completely false. There were more isolated areas in north carolina that
were harder to reach but people are trying to get there and in fact some of the hardest reach areas
were actually immigrant communities who were like too scared to like actually ask for federal help
out of fear they would be deported so like yes there actually is people really struggling to
get uh relief but it's not by and large your Trump voters. Like again,
certainly the relief efforts managed by the government have had their fair share of problems.
People are not getting all the help they need, but this is not a conspiracy by the Democratic
governor to deprive Republicans of hurricane relief. Like that's not true. Now Trump's
falsehoods about the hurricane and the disaster response in service of his re-election campaign have signaled that it's a-okay for Republicans to spread all manner
of hurricane conspiracy theories targeting the federal government.
Oh boy.
And this is where we're going to get into the newest conspiracy theory sweeping the
nation, that the government controls the weather.
All of the weather, especially hurricanes.
Now, this is not a new conspiracy theory, certainly.
I'm so sick of the weather weapon shit.
But the fact that we have sitting congressmen,
including Marjorie Taylor Greene from Georgia,
who is riding this thing like a fucking horse,
is a little bit wild.
She has been posting nonstop the past week
about how, quote-unquote,
they control the weather.
I wonder what they means.
She has been attributing the weather modification
to a few different agencies,
including the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Yeah, sure.
Sure.
No one's doing this.
Like, come on.
She has posted memes that prove that they're controlling the weather
because they list a whole bunch of weather modification patents.
Now, the funny thing is that most of these patents are like over 100 years old.
Many of them are expired.
Yeah.
These patents contain plans to drop water from balloons to produce rain that's the weather modification
she's talking about she included a patent that includes like a way to use like airplane exhaust
to blow away poison gas from like trenches that's chemtrails garrison's chemtrails
it's absurd all of these things are like are like ancient patents and like weather modification is
a real thing technically. Like we have been
trying to alter the weather. One of the pointed to like real technologies is cloud seeding.
Cloud seeding is a small scale technology to alter a cloud's precipitation, usually to increase a
cloud's ability to produce localized rain by adding ice or condensation nuclei into the forming clouds.
This helps areas suffering from drought and low
rainfall. Cloud seeding has been jumped upon by Republican conspiracy theorists as proof
that the government is actually engaging in a massive weather control operation,
including to produce hurricanes. Now, hurricanes are famously quite large, and it is impossible
to determine the path or cause one to happen.
This just simply isn't true.
Yeah, and I mean, the largest scale, like, attempt to manipulate weather that humanity has ever done, like, on purpose that wasn't global warming, was for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.
beijing and it took it took the entire industrial technological and scientific capacity of a nation of 1 billion people and putting like an unfathomable amount of resources and planning
and like logistical capability at specifically not making it rain in beijing for like a fairly
small amount of time and lowering the air pollution levels they barely managed to pull that off so they they sort
of kind of made the weather better in one city for like two weeks and that took a a level of
resource coordination like fucking unfathomable like most of human history like it's it's it's
very challenging to alter the weather it It requires a lot of resources.
No, it doesn't work very well.
They had to shut down factories across half the country.
It was a fiasco.
These people aren't actually talking about that.
They're talking about conspiratorial efforts from the federal government's Illuminati
to target hurricanes on certain red States to alter the election.
Like that,
that's,
that's really what they're talking about.
Conspiracy theorists in the right have pointed it to harp.
Oh no.
A university of Alaska fairbranks program.
Not the harp bullshit.
That uses high frequency equipment to study the upper atmosphere.
According to Reuters,
no atmospheric monitoring equipment do not alter the weather.
Conspiracy theorists have also targeted Doppler radios and NEXRAD,
basically like radar control systems and radio control systems,
as being used to change weather patterns and cause hurricanes.
This isn't true.
You can't change the weather with a radio or with radar.
Again, we're not
we're not debunking this because this is so no this is so ludicrous but these are the conspiracy
theories that they're invoking and like and like harp conspiracy theories do go back quite a while
i've seen a few other things talking about like direct energy weapons and lasers from space or
lasers from the ground pointed at the atmosphere, which caused hurricanes
to form. This also isn't real.
We cannot cause a hurricane to form. It's too
big. And the thing about this stuff
is, like, these are all old conspiracies, right?
But it's like, these are things that used to be
like, like, you would walk into a room
full of guys who believe that 9-11 was staged
with holograms, and that MKUltra
successfully produced mind control that was originally
developed by North Korea, and
those people would laugh the, like, harp idiots
out of the room? Yeah. It was a
conspiracy seen by other conspiracy theorists
as, like, too
obviously bullshit.
Like... Do you know what isn't bullshit, Mia?
Is it the products and services
that support this podcast? It sure is.
The MyPillow guy, you're trying to sell gold
now? Here we go.
Get your gold.
All right, we are back.
But yes, these conspiracy theories
have existed for a long time,
talking about some degree
of the government's ability
to influence natural disasters and like big weather events people have tried to blame forest fires on lasers
specifically the maui fires uh from a few years ago they said were were actually caused by direct
energy weapons to get people to flee their land so that it could be seized by the federal government
all this kind of stuff now like some of them them also point to geoengineering, right?
They say that although geoengineering
is said to combat climate change,
it actually causes climate change.
Geoengineering,
there's technically a few forms, but the one that we're
talking about basically injects
aerosolized chemicals into the atmosphere
to reflect sunlight. Obviously,
reflecting sunlight's not going to
make a hurricane worse, but whatever. Obviously, reflecting sunlight's not going to make a hurricane worse,
but whatever.
So this has gotten really bad.
This has taken over a significant portion
of the online right.
Yeah.
To the point that even people like DeSantis
are having to come out and say,
hey, guys, no, this isn't real.
In a press conference,
DeSantis claimed that there are,
in fact, weather conspiracies,
quote, on both sides.
Yeah, my one friend
you kind of have some people who think the government can do this and others think it's
because of fossil fuels unquote oh my fucking god
dissent is this communication director later reiterated the claim saying quote the government
controls the weather crowd and the global warming and
climate change alarmists are two sides of the same coin unscientific agenda motivated and
unhelpful following a storm weather is weather unquote jesus christ so even in their refutation
of the weather controlling conspiracies they cannot help but dip into some climate denial
conspiracies we love to see it oh my Now, I think like hurricanes and natural disasters are uniquely
susceptible to misinformation. During times of crisis, people try to search for information
to relieve stress, and they often don't take the extra time to verify said information.
Whenever a new natural disaster strikes, old footage and videos circulate being
passed off as current events. Conversations and arguments about climate change and climate denial
also spark during natural disasters, leading to a surge of climate change conspiracy theories.
While this is nothing new, the way people are getting information is changing with the increased use of AI, chatbots, personal assistants,
and image generation. There was this TikTok trend ahead of Hurricane Milton where you ask in Amazon
Alexa what the result of the hurricane was going to be before it hit landfall. I'm going to play
this video that has over 2 million views on Twitter. Alexa, how many lives were lost during Hurricane Milton?
Overall, extreme Hurricane Milton caused $21.3 billion in damages and caused 262 fatalities.
October 8th, 2024, 12.15 p.m. Central Time.
Very scary.
12 15 p.m central time very scary now this other video has over 750 000 views on tiktok alexa what kind of hurricane is hurricane milton from fandom.com hurricane milton was
an extremely powerful category 5 hurricane that caused widespread damage across its path in October 2024.
They've already predicted the outcome. I wonder why.
So, that one may have given you a hint about what's going on here.
Obviously, Alexa doesn't know the future, nor has the government pre-programmed data
about its secret weather control program into your echo device alexa just pulls from information it finds online
in this case fandom.com hypothetical hurricanes wiki are you fucking which is a wiki which is a
wiki based comprehensive database of hypothetical tropical cyclone articles that anyone could edit
unquote you know i i said i said as a i said as a joke a couple years ago that we we were about
two years out from the q anon people discovering the plot of metal gear solid and believing it was
real but like we we're so close to that now we we are two months out from them from from an ai
telling them the plot of Metal Gear Solid and them believing
the Patriots secretly control the government.
They're quoting from a fandom wiki
on fake hurricanes
that people make for fun and can
be manipulated in the lead up to a hurricane
specifically to cause this type of reaction.
Again, like, as a bit, right?
It's absurd. Now,
to go even further into this AI
singularity hellhole oh no a twitter
user tried to debunk that first video i played predicting the death toll in the replies this
other user wrote quote there was a hurricane milton in the year 2000 please before you post
at least try to fact check with grok unquote they include a Grok AI screenshot that reads, quote, the name Milton has been used
for one hurricane in the Atlantic basin. Hurricane Milton occurred in 2000. However, for the 2024
hurricane season, there was another Hurricane Milton, making it the second time this name has
been used for an Atlantic hurricane, unquote. So an argument then ensued about which AI is correct. Quote,
Grok and ChatGPT disagree on the existence of a prior Hurricane Milton. Grok says,
prior to the 2024 hurricane season, there were no hurricanes named Milton in the Atlantic.
Next, I asked ChatGPT, Hurricane Milton, which occurred in the year 1990, caused significant damage, particularly in Mexico, where it made landfall.
I asked ChatGPT a second time, was there a Milton hurricane in 2000?
ChatGPT said, yes, there was a Hurricane Milton in 2000.
It formed in the eastern Pacific in late December. You know, I... say these people are using chat gpt and grok ai as search engines and when they hallucinate fake
data they're alleging some kind of conspiracy theory to suppress data on a previous hurricane
milton i mean and it's it's also just worse like having like this person condescend being like
please before you post try to fact check with grok you're like what the fuck are you talking about
grok is a comedy ai chat bot that's going to generate you a nonsense response. It's not a fact-checking tool. It's not even a search engine. They're just hallucinating data that people are then passing off as real information.
sense that like if you live through the 2010s the thing that you were able to do and that you were trained to do was if you had a question you would type it into google and sometimes it would give
you the right answer yeah right but now it's like a machine has been created that answers the
question what if google never gave you the correct answer and all of these people have been trained
that they can put this into the internet and it will give them the correct answer except now
we we have a machine that destroys
the entire Amazon every single second
in order to generate the wrong answer.
Well, and, like, specifically because of how
these, like, AI systems have been politicized
with, like, Elon Musk and stuff,
like, Republicans view it as, like,
a political imperative to use
them over the Democrat-leaning, like,
search engines. And people
aren't just turning to AI in lieu of
search engine. They're also using TikTok. They're also now using X as their own search engine to
get reliable information from users instead of actually verified information online, which you
can find with a little bit of searching. So all this is creating a quite volatile scenario where
misinformation is spreading at a faster pace than it really ever has before. Now, just like in the Springfield pet eating hoax, people on the right are also spreading
AI images as evidence of how the Biden-Harris government failed their disaster relief response
after Hurricane Helene. The most circulated image is of a crying little girl wearing a life vest
holding a wet puppy. Oh no. She is sitting in a boat surrounded by flood water. This is,
this is pure boomer bait, right? Like, yeah, you will never regret liking this post.
Rolling Stone traced this AI image to a Trump web forum called patriots.win. Oh God. And like
users there quickly saw that it was AI, but that didn't stop its spread online. The image got on Twitter and
was spread around after being posted by Utah Senator Mike Lee, who has a dark mega profile
picture. I'm going to quote from Rolling Stone, quote, Laura Loomer called the image sad,
quote, tweeting from a post by Buzz Patterson, columnist for the conservative blog Red State, who wrote of the
picture, our government has failed us again. Amy Kamir, RNC National Committee woman for the Georgia
GOP and the co-founder of Women for Trump, tweeted on Thursday that the image has been, quote,
seared into my mind, unquote. Informed that she was not looking at an authentic photo,
Kermer doubled down. Y'all, I don't know where
this photo came from, and honestly, it doesn't matter. There are people going through much worse
than what is shown in this pic, so I'm leaving it up because it's emblematic of the trauma and the
pain people are living through right now. Unquote. Oh my god. So, again, like, at this point, people
know they're spreading fake information, but they're doing it anyway because it helps them.
They are willing participants in the complete removal of reality from their constituents' brains.
A mega Twitter account posted this AI photo with the girl and the puppy and wrote, quote, Kamala doesn't have enough money for this child.
I can't hate this administration enough, unquote.
Oh my God.
So do you know what I can't hate this administration enough, unquote. Oh my god. Do you know what I can't hate enough? Nope.
Do you know what I love
dearly with my full
life force?
Is it products and services?
Yeah, it's the products and services that support
this podcast. Listen to them. We will be right back
afterwards. Okay, we return to conclude our hurricane misinfo rundown. So why is this stuff
catching on? Like what's happening that's causing this to be so much worse than usual? What's going
on? Why is this spreading right now? To answer that question, I'm first going to read a tweet from Candace Taylor, a Georgia candidate for governor back in
2022. Quote, the weather can and is being manipulated. Wake up. Stop being ignorant or
plain stupid. There is no such thing as coincidence. The most important election in the history of
America is 30 days away. Pray.
Georgia voting has been compromised, and I don't know if we will be able to get all of our early voting days in.
Now a hurricane is coming straight for Florida.
These two states are necessary for a Trump victory.
No coincidence. So, of course, this is all a conspiracy to send hurricanes specifically at red states to compromise Trump's ability to win the election.
A woman at a Trump rally explained that the government is using cloud seeding to make the hurricanes worse,
and that this was pre-planned because Amazon Alexis already knew the information about the hurricanes ahead of time.
Her reasoning was that the hurricane-damaged land could be seized for lithium mining by Kamala Harris's husband, and that the weather
was controlled to rig the election against Trump. Now, this little tidbit about Kamala's husband,
that's a nice little anti-Semitic jab in there. Of course, the Jews are controlling the weather
to do lithium mining. Why not? And I'm not going to play a short clip from this interview.
Not the whole thing because it's way too long
and she rambles about cloud seeding
for longer than I want to include.
But I will include this one short clip.
You're implying that the government
made a hurricane stronger
to hurt its own country,
the United States of America?
Correct.
And what would be the gain of that?
When, if you, like there's been people out there,
if they have an Alexa, I don't know if you've heard that,
and they've asked, what caused Milton?
You can go on there now.
It's already predicted the number of deaths and the amount of,
it's already predicted it.
On a Google, it won't do that.
If you ask it about Helene, it'll tell you the
government actively used seed clouding. This is before Helene even happened. Why would a country
want to have a hurricane be strong and hit its own country? Because they want to control certain
places. And if you're looking at where the hurricane's going, it's a lot of red states. If you're looking at the counties in North Carolina that were hit,
there were all of them, 26 out of 28 of those counties were for Trump. They're doing whatever
they can because they can't rig the election. Even control the weather?
Yes. Very compelling stuff coming out of the Trump rallies.
Jesus Christ.
I'm going to quote from a Media Matters article on hurricane misinformation and conspiracy theories.
Quote, a video with over 64,000 views has on-screen text that reads, we're at the point of revolution.
It features a user speculating for over six minutes that Hurricane Helene was somehow part of a plan to suppress white Republican votes.
Quote, you might be able to speculate that this has something to do with the fact that these are
largely white, rural Appalachian areas that have been affected. They're looking at it like this.
This election is three weeks from now. We've just wiped out the complete and total infrastructure
for all these towns and cities. That's's great because guess which way these towns leaned
they leaned red these were largely republican leading towns as far as they're concerned they
could all die and they don't care because that's just one less vote for trump unquote yes ashville
north carolina famously famously a republican town famously the conservative paradise of ashville yeah
now a lot of these conspiracies also link up to very old like fema conspiracies right
there's been conspiracies about fema since like the 1980s they've been heavily tied in with the
militia movement the formation of the oath keepers was in response to fema concentration camp
conspiracy theories basically that they'll use in response to fema concentration camp conspiracy
theories basically that they'll use natural disasters in fema to like round up patriots
to do some kind of new world order or that they're going to use fema to seize your land so then you're
going to be put in a fema concentration camp very old conspiracies now these have kind of fed into
the current conspiracy matrix regarding the hurricanes i'm gonna quote from this one guy
on twitter called the health ranger no not the health ranger no do you know do you know who the
health ranger is yeah the health ranger is is is a frequent alex jones guest yes he is like an
anti-vax guy and he's a whole he's a whole thing in this whole
conspiracy universe i hate him so much he does and this this is this is what he says about the
current hurricanes quote no incoming intel all caps fema is waving ungodly amounts of money
at private security firms right now, begging for security contractors to station
at Florida to prevent Floridians from returning to their homes and businesses after the storm hits.
The evacuation orders are to push people out of Florida and keep them out. Reportedly,
Delta Force personnel advising FEMA at the top, devising denial of area enforcement plans,
which will be enforced at gunpoint if required.
I'm told FEMA is practically panicked to get enough armed personnel on site, anticipating
a tremendous amount of resistance from displaced people who want to return home to salvage whatever
they can. This is the next step up the escalation ladder as the federal government wages war against
the American people, as we saw
FEMA carrying out in North Carolina, actively hindering rescue efforts to maximize starvation
and death. To the people, do not escalate. Hold your ground peacefully and firmly. This looks a
lot like a J6-style trap to provoke an insurrection and declare martial law to cancel the election.
insurrection and declare martial law to cancel the election. Don't play into their hands, unquote.
This unhinged diatribe got over 10,000 likes and was spread wildly around Twitter. A few days ago,
the Institute for Strategic Dialogue posted an article documenting this current conspiracy ecosystem, and they included one TikTok video that stated, quote, to my North Carolina families, please, I know it's hard, but please
do not take that $750. It's a loan. And if you don't pay it back, they will seize your property.
In response to this, FEMA clearly stated that FEMA cannot seize your property or land applying
for disaster assistance does not grant FEMA or the federal government authority or ownership over your property or land. So now we have these conspiracy theorists, which are being
boosted by Republican officials, basically encouraging people to resist help from FEMA
to not evacuate. And like all of this puts themselves and others in great danger, right?
You might say, well, if conspiracy theorists don't want help from from fema like what's the harm right well these people have like kids like these people have
families like it's not just them that are going to be affected if they're refusing to evacuate
their family from from the path of a hurricane and like their kids die that's super fucked up
if they're refusing like help from fema to to like feed themselves and their family. That's not a good sign of the
current state of this country. Yeah. Yeah. Like it's bad. Ron DeSantis, his press secretary,
had to come out against the unhinged ramble from Health Ranger on Twitter. She quote tweeted his
post saying, spreading lies like this could have serious consequences if people in evacuation
zones see this and decide not to evacuate,
despite warnings from state and local emergency management,
they are unnecessarily putting their own lives
and the lives of first responders at grave risk, unquote.
Wow, the...
Wow, the fucking Ron DeSantis' press person?
The leopards are finally eating your face?
Have you joined the leopard-eating face party?
Wow, who could possibly have predicted this?
The Ron DeSantis team has been replaced
by the lizard people, I swear.
No, like, things got so bad
that in DeSantis' emergency declaration,
he had to specifically put in language
that stated that law enforcement will help ensure
that people can return to their property
after the evacuation has ended. Like, goofy. Goofy shit. And just like in general, all these FEMA
conspiracies are preventing people in need from requesting badly needed help from the agency.
I'm going to include this one clip from this guy who was interviewed on MSNBC talking about how
his family has been refusing help in North Carolina.
My father-in-law lives just outside of Asheville, North Carolina,
and he was badly damaged by Hurricane Helene.
And he has refused all FEMA help because he's a hardcore Trumper.
And he believes, he literally believes,
that if he accepts anything from FEMA, they're going to take his house.
I don't understand how so many people are under the spell of this
freaking con man. I don't understand it. Well, it's absolutely heartbreaking about your father.
So sorry to hear it. You know, it's hard. It's hard. Just it's hard to even imagine it. I mean,
he lost almost everything and he's refusing all help from the federal government and complaining to us that he doesn't have food, that he doesn't have the stuff he needs, and yet he won't accept the help.
What the hell are we supposed to do?
We're not in a position to be able to fly across the country and help him.
There's people begging us to get him to accept help, and he won't do it.
Wow.
And I guarantee you, I'm not the only one.
I guarantee you, I'm not the only one.
I wish there was something I could say as to, you know, I don't know.
Is there, does he have access to any electronics where you could send him some information debunking this and that he might we've done all of that we've done all of that
we've sent him we've sent him all the fema bulletins we've sent him all the stuff from
the fact checkers he doesn't believe it he thinks it's all he just believes trump literally dan he
just it's a cult he's a cult member i'm sorry to say it he's a he's a cult member
and he's my father-in-law and it sucks that's pretty bad that's uh that's devastating and i
think that yeah is very resonant to a lot of people right now and how this whole like
conspiracy misinfo ecosystem that's been getting worse slowly over the course of the eight years has just ruined families and puts people in constant active danger.
Now, these conspiracies have also led to threats against FEMA workers and meteorologists for both being a part of the conspiracy and for controlling the weather.
I'm going to read a quote from the Institute for
Strategic Dialogue, quote, falsehoods around hurricane response have spawned credible threats
and incitement to violence directed at the federal government. This includes calls to send militias
to face down FEMA for the perceived denial of aid and that individuals should, quote unquote,
shoot FEMA officials and the agency's emergency responders. Unverified claims
about attacks on FEMA representatives have been used to glorify and encourage violence, unquote.
Media Matters archived a TikTok video threatening FEMA employees, which received over 200,000 views,
saying, quote, Dear Feds and FEMA, if you're trying to deny people access to help in the affected area be advised we're still
under the war on terror emergency declaration if you violate your constitutional oath to protect
and assist the charge will be treason punishment can mean being unalived immediately by the citizens
you are withholding aid from unquote on tiktok they're threatening to unalive government
agents another video states quote public notice we the united states of america have declared
fema personnel engaged in obstructing local rescue efforts in the area impacted by hurricane helene
to be enemies of the
state. If FEMA personnel offer any further obstruction or fail to immediately assist to
their best ability, they can be arrested or shot or hung on site. Unquote. Jesus Christ.
Now, a lot of these conspiracy theories are also heavily anti-Semitic, talking about like the
religion of local officials, like I think like the mayor of Asheville and just in general,
combining these weather control conspiracy theories
with FEMA conspiracy theories,
saying that like the Jews
are somehow controlling all of this.
And like, that's just a recurring aspect
of these conspiracies
that I feel like it is worth mentioning,
especially because like the right
is like trying to weaponize claims of antisemitism
to attack the Democrats on Israel right now, which is absurd because the Democrats are
extremely pro-Israel. But still, their constituents are going to be spreading
all these very unhinged anti-Semitic conspiracy theories about Jews controlling weather
and using FEMA to hurt Christians in the Appalachians, all that kind of stuff.
Now, it's not just threats against FEMA
officials. Death threats have also been targeted against meteorologists, as Rolling Stone documented
in an article last week. Quote, I've been doing this for 46 years and it's never been like this,
says Alabama meteorologist James Spann. He says he's been inundated with misinformation and
threatening messages like, stop lying about the government controlling the weather or else, unquote. Great. A Washington DC based meteorologist
named Matthew Capusi said, quote, for me to post a hurricane forecast and for people to accuse me
of creating the hurricane by working for some secret Illuminati entity is disappointing and
distressing and it's resulting in a decrease in public trust, unquote.
So like, again, like, why is this all happening? A part of it is because the election is upcoming and people are trying to find reasons to think why Trump might lose. And they're saying that
the hurricanes are actually a plot by the Illuminati to make Trump lose the election
via having these storms controlled by Jews and Democrats to target Republican areas.
But like, what has changed in
the actual ecosystem to allow this to feel like it's so much worse than what it usually has been?
And I've kind of decided that everyone is now Alex Jones. Like everyone has become their own
little mini Alex Jones. Platforms have changed in the past eight years to create massive social and
financial incentives to go viral.
So now everyone is just doing what Alex Jones did, right?
Like Alex Jones learned that he could make a profit saying all kinds of crazy shit on air.
And now other people have also learned this lesson.
This is a part of, I think, what's going on now. How does everyone has the capacity to go viral by saying whatever crazy shit they can during a moment of crisis.
A few days ago, there was a really good article in The Atlantic by Charles Warzel titled,
I'm running out of ways to explain how bad this is.
This is going to be linked in the sources below.
I recommend you give it a read, but I'm going to read a paragraph from it here.
Quote, this is more than just a misinformation crisis.
To watch as real information is overwhelmed by
crank theories and public servants battle death threats is to confront two alarming facts. First,
that a durable ecosystem exists to ensconce citizens in an alternate reality. And second,
that the people consuming and amplifying those lies are not helpless dupes, but willing participants.
those lies are not helpless dupes, but willing participants. This reality fracturing is the result of an information ecosystem that is dominated by platforms that offer financial
and attentional incentives to lie and enrage, and to turn every tragedy and every large event
into a shameless content creation opportunity. This collides with a swath of people who would rather live in an alternate reality
built on distrust and grievance
than change their fundamental beliefs about the world.
Unquote.
I know, Mia, we've been talking about
this misinformation problem in the chat,
and I know you had some comments you wanted to share.
Yeah, there was a...
Oh, God, where did I first hear this?
Might have been a Philosophy Tube episode, but there's a bunch of philosophical stuff about how ignorance works and about how
it's not just like ignorance isn't just the state of not knowing something you have to actively
create it right you have to you have to go out of your way not to seek the information
that would that would sort of like you know cause you to have to know have to go out of your way not to seek the information that would that
would sort of like you know cause you to have to know or cause you to change your worldview or
cause you to like have to confront what your beliefs are so people actively sort of construct
this this reality around themselves so they don't have to do anything that ever sort of challenges
their own views and this is something that you can see
i mean you just you see it happening all over the place and this is one of the things that
we're still gets like gets right that is important is that like people are active participants in the
construction of of their own universes and now there's there's a financial incentive there's a
social incentive and there's also a cognitive incentive which is that like having to deal with
the fact you might be wrong but something fucking sucks yes and it's hard a cognitive incentive, which is that like having to deal with the fact that you might be wrong about something fucking sucks
and is hard.
And sometimes you just don't want to know.
Totally.
Yeah, I mean, and this is something that like myself,
Robert and you have been talking about
increasingly the past few years.
It feels like misinformation is an outdated model
to understand our current predicament, right?
Like misinformation is no
longer meant to, like, actually change minds or persuade people. It's just a mechanism to construct
and reinforce false realities. Like, in the recent meme politics episode, I talked about how
AI images of trans athletes or of immigrants stealing pets, like, these aren't meant to
convince anyone of their authenticity, but they exist in lieu of evidence to help people maintain their reality tunnel.
An information researcher at the University of Washington named Michael Caulfield wrote an
article earlier this year about how a whole bunch of mega people started to deny the authenticity
of those videos of Kamala Harris's rally in that Detroit hangar, showing like a massive,
a massive huge crowd with Air Force 1 or Air Force 2 landing and her
getting off. With these mega people saying
that this was like AI, this is fake, there was no way the crowd
would be this big. And they invented a whole bunch
of reasons for why this photo must be
fake. And this wasn't fake, this was
a real photo, this was easily verified. There's
like video evidence from multiple
sources showing that this is a real thing that happened.
But Caulfield wrote, quote,
the primary use of misinformation is not to change the beliefs of other people at all. Instead,
the vast majority of misinformation is offered as a service for people to maintain their beliefs
in face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, unquote. And yeah, I don't believe in giving these
people a degree of passivity, right? Like this is an active choice that they are doubling down and reinforcing and creating
their own reality tunnels to live in.
And I think the other aspect of this, this is something that Robert was talking with
me last night, is like the people also propagating this, the people creating the environments
to make this happen are also willing participants, right?
This is a big reason why Musk bought Twitter Twitter is so that it purposely could turn into the current conspiracy
like shit show that it currently is. Facebook used to be where conspiracy theorists gathered
to post their weird boomer opinions. And now it's Twitter alongside just actual, like useful,
verifiable information. And now because these two platforms have kind of combined how we have so much conspiracy
content on Twitter, it also just damages
the use of Twitter as a platform to look for real
information. And I think you can see the same thing with
TikTok, with its very loose content
moderation policy regarding
factual information, and the fact that people
use TikTok as its own search engine,
creating its own ecosystem of
misinformation, fully isolated away
from the rest of the internet.
And this project to like wear down collective reality is a long-term project by the right.
You could look at the John Birch Society and other anti-communist groups from the 50s,
who used to deliberately put out fake articles about communists infiltrating.
Fox News and a whole bunch of conservative mass media like talk radio was created at least in part as a reaction to Nixon being forced out of office. And a lot of
the same people funding right-wing media are also pushing for charter schools and attempts to
destroy public education. It's all an intentional effort to make people's media literacy go
completely down the toilet and propagate entire false versions of reality in service of a few rich
people and that's what our current situation is right now and i don't know if there's a way to
stop it as you heard in that clip from msnbc like fact checks don't work anymore because that's not
like the point of any of this it's not meant to actually persuade people it's only meant to
reinforce what they already want to believe so what do you do in a world post fact checking?
I don't know.
And we're going to have to find out.
I don't know.
Do you have any closing thoughts?
You know, I will say one of the few things I've ever seen that's gotten someone out of something like this is just sometimes it doesn't always work like this.
But every once in a while, you could have an experience that is so cognitively shattering to everything that you'd believed that it just implodes so mia you're advocating to dose your
republican family members with lsd is that what i'm hearing well no what i'm advocating is that
the people who think that china is a socialist state be sent to china and have to interact with
members of the chinese communist party Because I have seen this work.
It does work. It can.
I've seen it happen.
You can't talk to these people for more than five minutes.
But, I mean, you know, on a sort of more serious note,
I mean, this is something that, you know,
you're trying to fight emotions on a sort of intellectual level.
And so, like, if you want to deal with this,
I think you have to kind of be working on a sort of intellectual level. And so like, if you want to deal with this, you, I don't, I think you have to kind of be working on,
on a sort of like emotional act factor register.
And that sucks because it's,
you know,
it's effectively the abandonment of politics as politics.
It's,
it's arguably just a complete retreat into fascism.
But,
you know,
if you take the sort of understanding of fast, one of the elements of it as fascism is reducing all politics to aesthetics, right?
But we've hit this point where there's no centralizing viewpoint, like central reality tunnel that most people are in.
Partially because of these people trying to destroy it and partially because the people who were running the mainstream media blew themselves up by lying about Iraq and then by spending 30 agenda. So now a bunch of other people who want to just destroy everything inside of
those rails are just like detonating bombs inside of all of our like
psychological conscious.
I mean,
I think the guy who was talking about his stepdad in Asheville is correct.
It is a cult and you have to treat it like you would treat a cult. You can't fact check
them out of this. You have to treat them
like your friend just joined
Scientology. Some people
might just choose to completely cut the person off because
they find it too dangerous. And that's fine.
But I think there should be others that remain
as a lifeline to the person, right?
If they ever one day realize, oh no,
I'm in a cult and I need help, there needs
to be a way for them
to get out. There needs to be a lifeline for them to escape. And this is the only way that like,
quote unquote, cult deprogramming has worked. You can point to like people who've like gotten out
of the QAnon conspiracy theory. Like this is the only tactic that actually works. And it's reliant
on the courtesy of others, right? It's reliant that you have to put yourself
in a degree of danger by maintaining contact with this person that is kind of dangerous because
they are in this like very volatile cult there needs to be some lifeline for them and i think
that's really the only way that i know of right now that shows a degree of success in getting
people out of this like fucked up conspiracy. And it sucks, and it's not
easy. And most people
promoting cult deprogramming are
hacks with pseudoscience.
And it turns out this is just a very
emotional problem, and it
requires, unfortunately, emotional solutions
that a simple Reuters
fact check will not suffice. So anyway,
that is my rundown on
what's currently going on with the
hurricane misinformation. It's really bad. Yep, it could happen here.
Hola mi gente, it's Honey German and I'm bringing you Gracias, Come Again, Thank you. We're talking real conversations with our Latin stars, from actors and artists to musicians and creators,
sharing their stories, struggles, and successes.
You know it's going to be filled with chisme laughs
and all the vibes that you love.
Each week, we'll explore everything from music and pop culture
to deeper topics like identity, community,
and breaking down barriers in all sorts of industries.
Don't miss out on the fun, el té caliente and life stories.
Join me for Gracias Come Again,
a podcast by Honey German,
where we get into todo lo actual y viral.
Listen to Gracias Come Again on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast,
and we're kicking off our second season digging into how Tex'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.
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.
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.
Hey, I'm Gianna Parente.
And I'm Jimei Jackson-Gadsden. We're the hosts of Let's Talk
Offline, the early career podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts. One of the most exciting
things about having your first real job is that first real paycheck. You're probably thinking,
yay, I can finally buy a new phone. But you also have a lot of questions like, how should I be
investing this money? I
mean, how much do I save? And what about my 401k? Well, we're talking with finance expert Vivian
Toot, aka Your Rich BFF, to break it all down. I always get roasted on the internet when I say
this out loud, but I'm like, every single year you need to be asking for a raise of somewhere
between 10 to 15%. I'm not saying you're going to get 15% every single year,
but if you ask for 10 to 15 and you end up getting eight,
that is actually a true raise.
Listen to this week's episode of Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now, and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast, Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls from anonymous strangers all over the world
as a fake gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains and learn a little bit about their lives.
I know that's a weird concept, but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give it a shot.
Matter of fact, here's a few more examples of the kinds of calls we get on this show.
I live with my boyfriend and I found his piss jar in our apartment.
I collect my roommate's toenails and fingernails.
I have very overbearing parents.
Even at the age of 29, they won't let me move out of their house. So if you want an excuse to get
out of your own head and see what's going on in someone else's head, search for Therapy Gecko
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. it's the one with the green guy on it it's it could happen here the podcast
about things falling apart i had to put them back together again i'm your host via long
so for people who listened to yesterday's episode which i'm hoping is like most of you
yeah so yesterday was a very kind of downer episode on hurricane misinformation and the way that these sort of people construct these reality tunnels and, you know, have become active participants in their own sort of propagandize.
of what you can do for sort of individual people, right?
Which is the same mechanisms you use to get someone out of a cult,
which is you stay with them,
you maintain enough personal connection that you can pull them out if they ever want to come out.
But that's also not a large-scale solution to this problem.
And in order to talk about a large-scale solution
to both our present social crisis and the ecological crisis
that this social crisis is being aimed to sort of
cover up right now i'm talking to rosewater who's the hub coordinator for the sunrise movements dc
hub and delegate to sunrise's delegate body and also a solar punk organizer rosewater welcome to
the show thank you so much for having me on yeah hi everybody my name is rosewater and yeah long
time fan of cool zone media y'all were my introduction to my current like democratic confederalist politics.
Oh, that's awesome.
So it feels like a really fun, like full circle moment to have a chance to be on the pod.
So the specific thing we're talking about is in terms of there being an actual plan for what people are doing, like past the next three weeks, like after the election, the biggest thing that has been happening is something we've talked about a little bit on this show is the proposed 2028 general strike.
So do you want to talk a little bit about what that is before we get into sunrise's involvement and yeah the sort of broader story yeah yeah so um i feel like most people who follow leftist politics were following the uaw strike against the big three automakers
last fall and people found that they found their strike really inspiring and they had like
really strong gains that were
the sort of straightforward, increased pay, better benefits type stuff, and people were
celebrating that.
But I would say the two actual most important changes were not reported on nearly as much.
One was they eroded their labor peace clause, and they made it possible to go on strike if any of their facilities were
closed which labor peace has in my opinion been sort of strangling the u.s left for 80 years
yeah can you explain what that is for people i think we've usually more broadly talked about
is no strike clauses but yeah can you explain like what that is yeah so labor peace is essentially a truce that was established between the labor movement
capitalists and the u.s government where the labor movement gets generalized rights and the
u.s government is like a quote fair mediator between capitalists and the labor movement.
And capitalists get a consistent workforce and peace, like peace from disruptions. And this essentially was established between the beginning of World War II and the end of the Red Scare,
when all of the socialists and anarchists and communists were expelled from the labor movement.
when all of the socialists and anarchists and communists were expelled from the labor movement.
And it felt like a good deal to a lot of liberals at the time and a lot of normal rank and file workers at the time. But on reflection, it has really strangled the U.S. labor movement.
And so the fact that the UAW eroded their no-strike clause at all is a huge precedent, right?
Yeah, and this is something, I mean, I don't remember if this actually got into the Labor
Notes episode that I did, but I remember at Labor Notes, I was listening to people talk about this,
and this is stuff that I think the global impact of it has also been really underplayed. Like,
I mean, obviously, there was a lot of attention paid this in mexico right because there's a lot of like you know the the structure
of the of the auto industry is such that not so obvious to me i didn't even think about that until
just now yeah so one of the things that nafta did is that sort of right across the border right
right a whole sort of range of factories that are right across the border that operate off
mexican labor that do some of the auto industry stuff so there's always
been sort of connections between the more independent unions there and sort of american
unions so but like you know but this is also struck as being watched really really heavily
in china yeah which is interesting because like chinese state unions are a fucking joke yeah
they're basically not real unions at all and the extent to which you know
the china's version of the labor peace was also the the deal was less like you get rights and we
get like labor peace and more like uh we're going to just stamp out our working class organization
yeah completely in a way that that was even more thorough than
what happened here where most of it got
wiped out. I think
the breaking of the labor piece
and the demonstration that there is
another way is something that
has reverberated massively
across a lot of different places
that I don't think both the people organizing
the strike or the sort of
press coverage of it has really gotten into sort of how wide the reverberations of this have been. that caught my attention at first was immediately afterwards they changed the end of their contract
date to international workers day 2028 and they called on every union in the country and later
every union in the world to align with that contract and go on strike with them on may 1st
2028 and that was the first time like correct me if i'm wrong
that was the first time that a major labor union in america has called for a planned general strike
since 1948 yeah i think that's true and i and I think there being an actual plan and there being a way to do it that's legal
is a big deal
because part of the problem with this
is that there's, you know,
unlike a country like France,
American labor law is specifically designed
so that you don't have this happen.
And there's a bunch of legal mechanisms for this,
but it's very, very specifically designed
to make sure that people are not allowed to do solidarity strikes people are not allowed to like coordinate
the entire power of their of of their action yeah and this is a pretty promising way around that
yeah this may be better for later in the episode but one of the things that we're doing is we're in collaboration
with the institute for social ecology doing a teach-in on labor peace and the history of general
strikes in the u.s about a week after the election in order to orient ourselves in whatever new
political context exists there but But yeah. So,
yeah,
I think that's a jumping off point to get into.
I think sunrise is kind of an unlikely organization that people would think to be getting like excited and trying to get involved in a labor struggle.
But yeah,
let's talk about how sunrise got involved.
And I guess first also,
I don't know how many people listening to this know what sunrise is and if you do know what sunrise is that might also make you
more surprised you're getting involved in labor but yes let's talk about that yeah so sunrise is
a youth climate movement that has been one of the main advocates for the idea of a green new deal
when aoc first came into office and she did that like sit in at nancy
pelosi's office like that was a sunrise action and we historically have been an org that sort of like
tries to bridge the divide between people who are sort of apolitically liberal and like more
radical politics which is a hard place to be yeah someone's got to do it yeah but we've
really focused on trying to like connect environmentalism with labor actually what
our main slogans the main intervention that we've succeeded at has been associating the idea of
environmental action with jobs like green jobs and stuff like that the problem with
that has been one it has been primarily rhetorical especially after bernie's loss in 2020 yeah and
stories matter but material conditions matter more yeah and the reason that we didn't we weren't more
materially involved in connecting labor and environmentalism, and by that I mean connecting with unions, is that unions' leadership was often very far to our right.
Yeah.
Especially in the United States.
So it didn't feel like who we are.
Are we a radical movement that sort of positions itself rhetorically as more normie in order to bring in like young people who whose parents won't let them, you know uh join a fight to end all unjust hierarchies
or yeah like seize the means of production etc like are we are we a radical movement that poses
normie or are we a like liberal progressive movement that sometimes asks for radical things
and that's been a really big conflict within the
org these last few years because the path to any climate action, the only path that a lot of people
have seen has been electoral stuff, pushing politicians and things like that. In a lot of
ways, the Inflation Reduction Act was a direct result of sunrise's organizing and our work to try
and force through the build back better program but it aligned us with biden and from the point
of view of a lot of our organizers like even if it was a victory it didn't feel like one and it's certainly not nearly large enough to actually
handle the scale of the crisis and so essentially the more radical wing of the of the movement has
been winning that fight over the last year or two fights a strong word, has been winning that debate over the last year or two.
And specifically this last summer, when the American Federation of Teachers joined the general strike, which almost no one has heard about. But the AFT and their 1.7 million members
have already decided that they're going to try and join the 2028 general strike so
it's not just the uaw anymore yeah but unfortunately we need to take an ad break we come back we are
going to get to that because that i think will be looked back as one of the pivotal moments of
this whole thing that everyone kind of just missed when it happened i completely agree
it's going to be amazing yeah okay a little ads unfortunately
buy gold.
We're back.
Don't buy gold.
At some point, I'm going to write a don't buy gold episode.
You think this is a joke.
There is a don't buy gold episode.
It's being worked on
in the in the mia laboratory the gold scammer ad thing okay back back back to the present or i
guess back to the future i don't know time time is falling apart here but let's talk about the
aft the american federation of teachers right and i don't know what they've announced in terms of this right so the american federation of teachers sort of led by the chicago teachers union
the baltimore teachers union and to a smaller extent the dc teachers union managed to get
through a resolution at their convention that when you read the title it's very boring it's like on aligning
with the uaw but when you actually click on the document and you read it it is like class struggle
fire like reading it from beginning to end i felt exhilaration like i felt like a fire exploded my
heart it was so amazing and i heard about this the same weekend that we were
actually having a climate disaster training in DC, right? We had about 100 leaders from across
our movement, about half of our staff there. And at the beginning, people were really excited for
climate disaster actions responding to moments like this, actually.
But when we talked about victory, when we talked about, and we're going to have mass mobilization against the climate crisis, where the whole of our society pitches in to do this.
The federal government does a World War ii style mobilization against this destruction
and stuff like that you could tell that people didn't see a path you could tell yeah and so
like this news dropping that the teachers were joining a general strike we're joining
mass disruption in some meaningful way it hit us like like a bomb. It was the perfect moment for it to hit us
because it was like, yeah, if the auto workers are going on strike and the academic workers
are going on strike and the teachers are going on strike, then why can't the students go on strike?
And not only why can't they, but the students must go on strike. And that was sort of the moment that really got our movement from, yes, we would like to figure out some sort of different way to get to the mass disruption needed in order to win serious action on the climate crisis, to like there's a path yeah like we see we see a path it's it's
core memory like if you know like inside out like core memory formed that weekend it was it was
beautiful yeah and i think what's you know i mean there's a couple things that are important here
right but i think it's being underplayed exactly how important it is to have teachers unions being into this because the thing about
teachers unions is that they're an extremely important lever on labor movement because
the way the capitalist society is structured right is such that most child care is just sort of
like all of that labor is basically it's been pushed on the teachers right and the moment that childcare collapses right a bunch of people suddenly also who are not
normally on strike suddenly are not able to do their jobs because they have they have to find
some way to take care of their kids and so this is this is sort of a massive like leverage point
and in the in the same way that like sort of dock worker strikes or i mean not in the same way but like in a sense that a strike by these people can shut down way way more labor than just theirs
directly right this is something that's very important yeah yeah i never really thought about
that i've thought about them in the context of like their sort of community pillars so like when
teachers go on strike they often bring way more community support with them than other types of workers.
But yeah, you're totally right.
Like outside of like the community going with them.
Also, that is the primary form of child care that exists in this country.
Yeah. And this is something that like teachers organizers, like teachers union organizers are very big on sort of emphasizing because they have an enormous amount of social power.
Yeah.
And it's kind of to a larger extent,
hasn't been tapped for,
for the kinds of sort of mass political action that we're seeing here.
Like it's one of those things,
it's one of those sort of leverage points that's always existed,
but there hasn't really been the kind of like political will or momentum or sort of
organizing capacity to fully mobilize it and yeah and so i guess i want to move from here to talking
about sunrise's involvement in the strike because i think this part's really interesting both in
terms of there being like both in terms of strike support and student strikes so can you talk i
guess about the sort of politics of student strikes
and how you see this fitting into the broader thing that's happening?
Yeah, yeah.
So the climate movement sort of had the height of its power in 2019, I would say,
when you had Fridays for Future and like Greta Thunberg,
climate strikes all across Europe and America. But I would use the word strike in quotes because sometimes you had full
walkouts. Sometimes you had like those sorts of huge things. But most of the time, it was
students asking permission from authority figures to participate in a rally and things like that.
Whereas in a class struggle context, like a strike is people going to the authority figure and saying,
this is not occurring because we're not going to be here.
You know, like this has been a critique that's existed inside of Sunrise, like from that period for years now, which was one of the reasons why we haven't focused doing this sort of thing,
especially in more conservative areas,
while also teaching them how to do it.
Because in really meaningful ways,
schools are practice work.
Yep.
Like they were directly modeled after factories in the 1800s.
So schools are modeled after work. So if schools are practiced work,
then student strikes can be practiced labor organizing.
Yeah, I mean, and turning schools from sort of laboratories for the reproduction of the
class system into laboratories for learning class struggle is something that's very,
very important, both in the immediate term
and in the longer term. Yeah. We've talked a bit about this on other episodes, but like there
hasn't been the kind of like generational pass down of organizing skills that we've seen in
previous generations. And the way, honestly, we were talking, this is a talk about this in our
sort of UAW staff union episode, right? The way that a lot of these unions are running their staff systems also aren't designed to build up continuous momentum for people who learn how to organize and keep doing it. And this is a way we can sort of restart that treadmill to create a generation of organizers, both in this moment and for the future. Yes, exactly. And I have had many critiques of my organization, many critiques of my movement.
But the thing that has always made me want to stick around has been seeing the young organizers
who find themselves here. The primary person who does our press stuff in the movement is turning 18 in
three days. Wow. They're one of the best organizers I know. Wow. It's inspiring, but it's something
that I want our movement to do at scale, as opposed to having something like that every
once in a while. Like you said, the idea of creating an entire generation.
And I'd love to talk about a thought process
and plan around that after the ad break.
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all right we're back awesome so one of the things that i think is really, in terms of, like, for us, a stable niche in the movement ecology is to be sort of a feeder for radical labor in a sort of way.
Like, because one of the things is, even if you are radical and you go into the labor movement, oftentimes you are going to be taught practices that rely on labor peace
in meaningful ways. Practices that are going to be really disrupted if labor law weren't a thing
and stuff like that. And it's something that holds back our ability to create a strongly
organized working class. But in the context of schools, right, there is no labor law.
There is no labor peace in a high school, right? So as a place to practice the sort of radical
class struggle organizing that we're talking about, it's sort of the perfect place because
it's a simplified version of the workplace of like adult reality there are
obviously many other like blockages like students and like young people minors have far far less
power and far fewer rights than you do once you become an adult and their family has far more
power over them there are huge barriers but in terms of like
grounding people in class struggle labor organizing tactics i'm thinking of things that you can learn
about in uh jane mclevey's book no shortcuts and stuff like that they can learn how to
use structure tests and like use hard organizing conversations in order to build
their power in a specific like context and things like that and whether or not they actually manage
the the strike right at the end of it you have an 18 year old entering the workforce yeah is a
skilled trained class struggle organizer who has gained their politics
completely outside of the context of labor peace yeah and i think that that's one of the important
aspects of this and i think that the second one is something you were talking about earlier which is
sort of bridging the sort of labor ecological divide and i think that's been happening more
which is encouraging because yes there's been an enormous effort to make sure this doesn't happen.
I mean, I think we've talked about this on this show at some point.
I know Margaret's talked about it on Cool People Does Cool Stuff.
But, I mean, one of the most famous times people tried to do this was an IWW organizer named Jodi Berry.
And she...
So, legally speaking, we don't know who killed her what i will say
is that she was killed by a car bomb that was virtually identical to a car bomb that was built
by the fbi that was edited by the fbi in their bomb like training things like a couple of weeks
before so uh right we genuinely don't know who killed her however comma someone someone built
a car bomb and blew her up in order to stop this
from happening so it's something that is right very very obviously seen by the powers that be
is extremely dangerous yeah in the same way that we know exactly the singular one person who on his
own completely killed martin luther king with no support from the u.s Yeah, yeah. And like, you know,
I think this is an important moment
to sort of do this because one of
the things that the right is trying to do
to like
capture this sort of like moments of radical
labor has been like, oh
yeah, all the problems with the UAW are because the
government wants to force them to make electric cars.
It's like, you know, there's very much like an
anti-ecological angle to the way that sort of like republican
like co-option is happening it's another thing that we can use a simultaneously tactic for our
side and helps defeat a co-option attempt in addition to this being a way to like take on
the climate crisis in meaningful ways the climate crisis is also a way where we can make more radical demands.
This is one of the reasons that I really love Sunrise and ecological, like,
eco-socialist movements in general. Because if you ask someone to seriously consider,
how do we address the climate crisis? And you're not paying them to have a specific answer, which is nonprofit industrial complex things. If you ask someone to seriously
consider what do we need to do in order to address the climate crisis, in six months,
you have a radical, no matter what. In my experience, no one who I've ever talked to
who has thought about that question seriously for six
months and not avoided it has not come out the other end being like oh we need a general strike
we need a revolution you know yeah and so like being able to bring that exact that exact analysis
into the labor movement i think is one of the things that can bring back radical labor.
You talk to labor leaders who might feel comfortable with labor peace, and they're like,
we can do this, we have time. And you're like, how much time exactly do we have?
Like, really think about it. Yeah. And this is something that we've seen,
and I think this is sort of a good place to wrap up. This is something that we've also seen in the way that immediate short-term disaster response is happening, where, you know, all of these sort of, you of of crisis and also the immediacy of the fact that the way that we have been doing
things simply is not actually a functional way to for example respond to a hurricane yeah i think
there's a bridge there between the sort of immediacy of this like mutual aid disaster response politics and sort of long-term goal of
of trying to actually like have sustained substantive action against the sort of climate
devastation yeah i completely agree and this is quite a tangent from the specific topic that we're
thinking about but when i think about democratic confederalist politics, like Rojava was able to
take power and have its revolution because the state retreated. And ideally, we don't have a
civil war that causes the state to retreat, ideally. Yeah. One thing we do know will happen
and is happening right now is that the state retreats during disasters. The state retreats
during climate disasters. And so if we're prepared to take that
temporary mutual aid structures and jump on them in order to create systems like what they have in
and create like like build our labor movements build our neighborhood power build our direct
democracy capabilities and be able to be like no we want to keep these when out like
whenever the police come back whenever da da da da da yeah like there's going to be devastation
but there's also a lot of opportunities for creating really really beautiful things
yeah and i want to close on there's now a whole argument as as to whether or not whether or not buenaventura derudi who was
one of this uh like very prominent organizers in the spanish revolution ever actually said this
but there was a quote attributed to him that goes roughly we are not in the least afraid of ruins
like we are the people we are the people who built this world and we'll fucking do it again wow
that's beautiful yeah and and i think that's
in some sense the attitude that we have to be going into this here right of you know like the
path that we are on now and this is true even if a movement takes power that is dedicated to actually
sort of dealing with the climate crisis right the stuff that we have now is normal yeah this is just
what the future is going to be there's going to be disaster, there's going to be storms, there's going to be destruction but again
fundamentally
we are the people who built this world
and we can build it again
we're going to have to build it again
and we're going to build it better
actually that makes me think of
this one
song that we sing a lot in
Sunrise, we have a really big cultural
focus on movement song
i would really love it if that could be the outro yeah there are more waters rising this i know
this i know there are more waters rising this i, who is a movement musician actually from
Asheville, North Carolina. It's not fully clear to me right now if they are safe,
but we've been singing this song for many years. It is a song that I think really resonates with the thing that Mia Mia just finished
talking about, knowing what's on the horizon, knowing the ruin that we may face, but also knowing that we're not afraid of that
and that we can get through it.
I will rebuild the mountains, this I know.
Yeah, so I hope that you all find the strength with this song
and with these plans to rebuild the mountains. Thank you.
I will wade through the waters when they find their way to me. I will wade through the waters,
this I know, this I know. I will wade through the waters, this I know.
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.
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,
or wherever else you get your podcasts.
Check out betteroffline.com.
Hola mi gente, it's Honey German and I'm bringing you Gracias, Come Again,
the podcast where we dive deep into the world of Latin culture,
musica, peliculas, and entertainment with some of the biggest names in the game.
If you love hearing real conversations with your favorite Latin celebrities,
artists, and culture shifters, this is the podcast for you.
We're talking real conversations with our Latin stars,
from actors and artists to musicians and creators,
sharing their stories, struggles, and successes. You know it's going to be filled with chisme laughs and all
the vibes that you love. Each week, we'll explore everything from music and pop culture to deeper
topics like identity, community, and breaking down barriers in all sorts of industries. Don't miss
out on the fun, el té caliente, and life stories. Join me for Gracias Come Again, a podcast by Honey German,
where we get into todo lo actual y viral.
Listen to Gracias Come Again on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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. In May 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.
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.
Hey, I'm Gianna Parente.
And I'm Jimei Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline, Hey, I'm Gianna Pardenti. And I'm Jemay Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline, the early career podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
One of the most exciting things about having your first real job is that first real paycheck.
You're probably thinking, yay, I can finally buy a new phone.
But you also have a lot of questions like, how should I be investing this money?
I mean, how much do I save? And what about my 401k?
Well, we're talking with finance expert Vivian Tu, aka Your Rich BFF, to break it all down.
I always get roasted on the internet when I say this out loud, but I'm like,
every single year you need to be asking for a raise of somewhere between 10 to 15%. I'm not saying you're going to get 15% every single year, but if you ask for 10 to 15
and you end up getting eight, that is actually a true raise. Listen to this week's episode of
Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating. I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now and I was dating. I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast, Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls from anonymous strangers all over the world as a fake gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains and learn a little bit about their lives.
I know that's a weird concept, but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give it a shot.
Matter of fact, here's a few more examples of the kinds of calls we get on this show.
I live with my boyfriend and I found his piss jar in our apartment.
I collect my roommate's toenails and fingernails.
I have very overbearing parents.
Even at the age of 29, they won't let me move out of their house.
So if you want an excuse to get out of your own head and see what's going on in someone else's head,
search for Therapy Gecko on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's the one with the green guy on it.
Hello, and welcome to the podcast. It's a calm introduction today.
Just a chill one. It's me, James, and I'm joined by Amir. How are you doing, Amir?
Not the best, but you know, we're hanging in there. We're defeating the illness and the
frailness of the human body. overcoming uh the surly bonds of earth to
touch the face of god or something that's what elon musk does every day of course yeah we're
doing this with the power of cough medicine it's gonna be great yeah yeah not the kind of cough
medicine that you can only buy so much of okay so we're here today powered by cough medicine
to discuss the united nations interim force in leban Of course, a thing that we haven't talked about before,
but that lots of people are talking about on the internet.
And I wanted to just clear up what I think are some misunderstandings
or just a lack of background, sort of explain what they do,
explain who it's composed of, a little bit of history
and sort of its role here as Israel begins attacking Lebanon as it did Gaza.
And as it has continued to attack the West Bank as well.
Yeah. And as we're going to get to the end of this episode, they've started making a small push into Syria.
So great things happening here.
We'll get to that at the end of the episode.
Yeah. Israel once again employing an entirely proprietary understanding
of borders and where they are and how they work maybe they're actually uh the no borders state
you know like uh benedict anderson my opposition to the sykes-bicot borders is is well known but
not like this man this is not what i meant whenkes was so bored. In the Venn diagram, the overlap of people who disagree with Sykes-McCoy,
it's Mia Wong, the Kurdistan Workers' Party, and Israel.
But it's very small, and they disagree with it for very different reasons.
ISIS, too.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, yeah.
You're really in good company.
Yeah.
I remember back in 2014.
So this one's for...
There are a bunch of kids who listen to this show. by kids i mean people who aren't like 27 um who don't remember the fact that you
could just argue with isis people on twitter oh yeah in like 2014 2015 and like they had a really
good pr operation oh incredible yeah and one of the arguments he would make was like well yeah
we're trying to destroy the imperialists like it's like there's no borders and we're like well okay like you're doing this
by establishing ISIS and it's like
really
yeah no that was a
wild time when you could argue that like
you can still argue with like an
Assadist occasionally on Twitter or
like oh sure but like this wasn't even just
like people who support them this was
like actual ISIS PR guys
yeah yeah that was their
whole job was to argue with you yeah um there are some pretty good articles from back in that time
period about that if you're too young to remember that but yeah so we're talking about unifil today
right the united nations interim force in lebanon why are we talking about them because the idf has
spent the last week or so edging on just openly attacking them. And it has more or
less openly attacked them, but it hasn't done so in like a complete way, I guess. We'll talk a
little bit now about some of the things which have happened, because I think we should probably start
there. And then we'll explain who UNIFIL are, what they do, why they're there, etc. A little bit of
history. So UNIFIL has called the situation with the IDF extremely serious and a flagrant violation of international law.
A phrase which is used every time Israel does anything because it's true.
And then nothing happens.
And then nothing happens.
Yeah.
And that's, I think, where we're going to end up today is that, like, it's good that they are there.
Right. right like just to big picture this what israel has done in lebanon in gaza and in the west bank
is it has attacked anyone who is any form of outside observer right it has killed aid workers
it has killed journalists and it has shot artillery rounds at peacekeepers injured
peacekeepers in lebanon right anyone who can provide any form of independent oversight
who can provide any form of accountability for who can provide any form of accountability for
what they're doing is in danger and this like is more or less i mean russia does this a little bit
too right but like among like i don't know what we're supposed to uh understand israel as a
democracy but like this war seems to be pretty unpopular even there and then yahoo really isn't
he's taking the trump approach to democracy let's say israel like seemingly murdering journalists as part of his policy as a goal of
its invasion of gaza is uh pretty unique even by the standards of like other western militaries
who have done some pretty terrible things in the middle east in the last 20 years so some of the
things it's done in recent days it's fired smoke rounds about 100 meters from their compounds,
causing Unifil peacekeepers to have to don their gas masks.
15 of them were injured.
They had skin irritation from whatever the munition was.
I don't quite know what it was.
I think expired smokes can do that and tear gases.
Old tear gas can do that.
You're not supposed to use tear gas.
Yeah, that's a war crime. Yeah, that's a war crime yeah that's a war crime it's a war crime that lots of people do to be fair like it they wouldn't be the first
one i'd seen but then again right like these are people are they signatures to a geneva convention
actually i don't know that's a good they are they don't give a fuck does it really matter
but yeah have a look i'm interested to know yeah they actually have ratified the convention
which i guess makes them mildly more there you go international law bound in the u.s which is the ultimate rogue
state yeah yeah exactly i mean israel is pretty much a rogue state at this point right like that
i think is oh yeah the sort of the frame of analysis through which they should be understood
a rogue state doing violent settler colonialism wherever the fuck it wants with your taxpayer money because apparently there's nothing it can do which will
cause it to have one centimeter of accountability from the u.s yeah other things they've been
getting up to they've knocked down compound walls of the unifil compounds can we explain what unifil
is by the way yeah sure so the unifil is the united nations interim force in lebanon it's tasked with
peacekeeping monitoring the withdrawal of the idf so in theory the idf as we'll get into has
invaded lebanon many times has in theory since 2006 which was the last time it sort of
invaded lebanon like it's invaded lebanon on a very small scale like hundreds of times right 2006, which was the last time it sort of invaded Lebanon.
Like it's invaded Lebanon on a very small scale,
like hundreds of times, right?
Like for instance, stepping across the border,
which the border is not entirely agreed upon
by Israel and Lebanon,
but the United Nations has imposed
something called a blue line,
which is what it considers to be the border.
Israeli troops will go across that to trim trees a lot
so they can like spy more
effectively right they literally have towers and cameras and stuff but in 2006 people who are old
like myself will remember israel last time it did a sort of full-scale evasion of lebanon
and on its withdrawal i'll just go through the history of uniform now we can talk about the
attacks later i guess so they're supposed to keep the idf and hezbollah in theory
out of an area between the litani river and the blue line the blue line is where the un drew the
border in 2000 and the idea is that the border was drawn there by the un to determine if israel had
withdrawn from lebanon that doesn't necessarily mean that all parties accepted it's the border they don't but it is blue line for now the unifil have been in lebanon since 1978 that was one of the times when
israel invaded lebanon at that point they were looking for the plo yeah i think the plo had
crossed over from lebanon to attack and massacre people in israel right? At which point Israel then decided to just go hog and
fully invade Lebanon in 78.
It invaded again in 82 while
UNIFIL were there and
it sort of bypassed UNIFIL position
to that point and it doesn't mean that people didn't
die in these invasions. UNIFIL troops
are peacekeepers because they did,
right? Like, it's a dangerous place to be.
Also, like, 82 is like the Sabro Shetila massacre.
Like, it's just like hide to be also like 82 is like the sabro shatila massacre like yes like i mean just like hideous israeli massacres of uh refugee camps just the kind
of thing that like used to cause more anger in the u.s that it did now like yeah now it's another
day that ends in y right yeah you know they bombed our hospital again it's a year of bombing
hospitals now.
And it doesn't seem to register anymore.
It doesn't make the headlines.
Yeah, in 82, Israel bombed compounds.
And it took Israel until the year 2000 to quote-unquote withdraw from Lebanon.
And at that point, that was when the blue line was drawn, right?
During that time before 2000, it wasn't just the IDF that was operating in the area. You also had the South Lebanese army.
I don't like the division of groups in this part of the world exclusively along religious lines,
because I think that doesn't entirely explain things always. And I think it's like a very
analyst brain way of seeing things, like to be like, Oh, these are the Shiites and they do this.
These are the Sunnis and they do this.
But the SLA is,
is a majority Christian organization.
And like it began as its own independent thing in the,
in the civil war in Lebanon,
but it became more or less an Israeli proxy,
right?
It's certainly in this area.
And the UN calls them Israeli de facto forces,
which is kind of a bold move from the UN, actually.
Like, to just say it.
Of course, saying it and doing it is another thing.
But, like, during the time from 82 to 2000,
Israel invaded multiple times, right?
Including in 1996, when just in the year of 1996,
Israel fired on UNIFIL peacekeepers 270 times.
Jesus fucking Christ. So, like, I like i think that's like every weekday
for the entire year to put things in perspective you know like if they took weekends off
uh they fired on them every weekday including shelling a unifil compound after the withdrawal
in 2000 withdrawal unifil's task was peacekeeping monitoring the withdrawal and assisting the lebanese government in restoring its authority in the area under un mandate 1701 2006 it's
elevated again uh and eventually it's sort of ground to a standstill that time ground to a
standstill on top of a massive pile of civilian bodies as it tends to do right they bombed beirut
in 2006 i remember that i was um i was traveling in the middle east in 2006
i remember just being like oh this is it's i'd want to think to watch war on tv when you're at
home but when you're that little bit closer and it's people who are like yeah my cousin is there
my brother is there a good school friend of mine was was in beirut i remember like
it was one of my earlier
experiences of just being like this is horrific and there's nothing we can do like no one seems
to care no one's going to stop them and like here we are getting on for two decades later and in
fact no one has stopped them they're still doing it talking of things that no one can stop yeah
no one can stop the relentless march of capitalism, and that is why we now
have to pivot to advertisements.
We are back.
So in 2006,
once again,
Israel killed UN peacekeepers, right?
Perhaps the most notable incident
is when a precision-guided bomb struck a bunker in which four UN peacekeepers were sheltering.
They'd been shelled 14 times that day.
They had then gone to their bunker, right, to be protected from the shelling,
at which point they received this precision-guided munition, which killed four of them.
The peacekeepers were from Austria, Canada, China, and Finland.
The peacekeepers were from Austria, Canada, China, and Finland.
Later, the UN sent a quick reaction force and a rescue team,
which the IDF also shelled.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
I think this may be the time to point out that I think a lot of people are maybe hopeful,
and maybe it's true,
that if Israel crosses a line with attacking European people, that will matter more to the states and governments of the world than it has done with killing Palestinian civilians.
And to a degree, they might be right.
You've had statements from a dozen or so countries that Israel shouldn't be attacking, but they're still getting this fire hose of money and weapons.
There's still been no actual accountability.
I think that will actually stop them from doing what they're doing.
That's not the fault of the people on the ground in UNIFIL for the most part.
Yeah.
But nonetheless, it's the case.
It was also in that incident in 2006 that I was talking about,
UNIFIL called the IDF 10 times to ask them to stop shelling.
And this bunker, by the way, I'm not talking about like concealed position, right?
Like I've been in bunkers and I'm away for work that you might not be able to see very easily.
This bad boy is painted bright white with the letters UN on it.
Like it's incredibly well marked.
It's impossible to miss.
You know, it stands out like a sore thumb
that's where they dropped their precision guided munition there was also an incident in 2010
this might be one people remember and this is one of the tree trimming incidents
so the idf was trying to trim trees on the blue line uh the lebanese military perceived them to
have entered lebanon i'm sure the idf perceived themselves to be inside Israel the IDF's understanding of borders as I said is somewhat uh unique and so
Indonesian UNIFIL troops were there this is a particularly interesting incident the Indonesian
troops seem to be pretty popular in Lebanon from what I can tell there are 41 nations that take
part in UNIFIL right um but there are large contingents of spanish french
german italian and irish peacekeepers and indonesian and napoli peacekeepers as well
the indonesians are interesting because their government doesn't recognize israel
and so they have they have no diplomacy like i don't quite know how they manage that because
as we'll get into unifil is controlled by this thing called a tripartite mechanism,
whereby they have to agree on almost everything with the government of Lebanon
or the military of the Lebanese army and the IDF,
which is, it's kind of classic UN, right?
You have these people there who are positioned to do something really important right now,
which is to stop the IDF doing in lebanon what he's done
in gaza but they've managed to engineer themselves into a situation where they the idf also has a
veto on pretty much anything they can do yeah which like i was told for i spoke to someone who
was very familiar with the operations of unifil and they were telling me for instance so the idf
had been able to control what munitions they were able to bring into the
country jesus which matters because as we'll get into one of the things that idf likes to do is
like literally knock on their front door with main battle tanks right they actually knocked down the
front gate of the unifil compound with a macava tank certainly like knocking the front gate down
with a macava is one way of going about asking. Yeah, which is insane.
Yeah.
Like people just completely lost their minds.
Yeah, that's the thing, right?
Like I think that's what I want folks to take away from this is that like it's unlikely that the UN is going to go toe to toe with the IDF at this point.
Yeah, no.
That doesn't mean, as I've seen people saying that either they're there to
spy for the idf they're not the idf keeps killing them yeah in quite large numbers like i think 42
irish people have been killed in the history of uniform deployments dozens from other countries
too right nor does this mean there's a netanyahu has called them quote hostages of husbala which is
kind of a ridiculous claim yeah many of the things that come out of his mouth are like they're also
categorically not they're hostages of the united nations and there's this system that it's backed
itself into whereby two belligerent parties can stop them doing anything they do so i'll give you
an example of that 2010 case right these indonesian
unifil troops are trying to prevent the idf and the lebanese army firing at each other the idf is
entering into lebanon to cut down some trees and in the perspective of the lebanese army
i guess they started throwing insults on one another and soon enough they start shooting
each other so two indonesian peacekeepers there was a video of this that went around for a while
so the indonesians decide that basically there's nothing we can do they're going to shoot at each So two Indonesian peacekeepers, there was a video of this that went around for a while.
So the Indonesians decide that basically there's nothing we can do.
They're going to shoot at each other.
And so they decide to withdraw,
which probably isn't the best,
like,
you know,
they're not keeping peace by force,
I guess,
but they basically decide there's nothing they can do.
They decide to pull out local people,
construct a roadblock to try and make them stay and prevent the idf from entering lebanon the indonesians this happens a lot this uh
like you'll see this happening and this happens in various like i'm going to get into some other
un situations where this has happened right but um the two peacekeepers get separated from their
unit this is a video that kind of went around at the time.
I'm sure they're genuinely afraid at that point, right?
In the video, they're being helped by local folks and they end up getting in a taxi to leave and come back to their base.
Which I'm sure they were in a pretty shitty...
They were having a bad day.
And to quote Major General Alain Pellegrini,
who was a French officer who was UnIFIL commander from 2004 to 2007,
quote, the problem is in such cases as this, if you intervene to protect the IDF, for instance,
UNIFIL will be accused by Hezbollah or the people of protecting the Israelis and collaborating with the enemy.
The other side, if we do the same with the Lebanese, Israel will accuse UNIFIL of collaborating with Hezbollah.
So, yes, it will in uh situation that we're seeing currently
like i think obviously like what israel thinks and says doesn't really have much credibility anymore
because they're ruled by this tripartite mechanism there's really very little they can do
yeah they can fire at people if they're fired upon but the idf isn't like uh engaging them
in small arms combat right
they're lobbing artillery shells
into their compound they're firing smoke
they're bashing down their walls
with caterpillar armored bulldozers
the IDF loves an armored bulldozer
yeah
because I mean you can probably join the dots
on why the IDF loves an armored bulldozer
they're in the business of knocking stuff
down I guess and going into urban areas and destroying people's homes
that's i'm sure other folks have armor bulldozers too just idf is kind of well known for using these
things they shot down an observation tower last week which had two peacekeepers in it
and obviously those people were injured because their tower got shot down but like they're not
fully attacking them enough that those peacekeepers would like defend themselves or their uh
their positions and i think if people are like hoping that somehow like an engagement between
peacekeepers and the idf will be yeah what causes accountability i don't think that's going to
happen yeah and for like for the un to actually like really seriously intervene in a world like
this it takes one of the un security council members being like we will send our own troops
like that's like how the un got involved in korea right yeah like the us was like fuck it we're
gonna send an army there and like russia is not going to like send an army they are significantly
too busy invading ukraine and selling natural gas to Israel to do anything.
China's not going to do it because they're Israel's
second largest trading partner
and they don't give a shit.
No one's actually going to
send troops
to back some kind of
UN mandate to stop
the Israelis from doing this.
Even if the Israelis were to just
start killing peacekeepers. It's not going to happen.
It's never happened any other time.
The Israelis have killed peacekeepers.
Peacekeepers have in other
places fought.
For instance, Irish peacekeepers
in Congo or the Canadians.
And indeed,
the Unifor have engaged in combat
before, but I think the chances of them
stopping the idf
invasion are extremely slim yeah like if you're fighting a state that is just directly an american
proxy like there's no way yeah it's uh i don't even think like the 70s nam like not a line
movement like dominated un could have pulled something like that off and like this un will not
no like the un will issue strongly worded statements the un will say
it's deeply concerned and i imagine that like if you're just like a troop and then you're on your
unifil so most of the at least for the irish most of the people that have volunteered to be there
to an island is probably among at least among european countries a country that has stood
strongest in its solidarity with Palestine for a long time.
I'm sure it fucking sucks.
I'm sure it really blows.
Oh, yeah.
And what the IDF has done now is advance past their forward positions
and the positions where people are being injured by shelling are their headquarters positions.
So if you imagine a triangle with a broad base of it at the front,
they're shelling and sort of fighting around the headquarters positions.
I'm sure if you've been spending that much of your life
as a soldier, you know, like,
and you're watching something terrible happen,
you'd want to fight.
But yeah, you're just sitting around.
Like, that doesn't mean that it's bad that they're there.
No, yeah.
Like, any form of accountability will make it
more accountable than what happened in Gaza, right?
Yeah.
Or at least it will make whatever happens more visible than what happened in Gaza.
And it probably legitimately has slowed the Israelis down.
Yeah.
Versus what would happen if there was just nothing there and they could just run roughshod,
which is, you know, again, like what we've seen in Gaza and what we've seen in the West Bank.
Yeah, like, I mean, their strategy in Gaza has been, first of all, militarily inept.
They've lost control of areas in their rear because aside from just killing lots of people and flattening cities,
they don't seem to be really doing much in an actual sort of targeted manner.
And just the presence of peacekeepers means that you can't just carpet bomb in advance you know fire at anything that moves this area between the latani river and the blue line civilians have largely left because
there's intense combat going on there right has bala present there and then obviously the idf are
now present there and they're fighting so like if people can leave they've left so having not that
civilians have really slowed the israelis down in Israelis down in Gaza or been a civilian casualties don't seem to be something they care about.
But yeah, having these folks there has stopped them just carpet bombing the area, which is a good thing.
Something that's not a good thing.
It's our obligation to pivot to adverts again, which we will do.
All right, we're back.
Yeah, I guess, like, I've seen it from a few people.
I think it's either the people who discovered, like,
international politics a year ago and previously, like, hadn't really thought about it,
or from the kind of nativist right,
the idea that, like, they shouldn't be there.
I've seen it from some kind of nativist-type folks about Ireland,
like why are the Irish there risking their lives for the Lebanese?
What the fuck did the Lebanese ever do for them?
I have such good news for you
about who was training the IRA in the 70s.
There were a lot of guys with Irish accents in the Bekaa Valley training in the pillow camps in the 70s. There are a lot of guys with Irish accents
in the Bekaa Valley
training at PLO camps
in the 70s.
So, you know,
they really have actually
done things for you.
It's one of the things
people do this with, like,
the U.S.
or there's, like,
one of the Israeli lines.
It's like, ah,
what have Palestinians
ever done for black people?
It's like, well,
like, there are a lot of people
who got a lot of training
with PLO in the 70s.
JD Whiteley
are, for better and for
worse, because there's also groups that they
trained that they probably shouldn't
have. A lot of the
groups that became the Fighting Vanguard,
which was...
I don't want to describe the Fighting Vanguard.
The Fighting Vanguard were like a
militant wing of the Muslim Brotherhood
in Syria, and a bunch of those Fighting Vanguard. The Fighting Vanguard were like a kind of militant wing of the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria
and like a bunch of those Fighting Vanguard guys
who survived.
So they do an uprising and I think it was 84.
They like all get killed.
Those people who survived go on to be
some of the founding members of Al-Qaeda.
So not always.
Yeah, not great.
Yeah, but like, you know, their record,
like look, one out of like 20 of the people you trained
go with haywire is not great. But like, you know one out of like 20 of the people you trained go with haywire
is not great,
but like,
you know,
19 other ones
like,
did pretty good.
Yeah,
I think Abdul-Dajlan
was in the Bekaa Valley
for a while.
Yeah,
yeah.
Lots of cadres of the,
of the PKK.
Yeah,
PKK was there,
yeah.
Kurds died,
actually,
like,
there's a good article
called The Kurds Who Died
for Palestine
I was reading recently because often you'll see this like, idea that the Kurds died, actually. There's a good article called The Kurds Who Died for Palestine I was reading recently.
Because often you'll see this idea that the Kurds are inherently Zionist,
and I don't think that's true.
No, they fought in the Lebanese Civil War on the side of the PLO.
Because they were in Bekaa Valley in the PLO's training camps.
Yeah, they didn't really have much choice, to be fair.
Israel was coming for them.
Yeah, and Israel is one of the countries that helped kidnap Abdullah Azzalot.
They're really not pro-Zionist at all.
No, this is one of those things that you'll see from, like,
I don't know if they're bot accounts,
or they're just people with very unoriginal opinions
who treat kind of Turkish state lines.
When Israel builds settlements in the West Bank and Gaza,
they do it with steel that comes from Turkey.
So, yeah, maybe treat those claims with some skepticism
if there's a gray wolf in bio, particularly.
Yeah, there is a broader, more serious point there,
which is that the actual physical resources
that the Israelis use to physically build the occupation,
those all come from places.
And it's not all the U.S., and I think people have this image
that, like, well, and it is
true, the U.S. sends an unbelievable amount of money to
Israel, but there's
a lot of places where
the Israelis are getting their shit for, right?
Like, the Israeli tech sector, the Israeli tech
sector is one of the cores of the Israeli economy,
and it's one of the cores of
the Israeli occupation, is almost
entirely fueled by like
semiconductors and stuff that they buy from china right that's where all the the physical technical
infrastructure of this stuff comes from i talked about before about like russian natural gas right
all of these countries who will you know talk all of this shit like and the un about israel
like people's geopolitical stances and what they're willing to send
materially to the Israelis are not the same thing at all.
And if you want to actually gauge how the occupation functions,
it's because a lot of countries that nominally will be like,
Oh,
we oppose Israeli occupation.
We'll just send them all the fucking resources that they need to do the
occupation.
Yeah.
And they don't get any heat unless it's like literal bombs and bullets, right?
Yeah.
And even then,
like lots of people,
like...
Yeah.
There's plenty of non-US.
I mean, the UK does a lot of this too, right?
Yeah.
One of the things that IDF likes to do
that I haven't mentioned yet
is mock air assaults
of uniform positions.
Jesus Christ.
Well, they'll fly in like a bombing formation.
Just basically,
I guess, haze them.
I can't really think
of a way to describe it.
It's terror.
It's a terror campaign.
Yes.
It's a very clear indication
that any day
we could wipe you
off the map.
Right.
And some of the UNIFIL assets
seem to have
anti-aircraft missiles.
Some of them don't.
But even still,
a determined attack by the IDF,
they'd be in big trouble, of course.
So right now, I guess the situation we're in,
according to the person I spoke to,
is that these positions, Israel has advanced past.
The peacekeepers there are still in their positions, right?
They have, using their own funds,
which I presume means funds from the states of which
they are part fortified their positions and improve their positions with their own jesus christ yeah
well the un is supposed to provide positions for them it's supposed to provide their rations and
it's supposed to provide weapons and vehicles for some of the states that like kind of aren't up to uh i guess a modern
standard that's incidentally why you don't see it so much here but in other parts of the world
you'll often see troops on peacekeeping missions who like perhaps you haven't heard of that
country's military before right like it's very common for like also i think it is better that
there are african peacekeepers in africa than like white european peace like i think for historical
and very obvious reasons i will mention i one of the places that sends a lot African peacekeepers in Africa than white European peacekeepers. I think for historical and very obvious reasons.
I will mention,
one of the places that sends a lot of peacekeepers
to places is Nepal
and the record of Nepalese peacekeepers
that are being sent by Maoist governments
are not great.
It's not great.
That sucks.
Yeah, you can Google that.
We've talked about this in Brazil at length
and in Haiti.
Sorry, Brazilian-Nepalese cooperation in haiti is a shit show yeah no it has not been good for the haitian people
uh i will say like one of the things that happens a lot is the un pays them a certain rate for
peacekeeping i guess the un compensates certain rate which is often a lot more than those militaries
pay their soldiers so it's like a source of income for the military. If you see what I mean, they can like skim off the percentage.
But these guys have, at their own expense,
fortified their positions.
At their own expense,
supplied themselves with rations.
So like they bought a ton of food and water.
It's what that means in like non-nerdy terms.
So they're pretty well stocked up, right?
They're like, they're bunkered up.
But it's also like this UN operation is being equipped in the same way that American school teachers make sure their classrooms have pencils.
That's imperfect.
What the fuck is going on here?
Yeah, yeah.
Jesus Christ.
It may be, Mia, maybe the state not the best way of organizing human society is what people are saying.
Look, we need to fuse the two and finally bring about my lifelong
dream of armed teachers union pickets yeah bring it back to like blair mountain but for teachers
yeah it's like look don't arm teachers arm teachers unions yeah yeah we can finally get
bipartisan agreement on uh nothing yeah they're pretty well hold up like like uh like american
preppers dream of themselves being right surrounded by ammunition and mres but at some point they're pretty well hold up like like uh like american preppers dream of themselves being
right surrounded by ammunition and mres but at some point they're going to run out of food and
water and at some point that means that they're going to have to resupply right now on i'm just
going to check the date very quickly and unifil is on twitter by the way if you want to uh do you
want to follow them there they kind of give a daily update on what's going on.
On the 13th of October, Unifil said that the IDF soldiers stopped a critical Unifil logistical movement,
which could well be like an attempt at resupply of one of these places, right?
At some point, they're going to have to resupply them either by air or by land. And I think that is when we will most likely see
exactly how hard the IDF wants to go against,
in this case, trucks full of MREs, right?
Yeah.
Previously, they've gotten standoffs.
A few years ago, the French have done some interesting stuff
as part of the Unifil mission.
In 2010, they kind of went on a unilateral operation
without approval to look for Hezbollah.
Yeah, not a great move.
Yeah, it's wild.
French forces in Lebanon
are such an interesting thing
because it's like,
inside of the French soul
is warring at all times
two forces.
It is racisme
and antisemitism.
Because they hate Muslims
so much,
but they are also
so antisemitic.
This is at all times warring.
The nature of the French soul, the two wolves that live inside the French person.
Yeah, well, in 2010, their Islamophobia was winning.
Specifically, they used sniffer dogs in people's homes,
which is very disrespectful in culture in that part of the
world i mean also here i would be really pissed off if fucking a bomb squad like
can started running sniffer dogs around my apartment yeah for sure don't get out going
through private property you know doing things that they were they're supposed to operate with
the lebanese armed forces right so they patrol alongside them but in this case the french
decided they were just going to send it solo and obviously pissed a lot of people off. And it's really interesting to see people address
their concerns. Well, it's not interesting, I guess, but people address their concerns
specifically with the French element of UNIFIL rather than other elements of UNIFIL.
For instance, the Indonesian seems to be pretty popular. The Indian element of UNIFIL teaches
weekly yoga classes, which are apparently becoming more and more popular.
I've seen a bunch of videos.
There's like TikToks of Lebanese people in that area who speak English,
and they all speak English with an Irish accent.
Oh, yeah.
Because they've been there for so long.
It's great.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, well, the Irish have been there since the 70s, right?
Like, I know of people who have two generations of their family
who have been peacekeepers there.
Yeah.
I think for those people,
like over time being there,
I'm sure they do develop a personal connection
to the people who, you know, they're around
and the people whose communities they are protecting.
And like, I genuinely feel like
it's probably really a shitty situation to be in.
Yeah.
Being locked in your base.
That doesn't mean they should leave, right?
I just want to end with like,
and I know we want to talk about the Golan Heights too.
In 2013, actually, Austria pulled out of the Golan Heights
and Ireland had to deploy a bunch of people really quickly
to kind of cover that area.
But if we look at like Srebrenica, right,
where the UN could have prevented a genocide,
did not.
The UN forces there withdrew,
they surrendered,
and then places were captured by the serbs um and then used
as collateral to stop the un doing any more to prevent what and like some of the most horrific
acts in in human history happened it's for benico right just just disgusting terrible stuff and like
hopefully the un has learned from that. Hopefully like individual nations.
I think like in that case,
it wasn't so much the UN as a whole.
It's like the specific chain of command of those peacekeepers.
I think they were Dutch.
And like,
it's worth noting in that point too,
that like part of what's going on there is that like a lot of the European
countries until well into the genocide were basically pro-Serb because they
saw the
Serbs,
something that could like just cleanse the Muslims from Europe is like,
this is the explicit language that they're using.
Right.
Yeah.
And this is,
this has always been a problem with,
with UN missions is like,
well,
half the time you're trying to stop a genocide.
There's like some faction of the UN that's like,
no,
this one fucking rips.
And yeah,
yeah,
right.
This is the,
but they are the bad guys though.
Aren't they?
Yeah.
I think it's good that they have like Muslim countries countries within their yeah their group and like i think it's probably
good that the irish are there in large numbers because as a country they have been better on
on palestine than almost anyone else in europe yeah it turns out being a colony has an effect
on you yeah yeah yeah i mean like yeah that's on that's on us as the British.
But it's better that they're there, I guess.
And no one talked about them for the past 10 fucking years,
but the most important time for them to be there is right now.
Yeah.
And even if they're not fighting, I think they serve a useful role.
It's the only accountability mechanism that Israel can't just destroy. There are definitely people who are alive right now
who would not be if the Irish were not there.
Yeah, and I know we have
these number of Irish listeners. I know it sucks if
it's your family member who's stuck there
and it feels
like they're not able to do anything because they're just stuck there
as collateral, as a bargaining chip.
I don't know. But I think
overseas military deployments by European countries
go. It's one of the more defensible ones.
It's one of the ones that has stopped civilian lives being harmed.
And yeah, I think the idea that they should leave,
which I've seen people trotting out,
no, they shouldn't.
When they leave, it's just like Gaza all over again.
It's just Israel carpet-bombing civilians.
Talking of carpet-bombing civilians, I guess, Meir, you wanted to talk about
Israel has decided to invade another country.
So, okay, so one of the things that's happened,
and this has gotten almost no attention,
I think because the Syrian government
does not want to admit that this is happening
and they're not doing anything about it
because they don't give a shit.
So Israel has been occupying the Syrian Golan Heights
since 1967.
They've militarized it. They've just been holding the territory So Israel has been occupying the Syrian Golan Heights since 1967. Yeah.
They've militarized it.
They've just been holding the territory for,
I shouldn't have tried to do math on the fly,
like over half a century.
60 years.
Yeah.
And one of the things that's been happening recently is there had been,
there had been like,
as soon as you describe it as like a Russian monitoring force,
sort of on,
on the border of the Syrian Golan Heights and the sort of like southern provinces of Syria.
Yeah.
And the Israelis seem to have just apparently they've done this before where they'll just like go in and bulldoze a bunch of farmland. Yeah.
I think this is under the auspices of demining, right?
Yeah, sort of.
Yeah.
It's always been it's always been pretty clearly like a
land grab kind of thing.
But normally what happens is they go in,
they bulldoze a bunch of places, and they pull out.
Somehow they have surpassed
Turkey as the number one bulldozer
of olive fields, which is sort of
staggering.
They love that shit. But this time
they've set up, it seems like a road
project, although given everything that we've been seeing about the sort of like rise of the concept of
greater israel where they just start invading everyone and radially outward from israel is
extremely alarming so they've they've bulldozed these places but now and they're but they set up
like barbed wire like around the new territory, which seems like they're just actually attempting to do annexation.
Yeah.
And that's really alarming because I mean, like the Syrian government isn't going to do shit about this.
Right.
Like, you know, Israel has bombed Syria a few times already.
Oh, yeah.
They bombed Syria last time I was there.
The Syrian government doesn't give a shit.
Right.
They're too busy. Like they have courage to kill like they don't have time to
be dealing with fucking israel here yeah yeah but there's there's been an explicit israeli push like
even further out from the golan heights and i and i think we're just going to see this intensify
as as the most sort of like deranged settler factions in Israeli politics,
gain more and more power in the,
in the,
the sort of like,
frankly,
like very American,
we must push our borders.
We must like push into new frontiers and seize more land,
like cycle sort of perpetuates itself.
Yeah.
And a lot of the people doing the settling have literally come from America to do the settling.
Yeah.
Pushing out in the Golan Heights.
It's bad.
Like,
yeah,
I know Israel claims it was attacked by Katipa's Buller in the golan heights it's bad like yeah i know israel claims
it was attacked by katiba's bulla in the golan heights like last week and katiba's bulla has
denied that they claim israel fabricated it neither of those people are people i particularly trust
yeah well and this is also one of these funny ones where it's like the the israelis are denying
that they've done this i think and the syrian government is also denying that they've done this, I think. And the Syrian government is also denying that they've done this.
But, like, everyone who's there is like, well, obviously they did this.
Like...
Yeah, and, like, I don't know why Israel keeps wanting to open up New France.
I mean, they do.
Yeah, like you say, it's settler colonialist logic, I guess.
But I do think that, like, the continuation of this, like, full-scale war generates consent for the government as it exists
in the moment that it stops
and the government's legitimacy will collapse there.
But yeah, pushing into Syria opens up a whole other world of shit.
Just shit, yeah.
The worst stuff.
Yeah, if there's a nation on Earth
who really doesn't need anyone else trying to fucking...
And it's not that Israel has not been killing Syrians
for a long time. Israel has been lobbing
munitions into Syria for a long time
and it's increased in the last year.
I was in Syria
on October 7th last year
and pretty much soon as
Israel began responding to that
attack, it began responding in Syria as well.
But a ground operation is a whole different thing.
There ain't no UN peacekeepers in Syria.
And yeah, that could be very bad.
Yeah, so we'll keep you updated on that story
as it presumably continues to get worse
because everything seems to end.
I mean, I will say, okay, so today,
Biden made a thing that said if Israel hasn't resolved humanitarian situation in 30 days, he's going to cut off aid.
But like, that's not going to happen.
Like, it's simply not like everyone says that all the time.
I mean, how many lines have they stepped over?
Like how many?
An American red line is a line that when you step over, nothing happens.
Yeah.
That's just how it works.
Right.
Like, it was in Syria.
It has been multiple times.
Yeah.
I mean, there's this old Russian joke about China's final warning.
Because throughout the entire 70s, when there's all these border disputes going on,
even in the 60s, and something sometimes in the 50s, 60s,
Chinese officials would be like, this is China's final warning.
Russia must stop. Nothing would happen.
This is where we're at with the Democrats being like,
ah, Israel must stop doing whatever the fuck.
No, they're not going to do anything.
They don't give a shit.
Yeah, no, we've cried wolf so many times.
It's clearly not an issue that Harris feels like like it's going to lose her the election yeah
and then whoever wins we got four more years of turning a fire hose of money and weapons on
children in palestine and apparently syria and lebanon as well so yeah it's great it's all great
i'm afraid yeah this this has not been a good news episode i I hope people who have family, I have friends who are in Lebanon.
Like I hope people who have family there are doing okay.
I know it sucks.
Hola mi gente, it's Honey German and I'm bringing you Gracias, Come Again. We'll see you next time. and culture shifters, this is the podcast for you. We're talking real conversations with our Latin stars,
from actors and artists to musicians and creators,
sharing their stories, struggles, and successes.
You know it's going to be filled with chisme laughs and all the vibes that you love.
Each week, we'll explore everything,
from music and pop culture to deeper topics
like identity, community, and breaking down barriers
in all sorts of industries.
Don't miss out on the fun,
El Te Caliente and life stories.
Join me for Gracias Come Again, a podcast by Honey German,
where we get into todo lo actual y viral.
Listen to Gracias Come Again 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 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. Hey, I'm Gianna Parente. And I'm Jimei Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline,
the early career podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
One of the most exciting things about having your first real job
is that first real paycheck.
You're probably thinking, yay, I can finally buy a new phone.
Mm-hmm.
But you also have a lot of questions, like,
how should I be investing this money? I mean, how much do I save? And what about my 401k?
Well, we're talking with finance expert Vivian Tu, aka Your Rich BFF, to break it all down.
I always get roasted on the internet when I say this out loud, but I'm like, every single year,
you need to be asking for a raise of somewhere between 10 to 15%. I'm not saying you're going to get 15% every single year,
but if you ask for 10 to 15 and you end up getting eight,
that is actually a true raise.
Listen to this week's episode of Let's Talk Offline
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now, and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast, Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls from anonymous strangers all over the world
as a fake gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains and learn a little bit
about their lives. I know that's a weird concept, but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give
it a shot. Matter of fact, here's a few more examples of the kinds of calls we get on this show.
I live with my boyfriend and I found his piss jar in our apartment.
I collect my roommate's toenails and fingernails.
I have very overbearing parents. Even at the age of 29, they won't let to get out of your own head and see what's going on in someone else's head,
search for Therapy Gecko on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's the one with the green guy on it.
Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. It's the one with the green guy on it
Hello and welcome to it could happen here I'm here with Mia are you doing?
It's it's abominably early which not even podcast early. It's like 8 a.m. Here. So it's gonna be where we're
We've done the caffeine We're holding on for dear life say i feel you i feel you i have
to ask have you noticed that the continents are dripping a little bit continents are dripping
yeah yeah and i don't mean like blinged out i mean like if you take a look at a map
and you assume that north is up and south is down you'll
find it kind of looks like our major land masses are melting a little bit uh you know okay now now
now that you say it i can kind of see it hmm yeah this is a concept known as continental trip and
i'm not tripping on anything i have not i'm not the first person to notice. Incredible. You can look it up.
There's a whole Wikipedia page
about what we've seen and everything.
And well, South America
alongside India
they're kind of seen as
the quintessential examples
of this continental trip.
And this is a very
odd way that I've decided
to segue into
the next nation
in our exploration
of Latin American anarchist history.
It's right to the east of Chile and south of every other country in its hemisphere.
That is, of course, the Argentine Republic, more commonly known as Argentina,
which is derived, by the way, from the Latin word for silver.
My name is Andrew Sage.
You can find me on YouTube as Andrewism and thanks to the scholarship of
Chuck Morse, Jeffrey de la Focard and Angel Capuleti we're going to take a journey into
the history of anarchism in Argentina also gotta do the shout out for Capuleti's anarchism in Latin
America great book also great cover got a big bird on it. Good stuff. Oh yeah, shout out
of course, of course. So I suppose
the best place to start is in the beginning.
So there was this thing called the Big
Bang, right?
The universe
expanded extremely fast.
In like picoseconds
of time.
There was a large movement.
Large expansion of matter
and yeah, but seriously, Argentina has been It's a large expansion of matter.
Yeah, but seriously, Argentina has been peopled since the Paleolithic period.
In particular, we find evidence of ancient peoples butchering the meat of an armadillo relative as early as 21,000 years ago.
Jeez.
So, you know, we've been around. We've been around. From then on,
as far as we can tell, for now at least, because, you know, the timelines are constantly getting updated with new information, as it should be, the area to be known as Argentina was
pretty sparsely populated by a variety of diverse cultures with diverse social organizations,
by a variety of diverse cultures with diverse social organizations, including foragers and farmers. To make a long and largely unknown history of indigenous coexistence and conflict
short, people continue to live and the earth continues to spin for the next few millennia
until a few ships on the horizon spell doom for all to see. These are, of course, the Europeans,
spell doom for all to see. These are, of course, the Europeans, who first arrived in the region with the 1502 voyage of Amerigo Vespucci, with the Spanish navigators Juan Díaz de Solís and
Sebastián Cabo in particular visiting the territory in 1516 and 1526, respectively.
Then in 1536, Pedro de Mendoza founded this small settlement of Buenos Aires.
Maybe you've heard of it.
But it was abandoned in 1541 thanks to continuous indigenous resistance and had to be refounded in 1580.
As for the rest of what would be Argentina, the Spanish Empire that was running most of the continent was busy looting the silver and gold mines in Bolivia and
Peru, so Argentina was kind of seen as a backwater. It wasn't as much of an interest by comparison.
Argentina stayed under the Viceroyalty of Peru until the creation of the Viceroyalty of the
Rio de la Plata in 1776, with Buenos Aires as its capital. After two failed British invasions in 1806 and 1807,
and as you can see, the British and Argentina
have had a bit of a scuffle for some time now,
the Buenos Aires capital would be the stage of revolution,
as the 1810 May Revolution replaced the Viceroy Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros
with the first Junta, a new government made by and
for the locals. And then there was a Royalist counter-revolution, some anti-colonial alliance
with the then Spanish Philippines, divisions between centralists and federalists over the
newly formed Argentine state, proposals to crown a Sapa Inca as monarch of an independent Argentina,
to crown a Sapa Inca as monarch of an independent Argentina and the official declaration of independence for a republic
on the 9th of July, 1816.
Just to go back a bit, to be clear,
there is an alternate history scenario
in which Argentina was briefly or continuously
under an Incan monarchy.
That would have ripped.
Literally, I believe it was a cousin of Tupac Amaru III
was being considered for the position.
Incredible.
Incredible.
Incredible indeed.
See, people tend to see South America as just like,
eh, you know, it's just the extra continent.
I mean, I don't think people think about
how much has gone on down there.
Rather, it's not really present in the English-speaking world's imagination.
You know, we tend to focus on more of the Northern Hemisphere side of things
or whichever specific region we find ourselves in,
whether it be the Caribbean or Australia, New Zealand, UK, US, Canada.
We tend to think about English-speaking colonial history,
but Latin America had a lot going on in
its time i mean come on they had an alliance with the spanish philippines yeah rips yeah so i mean
civil war go as they say between the centralists and the federalists and that would continue for a while after the Declaration of the Republic in
1816, and it was only resolved in 1831 with a Federalist victory. Basically, it was a division
over how they should organize the state, whether it should be in a federal manner or more centralist,
unitary manner. And so the Federalists won, which would lead to the War of the Confederation
between 1836-1839, the establishment of the Constitution in 1853,
and a temporary secession of Buenos Aires, which was forced back into Argentina by 1861.
And as in much of Latin America, anarchism would establish itself fairly early on
thanks to the waves of migration from Europe, and particularly from France, Italy, and Spain.
There are so many Italians.
So many Italians.
Just an absurd amount of Italians.
These folks fled political repression and poverty in their home countries.
Refugees from the Paris Commune and anarchist literature from the aforementioned lands would find themselves in the streets of Buenos Aires City
and the countrysides of Buenos Aires Province.
They circulated anarchist ideas through group meetings,
such as the group El Miserable in the port city of Rosario,
and publications like La Revolte,
which was founded by Kropotkin all the way back in Switzerland.
Kropotkin's words of a rebel would also make frequent appearances throughout Argentina. And his
conquest of bread received a translation by Catalan carpenter Juan Vila. As with the splits
internationally, the First Internationale's local section in Buenos Aires, which was founded in 1872,
was split between the supporters of Marx and the supporters of Bakunin. The former were
predominantly French, the latter predominantly Spaniard and Italian.
Three decades of substantial migration started in the 1880s would spark significant growth in
the anarchist movement, as the migrants found crushing economic deprivation and repressive
governance where they'd hoped they'd find prosperity and liberty. Over 3 million people arrived,
leading to the country having a foreign-born population
of 33% by 1914.
Nowadays, as in much of the world, unfortunately,
that once foreign-born population,
some percentage of them,
are now unfortunately anti-immigration.
Yeah.
And violently so.
It's a cruel irony that we find ourselves with.
Just mere decades ago, their own ancestors were migrants.
Among the migration wave came the likes of Hector Mate,
an Italian anarchist who helped publish Il Socialista, which is a weekly paper.
And of course, believe it or not, the one and only Errico Malatesta, who keeps making guest appearances in these Latin American anarchists.
Yeah.
He's just like all over the place, traveling everywhere.
If I recall correctly, he made an appearance in Cuba.
He made an appearance in the Egypt episode as well.
Yep. He just keeps showing
up. He's really, truly
a globetrotter in a mold that we
haven't really seen. Hey, I mean,
move aside Pitbull, you know, he's the real Mr.
Worldwide.
So, Errico Montesta, he actually
fled Italy in 1885
after escaping imprisonment and he helped
to establish the circulo de studio socialis where he and others give public speeches promoting
anarchism and he worked to organize the sociedad cosmopolita de obreros panaderos an anarchist
baker's union i didn't know he could bake maybe he he could bake, maybe he couldn't. Maybe he was just there helping them set up.
But in my head, I'd like to imagine
that he was pretty good at baking bread and making cookies.
I'm pretty sure he was at an ice cream sale.
It's been two at one point.
I thought I might be getting that confused
with some other anarchist who was going around everywhere
who was also selling ice cream.
I wouldn't be surprised.
I have vague memories of there being a story about him having an ice cream cart and trying to make
money and he couldn't do it because he kept giving ice cream to children i think i remember that
story i think zoe baker had a video on it you know that those ads used to show on tv a couple
like about a decade ago um the most interesting man in the world. Yeah. He was based on Errico Manatesta.
Yeah, so Manatesta later returned to Europe in 1889,
yet he left a lasting legacy in helping to organize workers
and sow the seeds for a powerful anarchist movement in Argentina.
In the early 1890s, the anarchist paper El Perseguido
became one of the most popular and prominent voices of
anarchist communism in Argentina, despite ongoing repression and government censorship.
The anarchist press continued to expand during this period, with publications like La Voz de la
Mujer and Anarchist Feminist People emerging in Rosario. The 1880s and early 1890s also involved
significant internal debates, particularly around the role of workers' unions in revolutionary tactics.
Some groups embraced anarchist cynicalism,
while others believed smaller affinity groups as catalysts of social revolution were the way to go.
While in the midst of a massive, rapid industrial growth
and dealing with the worsening economic situation for the working class,
such a society was ripe for transformation
of the anarchist variety. Initially, the anarchists had been focused on counter-cultural concerns,
particularly in the field of education. But as their ranks swelled in number,
the stage was set for the debut of a mass anarchist movement among Argentine workers.
In 1897, the anarchist workers were found La Protesta Humana, later shortened to La Protesta,
which would become an enduring anarchist paper throughout Latin America.
But the anarchists didn't just stick to papers, though.
In 1901, anarchists were instrumental in the founding of the Argentine Workers' Federation, or the FOA,
which was Argentina's first labor federation.
or the FOA, which is Argentina's first labor federation. The federation was founded in a congress that assembled some 50 delegates representing 30 to 35 workers' organizations
from both capital and interior. The aim of the federation was an entity that included all workers
without regard to their races or beliefs based on a solid foundation of direct action and economic
struggle. Though initially including Marxists,
those would later depart to found the General Workers' Union, or the UGT, which was more
amenable to party interests, of course, which left the FOA in anarchist hands. The FOA stood
at the forefront of the struggles, advocating for higher wages and better working conditions.
At the time, the typical workday was 10 hours or more,
with wages barely covering essential needs. Strikes broke out across industries,
with notable successes. Painters in Mar del Plata secured an 8-hour workday,
and dockworkers in Buenos Aires won a 9-hour workday along with a wage increase.
But despite the repression, the workers' movement continued to grow stronger.
The FOA's membership surged, with 42 unions and over 15,000 members in 1903,
rising to 66 unions and nearly 33,000 members a year later. In 1904, at its fourth congress,
the group was renamed the Regional Workers' Federation of Argentina, or the FORA.
The group was renamed the Regional Workers' Federation of Argentina, or the FORA.
Their reasoning was ideological.
By adding the adjective regional, it made plain that Argentina was not considered a state or political unit, but a region of the world in which workers struggled for their liberation.
This fourth Congress also approved a solidarity pact that proclaimed the establishment of a classless society
with neither state nor private property as the ultimate aim of their struggle.
The anarchist influence was clear, but it gets even more explicit in the following year.
The UGT had been subordinate to the Marxist Socialist Party,
but even their third Congress in 1905 had a syndicalist emergence that preferred workers' associations
to political parties. Basically, even the non-Anarchist workers' organizations were being
influenced by the anarchist wave. So much so that the UGT wanted to form a solidarity pact
with Fora. But the anarchists in Fora didn't quite trust the parliamentary socialism of the UGT.
Still, they did work with them to call a general strike in 1907 in solidarity with
cart drivers in Rosario, joined by some 150,000 workers from around the republic. That strike
ended in victory for the workers. In 1905, two years before and as 5th Congress,
Fora made its commitment to revolutionary anarchist communism
explicitly known quote we advise and recommend to all our followers the broadest possible study
and propaganda with the aim of instilling workers the economic and philosophical principles of
anarchist communism this education not concerned with achieving the eight-hour workday will bring
total emancipation and consequently
the social evolution we pursue. End quote. Fora was among the largest federations of
workers' organizations and it was officially anarchist-communist. The 1906-1907 general
and tenant strikes garnered greater fervor and in response, Buenos Aires police head Colonel
Falcón swore to finish off the anarchists.
1907 saw Fora and UGT attempt a merger, but since the majority sought adherence to anarchist
communism, the merger could not be achieved. Fora was militant and effective in achieving
many of its goals, including wage increases, reductions in the length of the workday,
and various rights of association.
Port workers, crown transport workers, seamen's unions, beakers, metal workers, construction workers, and ship workers
were all prominent in the Federation and were well positioned to paralyze the Argentine economy and win their demands.
In the first decade of the 20th century, these unions led six general strikes
and many more partial strikes. And women were more involved than in any other radical movement
of the time, taking part in consumer boycotts and rent strikes as well. But the anarchists
knew that ruptures in the capitalist economy wouldn't be enough.
It could never be enough to merely confront the system and refuse to cooperate with the system as it is.
The social revolution also demands consciousness,
solidarity, and the prefiguration of an enlightened,
progressive society and social organizations.
Thus, anarchists engaged in counter-culture,
multiple papers in multiple languages, theater and poetry, mayday marches, social centers,
popular education centers, popular libraries, and discussion circles. All of these efforts
were seeded throughout the cities and linked to various unions to create a veritable and dynamic
network of revolutionary
causes. And since the government understood the anarchist threat, they tried their best to raise
the cost of revolutionary activism. The actions included petty police harassment, the humiliating
and inconvenient searches and gratuitous demands for identification, which were a familiar experience
for the anarchist militants. There was also the
outlawing of radical publications, the suppression of the right to public assembly, mass arrests,
martial law declared for a total of 18 months between 1902 and 1910, and of course outright
violence to the police, the army, and other formal forces, in addition to thugs acting on their
behalf. The government also attempted to undermine
the anarchist movement through legislative means. The Residence Law in 1902 granted the government
the right to deport foreigners that are deemed undesirable without trial. After the law had been
in effect for a few years, FURA called a general strike against its oppressive conditions.
FURA's leadership condemned the law as a violation of human rights,
laboring it as a tool by the state
to suppress free thought and working class movements.
The government did not budge.
On May day 1909,
police violently attacked a peaceful protest
organized by transport workers and anarchists,
killing eight people and wounding many others.
Colonel Falcón,
the recurrent villain who ordered the attack, later became the target of a retaliatory bombing by young anarchist Simone Radowitzky in November 1909. This act of defiance shook the whole country.
In the meantime, the anarchist cause also resonated internationally. In response to the
execution of Francisco Ferrer,
a Spanish educator and anarchist, Fora led a series of strikes in Argentina, joining global
protests against his death. 1910 marked Argentina's preparations for the centenary celebrations
of its first national government, portraying itself as a beacon of prosperity. But oh,
here come the workers with
their unrest and protests to sour the vibes and demand the release of political prisoners and the
abolition of the law of residence. Naturally, the government responded by declaring a state of
internal war, arresting hundreds of anarchists, including foreign leaders, and imposing extreme
censorship and restrictions on civil liberties,
shutdowns of publications, and the declaration of a state of emergency.
The government also introduced the social defense law, which levied a series of penalties against
anarchist activities specifically. As the centennial celebrations unfolded, Argentina
had transformed into a heavily militarized state, with more than
2,000 anarchists arrested
or deported.
So much for a grand celebration of their free
democracy.
Despite
the repression, the workers' movements
continued to grow.
Forest General strikes forced the government
to make concessions and release jailed workers.
But divisions began to appear within the movement.
After dealing with so much repression for their radical ideas,
a split occurred in 1909 with the formation of the syndicalist group Cora,
which adopted much of Forrest's structure and retained some anarchist ideas,
but leaned towards a less radical approach, hoping to be less of a target. The anarchists
took yet another hit when, in 1912, the science peña law made voting secret and obligatory,
thus making anarchist abstentionism as a tactic illegal. Their range of possible actions was
being intentionally closed. While dealing with these external pressures,
anarchists also had to deal with pressures from within the workers' movement
by even more folks who wanted to compromise
the revolutionary goals.
Another split between the syndicalists and anarchists
occurred at the Forrest's 9th Congress in 1915.
Unions were increasingly led by reformists,
social democrats, and uncommitted anarchists,
which led to the thesis of a neutral syndicalism
focused on winning workers rights becoming the dominant position within fora the syndicalists
dropped their commitment to anarchist communism and claimed the name the fora of the ninth congress
while the minority of anarchists that maintained their commitment to anarchist communism
took the name the fora of the fifth congress the timing of the split was impeccable though
you see as has been a recurring theme in this series the russian revolution of 1917 had a
significant impact in argentinian anarchism in a sense it reignited the revolutionary fervor
within the movement and led to the reformist and cynicalist 409 losing influence, while
revolutionary ideas once again gained momentum. For a brief moment, there was hope, but the
Bolsheviks would waste little time in crushing that hope. By 1920, Argentinian anarchists,
like their European counterparts, began to distance themselves from Leninism. They began
to recognize the authoritarian nature of the Bolsheviks, took note of Kropotkin and Lenin's
correspondences, and soon came to reject the idea of the dictatorship of the proletariat.
On his part, alongside his mass slaughter of the anarchists in Kronstadt, Lenin also ordered the
confiscation of anarchist texts, which he saw as influencing the conflict within the Bolshevik ranks
Tale as old as time
Anyway
Next time we'll see if and how the anarchists in Argentina
Managed to navigate the tumultuous 20s, 30s and beyond
To leave a lasting mark on Argentine history
But things aren't looking too good for them right now.
Until then,
all power to all the people.
This has been El Crabne.
Hola mi gente, it's Honey German Thank you. We're talking real conversations with our Latin stars, from actors and artists to musicians and creators,
sharing their stories, struggles, and successes. You know it's going to be filled with chisme,
laughs, and all the vibes that you love. Each week, we'll explore everything from music and pop culture to deeper topics like identity, community, and breaking down barriers in all sorts of industries.
Don't miss out on the fun, el té caliente, and life stories.
Join me for Gracias Come Again, a podcast by Honey German,
where we get into todo lo actual y viral.
Listen to Gracias Come Again 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 you get your podcast. 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, or 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 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 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.
Hey, I'm Gianna Parente. And I'm Jimei Jackson-Gadsden. Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. You're probably thinking, yay, I can finally buy a new phone. But you also have a lot of questions like, how should I be investing this money?
I mean, how much do I save?
And what about my 401k?
Well, we're talking with finance expert Vivian Tu, aka Your Rich BFF, to break it all down.
I always get roasted on the internet when I say this out loud, but I'm like, every single
year you need to be asking for a raise of somewhere between 10 to 15 percent.
I'm not saying you're going to get 15 percent every single year, you need to be asking for a raise of somewhere between 10 to 15%. I'm not saying you're going to get 15% every single year. But if you ask for 10 to 15 and you end up getting 8, that is actually a true raise.
Listen to this week's episode of Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now, and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast, Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls from anonymous strangers all over the world
as a fake gecko therapist and try to dig into their
brains and learn a little bit about their lives. I know that's a weird concept, but I promise it's
pretty interesting if you give it a shot. Matter of fact, here's a few more examples of the kinds
of calls we get on this show. I live with my boyfriend and I found his piss jar in our apartment.
I collect my roommate's toenails and fingernails.
I have very overbearing
parents. Even at the age of 29
they won't let me move out of their house.
So if you want an excuse to get out of your own head
and see what's going on in someone
else's head, search for
Therapy Gecko on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's the one with the green guy on it.
Hello and welcome back to It Could Happen Here. I'm Andrew Sage.
Find me on YouTube at Andrew's Home. I'm here once again with...
Oh, Bia. Haha, that was my cue. Yeah.
Indeed.
Yeah, she's here.
And today, we're continuing the Latin American Anarchism series with our exploration of anarchism in Argentina.
Thanks to the scholarship of Chuck Moss, Jeffrey De La Focard, Angel Capiletti, and Jose Antonio Gutierrez and Ian McKay.
and Jose Antonio Gutierrez and Ian McKay.
When we last left off, various laws and government actions were pressed hard on the anarchist cause in the country.
Which one the anarchists executed, jailed, or exiled? What would become of the anarchist movement?
Would things get better or worse?
It's hard to say. I think you know the answer.
1919 marked the year of La Semana Tragica, or the Tragic Week,
when several metal workers were killed by strikebreakers.
This led to a general strike that shut down the entire country
and pushed Buenos Aires into a state of chaos for several days.
The anarchist paper La Protesta noted the complete shutdown and praised worker solidarity
But despite the revolutionary atmosphere, the movement lacked a clear objective
Which weakened its long-term impact
They had the power, but didn't do too much with it
Eventually the police and Argentina's first fascist organization, Liga Patriotica
Were able to subdue the rebellion
The fascists,
by the way, were backed by military figures like Rear Admirals Bomec Garcia and O'Connor.
They attacked and killed with impunity, and in the end, 55,000 were detained, with anarchists
sent to Martin Garcia, Ireland, and as many as 700 were killed and 4,000 were injured.
and as many as 700 were killed and 4,000 were injured.
The anarchist movement persisted, as they always do.
La Protesta continued publishing alongside the launch of new papers like Bandera Roja and Tribuna Proletaria.
Even after the government banned anarchist press in March 1919,
the movement continued to organize, culminating in an extraordinary congress of 200 unions in September 1920. Throughout the 1920s,
Fora V remained a powerful force in Argentina's labor movement, pushing for causes like the six-hour weekday and resisting rising nationalist and militarist sentiments. But throughout came
more repression. In 1921, Argentinian workers de la Forestal in the Chaco region were brutally killed for demanding better wages and conditions.
The anarchist fora proposed solidarity actions, but the more reformist fora, the 9th Congress, distanced itself, leaving the movement unsupported.
This indifference unfortunately also extended to other violent incidents, such as the murder of workers by the fascist Liga Patriotica in Guadalupe and worse still with the largely unreported massacres
of striking rural workers in Patagonia by the army
sending 1,500 to death by firing squad
an event ignored by most media
except for anarchist outlets like La Protesta.
In this case, at least the anarchists got their get back
somewhat later when german anarchist
kurt wilkins assassinated colonel hector valera the military leader responsible for the killings
that whole story is so wild because the german assassin was also a pacifist but it's just like
fuck it we ball yeah i mean sometimes you had to do what you had to do yeah and i mean the
government got it to get back as well because wilkins was later murdered in retaliation for his
murder of you know hector valero yeah um but at least that led to a general strike across argentina
it truly is a wild story anarchists in argentina further agitated in opposition to the trial and execution of Italian-American anarchists Sacco and Vincetti in the United States in 1927.
This was a notorious case, by the way, but we'll pull that string another time.
There was a certain anarchist who took the protest in a different direction, though.
who took the protests in a different direction though. Known to be prolific in his acts of violence, Italian anarchist Severino de Giovanni carried out bombings against the American embassy
to protest the trial, bombings against the Italian consulate to protest Italian fascism,
and robberies throughout the country. De Giovanni's actions sparked debate among anarchists
about the issue of quote-unquote anarcho-banditry.
Some papers, like La Antorcha, defended Di Giovanni. Others, like La Protesta, attacked him.
Di Giovanni's fight came to an end in 1931, when he was arrested and executed for carrying out the
murder of one of his fiercest fellow anarchist critics, a certain La Protesta editor named
Emilio Lopez Arango. As you could
probably imagine, there weren't any general strikes to protest the Giovanni's execution.
General José Félix Uriburu led a coup in 1930 that marked the rise of fascism in Argentina
and the continuation of systematic persecution against workers and
anarchists. Many were imprisoned, deported, or killed, including prominent figures like Juan
Antonio Morán and Joaquín Peniña. Anarchist groups and unions were repressed under Uriburu's
martial law, while the more moderate Confederación General del Trabajo, or CGT, dominated by reformist socialists,
survived and became the main representative of workers in the country thanks to Uriburu's
corporatist stance. Martial law was peeled back slightly by 1932. With such heavy blows to the
movement, anarchists had to pull back to the more counter-cultural efforts that defined their movement in the 1880s.
Fora resumed publishing activities, with La Protesta returning as a daily. But government
pressure, including actions against its editors and restrictions on postal services, made it
difficult to maintain this daily schedule. Eventually La Protesta transitioned to a weekly,
then bi-weekly, and finally monthly publication.
Despite these challenges, a group of anarchist militants in Villa Devoto prison conceived the idea of a National Anarchist Congress.
This Congress first met in September 1932 in Rosario, with delegates from across the country.
And one key outcome of this Congress was the creation of the Comité Regional de
Relaciones Anarquistas, or the CRRA. This laid the foundation for what became the Argentine
Anarcho-Communist Federation, or FACA, in 1935, although the organization never really gained a
mass following. In 1935, Anarchists also established the Biblioteca Popular José Ingenieros,
a library and social center. While initially founded with the support of socialists,
the anarchists took full control after the socialists left. Around this time, anarchist
groups campaigned fiercely to free Voto, Manini, and Diago, comrades who had been tortured and
imprisoned for over a decade.
The newspaper Justicia was created solely to advocate for their release,
which was finally granted in 1942. Throughout this period, the anarchist press remained active.
The number of publications diminished. Several publishing houses like Nervio, Iman, Tupac,
and Reconstruir kept anarchist literature alive, publishing key
works and essays. In 1933, Acción Libertaria emerged and eventually became the voice of FACA,
later known as the Federación Libertaria Argentina, or FLA, until 1971. But the most
significant international event for Argentine anarchists during the 1930s was the Spanish Civil War.
The rise of fascism and the resistance led by the CNT and Federación Anarquista Ibérica, or FAI,
inspired Argentine anarchists to provide solidarity and support. Many traveled to Spain to join the fight, with José Grunfeld becoming the secretary of the FAI. Campaigns to support anti-fascists
in the Spanish Civil War were also launched,
with FACA publishing books and pamphlets on the struggle. FACA launched Solidaridad Obrera in 1941,
edited by Juan Corral and Loreano Riera, though it was later shut down by the first
Justicialista government under Perón. Fora also began publishing a series of booklets, including Todos contra la Guerra in 1935 and Lucha Constructiva por la Libertad y Justicia in 1944.
One notable libertarian cultural journal, Hombre de America, ran from January 1940 until the end of 1945, covering nearly the entire duration of the Second World War.
covering nearly the entire duration of the Second World War.
FACA was clear about its position on the global conflicts of the time.
In a 1942 general plenary, the group denounced both Western democracies,
which they saw as veiling capitalist exploitation,
and the Soviet Union, which they deemed bureaucratic capitalism.
However, they saw the greatest threat in National Socialism, the Nazis, and the rise of the Third Reich, warning that totalitarianism was the worst danger of their era.
Faka's statement to solidarity with the oppressed under Nazi barbarity also recognized the threat posed by Soviet expansionism and the false promises of post-war democracies.
Domestically, Faka and and FORA faced a new challenge
with the rise of Juan Domingo Perón. His populist approach, while beneficial somewhat to workers,
was paradoxical for anarchists. Perón's government promoted a state-centered,
jingoistic project that co-opted labor movements through control networks,
that co-opted labor movements through control networks, undermining genuine proletarian democracy. Anarchists rejected Peronism, seeing it as a threat to the revolutionary ethos of
worker solidarity. Despite this, Fora retained some influence, especially among agricultural
workers who were caught between the identities of peasants and workers. In June 1946, Anakis launched a new newspaper,
Reconstruir, with Luis Danussi as editor. The first issue featured Jacobo Prince's critique
of Peronism in an article titled El Totalitarismo Falsea El Principio de Justicia Social,
calling out the regime's distortion of social justice. By the late 1940s,
early 1950s, Fora's influence had waned, and anarcho-syndicalism was reduced to a smaller
rule in Argentina's labor movement. However, the Sociedad de Resistencia de Operarios del Puerto,
aligned with Fora, demonstrated their commitment to anarcho-syndicalism 1952 by rejecting a compulsory wage tax to fund a monument to eva peron jesus christ yeah
this act of defiance led to the imprisonment of several militants for six months
imagine you decide you want to reject extra taxes because the dictator's wife demands a monument.
You get thrown in jail because you decide you don't want to pay that tax.
God, it's terrible stuff.
While Perón's regime weakened free unionism, he did so by means of corruption rather than violence.
Contrasting with the methods of
his predecessor, Uripuro. FACA continued its work, holding several congresses, including the 4th in
1951 and the 5th in 1955, just before Perón's overthrow. In 1955, FACA rebranded as the
Federación Libertaria Argentina, or the FLA. And the FLA held its sixth Congress
in 1961, and its journal Reconstruir published regularly from 1959 until 1976, coinciding with
the onset of Argentina's most brutal dictatorship. But before we fast forward to 1976, we need to explore what took place in the 60s.
The 60s are known as the New Left Era in many parts of the world, thanks to the rise of student radicalism.
The New Left is marked by a notable libertarian and democratic impulse,
an emphasis on cultural
as well as political transformation, an extension of traditional left's focus on class struggle
to acknowledge multiple forms and bases of oppression, including race and gender, an
emphasis on anti-imperialism and anti-colonialism, and a rejection of bureaucracy and traditional
forms of political organization in favor of direct action and participatory
democracy. Many youth were searching for a third way outside of Soviet and Western models.
So during the 1960s and 70s, a new generation of Argentine youth turned to anarchism,
though they struggled to collaborate with the older anarchist movements.
Cultural and political differences were the heart of this divide, with younger militants aligning themselves more
with the global anti-imperialist movements of the time than with the anarchist legacy already within
Argentina. In some ways, this generational rift left a scar in the anarchist struggle.
In other ways, it helped younger anarchists to develop a clearer ideological stance
compared to their counterparts in countries
where such internal conflicts were less prevalent. One of the most significant anarchist groups to
emerge during this period was Resistencia Libertaria. Operating clandestinely and with
a cellular structure, RL aimed to ignite mass resistance and ultimately spark a prolonged
popular war. The group was active in neighborhoods,
labor movements, and student circles, and it had a small armed wing for defense and
expropriation purposes. Although it was formerly a national organization,
Aral's main operations were in La Plata, Cordoba, and Buenos Aires. As Argentina grew increasingly
polarized in the mid-1970s, our royal activists
became targets. Many were disappeared even before the military coup of 1976. But then it hit.
Henry Kissinger at the United States Machinations bore fruit.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, we go in there. A military coup overthrew President Isabel Perón,
the third wife of the original Perón,
and installed a junta led by Lieutenant General Jorge Rafael Videla,
Admiral Emilio Eduardo Macera,
and Brigadier General Orlando Ramon Agusti.
This coup was part of Operation Condor,
a coordinated effort between Latin American dictatorships backed by the United States under its Cold War national security doctrine.
The aim was allegedly to maintain stability in the region that America considers its backyard,
and US officials, including Kissinger, were sure to meet with Argentine military leaders
after the coup to encourage them to wipe out their opposition quickly and brutally
before any whiny human rights concerns started to be raised internationally. The junta remained in
power until December 1983, during which time some 30,000 people were disappeared or executed.
RL militants were particularly targeted by the regime. One particularly horrible story I have to share.
The military men responsible for the killings,
often spared pregnant women,
kept them in custody until they gave birth,
then killed the mothers
and gave their infants to childless military families.
Jesus Christ.
That's the kind of evil we're dealing with.
Yeah.
And despite the dangers,
RL continued its activities until 1978,
when a series of coordinated police raids dismantled much of the group. Around 80% of RL
members were detained in concentration camps, but they were tortured and most were eventually
executed. And that is how you kill a social movement. In the final years of the dictatorship and following the re-establishment of civil government in 1983,
new and relatively anti-authoritarian social movements emerged in Argentina.
Among the most prominent were the Madres de la Plaza de Mayo,
a group of mothers advocating for justice for those who had been disappeared under the military regime.
Alongside them, various ecologists, feminists, and other grassroots
activists began to make their voices heard. This shift marked a significant departure from
traditional state-centric leftist politics, with a growing inclination towards more decentralized
approaches. While this climate sparked renewed interest in anarchism, it didn't lead to a
substantial increase in the membership of older anarchist organizations.
Instead, it highlighted a transformation in how social movements approached activism
and sought to address issues of justice and accountability.
And then we come into the 21st century. In the early 2000s, Argentina, which was once a poster
child for neoliberalism thanks to the actions of the dictatorship,
found itself in the throes of a devastating economic crisis. This meltdown didn't just affect the economy, it ignited a wave of social movements that were far more confrontational,
radical, and anarchistic than before. We saw the rise of militant neighborhood assemblies,
factory takeovers, and intense street protests.
What was happening in Argentina was the direct result of more than two decades of so-called free market reforms and structural adjustment programs.
These policies had left the economy in ruins, with poverty and unemployment levels soaring.
By the time the crisis hit, poverty had shot up from 31% to 53%, and unemployment
had jumped to 21.4%, nearly a quarter of the country's population.
Out of this chaos came the PICTEROS, a new movement of unemployed workers who turned their anger into direct action.
They didn't just march in protest, they blocked roads demanding work and dignity.
But what set the PICTEROS apart from traditional unions was their commitment to horizontal organizing and direct action.
They knew that those unions didn't represent them,
and they wanted something more than just jobs.
They wanted dignity,
and they wanted a say in how society was run.
One of the voices from this movement,
a woman from the Solano neighborhood in Buenos Aires,
captured this spirit when she said,
I dream of my children finding a way of life here,
away from the despair the system gives us.
We're building something new. Politics without political parties. End quote.
The PICTEROs didn't just demand employment. They wanted meaningful work that gave them control
over their lives. They weren't looking to be folded back into the capitalist system that
had failed them. Instead, they called themselves autonomous workers, envisioning a society where people took charge of their communities and their futures.
And then came December 2001. On the 19th, the crisis hit a boiling point. All across the country,
people took to the streets. Unemployed workers, middle-class families, and whole neighbourhoods.
They were united in their demands.
An end to the government's economic policies and the resignation of the deeply unpopular president, Fernando de la Rúa.
After two days of street battles with police, the government collapsed.
In the wake of this upheaval, neighborhood assemblies popped up everywhere,
and the piqueteros intensified their efforts.
Millions of workers across Argentina joined a general strike.
In Buenos Aires alone, over a million people defied a government-imposed state of emergency,
flooding the streets in protest.
It wasn't just about venting frustration, it was about reclaiming their power.
In a way, the ideas of anarchism, self-management, decentralization, and direct action
were being put into practice on a truly massive scale,
even though anarchist groups themselves didn't necessarily lead the charge.
The fight wasn't just on the streets, though.
It had to happen in the factories, the fields, across all the sectors of society.
They couldn't just remove politicians.
They had to dismantle the entire system of exploitation
and replace it
with something radically different. A key piece of this puzzle was the rise of the fabricas recuperadas
or reclaimed factories. These takeovers didn't start with the 2001 uprising though. The first
occupation happened back in 1996 when workers in a coal storage plant took control after the bosses
abandoned it. More factories followed suit,
with workers stepping in when owners fled. But they weren't even trying to launch an offensive
against capitalism. They were simply trying to survive, to hold on to their livelihoods in an
economy that had pushed them to the edge. By the time of the Argentine uprising in December 2001,
over 170 factories had been reclaimed,
with some 10,000 workers taking part in this new form of collective labour.
The message was clear. When the bosses leave, the workers are more than capable of keeping
things running. In these reclaimed factories, they got rid of the traditional management
hierarchies and made collective decisions and shared income equally.
It was a living example of one potential way society could function without the capitalist class.
In the midst of the Argentine economic collapse, these workers didn't just resist,
they were also producing.
Hence their banner of Occupar, Resistar, Procir.
Occupy, Resist, Produce. They knew it was possible to not just fight
but to build something new from the ground up. Not just to survive but to lay the foundations
for a new society. The cries of Que se vayan todos, or basically out with all of them,
echoed the widespread disillusionment with the entire political class. But this sentiment needed
to be transformed into something more substantial, a proper political framework to drive the momentum
forward. But this alternative, this framework, this potentially anarchist framework, wasn't fully
developed among the population at the time. There were some comrades who were working towards building such a framework,
but much of the movement, particularly of the left, were focused on elections as a way forward.
Their logic was simple. A left-leaning government could introduce policies to alleviate the situation and prevent the open repression of popular movements.
But what would this really achieve? It risked the transfer of the struggle from the streets,
from the workplaces, from the hands of the people,
into the hands of a new set of politicians.
Shifting the focus from the masses to a few leaders operating within clearly capitalist institutions.
The elections were not important.
The fight wasn't about winning seats in the government.
And that needed to be understood.
The fight was about building a true
popular power. Que se vayan todos, out with all of them, rejecting not just individuals but the
entire political, social and economic power structures. Even though the Argentine people
were not identifying as anarchists, they were applying anarchist principles in many aspects
of their struggles. Just like the Zapatistas and Chiapas who rose up in 1994 with a rallying cry,
Ya basta!
Or enough already!
The Argentine uprising was a clear rejection
of state power and capitalism.
Votes can't last forever,
but they could plant the seeds of a new society,
one built from below.
But the movement was torn between the two approaches
of whether factories should be managed by workers under state ownership, or if they should be completely worker-owned.
Some argue the demanding expropriation by the state wasn't a real solution within a capitalist framework, because the state itself was responsible for the conditions they found themselves in.
But even though they argue that true workers' power came from the workers controlling their own production, on the flip side, cooperatives don't really address
the deeper issues of capitalism.
Cooperativism doesn't inherently challenge
capitalist relations of production.
It just tinkers with the surface issues
like monopolies, internal structures, and competition.
Building a network of cooperatives can be valuable,
but it's not going to create a subsystem
capable of toppling capitalism.
Anarchism, and specifically anarchist communist ideas, propose something far more transformative.
Abolishing all forms of power exercised by a minority, whether the bourgeoisie or the state.
Assuming control of not just factories and fields, but all of society. It's not a choice
between cooperatives or state-managed workplaces.
It's about creating conditions for all workers and all people to self-organize. And such reforms,
such as reforms for workers to have control of their workplaces, are merely steps toward a much larger goal that should be kept in mind in that struggle. These experiences and this history in Argentina shows us that anarchist
ideas are not just lofty dreams. They're grounded in real struggles of working people,
consciously or unconsciously, proving that a society without bosses, managers, and exploitation
is possible. Every social struggle, every revolutionary action is another step towards
building that world. Through these movements,
through these actions, through these struggles, we can see the foundation of a new society.
And to the people of Argentina, who now face the rule of a new right-wing menace,
I implore you to stand up and say once again, que se vayan todos. Out with all of them.
All power to all the people.
Peace. website, coolzonemedia.com, or check us out on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you listen to podcasts. You can now find sources for It Could Happen Here listed directly in episode
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Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast.
And we're kicking off our second season digging into tech's elite and how they've 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
brought to you by an industry veteran with nothing to lose.
Listen to Better Offline on the iHeartRadio app,
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Welcome to Gracias Come Again, a podcast by Honey German,
where we get real and dive straight into todo lo actual y viral.
We're talking música, los premios, el chisme, and all things trending in my cultura.
I'm bringing you all the latest happening in our entertainment world
and some fun and impactful interviews with your favorite Latin artists, comedians, actors, and influencers.
Each week, we get deep and raw life stories,
combos on the issues that matter to us,
and it's all packed with gems, fun, straight-up comedia,
and that's a song that only Nuestra Gente can sprinkle.
Listen to Gracias Come Again on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
On Thanksgiving Day, 1999,
five-year-old Cuban boy Elian Gonzalez was found off the coast of Florida.
And the question was, should the boy go back to his father in Cuba? Mr. Gonzalez wanted to go home and he wanted to take his son with him.
Or stay with his relatives in Miami.
Imagine that your mother died trying to get you to freedom.
Listen to Chess Peace,
the Elian Gonzalez story,
on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.