It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 167
Episode Date: February 1, 2025All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. The Decline and Fall of the American Post Office Nut Country Revisited feat. Steven Monacelli & Dr. Mi...chael Phillips They're Trying to Put Women Into Men's Prisons How Unions Can Protect Trans Rights Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #1 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 Sources: The Decline and Fall of the American Post Office https://www.nalc.org https://www.fightingnalc.com https://concernedlettercarriers.com https://www.nalc.org/member-benefits/nalc-disaster-relief-foundation Nut Country Revisited Michael Barkun, A Culture of Conspiracy: Apocalyptic Visions in Contemporary America https://www.ucpress.edu/books/a-culture-of-conspiracy/paper Mark Fenster, Conspiracy Theories: Secrecy and Power in American Culture https://www.upress.umn.edu/9780816654949/conspiracy-theories/ Edward H. Miller, Nut Country: Right-Wing Dallas and the Birth of the Southern Strategy https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/N/bo19197692.html How Unions Can Protect Trans Rights Solidarity Pledge: https://crm.broadstripes.com/ctf/SJID0H https://sbworkersunited.org/ https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-sign-orders-ending-diversity-programs-proclaiming-there-are-only-two-sexes-2025-01-20/ https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-orders-end-federal-support-gender-affirming-care-minors-2025-01-28/ https://www.wjhl.com/news/regional/tennessee/bill-would-block-insurance-companies-that-cover-gender-affirming-care-from-contracting-with-tenncare/ https://www.npr.org/2024/12/24/nx-s1-5238169/starbucks-strike-christmas https://www.them.us/story/starbucks-threatens-to-take-away-trans-rights-at-stores-that-unionize See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Dicked Up and Here, a podcast about things falling apart and putting
them back together again. I'm your host, B.O. Wong. So long ago in a galaxy far far
away we talked about the collapse of the US Postal Service and the absolute
horror show that's been inflicted on postal workers. When we last left our intrepid heroes things were
not great and they have continued to be not great and with us to talk about this entire shit show
is Badmouth who's a letter carrier for it worth and Tommy Espinoza
Who is a former letter carrier and former union steward for the post office union that one?
Yeah, look, it's like I got up at 7 a.m. This morning
You're getting tired via but both of you to welcome to the show and I'm excited to talk to you both
Yeah, it's great to be back.
Yeah, thanks for having us.
Yeah, so, all right, let's start in a place where many things start, which is to say the
1970s, the full chrome upon which history pivoted.
So one of the things, and we talked about this in our last episode, is that post office
workers are not legally allowed to go on strike. This is sort of nonsense, but it also doesn't mean that it's never happened.
Oh, by the way, I was just about to talk about a wildcat strike.
Disclaimers, no one here represents a union.
They're speaking in their individual capacity, etc, etc.
None of this is legal advice.
Do I have any more caveats that we usually say for these things?
That's roughly all of them.
Yeah, but do you want to talk about sort of the last time more caveats that we usually say for these things. That's roughly all of them.
Yeah.
But do you want to talk about sort of the last time that things kind of looked like this and what happened?
Yeah, Tommy, you want to take that one?
Yeah.
So, uh, just going back to the 1970s, the working conditions for letter
carriers were so bad that most of them couldn't afford the cost of living. They found themselves in a position where they are working for a quasi-federal
position and are finding themselves on welfare, struggling
just to find the means to get to work, oftentimes having to work a second job if they even have time for a second job because
the post office has and still is very good at skipping around a lot of labor laws.
I think nowadays people probably work around 60-hour weeks.
I think probably at a minimal around 50-hour weeks, especially around the holidays. And it's not just letter carriers. This is
people inside of the distribution
centers, inside of the warehouses. Things were not good. And on top of the actual working
conditions themselves, the environment was incredibly toxic. There was a long history
of abuse. You're dangling people's livelihood over their head, like holding a carrot over them,
you know?
And it really pushed people to an edge.
You saw a lot of violence on the workroom floor, not only from supervisors, but from
carriers that just snapped.
Yeah, it was a time of great disparity.
Yeah, the thing with the post office is like Tom was mentioned and they dangle
the carrot, but there's never any goddamn carrot. It's all stick. It's supposed to be carrot and
stick. It's all stick. There's no carrot there. Management in the post office is just trying to
get you move as fast as possible and cut corners and that erode safety, it erodes service, and it's just a toxic, horrible, horrible environment.
And so back in the 70s, before the wildcat strike, it was illegal then, just like it's illegal now.
The NELC, National Association of Letter Carriers, Congress called all the shots.
Like we had some collective bargaining rights, but not full collective bargaining rights.
But like back then, adjusted for inflation starting wage was 50,000 a year,
roundabout, and it topped out at about $68,000 adjusted for inflation.
And that took 21 years to get to that point.
Yeah.
So it's, it's pretty wild and like very similar to today.
Now starting wage adjusted for inflation is just over $40,000
before taxes.
So it's, we're making even less money now than we were before that wildcat strike.
Right?
And a couple other real familiar things like, you know, unpopular wars, rampant inflation,
you know, every time you turn on the radio or TV, there's some lunatic politician that
you can't stand hearing about.
Time is a flat circle.
But Vince Abrado, who was an organizer out of New York City, the NLC didn't strike all
over the country.
It was New York and Chicago and San Francisco.
It was some major hubs, right?
And Vince Abrado came out of that and we won
in that strike one collective bargaining rights. Now the thing we gave up and it was a trade
off. So we have a no layoff clause. So they can't lay us off, but we gave up the right
to strike making sure that there wouldn't be another wildcat strike. Right? So that's
kind of why our hands are tied in that sense.
Now if we have an impasse with our negotiation and like we get a tentative agreement and
we during the ratification process vote that down, now we can either try and go back to
the bargaining table or it gets brought in front of an arbiter, basically an impartial
judge and they'll have a panel.
The post office will pick two and the NLC will pick two.
And then I think there's one impartial that's supposed to be impartial between that.
I believe that's how the arbitration process works.
We got to prove our case in front of impartial arbiters instead of going on strike.
Yeah.
And so as we sort of mentioned before, one of the things about the post office is it's
similar. If people remember the rail, like the rail strike that didn't happen where?
There's all of these hoops you have to jump you'd be able to go on strike and that it that's because again like rail workers
Postal workers don't operate under the normal sort of National Labor Relations board like framework right now
Admittedly there was a very good chance that it like it like seven months. We don't even have that no one has that anymore
But you know Right now we are right now.
Yeah, it's the thing things are going good. But as things are going right now,
let's get into the current tentative agreement.
And I guess we should actually we should roll this back a little tiny bit.
For people who haven't listened to these episodes before, can you explain what a tentative agreement is?
listened to these episodes before. Can you explain what a tentative agreement is?
Right, so a tentative agreement is effectively the first draft.
When you are going through and negotiating,
you will reach a contract where management and the union
kind of agree and they put it before their union members.
And the idea is that your union members are able to vote
whether or not
this tentative agreement passes.
And again, like Adanaph was saying, if it gets rejected or if it gets turned down, then
it goes back to the drawing board or we get an arbitrator and goes through a lengthy process.
Our specific contract has been under negotiation since before I was in the post office.
The amount of back pay that they're going to have to pay on some of these raises is
kind of insane.
And I imagine that a lot of people won't see it for a long time.
But yeah, that's what a tentative agreement is.
A lot of people think that it's
a bad thing to go back to the drawing board or a bad thing to renegotiate or be put before
an arbitrator. I largely think that is a myth. If you think about any sort of negotiation,
the first offer is never the best one. I think a lot of people are just afraid that somehow
you would end up giving more than you're getting. And I think that's of people are just afraid that somehow you would end up giving more than
you're getting.
And I think that's just the way that the rhetoric has gone for unions lately.
And I guess I need to adjust that a little bit because the Teamsters, even like the Service
Workers Union, they're all really doing well.
The Communications Union, they're in a little bit of a different age, but
a lot of the post offices, old heads, military veterans, that kind of sort who just come
from a little bit of an earlier time when the labor movement was really starting to
plant their feet on the ground.
Yeah. A lot of them are still dealing with, like most of us are, the hangover from the Reagan years.
Yeah.
Right? So they're all terrified of union stuff. Even though they love the union and they're in
the union, they're very distrustful of it. And they don't think that we can ask for what we
deserve. They think we need to ask for what they think we can get based on the shit that
management is saying, because they're, again, still shell shocked from the Reagan years and all the anti-labor stuff.
And that's had a profound impact on most of the unions
that survived that period.
And a lot of them didn't, right?
Which is part of why you get people who behave like this.
But on the downside is it means that you get handed
a lot of deals that absolutely suck.
But do you know what else absolutely sucks?
It's the products and services that support this podcast.
They probably don't, I don't know.
We are back. So let's talk about what the tentative agreements that y'all are being asked to sign is right
now.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's been, I think we're coming up on 600 days since our last contract expired.
Jeez. Yeah, yeah. There's people that just want their back pay. So even if the back pay is
dog shit, they're desperate because inflation is 8% across the country in some places, right?
And like, people are just desperate for that chunk of money. That delaying process feels very,
very intentional. Yeah. So the tentative agreement comes out around 500 days
after negotiations were supposed to have started. And there's all sorts of nonsense going on
during then, but we're getting promises like it's going to be a historic agreement. We're
going to get significant raises. We're going to go to an all career workforce, which by
the way, we don't have right now.
Can you explain what that is by the way? Yeah, okay so in every other trade you have an apprenticeship program, right?
So when you get on the job, you're wet behind the ears, you're brand new, you are automatically
career.
You are automatically paying into your retirement, you're automatically getting the regular benefits
everyone else is.
In most trades you're paying half the dues that the journeymen are paying and you are considered a full employee. You're the new Jack, you're getting all the shit jobs,
but you are a full employee. The post office has a position called the city carrier assistant,
which on paper and how they'll tell you sounds like an apprenticeship program, but it's really
more like they took an apprenticeship program and an unpaid internship and jammed them
together because these kids are coming in and I'm not even kids. I'm 40 years old. I
started as a CCA at 40 years old. They're coming in making less than $20 an hour. They're
not considered a career. So they're not paying into the retirement. You don't got all the
same union protections. Your benefits are super low. You get five days of annual leave a year
and no sick time. She's like, it's, it's, yeah, it's a meat, it's a meat grinder. So
that was a big thing and it creates a whole third tier. Cause we already have two different,
two different tiered wage system, which sucks enough. And you, anyone that pays attention
to labor that drives a huge wedge between workers and it crushes solidarity and kneecaps
a union.
And now with the CCA position and this non-career workforce,
it's created a whole third tier.
This is one of the things that the UAW was fighting for is like, is
eliminating tiering systems altogether.
Because if you're, if you're actually trying to get a functional
union and make people's jobs better, that's the thing that you do.
And having a, having a third. Yeah, not good extremely bad
Yeah, exactly
And it's it's because they've adopted sort of this Amazon model of doing things where they just have this burn insurance
Situation where like Amazon what is it Bezos said that he doesn't want anyone working for Amazon for more than like two years
Yeah, if they have these people constantly and they're constantly burning through them and they never have to pay full benefits
They never have to pay into their retirement, they never have
to pay them more than $20 an hour, and they can just get you to work your ass off and
burn out and quit within two years, as people retire, their labor costs go down.
It's evil.
It's absolute.
It's some Jack Welch hateful, hateful bullshit. So touching on that, if people are really quitting before they reach a point in their
career where they're educated and can stand up for themselves or stand up for each other
on the workroom floor, that's one of the major reasons that our union is failing.
And like you said, you used the exact example that I would have.
The Amazon model is working really well.
If you can just make it so that people are so miserable, they quit their job before they
understand what their rights are, how they can protect each other, what even the contract
says on the basics of when can you call out, when are you required to come in, can they
send you home early without your pay?
That's massive.
And while we were talking about the conditions of the 1970s
and how long it takes you to get to the top of the pay scale,
this third tier actually increases that time
by sometimes three or four years.
I've known people who have been CCAs for three or four years.
I don't think I've seen beyond that, but it wouldn't surprise me.
What this does is it means that before you go career, you're spending all this time.
You're effectively a fully trained, full employee, completely capable of doing everything that's required of you.
You're just not getting any of the career benefits, making a minimum wage.
And on top of that, the way our benefits work is it does come out of your paycheck.
Sheesh.
Not like other jobs where it might be a separate package or already calculated in, for instance,
a lot of the trades, they'll say, hey, you get 23 an hour, but the reality is you're
making around 29 or 30 because you're not paying into your health insurance or your
retirement or anything like that. You're effectively making less than the minimum wage.
You're almost paying to go to work as a CCA.
And just to be yelled at and told that you're not going fast enough, even though there's
no street standard, but that's getting into a little bit of nipicky contracts stuff, but
yeah.
So yeah, that's one thing that they were promising was to get rid of that non career workforce.
So this TA comes out and after hearing that we're getting rid of the non career significant
raises, it's going to be historic for us.
What they offered us was 1.3%.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
If you are in a union and you hear your leadership say the words historic contract, you are screwed.
That agreement is going to suck.
I remember on this show, literally live and recording right before they're supposed to be at the Teamsters UPS strike, right?
Like I'm literally on the episode with two of the union people and we get the text of the contract in the middle of recording
and we get the thing with it is this is a historic contract and we're like reading in the middle of the contract in the middle of recording and we get the thing with it is this is a historic
contract and we're like reading in the middle of the episode like wait this fucking sucks
shit it's like that's that's how you know you are do when you get the historic when they start
pulling out the historic contract thing yeah you'd think if you're making six figures a year you
could understand how to buy a used car and know that you promise low and deliver high like I don't understand how
Six figures a year. They haven't figured that out. But yeah, so in this contract
1.3% and that's enough to piss anyone off cuz that drops about the same time that we all see the the longshoremen
Going back to the table because they didn't get 60% You know what I mean?
I'm surprised more people just didn't call in sick because
we all got this news on the workroom floor and I was like, did you see this shit? I know
people that quit that day. You know what I mean? Like, it's wild. So 1.3% they're keeping
the city carrier assistance, the non-career workforce, they're removing some of our union
protections, right? Like it used to be, you have a 12-60 hour
rule. You don't have to work more than 12 hours in a day or 60 hours in a week. You can say,
I can't do this. I'm going home. And the union could protect you. Now, if you are a CCA or if
you have signed up to do overtime and they tell you to stay 16 hours, you have no choice. Jesus Christ.
So you gave up things for a 1.3% raise is like,
that's the kind of thing that you get if like,
I don't know, say like you got like some unbelievable
concession package somewhere else,
maybe conceivably you would take that,
or maybe it's
a thing where like you're like a nurse and your problem isn't pay your problem
is you're working like two million hours a week but like that's that's a that's a
you got concessions somewhere else kind of thing not a we gave up stuff for like
the worst raise you've ever seen yeah I mean it makes you think about like what
was there what was their first offer like I, mind you, it's been over 500 days of negotiations.
What was the first offer?
We got to put the fuel in the mail trucks ourselves?
Like what the, you know what I mean?
Tom, do you want to talk about what the tentative agreement doesn't address?
So the tentative agreement, we spoke about the post office's strategy for dealing with
our grievances or how to combat the union last episode.
And so, for the people that didn't listen to it or just need a refresher, the post office
has found this extremely effective strategy that if they just don't agree at any point
in our grievance procedure, which is if they violate
the contract and we want to be made whole, whatever that may look like, they can just
keep on saying no and push it up to arbitration because there is a grievance procedure that
ends up with a third party intervening as well.
And if they push enough of those grievances up, we have a major backlog on this process
because our final resort is now just the standard of operation.
And what that means is that there's nothing to force the post office to comply with the
contract.
If someone wasn't paid correctly or was missing a whole day of pay, got sent home or was put on emergency placement,
which is a process where they say you did something dangerous and so they can take you
off the clock.
It could be months or even a year before your case is even looked at.
They do have a process, of course, where they try and prioritize it, but it's obviously
not working.
The other thing that the contract doesn't
really touch on is our uniform situation where the companies that make and
manufacture the uniforms for our letter carriers and actually for all the
positions in the post office are effectively trying to sell you a shirt
for like $80. Oh Jesus Christ. The mostgregious one. It's like your winter parka is close to $400
and your allowance that you're you're given is I think 380 FM. I don't know. It's been well.
Oh my it's up to 499 but the rain trench coat just the rain coat is $465 and you have to get
it through a vendor so you can't even pay them money to do that.
Like a pair of polyester pants
that's gonna fall apart in two months, $95.
Oh my God.
Oh yeah, no, it's wild price gouging.
And they were gonna address that.
And what they did was they increased our uniform allowance
by $35.
Which is like three pairs of socks from those magazines
Great incredible stuff. Yeah, it's it's it's why
Someone should dig into who's running that company and like who they're working with to get those contracts because
Probably a fun story there. I think it's like four out of five of the approved
Manufacturers or the distributors are owned by the same people so oh great. Okay. Yeah, I
I'm bequeathing this as a gift to I know there's a bunch of journalists you listen to this go go do that story
I guarantee you'll find some unbelievably unhinged stuff and a quick shout out to any letter carriers that are are listening to this if you
Don't use your entire allowance look out for the CCAs, look out for the PTFs, the non-career and the fresh faces on there.
If you don't use the entirety of your uniform allowance to the way that they view it is
that they can give us less money.
So use all of it.
Don't protest by not spending that money.
It's not even yours.
So spend it, Give it to someone.
Do something, you know?
Yeah.
Get the new jacket in your office.
A fucking raincoat.
Cause like I tried to do the math on it for winter gear for a place like Minnesota to
get all the winter gear and your summer gear.
It's going to take you four years of uniform allowances to get all that gear.
Right?
It's ridiculous.
Yeah.
And like it's Minnesota, right? Like
I'm from Chicago. So like it is it is slightly warmer in Chicago and you get wind chills
and negative 40 here and like Minnesota is much worse. So like that is that that is not
like optional stuff. That is the difference between you having hypothermia and you not
having hypothermia. Yeah, no, exactly.
And God forbid you want to buy a pair of shorts as well
because Minnesota summers get over a hundred heat index.
Yep, yep, yep.
But yeah, speaking of ways to not die in Minnesota summers,
here are some products and services that will probably not help you with that,
but maybe they will.
And we are back.
One of the other things that Tom touched on that this agreement doesn't address is he talked about the non-compliance and the grievance backlog,
but also just the toxic work environment, which we've talked about. And it's so bad.
The whole reason we have the trope of someone going postal is usually because someone's
bullied to a point where violence occurs. They either take it out on management or my
own manager in my first year got in a fist fight with one of the clerks. The post office
has lost grievances because management was threatening to shoot an employee.
Any letter carrier would have been fired for that immediately.
That manager got a letter of warning.
Yeah, we have a joint statement on violence in the workplace, which I think you were about
to get into.
It's like, yeah, they're just not complying.
It's a very one sided thing.
Effectively, management has qualified immunity.
Great! Great! Your managers are also cops that can attack you!
Incredible, incredible stuff from the post office.
Yeah, and then there's a bunch of wage theft, too.
Personally, I caught my own manager putting in all the CCAs for two-hour lunches,
because the CCAs are new and don't know what they're doing doing and they don't know to check their time all the time. Putting us all in for two hour lunches and
then told me, tried to pretend to me, Oh, that was just an automatic computer error.
Whereas if we take a 31 minute lunch, I have my phone blowing up being asked why I'm not
moving and delivering the mail, but you guys managed to accidentally miss a two hour lunch.
Come on. You don't gotta lie. You don't gotta lie to be two hour. Look, come on. You don't
go like, you don't get a lie to be my friend. Like, come on. And then, and then there's
other places around the country where we, the NALC is one grievances where management
was making CCAs work in the dark, delivering mail till like 7 30 PM and clocking them out
at four o'clock in the afternoon.
Right? So they got people out there working for free. It's it's and we have to catch it. We have to catch them doing that. Yeah. They're
never going to own up to it. They'll watch their payroll. The management structure at,
at the post office. It's like the T move version of game of Thrones. They're all nasty. They're all
backstabbing each other. And like the nastier you are and the more willing you are to screw people,
other and like the nastier you are and the more willing you are to screw people, the higher up you go in management at the post office.
Like it's, it's disgusting.
So there's even more convoluted ways that the management finds to effectively steal
from the employees.
And one of them huge problem is changing the metrics on what a route looks like.
And so they can alter the times of, hey, how long you were in the office packing your truck
when you got back to the office and started unloading and cleaning.
And so what they do is they make it look like the street time took you, let's call it five
hours and you were in the office for four hours.
That way they can make a route look smaller than it actually is and have an excuse not
to hire another person, which makes it so that this poor carrier who was assigned to
this route now has a 10-hour day, 11-hour day just by default on a light day, on a regular
day.
This is a really big problem for the rural carriers.
Their contract is a little bit different.
Effectively, they get paid by the job, not necessarily hourly, or that's the case for
a lot of them.
And so if you're adjusting their times, they're going to be paid out for an eight-hour day.
But their route has just been stretched out through this method of just dishonest scanning and
dishonest entries and they get free labor.
And I'm not even well versed on the RCA contract.
That's a whole other, you know, there's only nine unions that go into the post office,
which means there's probably nine different contracts.
Yeah.
And in every single one of these contracts, they're inventing new, different and unique
ways to do wage theft
just steal people's money which
And it's worth noting again
Like if a post carrier like broke into an office and stole the amount of money that is being stolen from them
They would go to prison forever, right?
But because it's your boss doing this like the worst thing that happens to them is they have to go through a grievance procedure
Even though they are just literally robbing you.
Yeah. Yeah. And yeah, you do not fuck with the male cops, but the male cops, the postal
inspectors work for management. Yeah. So, uh, yeah. And management does nothing but
sit in their chair all day, sniffing their own farts, watching tech talks and trying
to figure out how to screw people through the virtue of spreadsheets while we are all out working our asses off.
It's a very demoralizing and abusive, abusive situation. So we were hoping that shit would
get addressed in the tentative agreement and none of it was. So there was all sorts of
problems with that. I'm with building uh, building a fighting NELC.
And uh, we are a, basically a bottom up, more of a radical reform caucus. I, I am out of
Fort Worth, but like it started in Minneapolis and you got people in Chicago and New York
and Naples, Florida and San Antonio, Hawaii, all over the country who are basically, we
are tired of, uh, we, we are tired of our leadership being in bed
with management, or at least doing things where they look like they're in bed with management.
We've been putting on vote no rallies all over the country.
You've probably seen some on the news.
This is vote no for the tiny different.
This is a vote to send your bargaining reps back to the table with the demand that we
can't take a deal that sucks this much. That's what a vote no thing is. Yeah. So yeah, we've been trying to get letter carriers
to vote no on it. That's so we've been doing the vote no campaigns so we can vote this shit down
and get it in front of a judge. Because once it goes into arbitration, there's a lot of fear
mongering things. Oh, we could lose this. Oh, we could lose that. Oh, we could lose this.
But like Mia, you said it yourself. These are are all concessions we're not getting anything for giving up all these things 1.3 percent is what we're
getting like yeah like 1.3 percent is is the kind of raise that like in a normal
functioning union is like that that's like a company's opening agreement that
both you and the company knows you're not going to take yeah like it's a joke
like that in and of itself
would be a major concession to get something else, but we're doing all these concessions
to get that. Yeah. That's the win quote unquote. Yeah. So the thing is the postal reform act
says that we are supposed to get paid comparatively to a comparable company in the private sector.
So an arbiter is going to look at that and try and look at UPS, UPS or Amazon.
And the post office is really trying to push it towards Amazon, which is why I try to talk
to every letter carrier I know to support and get some cross craft solidarity with Amazon
because without going on too much of a rabbit trail, the you know a rising tide lifts all ships yeah and and one a union in another
industry helps everyone in every other industry and trying to get people to
understand that but like you compare our contract to UPS yeah and UPS they top
out with I think their their benefits package tops out a hundred twenty four
thousand a year and it's about you, five or eight years to reach top scale. Ours tops out with this tentative agreement
at 93,000 a year and it still takes us 13 years to get to top steps. Christ. That's
not comparable, right? Yeah. Yeah. No, not at all. So I'm not afraid of arbitration.
I'm hoping we get this in front of an arbiter because unless that arbiter is completely crooked, I can't see him saying, well, you guys deserve 1.3%.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So when I first saw Bad Mouth talking and what his posts were on Reddit and stuff like
that, I got really excited because I remember when I was speaking to my local president
and talking to the stewards in my area across a couple of different stations, the kind of big question was, what do you
do when the union breaks your heart?
And I guess the answer is everything that Badmouth has just talked about.
You build a better one.
You remind people that there is an alternative.
Everything started somewhere. And if you go to his first episode on the, from Ada arbitration podcast, he has
something called the CCA corner where he's educating the newcomers, the fresh
faces, he's just talking about horizontal power.
And I was listening to that episode, um, before we had spoken, I got so excited
just to hear what this person was up to you know
I tried to sneak in as many anarchist shit without be saying I'm an anarchist
I try and sneak as much of that shit in as I can
I get old heads who have a Trump hat on talking about anarchist talking points. It's it's funny as fuck to me
You know who won't break your heart
products Podcast if you don't buy them and therefore
cannot be heartbroken.
Is there anything else you want to talk about with arbitration or should we move on to the
impending doom of the post-sustained?
Yeah, I think I think the arbitration there's a whole lot of fear-mongering and shit I think anyone paying attention to things we can't get a worse deal is the main point there and
That's that's the whole point of the vote no campaign is to just tell people hey, dude
We might as well go down swinging like we're not're not going to get a worse deal than this.
But that's that's pretty much it for arbitration.
Yeah.
So let's let's move on to the future of the post office, which I want to take a second
to mention that like, okay, look, like I am not someone who has any respect for the people
who built the US government.
However, if you want the US government to like exist, right?
The postal service is something that was deemed so important
that it is like establishing the postal service
is in the main body of the constitution.
Now, freedom of speech, right?
And like the right to free association,
that is not in the main body of the constitution.
That is a fucking amendment, right?
The people who built the American system
thought that the postal service was a more important thing to make sure to have in the main body of the Constitution that set up the modern version of the government, right?
They thought that shit was more important than like, your right to have freedom of assembly, like your right to not literally be grabbed off the street and tortured, which is like the Fourth Amendment, right? So like, you know, in the scale of priorities of like, how important is the postal service?
Like that's how important people who set it up thought it was.
And those people were not very smart and like a bunch of racist slave owners.
So I would argue it's actually more important than they thought it was because they're,
you know, I mean, like obviously their priorities are completely out of whack but like I am not a founding father Stan but the
post office was actually invented by Benjamin Franklin who I don't believe
owned any slaves and yeah he was really racist but yeah I mean like I know I know
that like I know that part I just I don't think he actually owned anybody but like that's it's a yeah. Yeah
And it was started I think 15 years before
The Constitution was even written. Oh, no, he did he he did he did own a slave as a young man
And I think freed him
You know, I was trying to get the racist bastard a little bit of a win, but like we're finding this out live on this
So yeah, he did for his early life and then became an abolitionist later
Which is still bad. Um, yeah. Yeah
That's uh, you know glad you came around eventually I guess I don't know
Look, we're finding this out live on this show. Oh my god. That was a lot of time of him owning slaves
That absolutely sucks shit
I take back my critical support
Critical opposition
To hell with Ben Franklin why they didn't teach us that in school
to hell with Brent Franklin. Why they didn't teach us that in school.
Yeah.
The hell with Brent Franklin too.
But yeah, um, couple, we're coming in as Trump administration and stuff.
And let me tell you that the situation wasn't really great under Biden either because we
have a postmaster, uh, Lewis dickhead to joy.
He was put into place by Donald Trump and you've seen, they've wanted to slow walk the post office into privatization
since the Reagan years, right? And they're just slowly chipping away at service and quality.
DeJoy was connected to XPO, the giant logistics company. He had stock and I can't remember
what position he held. He apparently detangled himself from that when he became postmaster.
But you know, they all all say that I don't know
I am not an accountant, so I can't do that
Well it like it like also I want to point out the president of the United States is issuing a cryptocurrency
Like that shit that shit is that shit is so fake now
Yeah, so like the choice also got a reputation as just being a massive job killer besides looking like a low rent Spiderman villain. So under his 10 year we've seen service take
quality take a nosedive and I want to talk about this stuff and this might get my ass
in trouble but like I am tired as a, as a letter carrier who loves my job, loves saying
hi to people in the neighborhood, loves walking through yards and knowing the names of all the dogs on my route and being the face of the post office.
It is so frustrating to have people blame the mailman and the letter carrier for the
decline in service because we are out there being brutalized by the post office, doing our best and fighting
against the degradation of service that is a top-down problem with leadership in the
post office.
I wanted to outline some of the stuff that I have evidence of and have seen firsthand
of management undercutting the service of the post office. They willfully delay the
mail all the time.
Jared Sussman Jesus Christ.
David Kuznicki There's pictures of racks and racks of DPS.
It's assorted letters and they come in trays, just sitting in a warehouse somewhere. And
management, they will order you on a regular basis to prioritize delivering packages over
the mail. If it's a big heavy day and they're looking at labor hours they will sometimes tell you to not deliver the mail and just deliver the
packages because the packages have a tracking number and their boss can get
it they can get in trouble for that but they can lie and hide the mail for
another day like that shit happens all the time yeah so it's like I just be
like they can just be like hiding like your bills or like social security
check yeah yeah also your junk mail have you ever have you ever ordered Just be like they can just be like hiding like your bills. Yes, or like social security check. Yeah. Yeah
Also your junk mail have you ever have you ever ordered something and it says it was delivered?
but you didn't get it and then it shows up the next day or
It says that oh, there's a vacation hold
I didn't put this on hold and then it shows up the next day or you gotta go down to the post office to get
It or recently severe weather delay. Yeah. Well, I mean, the severe weather delay
can happen, but what I'm talking about is ones where the package didn't make it to the letter
carrier who's out there delivering, because this has happened to me multiple times, and it didn't
make it to me before I left the station, but because they want to make their numbers look
good for their boss, they will scan it at the station as if it was delivered or as if it's a cheese.
Oh yeah.
So because they want their numbers to look good because their entire job is life on a
spreadsheet.
And so then I have to, I have to talk to my customers the following day.
We're like, it said it is delivered.
I didn't, I saw you and you didn't drop it off.
I was worried someone stole it.
What happened?
I was like, I know exactly what happened
I know what their name is that's some of the service degradation
We've had people in other areas catch management throwing away mail Jesus
Yo, yeah management reprimanding carriers who follow the manual and provide good customer service
Like I've been on the phone where I've had my manager call me because I was standing in one place for five minutes,
because I was helping an elderly woman move her garbage cans and helped her get some groceries
out of her car to bring in, you know, all the stuff that you see, the good mailman, the reason
why people love the post office, shit like that. I got told, no, you're not doing that. And I had
another customer come up to say hi to me while I was on the phone.
And I just stopped to just say hi as I'm walking by and my manager
chewed me out for even talking to the person.
They don't care about us.
And they throw us under the bus all the time, because if I don't deliver a package,
cause they never made it to me.
And it says delivered, the customer will come and complain at the post office.
Management will tell them, Oh, I'll talk to the carrier.
That carrier made a mistake.
And it's no carriers do make mistakes, but like this intentional degradation of
service to make the numbers that blame always goes on the letter carrier.
And it is, I, we love our job.
We love our jobs.
We love our communities.
We, I got like, I might start crying if I
talk about this too much. Like I love bringing treats to dogs. Like I get Christmas cards
from old folk on my route. Like I, I know, like I, I know when some people's birthdays
are, and I had an old timer on my route, sat outside to say hi to me every day. Suddenly
he wasn't and his wife was out in the garden. I said, where is he? Oh, he passed last night and she starts crying. I start crying and like, I get in trouble for
taking five minutes to give her a hug and talk things through for a second. Like it's yeah,
sorry. This is one of these areas where like delivering the mail is a social thing. But the thing is like sociality is the enemy of capital.
And that's the people who are running the post office that they don't give a shit about,
you know, like the actual social bonds and ties that, you know, that are the thing that society is supposed to be composed of.
Like they care about their metrics and them being able to make more money and them, you know
Being able to advance higher in their career ladder
Yes
It reminds me a lot of the campaign against the school system
Where you deliberately other fun things and then you blame the teachers for why the service is bad
It's like well, it is not the teachers fault that there's like 48 kids in a classroom, right?
Like yeah, you know, and there's also a very, very similar privatization campaign run by a bunch
of really powerful forces. Let's go back and talk a bit about like who the people are,
who are doing this and what their sort of plans are.
Yeah. So you have DeJoy, he's doing that. And we have all of these, they're starting to,
some of the stuff they're building these, I think they're called SDNCs. It's basically they take a bunch of
post offices from a metro area and then they make one big distribution hub like Amazon. Well, that
is adding an hour commute onto some of these letter carriers. They come in, they get to their mail
truck and then they have to drive their mail truck for an hour to even start delivering. Right? It's
a huge mess and it's a huge
fiasco and it feels very intentional because what's going to happen when they close those
facilities built by the government down and it starts to privatize. Well, what do you know?
Amazon just got a new hub or whoever ends up trying to step in. That's a little conspiracy
brain, but like certain fiascos done by DeJoy's delivering for America plan seem tailor made
to fail for the post office, but work for someone else.
And then also you have Brian Renfro, who is the current president of the NALC, the one
who was telling us that our tentative agreement was going to be historic when all it does
is help management.
He has gone on speaking tours lying about this tentative agreement and everything he
says sounds like management gave him a script. And there's a whole lot of theories on that
and how when he loses his position, people have running bets on what position he's going
to take in the post office. The second he's voted out.
Yep. Yep. Yep. He's the one that who's negotiated this whole contract. He used his position
as president. He iced out everyone from the union. He's the only one who talked to the
post office. So this, this tentative agreement is his baby. Wait, what? Yep. The executive
council. What? Yeah. He didn't tell the executive council. You didn't have like a bargaining
team. No, but have like a bargaining team?
No, but he had a bargaining team that were all of outside contractors.
He had no one from the union with him. What? Yeah, because he wanted it to be his baby. That's so unhinged.
Oh, yeah. That's like I need to stop here for a second because that's like if your union is doing that to you,
you need to understand like dear listener, that is not how any of this shit is supposed to work. Like even a normal corrupt union
will have a bargaining team that is composed of like,
it will have a bargaining team that isn't outside contractors.
There'll be people from inside the union
who are like the Stooges of like
whatever sort of management clique is in power.
Like having them all be outside contractors
is one of the most ludicrous things I've ever heard.
Union negotiation, cutting out the entire,
that's so wild, oh my God.
Oh yeah, no, and the thing is,
we're coming up on 600 days without a ratified contract.
Like, he has been the only one doing it this whole time,
and there's a bunch of shady shit.
Okay, so he's struggled with alcoholism.
I have dealt with addiction,
I have lost friends to addiction, I have. I have dealt with addiction. I have lost friends to addiction.
I have family members struggle with addiction.
I respect anybody who is going to take care of themselves.
But he disappeared for something like 50 days or something.
She didn't tell anybody.
He ghosted everybody.
He ghosted everybody.
And this is early days of negotiation. People stepped in to start negotiating without
him. It turns out he had gone and checked himself into rehab.
But the thing is, the NLC has two fucking vice presidents. I
have all the respect in the world for some to take care of
themselves. But when you got 277,000 employees livelihood, you're responsible for and you got I don't care if you got 277,000 employees, livelihood, you're responsible for, and you got, I don't
care if you got cancer, if you got a, an addiction problem or I don't care what it is.
If you got to step away to take care of yourself, please do that.
But put your vice, one of your two fucking vice presidents in charge.
So what happens is someone steps in while he's gone.
He comes back, gets mad at them,
strips them of their responsibilities, blackballs them from the union, and goes back into negotiations
all by himself. Which is why, getting to the next point on this, at the most generous, he is inept
as hell. He is inept as hell and just the worst sort of person to be in there at the worst. He is corrupt as hell and just DeJoy's stooge.
And the thing is, we work for the federal government, whether it's malice
or incompetence with the federal government, it's usually both.
And it doesn't matter what, which one it is to me, whether he's corrupt or just
an idiot, it's all the same to me because I can't make my fucking rent.
So we expect DeJoy and the
post office to do us dirty. That's their job as management. But to have the president of
our own union doing this to us is unacceptable. And like, it's, yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. So on that note, that's one of the big pushes for the union recently has been to reach open
bargaining where the membership is actually a part of it.
And that's what, to my knowledge, is one of the major issues that the building of fighting
NILC or the building better union talks are going towards.
Yeah.
Can you, can you talk about what open bargaining is? It's the thing that should be the standard for all unions, towards. Yeah. Can you, can you talk about what open bargaining is?
It's the thing that should be the standard for all unions, but.
Yeah.
I mean, open bargaining is effectively the bottom up structure of having your members
or even the representatives put forward motions that are open to the public and open to the membership so that you can effectively
ask for more or get a different variety of opinions and strategies. You know, the
duality of power kind of structure. But what the Post Office currently has, it's
not open bargaining. Or what the Postal Union has, it's not open bargaining. They have
their own team that they send in. They don't talk to the membership. You kind of just elect your officials and then they come back with whatever they ended
up with and they don't consult with any of their bottom line, which is problematic for
obvious reasons, including this one where someone can go missing for 50 days and most
of the membership has no idea. I've even talked to people. I think it was like two or three weeks ago.
I went to a bar and I ran into a letter carrier from the next city over.
I was like, Oh, did you vote?
No.
And it's like, what are you talking about?
He doesn't know that there's a vote going on.
It's out there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But yeah.
Yeah.
I guess, uh, I mean, like the main objective we want to do, I'm sure we're running out of time. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But yeah. Yeah. I guess I mean like the main objective we want to do. I'm
sure we're running out of time. Yeah. Yeah. I could talk about this shit for days. I mean,
I do. That's pretty much all I do anymore. But like Tom was saying, the building of fighting
ALC and pushing for the vote. No thing. The main thing that we're wanting is coming on
to shows like this and getting the public perception of what the letter carrier deals with, what's going on.
Cause this Trump's coming in, they're going to be trying to privatize it like they always
do.
That's already been in the works.
It's important that the public knows this degradation of service is the point of it.
And how, how can the public sort of support our fight so we can keep the post office?
So I wanted to just share a couple of links.
If you're, if you're a letter carrier and you want to get involved with
reforming things from an electoral end, uh, there's the concern letter carriers
and you can go to concern letter carriers.com.
They're going to be running in 2026 to get rid of Renfro.
If you are impatient like me and you can't fucking wait that long.
And if even if you're not a letter carrier, you can see how we're fighting with the building of fighting NLC
Which is more of a radical bottom-up reform caucus
If you want to get involved in that or you just want to kind of get updates from people who aren't gonna bullshit you
You can go to fighting NALC comm to check that out
Oh Tom, did you want to talk about the NALC Legislative Action Center?
Yeah.
So, uh, we touched briefly on it last episode.
The NALC actually can't really use a lot of the money and funds from the
union itself to lobby or to push Congress or anything like that.
So there are separate, uh, organizations, there are facets of our organization
that do that.
You can find that at nalc.org.
Specifically, they do have a link where you put in your zip code and it gives you the
appropriate Congress member to write a letter to and really push them on what to do there.
You can also donate to their fund if you see so fit and are able to do so.
Yeah, and that legislative action thing is
actually pretty cool because you don't even have to call. They'll have pre-filled out things that
you can just click enter your email and it'll do it for you. So it's a real quick snap. It's the
easiest way to harass your congressperson aside from drunk-dialing Ted Cruz which is my favorite.
Yeah we'll have links to all that. We'll have links to all that in the description.
There's one more plug I wanted to make because all the fire's out in LA right now, because you
have letter carriers where the post office burned down, and so did their house. And now they're
reporting to duty at another post office 20 minutes away to go and deliver, deliver mail to a devastated neighborhood.
Because the thing is when shit happens, whether it's a hurricane or a fire or, you know, the
first people who show up are your neighbors or the punks or the punks and mutual aid and
your neighbors show up. The first person you see from the government, we're federal employees. We're not federal is, but the first hint of normalcy that a lot of people get is trying to just
hide out and be safe. And then they see their mail mail walking through their fucking lawn,
trying to deliver to their shit. You know what I mean? Like that's important. And we
all love what we do. We love being a part of the community and we love helping. And
sorry, I knew I was going to cry at some fucking point. Uh, okay. So the NLC has an
NLC disaster relief fund. The public can donate to it. It's usually letter carriers. We all
donate to it. And what happens is if your house burns down like in LA right now, or
if like you were deaf, say in the fires in, in, in Hawaii or whatever, when that happens,
a letter carrier can apply and as soon as they're approved, which can happen within
a day or two, they automatically get sent like a thousand dollars from the fund to just
pay for their pay for their hotel or pay for their rent, a car, and then they get approved.
It's not a fix all, but they'll get like, they'll get another check after a little bit to
help with some of their damages after they make their claim. That's something that normally just,
it's just letter carriers giving to letter carriers so we can all take care of each other.
But like the public is allowed to donate to that too. I know there's a lot of you guys have already
been talking about a lot of mutual aid stuff at the beginning of your episodes lately. I just
want to plug that one is a mailman specific one. Yeah. I'm sorry for crying. No, no. Yeah. I mean, it's it's emotional.
It's yeah, this shit sucks, bro. Yeah, it really does. And yeah, is there anything else
that you want to make sure people know before we head off? If I have one thing, it's just
help your co workers. You don't have to be a steward. You don't have to be anything.
Just find someone you don't think deserves it.
Help them too.
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I'm Michael Phillips, an historian, the author of a book about racism in Dallas called White
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Since the late 1990s, Alex Jones built an extensive media empire, spreading outlandish
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A native of the Dallas suburb of Rockwall,
over the years Jones has claimed that the Apollo 11 moon landing was fake. So too,
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that inspired action from Governor Greg Abbott. Now to a Texas-sized conspiracy theory sparking headlines across the country, including this
week in the New York Times.
The theory that an upcoming Pentagon training exercise is actually part of a plan to impose
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Texas Governor Greg Abbott ordered the Texas National Guard to monitor U.S. Army troops
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We're playing a pivotal role of government, and that is to provide information to people
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Texas Senator Ted Cruz pledged that he would demand answers from the Pentagon about the
military's intentions and said he completely understood the widespread paranoia.
You know, I understand the concern that's been raised by a lot of citizens about Jade
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We have seen for six years a federal government disrespecting the liberty of the citizens.
And that produces fear.
Suffice it to say, the Obama administration did not overthrow the state government.
The intense outrage and fear generated over army combat preparations might have seen perplexing
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However, seething distrust of liberal elites is a lucrative business in Texas.
Alex Jones built a fortune of $270 million with his internet show and sales of dubious
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This is nothing new south of the Red River.
From the beginning of its history, the state has been an incubator for outlandish and occasionally not completely unreasonable conspiracy theories.
After Texas violently separated from Mexico in 1836, white Texans spent the next decade
fearing their southern neighbor, a nation that saw the Texas Revolution as illegitimate
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Meanwhile, those same white Texans viewed the African Americans they enslaved with suspicion
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This created an atmosphere of uncertainty and distrust that fed conspiracy theories
of all sorts.
After their rebellion against Mexico,
Texans wanted to become part of the United States,
but they were forced to spend almost a full decade
as an independent republic because of well-founded
suspicions held by American abolitionists
that the Texas Revolution was a part of a plot
to add a slave state to the union.
A decade later, the tide shifted,
and Texas was hurriedly annexed in 1845 after widespread
rumors gripped Washington, D.C. of a British plot to annex Texas and convert it to a haven
for African Americans escaping slavery.
In the 1850s, even prominent Texans like Sam Houston flocked to the American party, also
known as the Know-Nothings, that claimed
the pope had ordered Catholics from Ireland, Germany to immigrate to the United States
in order to take the country over and hand power over to the Vatican.
Panics over suspected rebellions by the enslaved gripped Anglo-Texans in 1835, 1838, 1841,
and in 1856, when perhaps as many as 400 African Americans held in bondage in
Colorado County and South Central Texas apparently plotted to rise up against their white oppressors
and battle their way to freedom in Mexico, where slavery had been abolished.
In 1860, construction workers carelessly tossed matches into a pile of wood in Dallas during
a hot, drought-ridden summer.
The blaze that resulted destroyed much of what was then only a village.
Immediately suspecting that enslaved arsonists had set the fire as part of a planned revolution,
whites in Dallas tortured and whipped almost every enslaved person in the county in search
of scapegoats.
Eventually, they hanged three African Americans and set off what would become known as the
Texas Troubles.
Fires broke out across the state, and each got blamed on black suspects and their supposed
white abolitionist instigators, often men from northern states.
As one historian put it, white Texan enslavers decided it was better to, quote, hang 99 innocent
men than to let one guilty pass.
Acting on little evidence, mobs lynched as many as 80 enslaved African-American men and 37 accused
white abolitionists by the time the panic burned out in September. A wave of labor unrest including
the Great Southwest Railroad Strike of 1886 and the rise of the Populist Movement, which
called for the government seizure of railroads and telegraph lines, in addition to a global
panic amongst the well-to-do about anarchism after a series of bombings in Europe and even
the United States from the 1880s to just after World War I, convinced economic elites in
Texas that revolution was in the air.
The Ku Klux Klan, which in its original
incarnation during Reconstruction, served as a goon squad to keep newly freed African American
labor under tight control, came to dominate cities like Dallas in the 1920s, where one in every three
eligible men were members of the KKK at its peak. The KKK charged that both Jews and Catholics were conspiring
to control the world. Texas politicians like Representative John
Box of Texas, in a column in Henry Ford's anti-Semitic newspaper, The Dearborn Independent,
charged that Jews had manipulated the Congress to add loopholes to American immigration laws
passed in 1921-1924 in order to let Jewish people
escaping the Russian Empire into the United States as part of a scheme to undermine American
society.
As oil millionaires and billionaires built their wealth over the 20th century, they became
a force in conspiratorial far-right politics in Texas.
Starting in the 1930s, they mobilized against Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, which they
insisted was a part of an international communist plan to overthrow capitalism around the planet.
Anti-communism, anti-Semitism, and hostility to the post-World War II African American
civil rights movement blended seamlessly in the conspiratorial imaginations of the far-right
in the Lone Star State, ideas that reached a national audience in large part because of oil money. John Owen Beatty, the
longtime chairman of the English Department of Southern Methodist
University in Dallas in 1951, authored one of the first and perhaps the bestselling
of all time book promoting Holocaust denial, Iron Curtain over America. Beatty claimed that the Jews of today were not the Hebrew heroes of what Christians call the Old
Testament. Instead, they were descended from a sinister Asian trot called the Khazars that
converted to Judaism around the year 800. Too arrogant to assimilate with Christian Europe,
Beatty wrote, Khazars undermined society under their stolen identities
and caused the Communist Revolution in Russia in 1918. After immigrating to the United States in
large numbers, they took over the Democratic Party, Beatty said, and moved it to the radical left.
Beatty also claimed that Jews controlled Franklin Roosevelt's administration and pushed it into
war against Hitler's Germany, which Beatty described in his book as quote, the historic bulwark of Christian
Europe.
A mere six years after Soviet and American troops had liberated Nazi concentration camps,
Beatty claimed that most of the victims there died from disease and the Holocaust was a
fraud used after 1948 to blackmail the West into political and financial support
of Israel.
The SMU professor urged the United States to expel Jews from the United States.
Rather than earning him scorn, Beatty's virulently hateful anti-Jewish rants won him a large
following.
His book, Iron Curtain Over America, went through nine printings by 1953.
The Public Affairs Luncheon Club, a women's
organization, adopted a unanimous resolution backing Beatty in requesting that SMU investigate
alleged communist influence on the university's faculty, politics, and values. Beatty taught
at SMU until his retirement in 1957, two years after a panic over allegedly read art, during
which the conservative Dallas
Patriotic Council accused the Dallas Museum of Art of intentionally promoting, quote,
subversive artists who were ostensibly part of communist front groups connected to the
Soviet Union.
After World War II and the establishment of communist regimes in Eastern Europe and in
China, the uber-wealthy giants of the Texas oil industry, to a large
degree, funded what came to be known as McCarthyism.
Clinton Murchison, whose son in 1960 became owner of the Dallas Cowboys National Football
League team, became one of the largest financial contributors to red-baiting Senator Joe McCarthy
of Wisconsin.
In Houston, hard-right organizations like the Minutemen fought against
school integration and took over the school board, firing the assistant superintendent,
George eBay, because he previously lived in California and Oregon, where he had nice things
to say about Roosevelt's New Deal and the African-American freedom struggle. A math
instructor got fired after he carelessly commented in a teacher's lounge.
They supported Adlai Stevenson, the liberal Democratic Party nominee for president in
1952 and 1956.
The Eastern School Board yanked books from campus libraries that said positive things
about the United Nations, while right-wingers in Dallas forced the city library and the
Museum of Fine Arts to ban artists like Diego Rivera and Pablo Picasso because of their supposed communist sympathies.
But before we get into that, a quick ad break.
One Dallas oil magnate who built a mansion intentionally designed to be a bigger duplicate
of George Washington's Mount Vernon estate, he used his wealth to broadcast extremist
fever dreams in the 1950s and 1960s.
His name was H.L. Hunt, and he was profiled by the BBC in the 1960s.
But as well as being perhaps the most frugal, the most stingy plutocrat of Texas, H.L.
Hunt is probably the most controversial.
For he is a fervent advocate of right wing, some would say reactionary causes.
He is against the UN, against the war on poverty, against Medicare, against central government
aid of any sort.
He would rather Washington didn't rule the United States at all.
And in his ideal land, votes would be distributed according to the amount of taxes you paid.
More than most Texans even, he is inclined to seek communists under every couch and
behind every curtain.
To Hunt, mankind is divided into communists and constructives, his private word for anti-communists.
You are either for him or against him.
He brooks no halfway position.
A health fattest who avoided white bread and sugar, Hunt believed his diet of largely
raw vegetables might actually allow him to achieve immortality. He also thought he had
psychic abilities, lived as a secret bigamist, and published pamphlets such as Hitler was a liberal.
An early prototype of Rupert Murdoch and Elon Musk, Hunt tried to create
an alternative right-wing media infrastructure, funding a nationwide radio program and pamphlet
subscription called Lifeline that promoted conspiracy theories from coast to coast.
It is time for Lifeline.
Let us tend to the Texas climate.
...around the world. Every leftist phrase and cliché of the past half century now has The Lifeline show was hosted by a former FBI agent named Dan Smoot
and broadcast on more than 80 television and 150 radio stations.
Hunt believed that democracy was the instrument through which wealth would be seized from billionaires such as himself
and redistributed to the lazy and the worthless.
Hunt once raged at Smoot when the Lifeline hosts claimed on air that democracy was a
political outgrowth of the teachings of Jesus Christ.
Hunt corrected Smoot, condemning democracy as the handwork of the devil, in a phony,
liberal form of watered-down communism.
Hunt innovated a number of ways to alarm audiences about far-left plots.
During the last two years, H.L. Hunt has added another emotive missile to his armory. alarm audiences about far-left plots. The United States really don't believe that communism is a serious threat.
Well, these people are in for a big shock,
because the communists have every intention of doing exactly what they've said they'll do.
And they do not hesitate to use force and violence
any time they think that it will further their cause.
Now, I don't pretend to know all the answers, but I do know that it is our duty to get out
and warn others of the serious threat that we are facing.
We have got to get out and tell others of the subversive movements that are going on
right here under our very own noses.
It's time to do away with this attitude.
Oh, it can't happen here.
Will communists bury us?
Will we face firing squads as in Cuba, and will our little bitty children become slaves?
Ladies and gentlemen, the answer rests in the hands of you and others like you.
Thank you.
For much of the 20th century, Dallas had built up a reputation as a clean, dull, modern,
and efficiently run city. By the 1950s, however, it had also acquired a reputation as the capital
of crackpots and conspiracy theorists, a development that historian Edward H. Miller would describe in his
book, Nut Country. In 1954, Dallas elected a far-right House representative,
Republican Bruce Alger. Less than a week prior to the 1960 presidential election
between John Kennedy and Richard Nixon, a pro-Alger mob assaulted in spat on the
Democratic vice presidential nominee and then Texas Senator
Lyndon Johnson and his wife Lady Bird as they left the Adolphus Hotel in downtown Dallas.
Alger joined the protesters who held signs with slogans that said,
LBJ sold out to Yankee socialists. Soon thereafter, Major General Edwin Walker,
who inspired the deranged fictional character General Jack D. Ripper, the person responsible for global nuclear holocaust in the 1964 film Dr. Strangelove,
called Dallas home.
I can no longer sit back and allow communist infiltration, communist indoctrination, communist and the international communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily
fluids."
Before filmmaker Stanley Kubrick turned Walker into an unforgettable caricature, the real-life
Walker achieved infamy, commanding an infantry division in what was then Western
Germany.
President Kennedy pressured Walker to resign because he repeatedly lectured soldiers under
his command to vote for far-right-wing political candidates.
He also distributed among the troops literature from the conspiracy theory promoting far-right
John Birch Society, and he encouraged them to join.
The John Birch Society, formed in 1958, opposed
American membership in the United Nations, which it claimed was part of a
global communist conspiracy to enslave free peoples around the world. The fringe
organization, established by former candy manufacturer Robert Welsh, accused all
American presidents, from Franklin Roosevelt to Kennedy, of being secret communists
under the command of the Soviet government.
The John Birch Society also saw the African American civil rights movement as part of
a Bolshevik conspiracy to divide the country, and argued that efforts of towns and cities
after World War II to add fluoride to public water supplies was part of a sinister scheme
to weaken men physically and make them less able to resist the supplies was part of a sinister scheme to weaken men physically
and make them less able to resist the radical takeover of the United States.
That particular Berkshire conspiracy theory made a long-lasting impact on the American psyche.
Cities across the United States banned fluoridated water.
Today, the John Birch Society is still active in North Texas, where recent gubernatorial candidate and car dealer Don Huffines has published anti-fluridation essays on the Dallas
Express, a right-wing website that repurposed the name of the historic black newspaper that
went defunct in the 1970s.
Edwin Walker's devotion to the John Birch movement cost him his military career.
Under pressure from Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, Walker retired and moved to Dallas,
where he found a friendly political environment.
The national far right saw him as a martyr to Kennedy's supposedly out-of-control leftism,
and he received financial support from fellow devotee of the John Birch Society, H.L. Hunt. In 1961, Walker made the cover of Newsweek
as a leader of the New Right.
And in 1962, he entered the race for Texas governor.
To all victims of communist tyranny
throughout the world, I send this word.
The hour of your deliverance is approaching
to patriots in every land korea
the ukraine the baltic nations
hungry
each germany the condo
and every other land stricken by the monster of communism
i think
for the time
lalo
preparing your hearts for liberation
do not expose yourselves to the brutal requital of a monster temporarily in power."
Walker was a painfully dull public speaker.
In the end, he couldn't bring his version of deliverance to his own state,
finishing a distant sixth in the 1962 gubernatorial race.
That would not prevent him and his allies from creating mayhem over the following months.
He got arrested and was ordered to be psychiatrically evaluated by Attorney General Robert Kennedy
after he incited racial violence during the integration of the University of Mississippi
in September 1962.
Adlai Stevenson, John Kennedy's ambassador to the United Nations would confront Walker and Amatova's followers when the diplomat visited Big D on October 26, 1963.
Stevenson was shouted down as he attempted to deliver a UN-day speech to the Dallas Council
on World Affairs. Let's... shall we get on with the business of the meeting?
Surely... surely, my dear friend, I don't have to come here from Illinois to teach Texas manners,
do I?
Outside Memorial Auditorium Theater, where Stevenson delivered his speech, Walker had
gathered a furious gang of middle and upper class men and women who rocked his limousine
back and forth while it waited to whisk him away to safety and surrounded the ambassador when he stepped outside. When he finally returned
to Washington DC, Stevenson warned the administration about the intense and
extremist atmosphere in Dallas where President Kennedy was planning a visit
meant to heal a rift between the conservative and liberal wings of the
Democratic Party in Texas. On the morning of November 22nd, 1963,
Kennedy and his entourage felt foreboding
as they prepared for a short airplane
drawn from Fort Worth to Dallas.
The president just examined a full page ad
in the far right Dallas Morning News
that featured a bold face headline,
Welcome Mr. Kennedy to Dallas.
The advertisement paid for in part by H.L. Hunt's son Nelson Bunker Hunt and the future
owner of the Dallas Cowboys, H.R.
Bumbright, featured accusations that Kennedy was soft on communism around the world and
radicals at home, while persecuting conservatives who criticized him.
The same morning, a group distributed leaflets designed like a wanted poster with front and
side photos of the president with the caption,
Wanted for Treason.
How can people say such things?
The president said to First Lady Jackie Kennedy.
We're heading into nut country.
Soon the Kennedys would make their fateful flight to Dallas and the president would die
from an assassin's bullet shortly after noon.
The president's murder spawned a cottage industry of conspiracy theorists.
Some said the president had been murdered by the mafia, angered because they had been investigated by the president's brother,
Attorney General Robert Kennedy. Others blamed Teamsters president Jimmy Hoffa,
who also had been the subject of criminal probes by the Justice Department.
Other suspected assassination plotters included Cuban leader Fidel Castro, who had himself
been targeted for assassination attempts by the Kennedy administration, exiled Cubans
in Florida, angered because the president had not fully supported the attempted overthrow
of Castro during the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion, and
even the Soviets.
One of the more elaborate theories involved an alleged plot hatched by American military
leaders and CIA agents angered that Kennedy supposedly wanted to end American involvement
in Vietnam.
Finally, others said Lyndon Johnson ordered a hit on the chief executive because he wanted
to grab power.
Or maybe others said Kennedy died because of a combination of some or all of the above,
having made enemies with the intelligence agencies under his command, who he had said
he would dash to the winds if they continued to do things that were against what he saw
as in the best interests of the United States.
Quote, President shot 129 times from 43 different angles, a satirical headline from The Onion
later asserted.
Sometimes conspiracy theories have deadly consequences.
William L. Pierce spent his teen years attending a military academy in Dallas as the city stood
in anti-communist dread and anti-Semitic hatred.
As a young adult, he had joined the John Birch Society, but grew frustrated because it wasn't
racist enough.
He became a leading figure in the American Nazi Party, and at the age of 41, formed the
Neo-Nazi National Alliance.
Beginning in 1975, he published in serial form one of
the most influential examples of white supremacist literature, The Turner
Diaries, a novel which told the story of white nationalist revolution in the
United States in the near future. This revolt is sparked by a Jewish authored
law outlying private ownership of guns. The hero, Earl Turner, joins an underground terrorist army,
the Organization, which battles a Jewish plot to destroy America not just through gun control,
but also through uncontrolled non-white immigration and by using rock music and drugs to encourage
interracial sex. At one point to save the white race, Turner blows up the FBI National Headquarters in
Washington D.C. with a truck bomb.
In the novel, racist revolutionaries then take over Vandenberg Air Force Base in Southern
California and seize its nuclear missiles, which they later use on cities across the
nation.
While ethnically cleansing California of non-whites, they hang 60,000 so-called race traders during
the Day of the Rope, a phrase you may find familiar if you've ever looked at white supremacist
posts online.
In the end, the book's hero, Earl Turner, finally defeats the system by flying a crop
duster armed with a small nuclear weapon into the pedagon.
White nationalists have since seen the Turner Diaries as both an accurate description of the modern world and as a manual on how to
win a race war. From 1983 to 1984, the Order, a white supremacist terrorist group that took
its name from the secret circle the fictional Earl Turner joins, robbed a pornography shop,
banks and armored cars, heisting more than $8 million they later distributed to several white supremacist groups
with the intent of funding a white revolution.
Along the way, they assassinated Jewish radio talk show host Alan Berg.
The Turner Diary became the favorite novel of Timothy McVeigh,
a bitter, disgruntled veteran in the 1991 Gulf War,
who saw the deadly confrontation between the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, a bitter, disgruntled veteran in the 1991 Gulf War, who saw the deadly confrontation
between the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms and the gun-toting Branch
Davidian Religious Sect in Waco, Texas on April 19, 1993, as a major step in a government
plan to seize firearms from law-abiding Americans.
McVeigh had spent years selling copies of the Turner Diaries at gun shows. He retaliated against what he saw as his government oppressors by
blowing up the Alfred Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on the second
anniversary of the Waco Conflagration. He used a truck bomb, facing his attack, in
part on the fictitious bombings of the FBI headquarters in William Pierce's
novel. The Turner Diaries also depicted a deadly attack
on the US Capitol.
Some of the pro-Trump rioters who assaulted the Capitol
on January 6th erected gallows and live streamed
their crimes as they joked about hanging politicians,
comparing it to the day of rope,
Pierce described in his pro-Nazi work, The Fiction.
Stay with us through this ad break to learn more.
["The Fiction"]
Kennedy was a classic Cold War liberal
in support of an aggressive military intervention
to stop communist expansion abroad
and with varying degrees of commitment, economic and
civil rights reforms at home.
But because of his assassination, by the 21st century, many on the far right saw him as
a martyr to the liberal deep state.
Beginning in 2017, a very online far-right conspiracy theory arose that centered on cryptic
messages first posted on the 4chan message board and then on 8chan
by an anonymous person who identified themselves as Q.
The pseudonym was for reference to the Q clearance which gives government officials access to high-level
security secrets. Kennedy would be central in the imagination of what came to be known as the QAnon movement.
Q or QAnon developed a huge following that interpreted these confusing and often contradictory
posts as actually revealing a secret global cabal that included top Democrats like Hillary
Clinton and liberal celebrities like Tom Hanks.
These people were all accused of being a part of a child sex trafficking ring in which the
young victims were molested and tortured and in some interpretations of the theories had
their precious bodily fluids harvested to manufacture a drug known as adrenochrome,
a drug that produces hallucinations and supposedly grants eternal youth.
These stories resembled anti-Semitic legends about Jews kidnapping Christian children before
Passover in order to use their blood in matzah bread.
A trope or canard really that has become known as blood libel.
In the QAnon mythology, Donald Trump plans to conduct mass arrests and executions of
these satanic child molesters in an event called
the Storm. Trump has winked and nodded to the QAnon movement, encouraged believers,
and even incorporated some of its key slogans and imagery in speeches and posts online,
such as Where We Go One, We Go All. And as I've reported for Rolling Stone, a cult-like spin-off group of QAnon
believers have repeatedly gathered at Dealey Plaza, the site of JFK's murder, to wait for
the prophesied return of JFK and his son, JFK Jr., who both are dead, but these believers
think were either miraculously resurrected or never actually died and have been secretly working with Trump to take down the aforementioned global Satanic
pedophile cabal. Some believe that when JFK and JFK jr. finally reveal
themselves a sort of kingdom of righteousness will reign and good will
ultimately prevail over evil. QAnon believers were a heavy presence
during the Capitol insurrection on January 6, 2021.
And QAnon banners competed with Trump and Confederate battle flags for attention.
In November of that first year, we saw the first of a series of rallies that Steve just
referred to.
They went to Dealey Plaza, where President Kennedy had been murdered 58 years earlier.
Over the course of many months, QAnon disciples kept returning to the site of JFK's death,
some staying at a local hotel so they could be nearby when the Kennedy return happened.
This was covered by Dallas ABC affiliate WFAA in November 2021.
Reporter Kevin Reese interviewed some of the ones gathered
at the Kennedy assassination site.
Word on the street is that Junior, JFK Junior,
will show up and introduce his parents.
You're expecting JFK Junior?
Absolutely.
Okay, how's that gonna happen?
He never does.
Are we gonna see him today?
JFK Jr.?
Yeah, that's what everyone's telling me.
We're hoping to hope and pray.
And then after that?
He'll probably be the vice president with Trump.
Conspiracy theorists often pay a high personal price for beliefs that
marginalize them from family, friends, and mainstream society.
There was one real truth several of these people agreed to talk about.
But you gotta understand that most of the world is going to think that's just crazy.
That's why half my family won't talk to me anymore.
They won't.
And my girlfriend thinks I've lost my mind.
With the return of Donald Trump to the White House on January 20th, conspiracy theories
will move from the fringe to the seat of power.
JFK Jr. will emerge and grab the reins,
but a different Kennedy will, Bobby Kennedy Jr.
Bobby Kennedy Jr. has insisted that Wi-Fi causes cancer
and that AIDS might not be caused by HIV.
Vaccines, he claims, against overwhelming evidence
cause autism. Antidepressants cause
school shootings, and chemicals in water lead to gender dysphoria.
One of these chemicals, R.F.K.
Jr. insists, might be an old obsession of the conspiratorial right.
I think fluoride is a poison.
It causes loss IQ, neurodevelopmental injuries. I think Florida's on the way out.
R.F.K. Jr., mind you, is the nominee for the head of the Department of Health and Human Services
and in a recent interview claimed that he was aided in his schoolwork through the recreational
self-medication of heroin. Trump has himself obsessively promoted
his own sinister tales of the deep state that supposedly stole the 2020 election from him,
and as we have said, has co-opted some of the slogans of the QAnon movement. None of this,
obviously, was disqualifying to a plurality of voters this past November. So why are people drawn to conspiracy theories?
First off, they provide convenient explanations that can be broken down into sort of simple
logics for people who may not have frameworks for understanding a complex world.
And they also provide believers sort of new family and friends as they become increasingly
alienated from their original family and friends as they become increasingly alienated from their original family and friends.
Regardless of whatever plots they believe they have revealed, it's clear that conspiracy theorists
of this sort, they don't believe that history is a product of class conflict or imperialism or
the global scramble for natural resources, nothing like that.
It's not shaped by political and economic alliances between elites
or irreversible transformations in technology
that render old job skills irrelevant.
There's no material analysis.
All of this loss, all this fear, all this terrifying disruption
of what is comfortably routine, they view
stems from a sinister plot, a plan that is hidden tightly by a small circle of elites,
sort of cartoon villains with near superpowers that control the world.
And if only the right people, the sort of heroes of the story, of the movie that they
think that they're watching, if only those people would step sort of heroes of the story, of the movie that they think that they're watching.
If only those people would step forward
and pull off the mask of the villains,
then everything would be set right.
These enemies of freedom somehow pull all the strings
and sight unseen, manipulate every aspect
of the world's politics, culture and finance,
manipulate elections, engineer depressions, urban riots, and even hurricanes.
Yet for all their cleverness, they leave just enough clues so that amateur sleuths,
if they are just smart enough, can crack the code.
Conspiracy theories make history an understandable contest between ruthless bad guys and intrepid heroes
who then feel superior because they've
unveiled the master plan.
As they discover kindred spirits, they find community otherwise lacking in their lives.
Perhaps if just enough people know about the conspiracy, they hope, the bad guys will fall
and the millennium will follow.
That fantasy offers a simpler, more emotionally satisfying vision of the future than planning
on how to dismantle capitalism, or figuring out how to persuade white people, for instance,
to surrender their privileges that come with skin color.
Conspiracy theories are mostly a distraction, but unfortunately they are often, from Oklahoma
City to the U.S. Capitol, a call for deadly action.
And while figures like H.L. Hunt and their operations like Lifeline may be in the past,
we have our own contemporary versions of this with roots in Texas.
We now have Elon Musk who controls X, formerly known as Twitter,
in which he has used his platform with millions of followers to promote dangerous conspiracy
theories like the Great Replacement Theory, which we recorded a previous episode of this podcast about.
Ultimately, we are living in a culture that swims with conspiracy theories,
and for us to make our way out of the rabbit hole, we're going to need some sort of framework
for understanding the world, something that can help us better understand
how we got here and where we're going.
And no matter what that is,
it certainly won't be something as simple
as believing that we just have to pull off the mask
of some villain,
and then everything will be set straight from there.
This is Michael Phillips.
And this is Stephen Monacelli.
Thanks for listening.
Hi, I'm Arturo Castro, and I've been lucky enough to do stuff like Broad City, and Narcos,
and Roadhouse, and so many commercials about back pain.
And now, I'm starting a podcast because honestly guys, I don't feel the space is crowded enough.
Get Ready for Greatest Escapes, a new comedy podcast about the wildest true escape stories
in history.
Each week, I'll be sitting down with some of the most hilarious actors and writers and
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People like Ed Helms, Diane Guerrero, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and Zoe Chao.
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Charles Manson.
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Asada Shakur.
The sketchy guy named Steve.
It's giving funny true crime.
I love storytelling and I love you. So I can't
wait. Listen and subscribe to greatest escapes on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
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Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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The OGs of uncensored motherhood
are back and badder than ever.
I'm Erica.
And I'm Mila.
And we're the hosts of the Good Moms Bad Choices podcast,
brought to you by the Black Effect Podcast Network
every Wednesday.
Historically, men talk too much.
And women have quietly listened.
And all that stops here.
If you like witty women, then this is your tribe.
With guests like Corinne Stephens.
I've never seen so many women protect predatory men.
And then me too happen.
And then everybody else want to get pissed off because the white said it was okay.
Problem.
My oldest daughter, her first day of ninth grade,
and I called to ask how it was going.
She was like, oh, dad, all they were doing was talking about your thing in class.
I ruined my baby's first day of high school.
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What turns me on is when a man sends me money.
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I'm like, oh my god, it's go time.
You actually sent it?
Listen to the Good Moms, Bad Choices podcast every Wednesday
on the Black Effect Podcast Network, the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you go to find your podcast.
Hello, and welcome to It Could Happen Here, a podcast about things falling apart and how
to put them back together.
I'm your guest host, Margaret Killjoy, and this is an episode about both of those things.
Not Margaret and Killjoy, but about things falling apart and putting
them back together. If you live in the US, you might have noticed that things are falling
apart. In the onslaught of new federal changes over the past few weeks, there is one that
is both astoundingly important and also likely to disappear below people's radars. Because
it affects prisoners. Trans prisoners.
Prison is the place that society puts people to forget that they exist.
It shouldn't be that way.
Well prisons ought not to be how we solve problems as a society at all.
But it is the way that things currently are.
Things that affect prisoners are routinely ignored, even though we live in a society
built on the idea of
incarceration.
It's been in the news that us trans people somehow just sort of don't exist anymore.
That everyone is either male or female, dictated at birth and immutable.
Obviously, this flies in the face of biological and social reality, and it's going to impact
us trans people
quite a bit.
One group of people that it's going to impact very immediately, very dramatically, and very
dangerously is trans prisoners.
According to Bureau of Prison Statistics, there are currently 1,529 trans women and
744 trans men held in federal prisons.
And not all of them are being held
in gender appropriate prisons already.
As we're gonna talk about with our guests in a bit,
prisoners have to go through an incredible amount
of dehumanization in order to have a chance
of being placed in the right facility.
But now that isn't an option and women are being moved into men's prisons.
Does the idea of being a woman in a men's prison scare you?
It should.
It's terrifying.
It's worse than what you might imagine.
One trans woman prisoner who's using a pseudonym for her lawsuit, going by Maria Moe, has already
filed a lawsuit in federal court to stop this new regulation.
She is challenging it on both procedural and constitutional grounds.
The government didn't go about this in the legal manner.
And to house trans women with men goes against the Eighth Amendment, which prohibits cruel and unusual punishment,
as well as the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause.
I simply can't imagine putting a woman into men's prison as anything other than cruel and unusual punishment.
The state can pretend that trans women aren't women, but the men in prison will not treat her like how they treat a cis man.
On January 21st, the woman suing the prison system was told that she was going to be moved
to men's prison after all of her records were suddenly changed to mark her male.
Federal data says that trans prisoners are sexually assaulted at 10 times the rate of
other prisoners.
And that's the state's own reporting on the issue.
But you know who doesn't know
how to effortlessly transition to ads after saying something as serious as that? It's
me. I don't know how to effortlessly transition to ads after giving you a statistic like that.
When we come back, we're going to talk about how serious the situation is, but also provide
just an absolute incredible number of things that you can do at various levels of risk to support the people whose lives are about to be ruined by this
policy change.
Okay, and we're back.
So to talk about how trans people fare in prison, I have brought on my friend with the
most experienced in prison, the former political prisoner, Eric King.
Eric served just shy of 10 years in prison for throwing a Molotov into an empty federal
building one night in response to the Ferguson uprising of 2014.
Those were protests that were anti-police protests that started in
the wake of the police killing of 18-year-old black man Michael Brown. Eric is also the
co-editor of a book called Rattling the Cages, Oral Histories of North American Political
Prisoners, which has a foreword by none other than Angela Davis and is worth checking out.
Eric was released from the ADX supermax in December 2023.
He walked out of prison wearing a support trans kid shirt and has been vocal about his support for us as soon as he walked out the door.
So Eric, thanks for coming on. It could happen here. How are you?
I'm doing really well. Glad to be back. Thank you so much.
Yeah. So you reached out to me about this. What did you call it, like a policy change?
Yeah, executive order, I guess.
Yeah, you know, and basically we talked about like how do we try and make sure that people
know about what's happening and I wanted to ask you, so you're a cis man and you didn't
have an easy time in prison, right?
As far as I understand, I think no one gets to have an easy time in prison, right? As far as I understand.
I think no one gets to have an easy time in prison is one of the things, especially in
a supermax.
Some have it easier than others, I guess.
Yeah.
You were not among the people who had it easier.
And as I would follow your journey through the federal prison system, it seems like you
had to defend yourself against both other prisoners and also prison staff. Is that a fair way to put it?
Mildly, yeah
Yes, that was what was going on
Can you tell me a bit about the experience of trans people in prison?
Because when you look at this executive order it sort of implies like all trans women are in women's prison and all trans men
Actually, I literally have no idea where trans men are held. I would rather if I was a trans man, I'd probably rather be in women's prison.
I just anyway, I don't know.
What was the situation like before this executive order?
So I want to start with saying like the reason I hit you up is because there's so much like
horror happening this first week of like Trump's new presidency.
And I didn't want this issue to get swept under the rug.
Yeah.
A lot of times the bigger more mainstream issues will get the most attention and I still remember our trans family inside.
And so like that's what scared me enough to go like dude I need to talk to you about this.
Yeah.
So when I was inside there was not very many trans people in their like correct
prison. Like a trans woman should be in a women's prison. A trans man should be in a
man's prison. And that wasn't happening on the level that it should have. And there was
a rare case like Marius Mason, who had enough support and publicity before they were able to but most people were were stuck at their gender at birth. Yeah. And so over the
last couple years people started getting a lot more access to safe prisons.
That's what I'll call them. Like prisons where they where they feel safest. Okay.
So like trans women were starting to go to women's prisons and it wasn't very
many. It's not like there's
tens of thousands. Yeah. But handfuls, because it is it's very hard in the federal system to
get recognized as a transgender person. Yeah. You have to go through years of degrading and
humiliating therapy with a prison psychologist. You have to get just horribly treated by doctors
who ignore you, gaslight you, diminish you,
try to push Christianity on you.
And then if you make it through their brutality,
then you were one of the lucky ones who got to say like,
I am this person, this is who I am.
And if you're even more lucky,
you got to be transferred to a prison
that would make you feel the safest
and the most whole as a human.
And that's the goal. Like that's the safety goal, basically. That's where we wanted things to be
pushed. That people would be recognized for who they are. They would get treated for who they were.
And they would be sent to a prison that was congruent with who they were.
Yeah. And that's what's all being taken away.
Yeah. And when you talk about the safety,
I don't want to necessarily go on at great length
about how trans women suffer in men's prisons, but it's probably worth talking about.
Because you've described it as there's literal sexual slavery happening in the prisons.
Is that a fair way to put it?
Yeah, 110%.
Yes.
Yes.
And I only speak for federal prisons.
I know in some states it's different.
Like in some states, people are able to use like their femininity as like a power play
as a tool to keep themselves safe.
And so if that's an option, then great.
But what I witnessed in the federal prison was the exact opposite of that.
People are getting destroyed.
And if you go into a men's prison presenting as female in any way or soft in any way,
as any type of woman or any type of non-cis straight male, you are an automatic target.
And it's not like hyperbole to say that if you walked on to a penitentiary yard
and you had makeup, if you had your hair long, if you had breasts, if you had
anything presenting as female, you will get butchered within an hour.
You won't survive that.
Or you'll get bought by some, some group and you will be a slave.
Like you will be property. And at the lower custody levels, it's a lot safer.
If you're at a low security like FCI Inglewood, you're not in danger though.
You're a danger of humiliation and being degraded by staff, but you're not going to get stabbed there.
But God forbid you go to Victorville medium, Florence medium, or any penitentiary.
Like that's a death sentence for real.
Yeah.
Do you want to talk about the worst things that ever happened to you?
Do you want to talk about, uh, you and I, we did another episode on my other podcast, um, live like the world is dying and talking about how to survive prison.
And in it, you talked a little bit about what was necessary to kind of stand up for trans
prisoners.
Do you want to talk about that a little bit?
Yeah.
So, like, everyone needs to have, like, consequence awareness and they need to work on the lines
that, like, make them feel most comfortable, of course.
But for me, I was not comfortable at all watching trans or gay prisoners get brutalized.
And so there were times where we'd have to raise money to buy a prisoner out of sex slavery.
We just have to buy them and then basically free them or pay off whatever debt they owed so that they no longer have to be in that situation.
And there was other times that you have to knife up or you have to show up physically. And I'm not a big guy, of course, but like, I don't tolerate
like anti-trans bullshit in my life anywhere and that includes in prison. And so like,
there are times you have to step to people and say like, I am not going to let this person
have this happen to them. And if you want to continue doing this, then like, we're going to take it to the next level. Yeah. And I wish to God there was more prison allies
that would be willing to do that inside. Because once someone is shown to have like, support,
it makes them less easy to be a victim. Yeah. If people see that like this person's trans or like
other people are riding with them, they're less likely to go after them because there'll be consequences.
But if they're all alone, then they're just a sitting duck.
And so like, we need that.
We need cis men to show up and be like,
this is not happening.
I don't care what race you are.
I don't care what gang you're in.
You're not gonna hurt this person.
And that's stuff that we had to do sometimes
and it's scary as shit.
Because you don't know what's gonna happen,
but you have to, like and it's scary as shit. Yeah. Because you don't know what's going to happen, but you have to.
You have to live your ethics.
One of the reasons that I wanted to talk to you about it and have you on this show is
because unfortunately, I mean, prison is kind of a concentration of the worst parts of society.
I do not want to say the worst people in society.
I believe it has much more to do with the incarceration and the way that people are
forced to be, right?
When they're incarcerated is a tangent.
But have you heard the whole thing where there's no such thing as an alpha male wolf in the
wild?
I've only heard from you and I loved it.
Okay.
I probably said this exact same thing last time we talked.
Just in captivity.
Yeah.
And, and so it's like, it obviously is going to bring out the worst in people.
The one of the reasons I want to have you want to talk about this is because I think
that the experiences that you're talking about, they're much more real and intense than most
people on the outside are like, really thinking, you know, they're like, oh, that sounds bad,
but then their brain kind of turns off and they stop imagining what bad looks like.
And I think that this idea that we're going to have to stand up for our ethics, regardless of the risk and cost to ourselves sometimes,
is what it takes to create a society that is resistant to fascism.
I think it's the same energy that people are going to have to do with like,
no, you can't take my neighbors, right? In the era of ICE.
I think that's really well said too. I think the way like I used to work inside is like we can't take steps backwards. We can't relinquish any progress we've made, not a single pinch of it.
Like everything has to move forward and whatever you're capable of doing, like not everyone's
capable of like physically stepping to someone and saying like no. Right. But everyone's capable
of something, whether that's doing calling campaigns, organizing protests outside of prison,
whether it's contacting region, contacting this person, raising money,
doing whatever it takes.
Everyone can do something to keep people safe.
And it's the same in the free world.
Like it's not different.
Everyone has something to offer, but it can't be apathy.
It can't be this nihilism that like, what does it matter?
Like they're going to do it anyway.
If we do that, like we're just forfeiting the future
and we're letting our family get butchered.
Yeah, I really like that way of phrasing it.
Yeah, we can't forfeit the future.
How can people support trans prisoners
with what's going on right now?
I don't know how in touch you are with people
on the inside and things like that.
How are people feeling?
Like what's the vibe?
What can be done?
So I assume like when you're asking like what can people do to support trans prisoners,
I assume you're asking like what can free world people do to support those inside?
Yeah.
I mean you actually kind of have said what people on the inside can do already, which
is necessary and important, but people on the outside, what can people do?
Visibility is safety.
Like, I saw that in my bid and I've seen that in other people's bids.
And if you look at someone like Marius Mason, if you look at people like Jennifer Rose,
keeping people visible and letting the prison know that like we're not turning a blind eye to this person,
like you're not going to get a free one on them, that keeps people alive.
And so the more the staff knows and the administration knows that like, this
person is looked after the more they are likely to look after them because they
don't want to be held accountable.
Okay.
So things like getting books into people, things like getting pen pals of people,
raising money so that they don't have to go into debt.
Like that's real.
Like this debt stuff is serious.
So making sure they have money on their books.
Like I don't care what they spend it on.
I don't care if they spend it on drugs.
I don't care if they spend it on 20 bags of coffee or gambling.
As long as it keeps them out of slavery or out of that knife, like that's what matters.
And then patsy names around, right?
It's almost as if we concentrate like all of our prisons were like five or six people.
And then we forget that there's like 15,000 trans people in prison
Yeah, and so organizations like black and pink do a really amazing job
But like there's there's not enough like we need visibility like we need to keep people present in our lives
That we don't know and we might not like their charges. They might not be nice people like they might not be cool
Yeah, but we need to keep them alive. Like that's what abolition is. So visibility. Yeah. That makes sense. I sort of know the answer
to this, but I'm going to pretend like I don't know it at all. What's Black and Pink? Black and
Pink is an organization. I know it used to be an anarchist organization. It might be something else
now, but it's an organization that's focused strictly on supporting trans and queer prisoners.
That's all they do. Social prisoners, political prisoners, it doesn't matter.
We're going to find you a pen pal and we're going to get people to write you.
And they do a really amazing job.
I honor them for putting in that work because it's hard.
And so someone who's listening, who's never considered being pen pals of the prisoner,
could get in touch with Black and Pink and be hooked up with someone to write to? Yeah if you like even just like right now
someone googled black and pink pen pal black and pink prison pen pal like it'll
pop up the website you just click on find a pen pal and you can find someone
in your city find someone in your state find someone that you relate to like
they'll have a little biography and you can find someone like to connect with and
potentially save their life or save your life. Yeah, I can make you better, too
Yeah, okay, so
Writing helps when you talk about putting money on people's books
Like who does that is that something you also could go through black and pink
should people be doing their own fundraisers and then like working with prisoners that they've already made connections with like
How how should people either plug in or start things?
So each prisons different like state and federal but to put money on someone's books, you can do that yourself.
You go, you find out wherever prison that person's at and you can just go to the BOP website or that prison's website.
BOP is Bureau of Prisons.
It's for federal people.
And it will just walk you through how to do it, how to send the money ground from Walmart or how to do the J-Pay and put it
on through your credit card.
And you can do it.
Like if there's an ABC and anarchist black cross
community near you, you can fundraise with them.
If there's any like books through bars or abolitionist
groups near you, like you can and should fundraise
with them to raise awareness, but you don't have to.
Like everyone can do this on your own.
Like this is a single person job.
But it's better if we do it as a community.
Well, the way that I fund raise is that I have advertisers that interrupt me talking about anti-capitalist things.
And here's one of those interruptions.
And I'm going to go ahead and donate my pay for this episode to exactly what we're talking about.
And here's ads. They are not donating.
You can think of whatever you want about these ads. [♪ Music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot of music playing. A lot Okay, with this new executive order, like, like how are people feeling, either inside
or people who are doing prison abolition work or like, how crisis does this feel?
Like what's going on?
I can't like speak for every, it should kill like a 10 out of 10.
Yeah.
Like this is a, a carceral genocide.
Yeah.
For real.
This is an erasure of an entire people.
So like if you're not at a 10 for this, like you either do not care or you're not understanding
how serious the prison system is.
I've talked to a couple of homies inside.
I have to be really delicate because I'm still on probation.
But those people understand like the mood is turning dark.
Okay.
Like they see inside that like when fascists come into power, it empowers everyone else
below them to be brutal, because they can get away with it now. And so these people that were already monsters
under the most liberal of prison director
are now being told by the president
that they do not have to respect this person's entire life.
And so it's a very serious situation.
We've got a non-binary person about to go in
named Casey Gunnan and they got sentenced
for allegedly firebombing some cop cars and
support with Palestine and I talked with them on a weekly basis just trying to
prepare them because like right now where they're at is a jail and they
haven't really experienced the prison yet and so it's all about like getting
them ready for like here are potentials yeah like here's what they could do but
it's dark in there like the Nazis are celebrating and that includes the ones with badges especially.
Yeah, that makes sense. What kind of support felt the most useful to you and other prisoners?
I know you talked about this a little bit, but I'm curious about, you talk about visibility.
Are protests outside of jails, do they make people feel good and welcome or does it make the
guards crack down on everyone? I know that there there's this, you know, habit of noise demonstrations every new
years and what kind of stuff felt good and what kind of stuff felt good but
scary and what kind of stuff was just annoying?
Like, I don't know, I'm just trying to find more stuff that people can do.
Yeah.
The noise demos are cool, but they're performative.
It's more for the people that are doing them than the people inside.
But like, let's say you're a trans person at a jail
and there's 35 people outside waving your banner,
that will get you respect inside.
They'll get people to say like,
what the hell is going on with them?
Okay.
Yeah, like that is, that's serious
to where you can build up a rep.
If someone's already in prison, that's,
you'll probably get them fucked up and put in the shoe.
That's what happened to me.
If there's a noise demonstration with your name?
Yeah.
Be delicate how you do it.
Yeah.
Because that's what put me in ADX.
Oh, shit.
So that's a real double edged sword, right?
Yeah.
They use that as the thing saying I was the leader of Antifa because I got people to come
out and protest for me.
So I got pulled without a chapeau.
We shouldn't tell everyone that you're the, we have to keep it on the DL
that you're the leader of Antifa.
Yeah.
For real, we dropped the ball.
I know.
Wait, I've been told I'm the leader of Antifa.
You're my leader.
Oh, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, totally, yeah.
I'm more a regional leader.
The things that help the most,
like in a real life situation
are the things that provide mental safety and something to do.
Okay.
So books, magazines, that gives you something to do, like empower yourself and pass the time and stay out of the way.
Money helps because then you can do crafts, you can paint, you can do art, you can sell things, you can do crochet.
That stuff helps.
And then letters, obviously like that gives you someone to talk to if people are actually putting thought into the letters.
And I always encourage and I always will for as many people as possible to on a daily or weekly basis, call that prison.
Call the prison, no matter what prison, state, federal, county, and demand to speak with the warden, the captain, the warden secretary,
the lieutenant, the head of psychology, and demand to know how is this person doing?
What are you doing to keep them safe?
We're hearing this and this.
What is going to happen to our family?
That makes a difference.
Okay.
If you know a lawyer, pay the $120 an hour to have them do a legal call.
That way the prison sees this person as a lawyer protecting them.
They don't need to know that it's just a one-time call.
But that legal call, just the wellness check is what they call it.
Let's that person get word out about what dangerous stuff is happening, but it also
forces the prison to recognize that they might be protected by legal system.
So these things help.
What's the master plan here for how we're going to respond to this executive order?
Because obviously we're not necessarily in a position to immediately reverse this
order and get women put into women's prison, which is a crazy thing to have to say.
We're not going to be able to get women put into women's prisons, but is organizing
with a local group. You create a group and you basically like figure out
who the local trans prisoners are in your area and make sure that you're communicating
with them and that they're getting wellness calls from lawyers and basically like just
making sure that the prison knows that people are paying attention to the fact that there's
now women in the men's prison.
Is that?
That's the soft version of what we should do.
Yeah, fair enough.
There's other versions that are. Yeah, fair enough. There's other versions that are...
Yeah, okay.
There's the other version that like I wish people would do.
Yeah.
There's the version where we do BDS, but for every single company that's benefiting from prison labor.
Yeah.
And say, as long as you let this transgender hate go on, we're not going to support your business.
There's boycotting. There's putting people on the road so that the cops can't show up to their jobs.
There's protesting outside wardens' houses.
There's protesting outside governors' houses if it's for a state prison.
There is tangibly putting your body on the line.
There is sabotaging cop cars that go into the prison.
There is barricading the entrances.
There's a thousand things we can do to say, if you hurt our people, we're hurting you.
Whether it's in your pocket, whether it's in your car, whether it's in your daily life,
whether it's annoying you. Whether it's in your pocket, whether it's in your car, whether it's in your daily life, whether it's annoying you. We can find things to do if we care enough. And we saw people
do it for Palestine. And I don't think transgender lives are less important than Palestinian lives.
It has to be an equal thing in my mind. But the sub-use that's really great too. That's daily stuff.
No, no, but you're right. And it's funny because it's like in my mind, it's so hard to
ring the alarm bells when all of the alarm bells are ringing and everyone's kind of ignoring alarm bells right now.
I mean, I guess the answer is that we talk about it like this, but like, how do we make sure that people actually listen to the alarm bells that are happening right now?
And I think part of it is being really, unfortunately, brutally honest about what it's like to be a woman in men's prison.
I mean, I don't think people understand it all.
And there's all this misinformation too.
Like you'll hear these like fascist talking points
coming out of liberals mouths to where like,
well, I don't want my tax dollars going to like
pay for their surgery or I don't want some man
just sneaking into a woman's prison saying
he's transgender so he can rape everyone.
And these are like the same scare tactics
and like misinformation that's used for every single,
like every single repression you've ever seen.
Yeah.
And it's our job to confront those head on and call them out as lies, show the real information.
And it's our job to like continue to just force people to recognize that this is a dangerous and real situation.
Yeah.
We can't let this entire group of people be destroyed.
Because like, if you're going to turn your blind eye to transgender people,
you're going to do it to gay people, you're going to do it to women,
you're going to do it to black people, and then it's just you.
Yeah.
And then no one's going to protect your stupid ass.
Yeah.
We have to as, or as I have to as a cis man, we have to keep bringing this belt.
Yeah.
We have to make people listen. I mean, as a, as a not currently in prison trans woman like like one of the reasons I think this almost happens
I mean it happens because of cruelty is the point but like it's terrifying
You've actually experienced the thing that's terrifying. It is terrifying the idea of going into
Prison in the United States, especially maximum security prison
into prison in the United States, especially maximum security prison,
potentially especially men's prison,
both as a man or a trans woman,
I wouldn't want to be in men's prison.
And I don't even want to compare it by the way.
It's not comparable.
Like if I didn't have Antifa attached to my face,
I could walk into any prison in the country and be like,
oh, there's just a white guy.
It's just a white bro.
Have no problems.
A transgender person, there's not a single place
except for a protective custody yard
where they can walk in and immediately feel safe.
It's the exact opposite.
Everywhere they go is flight or flight.
The scariest moment you've ever had your entire life,
24 seven all day every day.
Picture someone breaking into your home
in the middle of the night and that terror you get.
They have to walk into a new prison every single time
and face that terror every single day. Yeah
It's not comparable at all. It's scary as shit. No, that's fair
like to be honest like I think about this is like
Maybe more honest than I'm usually I'm on this podcast like
You know, I don't do as much frontline activism as I did and part of that's like
Oh, I'm like aging and I have other work that I do and part of it's like I came out as trans
you know part of it is like I came out as trans, you know?
Part of it is like I never liked the idea of like, because I always was trans and the
idea of like being surrounded by only men was just viscerally terrifying.
But now in particular, like it's just such a, it's a mind fuck.
It's terrifying and you know, I feel like one of my like main roles is to try and help
people be like, look, we're, we're in this together enough that you should be scared, but you should get through the fear.
But it's like, the fear of prison is like such a, I mean, it's part of the reason that
people say like, no one is free until everyone is free.
As long as there is a single person in prison, you are not free because your freedom can
be taken away from you at any point.
And that fear of prison, it's funny.
Okay, I'm almost over this rant. You know, people have kind of like figured out at this point that like certain branches
of Christianity will use the fear of hell to force people to be good by their definition
of good, right?
And it's a scare tactic.
It's terrorism.
It is like a, you know, you better behave or infinite suffering awaits you.
But then even the people who are critical of that haven't necessarily wrapped their head around that.
The existence of prisons, especially the existence of punitive prisons,
like the sort of theoretical perfect model of the Norwegian prison or whatever,
where you're just sort of separated from society, which I suspect is not actually,
I suspect Norwegian prison actually kind of sucks.
But the American prison system is a prison system
that exists to make you on the outside, not feel free.
Cause it can be taken away from you
and you can be thrown in prison.
That's my rant.
Yeah.
No, I mean, you're absolutely right.
That is the entire goal is to make sure
that the community walks the government line.
Because if you don't, this is what will happen to you.
And when people pull like the nonsense stuff like, well, if you're not committing
crimes, you shouldn't worry about it.
Like they are not looking at how like arbitrary crimes are.
Yeah.
They're not looking at how quickly something can become a crime or how quickly
something that wasn't a crime can be portrayed as one.
Yeah.
And the trans struggle, like trans people should not have to be on the front line.
Like at no point should you or any of our trans family
ever have to put their freedom on the line.
That's a privilege role.
That's our role, my role.
And my boss shouldn't have to get arrested
for trans liberation.
They should be safe.
They should be able to feel comfort and warmth.
You should be able to feel that safe and warmth and love.
Like black people shouldn't be fighting the black liberation fight.
That's white people's fight.
Trans people should not have to put their vulnerable lives on the line
for this struggle if we really believe in the liberation struggle.
Yeah, and it's hard because you also want to like,
while also not wanting to like lead that struggle, right?
Like I think that like white people putting themselves on the line for black liberation is like super
important but then obviously you can get into there's the hero shit and I am
trying to take leadership yeah do the David Gilbert role be a soldier how they
need you and help and fight how people actually need you yeah not how you think
it should be done yeah totally, any last words for our audience
around this particular issue? Yeah, here in Denver, Brenn Rose's Legal Center,
that's who I work for. It's a transgender ran civil rights law firm.
We're about to put forward the Trans Bill of Rights here in Colorado to
guarantee safety. And I bring that up to say that not only is there direct action
and protest we can do,
we can also try to weasel into the legal system.
There's a thousand ways we can fight these motherfuckers and we got to use every single one of them.
And I have nothing but love and solidarity for every transgender person alive anywhere.
And I'm with you and we're going to get through this, I hope.
We are going to get through it because even as individuals, we might not, right?
But that's just true about being alive, right?
Literally, none of us are going to get through being alive, alive, right?
At some point, that's going to stop working for us.
And they can't get rid of us.
We have always been here.
We will always be here.
As long as there are humans, there are going to be trans people,
there are going to be queer people, there are going to be... all of the identities that they're trying to destroy
cannot be destroyed, even if us as individuals might.
But again, we weren't going to get out of life alive anyway.
That's what I hold on to.
I don't know about everyone who's listening, but the thing that I hold on to is just literally
I was like, well, I wasn't...
I'm not immortal, you know?
Got a time limit.
Yeah. And all we can do is to say, go back to one of the first things that you said.
We just kind of can't compromise our ethics, you know?
Like there's like balancing acts, right?
Where you have to think like, well, I probably shouldn't do something
where I like while out and get myself killed and accomplish nothing.
Fight to win. Yeah, exactly.
And some of fighting to win is knowing when not to fight and things like that, right? But not in a secretly you're just
actually doing it at a cowardice way. You actually like have to be strategically
being like where and when should I engage in what ways? And there are so many
different ways that people can engage. Yeah. Thanks for coming on and do you
want to talk about your book? So, Rather Than The Cages is out right now. It's with AK Press and it is a oral history of the political prisoner movement pulled
from the mouths of those prisoners.
It covers like 50 or so prisoners from every movement, black, trans, our elders, our more
recent anti-fascists.
And it is a beautiful way not just to hear about like, oh, I fought for this, but what
was my life like inside?
What did I experience? What gave me joy? What gave me hope? What gave me sadness?
And it's a way to see the vulnerability and humanity of those inside.
And I think that's really valuable right now.
And here soon, my ADX book is coming out on the EMPress.
Oh, cool.
So I'll be, I'll be hounding you for that here soon for that coverage.
Yeah. Yeah.
Wait, what's that book called or about? Oh cool. So I'll be, I'll be hounding you for that here soon for that coverage. Yeah, yeah.
Wait, what's that book called or about?
It's going to be called A Clean Hell.
And it's going to be about how I won at trial.
Because like no one does that in the feds.
Like 0.08% of people win in federal trial.
And then how I got sent to the federal supermax and there's no books out about the supermax.
There's none.
Wow.
And so one of your homies has a, has the inside scoop.
Yeah.
I got some experience.
Yeah.
You were just a undercover journalist.
Just a real, deep undercover solitary confinement.
Uh, so Josh Davidson is helping me edit it.
Uh, Josh Davidson from Routers in the Cages who did also certain days.
So it seemed to be a really great project also.
Awesome.
All right. Well, people should check out both of those things and take care of people who did also certain days. So it's been a really great project also. Awesome.
All right, well, people should check out both of those things
and take care of people inside.
And I hope that we'll have you on again soon.
Yay, thank you so much. Hi, I'm Arturo Castro, and I've been lucky enough to do stuff like Broad City and Narcos
and Roadhouse and so many commercials about back pain.
And now I'm starting a podcast because honestly, guys, I don't feel the space is crowded enough.
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This is It Could Happen Here, I'm Garrison Davis, and yeah, it's happening.
The past few years I've been writing about how the religious right has been
trying to roll back trans rights, take away gender affirming healthcare, and essentially remove trans people
from public life.
And the day that I'm writing this, President Trump just issued an executive order aiming
to ban gender affirming healthcare for everyone below the age of 19 in the United States,
with promises to weaponize the Justice Department and alter the National
Health Guidelines for Gender Affirming Care.
And unfortunately, this is just the start.
But this won't be a wallowing in the doom and gloom episode, nor will I be laying out
the foolproof solution to get us out of this predicament.
Instead, we'll be hearing from two people
who are trying to do something to affect change in the physical world. Last month,
Mia and I talked with Neha and Cassie, who are organizers and baristas with
Starbucks Workers United, and they also co-facilitate that union's trans rights
action committee called TRAC.
And specifically, the topic of this episode is how to use union organizing as a way to
fight for trans rights and secure access to gender-affirming healthcare.
Which is, unfortunately, an increasingly critical issue.
We've already had conservative states like Tennessee pressuring private insurance companies
to drop covering gender affirming care by blocking insurers from contracting with the
state's Medicaid program, basically holding it hostage.
And now with the federal government threatening gender affirming care, and seemingly more
and more restrictions kind of on the horizon, working outside the state and not relying on government programs
like Medicare and Medicaid will only become more necessary.
And union organizing is one way to do that.
A union contract, union infrastructure, and the collective resources of you and your fellow
union workers can help protect trans people in the workplace and get us the things we
need.
If you already have a union at your workplace, you can get more involved and fight to prioritize
trans rights.
And if you don't have a union, you can work to secure access to gender-affirming care
through unionizing your workplace and having healthcare protections as a core part of your
contract.
For more on that topic, I'm going to play the conversation between my fellow union member,
Mia, and Neha and Cassie from Starbucks Workers United.
And I'll occasionally pop back in to provide some context.
Here's Cassie.
When you fight for a collective bargaining agreement, a contract between union workers
and their employer, you can fight for gender affirming care to be included in the healthcare
that's provided and make sure that that healthcare is affordable and actually usable by the people
working there and that their wages are adequate to cover out of pocket expenses, including
travel expenses if you live in a state that's coming under threat.
But it is not just healthcare that is under threat right now. Just days into office, Trump already started to roll back Biden-era federal discrimination
protections.
Last Monday, the Trump admin sent a memo ordering a freeze to all federal grants, loans, and
aid, requiring a sort of audit to ensure the recipients of those funds use the money in a way that
quote conforms to the administration priorities unquote and not to promote quote DEI and woke
gender ideology unquote.
On Tuesday a judge temporarily halted the order and on Wednesday the White House revoked
the directive but this clearly demonstrates what
the new priorities are for the conservative government.
And they will most certainly try this again, probably in a more targeted, discriminatory
fashion to limit the general backlash.
But even as the government starts openly allowing discrimination, or even encouraging it, discrimination
protections is still something
that unions can write into their contract.
Having non-discrimination language in a contract that covers gender identity is a really critical
way to improve not just for yourself, but then also we talk about these things like
hiring discrimination.
If you get that kind of language in a contract at a union job,
that's going to help everyone who comes after you. Because additionally, as a union,
you have the mechanism of enforcement of a grievance and an arbitration procedure, right?
That's sort of the critical, in addition to obviously all the kind of actions you can perform.
And we can talk about what things might look like without the NLRA, but for now we have grievance and arbitration procedures still. And even in states where
there are legal protections against employment discrimination for trans people, like here
in California, the bar to defending yourself legally is obviously a lot higher, including
financially, than defending yourself through a grievance procedure at a union job.
A grievance procedure at a union job is way more accessible to the average working person
than hiring a lawyer and going through a legal system that is totally stacked against you
and in favor of the wealthy.
Having a union to defend you with the collective resources of your union that you're part of, and having
your shop steward or you be a shop steward and filing those grievances yourself, it's
so much more accessible for regular workers to get enforcement when they are discriminated
against. And that's obviously not only relevant for trans people, but it is certainly relevant
for trans people.
Now, if you don't have union organizing experience, this could all seem a little intimidating,
even if you already have a pre-existing union at your workplace.
Mia has done a whole bunch of episodes on unions and labor organizing on this podcast.
You could certainly look to for more information and a bit of encouragement.
In 2023, NEHA co-founded TRAC, the Trans Rights Action Committee, which
is a subcommittee of the Starbucks Union that was started to help advocate for trans rights
within the union and share information about the challenges trans workers were experiencing.
We asked Neha about the process of getting this focus on securing trans health care through
your union to be something that the union collectively fights for.
The way that like our union started focusing on trans health care as one of like the core issues is like we were organizing around. It all started with a
conversation with like a regional staffer here in Oklahoma. I had like a regular check-in call with my staffer and this was like
two, two and a half years ago. And he was just like asking, you know, what's going on? What are
you concerned about? And I was like, well, I'm having some issues with like accessing health care.
And he not heard like how difficult it was for trans people to access healthcare at Starbucks.
He wasn't aware of how expensive it could be.
As I started talking to him,
he was like, hold on,
let me set up a meeting with some other people.
I think they need to hear this too.
Then we had a follow-up meeting with more staff and other organizers.
I talked about these issues again.
And one thing led to another thing.
And they ended up encouraging me to form a subcommittee
with the union for trans workers to build community for us
and connect us, but also hear more stories from trans workers
about the struggles that they were facing,
specifically in accessing health care.
And so that's kind of how TRACS started.
And it's been really moving to see how over the past two,
three years, this went from an issue that
was affecting a minority of a minority of workers.
It's not like every single work at Starbucks
is trying to have facial feminization surgery
or anything like that, right?
This issue that was affecting, like, a small subset of us
ended up becoming, like, one of the biggest issues
we were organizing around.
It makes me really emotional when I think about, like,
how much my union coworkers and, like, my comrades, like, actually, comrades actually fucking care about trans people.
That's kind of how TRACS started and how we started to organize around trans health care
specifically. It's been a focus for us for a long time, also in part because the initial,
our public bargaining proposals that were released early
on when we first formulated our demands included improvements to gender affirming care at Starbucks.
And part of that's because there were trans people involved in writing those initial demands,
right? And, you know, Neha was involved nationally in the campaign and had the opportunity and
the encouragement to start track.
You know, we have to be part of it, I think, is on some level, you know, the most basic
prerequisite for everything that came after is because trans people have been involved
with this campaign from the beginning, we do have so much support and solidarity from our coworkers
and from our fellow union comrades,
regardless of whether they're cis or trans.
And I think part of that is because we've really showed up
and done the work.
This again goes to that kind of like false narrative
of there's like some kind of contention
between workers' rights and trans rights.
It's like trans people have been super motivated to get involved in this campaign and fight for
the rights and benefits for every worker at Starbucks. Other workers have seen that,
seen the way we've been involved and dedicated, and that's given them the sympathy and solidarity
to stand by us for an issue that affects us very, you know, directly and somewhat narrowly compared to a lot of the other things we're fighting for.
So, yeah, on some level, I think it comes down to unions are a place where trans people can get involved in political life in a way that's hard to do in other parts of American political life.
other parts of American political life. And you get to build that solidarity.
And if you're there at the table,
you have a chance to highlight the issues
that are important to us.
And if you're fighting for everyone else,
they're gonna wanna fight for you too.
TraxLogo says, trans rights are labor rights.
A phrase one of Neha's coworkers came up with
to express the idea that even if your state
becomes an unsafe place for queer and trans people,
trans people will still fight to ensure that their workplace, their store, is a safe place for any trans person who works there.
As the functioning of the state and the federal government becomes more and more alienated and distant,
or in many cases increasingly hostile to the likes of
you and me, one of the few ways we can still exert power over our lives is through unions,
regardless of whether you live in Portland, Oregon, or Oklahoma City.
And specifically, as access to trans health care becomes more and more of a growing issue,
this is becoming more of a core issue itself
that you can organize around and can actually build a union around.
Lots of different struggles have been highlighted in our campaign. We have really made racial
justice a major priority as well. Obviously, economic justice isn't the core of any union struggle, but we're really invested in making
sure all workers are included in this movement and their specific concerns are represented
as well as our general shared concerns.
As more and more things get taken away at the level of federal politics and state politics
in many places, people will be looking for recourse. It's like, how do I get back
the stability, the protections, the dignity, the power that I've lost? Particularly if
some of these folks are not super democratically accountable, people will be looking for how they
can build power and how they can find security when the state is not providing it and when the state's actively undermining
it actually. And unions are one of the truly critical irreplaceable answers for protecting
yourself, for protecting the people you work with, for protecting your community, and for
taking back some of the things that they're trying to take away from you. Whether that's on the job protections, whether that's economic equality, whether that is
your access to trans healthcare, whether that's protections from racism or misogynistic discrimination
in your job and harassment.
All of these things, if the state steps away, people should and will look to labor organizing
as the answer instead.
Our ability to build power in this way is a way that we maintain hope so that we can
keep organizing for a better future. I think one of the best tools these fucking fascist
freaks have is making us feel like there's no hope.
It's beating us down.
It's making us feel like we have no power.
It's making us feel completely disconnected from the government, our workplace, all of
these different things that exert power over us.
And I think labor is such a direct way to give people that power back.
Yeah, morale is a tyrannical struggle.
And this is a way that you can fight there
that does other things too at the same time,
which is critically important.
And do you know what else is important?
Being subservient to the capitalist impulse
of pivoting to ads.
Okay, we are back. Here's more of our interview with Starbucks Workers United.
Yeah, I'm excited to talk to you because things have been very bad. And one of the specific
ways that they've been very bad is that there's become this framing and this has been around
for a while but it's getting sort of increasingly adopted in mainstream circles, that trans rights are opposed to workers' rights. And
that's just nonsense. So I wanted to sort of start there with a bit of a discussion
about the ways in which the trans struggle is a workers' struggle.
The trans community is like disproportionately disproportionately impoverished.
A lot of us are struggling to just pay for rent or our basic needs, right?
Yeah.
I think this framing assumes that all trans people are, I don't know, rich, working in tech or some shit like that, which just is not true.
Yeah, the actual stats, by the way, these are running from the US Trans Survey, which is the largest survey of trans people in the US.
34% poverty rate, the national number for cis people is 11%.
The unemployment rate is 18%.
The US unemployment rate for cis people is 4%.
18% is 1936 Great Depression levels of unemployment.
30% of trans people have experienced homelessness in their lives.
The national rate is about 7%.
And those numbers are actually very misleading
because it's actually much worse than that because these demographics skew
young significantly because of both the shortness of our life expectancy
and how often we get killed and also there's more people who are realizing
that they're trans now than there ever has before.
So those homelessness numbers we are we are racking up a rate of
homelessness that is four times higher than the right than the regular rate and we're doing it
in significantly less years than it takes the cis population to rack up these levels of homelessness.
So things are extremely bad for trans people. Trans femmes make like 60 cents on the dollar of
like the average American worker. Yeah, and I think you see that in our union, we have a lot of worker leaders who are trans.
It's a noticeable, obvious fact about our unions that trans people have really been
deeply involved since day one at all levels of this union. And I think part of that is
because Starbucks has been associated as a place of economic stability,
an opportunity for trans health care for a community that has relatively few opportunities.
I mean, if you're talking about 18% unemployment, then you're talking about people who certainly
are going to have difficulty getting employer provided health healthcare, let alone employer-provided healthcare that's going to include gender-affirming care, right? And so, Starbucks has been held up as an opportunity
for that for a lot of people. It's obviously drawn a lot of us to the company. Many of us started
working there for that exact reason. And then, you know, have discovered in many cases
that it's actually not so accessible.
You know, I can say in my case,
it's definitely one reason I started working at Starbucks
because I heard like,
hey, if you want facial feminization surgery,
go work at Starbucks.
That was a community tip.
And then it turned out that I made so little money
that I qualified for Medicaid.
And in California, where I'm lucky enough to live,
for now, Medicaid covers those things
and is more affordable and accessible
than the Starbucks healthcare actually was.
So I ended up relying on Medicaid instead.
And I think a lot of us have felt and seen that dissonance
between coming to this company, looking for opportunity,
looking for a place that is inclusive
and will hire trans workers, it says,
and ostensibly offers trans healthcare,
but then finding out where those gaps are
and realizing like, actually,
it's better for me to stay on Medicaid,
which is easy to do because I make so little money
at this job.
It takes that shine off.
And I think, you know think our economic vulnerability as a group
is precisely what drove a lot of us to seek improvements here.
It's related to our transness, sure,
but it's also just fundamental working class issues.
We need better wages.
We need better health care.
That's something everyone benefits from
and everyone can relate to.
And I mean, I can also attest to the fact that I started Starbucks five years ago because I needed to have access to gender-affirming
care. I was coming from a situation where I came out as a teenager, I was disowned and kicked out
by my family, I didn't have access to college, I was like basically on my own, right?
And I had no idea how I was going to medically transition.
And like older trans women in my life told me to apply to Starbucks.
And it was also like one of those things where like, again, I live in Oklahoma.
It's not like there's a ton of employers who are like super excited to hire trans women,
right?
That's something I also want to highlight because I don't think people understand this
at all if they're cis is that the level of employment discrimination is staggering.
It is however hard if you are a cis person you think it is to find a job, it is like
30 times harder if you are trans.
It's unbelievably difficult and the promise of just like any job that will hire a trans person is a huge deal because you know, otherwise odds are you walk in the door and they take
one look at you and like, you know, you're fucked.
Right.
And I think that's how Starbucks kind of like advertises itself to queer and trans workers,
right?
And I think this is reflected in the demographic of my store.
99% of my store.
99% of my coworkers are queer.
A lot of us are trans.
There's a lot of trans women who work at my store.
I actually don't even know if we have a single straight co-worker,
actually.
We have our one token diversity hire,
but he literally just transferred.
So I think it's all gay people.
But no, all of us applied to Starbucks
because what other options do we have, right?
And again, in my case, I applied to Starbucks
because I needed access to gender-affirming care.
And over the five years that I've worked here,
I've realized that while that benefit might look good
on paper, in practice, it's hard to actually qualify for that health care.
It can be completely unaffordable for a lot of us.
Last year, I made $16,000 in total from Starbucks.
And a disproportionate amount of that income
was just going towards healthcare,
which doesn't even take into account rent or bills or anything else.
Like, we're struggling to just fucking get by.
Something that Mia pointed out is that one of the few places trans people are actually overrepresented
is in union organizing.
Because trans people don't really have a safety net. Fewer of
us can turn to or rely on family support. So union organizing is one of the ways we can directly
fight for a better life. With the current political climate as it is, it's even scarier.
I mean, Cassie was talking about not being able to actually access the Starbucks health care and having to find other
ways to pay for gender affirming care. But I mean, we're looking at like a Trump administration
that could possibly be trying to make it impossible for anyone to use Medicare or Medicaid to cover
gender affirming care. We're looking at state by state like health healthcare bans, right? I think it's more important than ever to organize and focus on trans rights and our access to
healthcare, our wages, our safety at the workplace.
Where else are we going to protect ourselves like that?
The Starbucks union is also fighting for guaranteed scheduling and better staffing at stores.
And this relates directly to a worker's ability to access healthcare and gender-affirming
healthcare.
Part of Starbucks Healthcare being somewhat inaccessible is that employees have to work
a certain threshold of hours to qualify for benefits, including healthcare.
Failure to get enough hours of work scheduled means losing access to your own health care.
And this kind of reflects a more subtle form of employment discrimination.
I can speak to this.
I've heard this from many other workers.
It is such a struggle just to get the minimum amount of hours to keep your benefits.
I was talking to another worker who was telling me about how she had to like literally cry and beg
her manager to schedule her enough so she didn't lose access to gender affirming care.
And of course, this manager was scheduling enough hours for other workers who weren't trans women,
right? And so I've been having like protections in a contract that guarantee a certain number of hours,
better scheduling, that kind of thing.
Also makes it easier for us to maintain and keep the benefits that we need.
And obviously, this benefits all workers because everyone benefits from having enough hours
to actually get the money you need to live.
The Starbucks union started the official bargaining process with the company last April, and they
were supposed to have their final bargaining session last December, based on a shared expectation
that the contract would be closed and ratified by the end of 2024.
So after nine months of bargaining, it's December, we're expecting to finish up contract bargaining. And after
like a few months of like delaying and not really giving us a counter on wages or benefits,
Starbucks like finally gave us a counter proposal. And I mean like counter proposal. It was literally
like a page. And their counter proposal was basically no changes to benefits whatsoever and a 1.5%
raise if non-union stores received a raise that was less than that. And for context,
1.5% for most of us is 30 cents. So yeah, after nine months, that was the best they could do. So
it wasn't really a serious like counter proposal. I mean, frankly, it was a fucking insult.
So with less than a week's notice, they organized the biggest ULP strike in the union's history,
resulting in 5000 baristas at over 300 stores across the country going
on strike on Christmas Eve.
This is not the kind of open-ended, ongoing strike that you're probably more familiar
with.
A ULP strike refers to a short-term strike action directly tied to an unfair labor practice,
which is any act by an employer that violates a worker's legal
rights.
And unlike ongoing strikes, ULP strikes can happen anytime, not just during contract bargaining.
In fact, the Starbucks union has utilized ULP strikes the past few years to address unfair
labor practices.
Part of the shared agreement to finish the contract before the year's end
was to also resolve outstanding unfair labor practices by the end of 2024, which did not
happen, and thus the strikes. And this was a super tight turnaround to organize strikes
of this scale. By having a representative or delegate from each store in the union present
at bargaining, which is hundreds of workers, that provides a direct link to every store in the campaign.
This was how the union was able to pull off a mass mobilization on an extremely tight
turnaround.
So when it's time to vote to go on strike, there's already workers across hundreds of
stores around the country ready to organize their coworkers and get the word out. Contacts with union advocacy groups and a network of allies ranging from campus activists to LGBTQ
organizations can also help spread the word about these strikes, raise awareness,
and pull more numbers onto the picket line. On more of a big picture note, once you get these
sorts of structures and networks from union organizing,
you also gain the actual capacity to deploy them quickly in a way that actually lets you
do rapid responses to changing situations. And that capacity is something that trans
advocacy just hasn't really had in a long time.
These sites are directly connected to the broader political situation in America, right? I think that
a big issue that trans organizing has right now is that there's not a lot of on the ground
reaching out, connecting to, mobilizing people who are impacted by these policies that are
like negatively impacting trans people. And so I think the kind of organizing
that unions are doing, that we've been doing
this entire time, where we're speaking to people directly,
where we're getting them organized,
getting them involved, is really a helpful starting point
for turning discontent and turning anxiety and fear around issues
into like actual action. I think it's like super essential that we have this contract
now. We're heading into 2025. We're heading into a frankly pretty fucking scary time for
trans people. We need a contract that protects trans healthcare. We need a contract that protects trans health care. We need a contract
that guarantees better wages. We need a contract of only for the protections
that it guarantees workers in terms of like safety at work in terms of making
sure that they're not being taken advantage of at work, right? What Starbucks
offered us, again, was an insult. It wasn't a real counterproposal.
We're more ready than ever to finish this contract and to have something, but we need movement from
Starbucks. We need a serious counterproposal. 30 cents and no changes to benefits isn't going to
fucking do it. We're going to go on another ad break and return to finish up our interview with Starbucks
Workers United.
Okay, we're back.
I'm now going to throw to Mia for a discussion on how union organizing can help strengthen trans advocacy in general.
We're in this kind of crisis period of, I don't know, what you call the national trans movements,
just the extent that it exists, where the advocacy orgs and legal strategies they've been pursuing
are not working. We're losing in the courts all the time, their electoral strategy of
kind of burying themselves the Biden administration has failed.
And I think this is a moment where we need a new plan. And this is as good of a plan as I've ever
seen. And I think one of the things that we're going to see, we're going to need to see and
we're literally just going to have to do over the next few years. I mean, ideally over the next
couple of months, because we don't have, we don't have much time until these people take power,
is more sort of, you know, not just intra-union coordination
of organizing trans workers, but is organizing trans workers
across different unions and trying to figure out how we leverage our power,
like, more broadly to, you know, protect ourselves
and to fight for our rights and
fight to be free.
Yeah, I think that's something we're still building in our capacity for that in this
union, but we definitely do have relationships with other trans union activists and organizers.
Yeah.
We're affiliated to Workers United, which is affiliated to SCIU.
So obviously, that's kind of the most direct and easiest way for us to get in touch with other trans folks that are in the labor
Movement. Yeah, get support get feedback get ideas and share in turn what's been working for us
But it is a capacity we want to build out even further because we are gonna need that solidarity between and among
labor unions in order to form a coherent
response. I mean, as you're saying, the response hasn't been working. The kind of problem solving
we're seeing from a lot of politicians basically amounts to sidestepping the issue, pretending it
doesn't exist, you know, maybe not throwing trans people under the bus explicitly by actively supporting
our elimination from public life, but certainly not standing up and defending us. And unions
are one of the only ways that working people can come together in large groups and pool
resources for political activity. And we know there are a lot of problems with how many unions currently do that.
But for those of us who are, you know, very committed to struggle for equality, that's not
going to compromise and throw some group under the bus, we understand that we have to get involved
and be part of labor in order to improve how labor does politics in this country.
in order to improve how labor does politics in this country.
If we want people to stand up and defend trans rights and defend trans healthcare and defend our ability
to exist in public life, then we have to,
like we have to be the ones to do it.
We just, we have to do it.
And getting involved in your union
is one of the only accessible ways that trans
people are going to be able to build that kind of political capacity and find allies.
We have an opportunity here because you know, to do a version of Zizek's mistranslation
of Antonio Gramsci is like, you know, the old trans movement is dying and the new world
like struggles to be born now is a time of monsters. But I think this means that, you know, the old trans movement is dying and the new world's like struggles to be born. Now is a time of monsters. But I think this means that, you know, you like literally the people
listening to the show, the people on this now, we are going to be the people who define what the
trans movement is going to be going forward. Right. And we have to because we have no other choice.
But this also means that, yeah, we are going to be the ones who get to set the tone of
what we're doing, get to like strategically decide on how we're going to do this. And I think we have advantages, too, in the sense that there are ways in which our economic marginalization is sort of helpful in that, you know, if you look at the sort of independent unions that have been forming recently, right, even more so than conventional unions, unbelievable numbers, those people are trans, right? Because, you know, okay, you're dealing with a population where
it's very easy to get salts, it's very easy to send people into unionized
stores, because no one has jobs anyways. And so the, you know, the risk of you
losing it is like, lower because you're already taking a low wage job, etc, etc.
And I think, I think there's there's things about these movements and the way
that we're embedding ourselves in also sort of new movements
like the Starbucks unionization thing is not that old, right? I think we're well positioned
on the sort of front of a bunch of different changes that are happening in both union organizing
and in how the American working class works to build something together that can actually
go back on the offensive for the
first time in like a decade.
Right.
And I think we're at a moment where we actually have to like fight for ourselves, right?
Yeah.
Again, we're at a point where no one else is going to fight for us.
We have to be willing to take that step and fight for ourselves, advocate for ourselves. At this moment, it's up to trans people to get involved,
especially with the labor movement,
when there's so much opportunity to advocate for trans rights,
to build up the trans liberation movement in a way that
hasn't been done before.
I think it's so essential for us to not feel hopeless
and see the potential here and get involved.
I'm not necessarily telling people
that you should go apply to a Starbucks
and convince them to unionize,
but also I'm not not saying that, you know?
Yeah.
Trans people are getting that opportunity
to actually drive our own liberation.
And there's just so few places in society where we get that.
That's been one of the most exciting things about being part of this union for me.
And yes, you should consider going to work at Starbucks and unionizing it.
And certainly, you know, to directly plug a little bit, if there are baristas in your audience,
they absolutely should go to our website.
I think there'll be a link in the description
of the episode or something.
Go visit our union's website,
get in touch with an organizer and start organizing.
I know it can sound daunting in theory.
What does it mean to start organizing my workplace?
But there is a template, there's a plan. You know, we've done this a bunch.
We've done it at over 500 stores, at least 512 at this point,
nationwide, which is pretty incredible,
especially to have done all that without yet having even secured our contract.
So we have a good template for how to win. And if you just get in touch,
then people will reach out to help you. And that does include professional staff, but it also includes people like us who are workers that will be peer to peer worker to worker organizers.
Because that's what this campaign has been built on from the beginning is workers organizing each other.
is workers organizing each other. So yeah, I mean, there's really truly never been a time
that's better than now.
And also never been more essential.
It's never been more needed than now.
So this is the time.
And if you're not a barista or you can't become a barista,
then we still really need people to sign a solidarity pledge
with our union and get involved that way as allies,
as supporters, as supporters.
Community support is always critical to union struggles.
We are bargaining our contracts with Starbucks right now, and community support is a huge
part of what's going to get us the contract that does deliver the kind of protections
and benefits we're looking for, that does set a precedent for what trans
inclusive union organizing and union bargaining can look like in this country. It's kind
of a terrifying responsibility sometimes, but the thing about this union is because
it is one of the exciting bright spots in American labor right now, I do think a lot
of people are looking to us to figure out, well, what are they doing?
What's working?
What's going well?
And I certainly think the results we get for trans workers in our union have some precedent-setting
importance.
So it is really critical, even if you're not in this union, even if you don't work at Starbucks,
to support this struggle, because it will have ripple effects. There
will be ramifications for American labor and for the struggle for trans liberation as a
consequence of how things turn out with us. So yeah, we could really use your support.
Earlier this episode, we talked about hope and as important and as useful as that can be, it is also super crucial that people
know how they're actually able to organize and actually try to get things done.
After this last election, I'm sure many of you, like myself, were flooded with posts and performative calls to action.
Now is the time to organize your community.
But never with any real information on what
that actually means or how to go about it. But something like the Starbucks Union is
actually a very direct way to do that, especially if you're a barista.
I think I have to emphasize how achievable that is. Like it is possible. 500 plus stores
across the nation have done it in this political
environment, right? I'm going to shout out one of my co-workers. She transferred to another store
in Oklahoma, and I was jokingly telling her, I was like, well, you're allowed to transfer as long
as you unify your store immediately. And she was like, okay. And she did it like within like a week of being there.
She talked one on one with everyone at that store, people who were all already wanting, you know,
better wages, better healthcare, better staffing. And through these conversations, she organized
that store. And that is so fucking amazing to me and it makes me feel so, I don't
want to sound like patronizing or whatever, but it makes me so proud to like see that, right?
To see that she's been able to see how our store has organized, how we've spoken to people,
how we've reached out to like her co-workers, and she's been able to take that and replicate
that so easily and so quickly.
Like, when I stay with them like a week or two of transferring to the store, I am not exaggerating.
She was fucking on top of it. If we can do this in fucking goddamn Oklahoma, we can do this anywhere,
right? It is possible. You can do it. If you can have a conversation with your coworker, if
you can have a conversation with multiple coworkers, if you can develop relationships
with them, friendships, if you can establish that you have like a common issue, right?
If you can make it clear that like the struggles we're facing at our workplaces have a solution. You can do this. All you have to do is actually
fucking take that step to make it happen.
Every single union that has ever been formed was made by people exactly like you. You the
listener listening to this right now, right? You are exactly the person who has organized
every union that anyone has ever done. Right? It's not something that's like the domain of pure professional organizers. You can do this too.
Yeah, you really can. And I mean, you know, at my store, I was the only trans person at my store.
And despite being a transsexual communist, I was able to organize a successful election at a store
that includes, you know includes half of people being
Trump voters. The idea that you have to hide or diminish yourself or that because you're
trans or otherwise marginalized that it's impossible for you to build that solidarity
with your coworkers and come together for your common issues, It's just not true. People understand their own economic liberation.
Even if they don't fully just yet, there's always an intuitive level that you understand you're
getting screwed over. You can tell that the system is not set up fairly and it's not set up for you
to succeed as a working person. And with the right conversations, with the right information, with
the right relationships and solidarity that you build with someone else, people can be brought to understand
what the solution is.
And that the situation you currently live under with shareholders and capitalists stealing
all of this value from you is unacceptable.
And that there is a way to fight to get back what you've earned with your
labor. So for those of you who are listening, you don't have to hide who you are politically or
personally to do that work, to bring people along. And in fact, if we do hide who we are,
then we're not really going to be getting people all the way to where they need to go.
We're not going to build a movement of people committed to liberation by sidestepping issues and hiding pieces of
who we are and saying that, oh, well, trans liberation is not really important. That's
not how we're going to build a durable coalition.
I think this is a problem that politicians in our country keep making. It's a mistake
they keep making of thinking they can ignore or downplay certain issues,
tensions within their coalitions
to keep those coalitions together.
But when you ignore it, you don't address it.
It just blows up later in the end anyway.
Yeah, get involved that you really have nothing to lose
and nothing, you know, accept your chains not to be. I mean, I just realized
halfway through I was like, well, I might as well finish the quote. So.
I got more like such a scary point for trans people. And I know that that's terrifying,
that that's also an opportunity to pivot and to like actually make meaningful change, right?
Again, I cannot emphasize enough. We create our own hope for a better future and has to be on us,
right? We can't just, I don't know, depend on other people to do this work for us.
We have to show up and do this work. And I don't know, personally speaking, I am fucking tired of liberals who want to just
ignore trans people and pretend we don't exist as like, I don't know, our TVs are flooded
with anti trans ads.
I'm tired of depending on people who aren't advocating for me, right?
I'd rather fight for myself through my union.
So yeah, I think that's a good place to close on. advocating for me, right? I'd rather fight for myself through my union. So.
Yeah, I think that's a good place to close on. It is in some sense a cold world that has left us with no one to fight for ourselves, but ourselves. But if we fucking do it, we can win and we can drag everyone else along with us.
here with a few plugs for Starbucks Workers United. You can find their website at sbworkersunited.org
and sbworkersunited on social media. I'll been lucky enough to do stuff like Broad City and Narcos
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Welcome to It Could Happen Here. We decided every week here we're going to do an episode called Executive Disorders White
House Weekly, where we report the news.
And today we are going to start that episode.
We have the entire full-time team here.
We have Mia Wong, Garrison Davis, Robert Evans, James Stout, and I am the voice in your ears, Sophie Lichterman.
Yeah.
And you should know we'll be making a number of references to a show you haven't watched called The Newsroom.
So many references.
Just pretend we didn't.
Yeah.
Anyways, let's do the episode now.
Go.
Yeah.
So this episode is also going to be a little bit different because the idea is to cover each week of stuff That's happening vis-a-vis the White House and it's been two weeks since since inauguration day
And we are recording usually on Wednesdays
So there'll be you know a day or two there that we will record the week after
But we have a whole bunch of stuff today because we are covering essentially two weeks. I'll start with some of the
Transgender executive orders that happened last week.
There was an order defining two sexes assigned at conception, which made plenty of biologists
scratch their heads. A lot of this is just going to impact the ability to change your
gender marker on federal documents for the next four years, you know, passports, and
also removing the X gender
marker from federal documents. There's also a new directive that pride flags are not to be flown on
federal buildings. Also a separate one I don't think we have included here in the research doc
about how brutalist and modernist architecture is now not allowed to be used on new federal buildings you have to use Greek or Roman inspired?
Architecture because they project power so all of all of those like she's Greek avatar
Statue Twitter accounts have a complete cultural victory now
great, I am going to
Agitate to replace the Oregon State Capitol with just a statue of a Roman orgy, you know?
We don't even need place for the legislators.
Just look at the statue and you'll know what to do.
This actually is like bad, you know, very 1930s, you know?
Yeah, famously no other regimes
have harkened back to the classical era.
Well, and specifically is like calling like, you know,
modern architecture, brutalist architecture,
as you know, is like weak or bad or things that get restricted.
Yeah.
On a more somber note, part of this, this two sex, that conception thing also means that a whole bunch of trans women are now being sent to men's prisons.
And like a lot of this stuff is stuff that we knew was going to happen and it did happen quite immediately.
Yeah. Mm-hmm. And this is this is just the start I guess we'll throw over to Mia for some more executive action done on the woke gender
Ideology angle. Yeah, but by the time we're finished recording this there might be another anti-trans executive order
We'll get to that end
but the big ones for right now is that Trump is trying to do a
And this is something we talked about in our in our last episode about's going to look like for trans people, but a federal funding ban for trans
healthcare, which means for youth trans healthcare, which means any provider that like gets federal
funding. And this includes things like taking Medicare and Medicaid, right? Those like hospitals
can't do any kind of gender affirming care for youth.
Part of what's sort of terrifying, I mean, there's a lot of terrible stuff about this, but they've defined a kid as age 19 or under the age of 19.
Yeah, under the age of 19.
Yeah. Obviously, like that gives, you know, worries for stuff that we've been talking about for years
for how they might try to start bumping up the age for these for these HRT bands.
Yep. Yep. This also could be them not really realizing what they're doing to some extent, because
this could also just be copying, I believe, an Alabama or an Arkansas band, and that was
like the highest age used in any of these like state healthcare bands.
They could just be copying that over because it is the highest one.
And like, I'm not sure how much they've like thought about you know Their capacity to start like you know arbitrarily raising that number
I mean part of what I think is happening
And I think this because this was definitely at play in the Alabama ban is this is in addition to being an attack on
Trans people part of a broader
Set of messaging towards the parents rights movement which very much does not consider 18 year olds to be adults. Totally, totally.
Yeah, and on that note, one of the things they're trying to do is target states that
have like trans sanctuary laws by trying to like get parents who had take their kids to
save states like charged on kidnapping charges.
And it's worth noting, supposedly later today, there's going to be one about using the attorney general's office to work with attorney generals in states who prosecute
teachers to use gender-affirming pronouns as like sexual abusers and I want to point out like these executive orders
Specifically like the second raft of them that I've been talking about like these are all unbelievably illegal, right?
Yeah
Like these are probably not going to get implemented immediately because there's immediately going to go to the courts
Like the Supreme Court will probably give them some of it
But like you can't just like declare something a crime and have the Attorney General prosecute people for it
Like that specific thing is genuinely so ridiculous that it might not survive this room court. It's nonsense
But things that aren't nonsense and this is something he genuinely can do that's very dangerous is he's trying to get this is from per Aaron Reed.
He's a trans journalist does pretty good work on this stuff.
The federal government has been instructed to not follow W path guidelines or W path
is this sort of organization that sets the guidelines for like trans health care.
And this, we don't know what this is going to do.
There is a chance that this could endanger private like health care covering it because they follow the government using WPATH.
So that's extremely, extremely bad.
But again, and this is going to be a running theme in the next section of this.
A lot of this is stuff that he should need Congress for,
and he's just trying to do it because he thinks that he can and he doesn't give a shit.
Well, and it's just signaling to the base, even if it gets stopped.
Yeah, like he's I think to the base, even if it gets stopped. Yeah.
Like he's, I think, I don't think he cares if, if decent chunks of it gets stopped. He tried to do the thing.
Yeah, I agree with Robin.
Yeah.
He can now shift the blame to someone else.
Look, man, I did the executive order, which honestly is what Biden should have done on
some stuff, right?
Fuck it.
Yeah.
Make the statement, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So speaking of fuck it, let's get into this whole,
this whole freezing the entire federal government thing.
We're going to do a more detailed episode about this next week,
but maybe the most unhinged thing that he's done so far
is in the birthright stuff.
He did an executive order that's telling everyone they can't fund DEI.
Yeah. Early this week,
the US Office of Personnel Management sent out this memo to
everyone telling them that all grant programs are frozen until they submit a description
of what the grant program is and why it's not DEI. And so things that were fucked by
this, right? I have a few of these programs that they were the grads they were shutting down here The Nicholas and Zachary Burt Memorial carbon monoxide poisoning program
Whoa
The National School lunch program special milk program for children the supplemental
Nutrition program for women infants and children the DOD's basic and applied scientific research grants DEI
Yeah, it's even got a D right in there.
That's right. Yeah, and like one of these, and this is a very serious one, at least for
these people holding onto power was the National Guard's military operation and maintenance.
Namely. Which is like, it's like $8 billion of money to the National Guard. Hey, critical
support. He got one thing right. The way that you can tell that none of these people, and the thing this is a sign of, is that none of these people have any idea what's going on inside of the state.
They don't understand what it is, they don't understand what it does.
And I can prove this for a fact, because one of the programs that they froze was a program that gives money to police to do patrols outside of a nuclear weapons assembly plant.
EOEE. They defunded the nuke police
Like check the signal loop gang. I think I got a plan based on that
We're gonna become the first nuclear armed podcasting network
So I think people have this conception that like, you know, they're operating according to a plan
These are all sort of strategic like strokes and master master strokes and like, no, they're just,
they're just lashing out, right? They're driven by pure anger. And they're trying to do this
purge of the government of anything woke, whatever, like anything that's like vaguely
involves non white people, or just like, anyone who's not a cis white dude, they're trying to
get rid of. Yeah. And this memo was immediately challenged in court because it's also this is also
hideously illegal.
The president doesn't control the purse strings.
That's like, you know, in the Constitution, it says that Congress controls this.
So where we're at now is that the memo has been withdrawn, but there's a there's a
bunch of really conflicting information where
Trump spokespeople are saying that they're still going to go through with the executive
orders.
They're probably going to try to rewrite it.
They might make it more targeted against, you know, woke, whatever that means.
Yeah.
It may not be as broad as this as this initial memo, but they're certainly going to try again.
But the problem that they have is that there are literally so many of these grants.
And the reason they did it this way in the first place was because they just they found a list of grants.
They copied all of them and they were like, OK, departments, you have to go figure this out.
And we're freezing your stuff until you do that.
Even Medicaid was frozen for a few hours yesterday.
Yeah, right. Like they effectively nuked most of the capacity of the federal government.
And it's going to take a lot of effort for them to sort through which of these things
they could afford to turn off so that they don't end up turning off the nuke police.
Right.
Critical support to abolishing the nuclear security team.
Yeah, they did what Biden couldn't do.
They abolished the police.
Yeah, let's go on a quick ad break and then we will return to report more of the news.
All right, we are back.
I guess I will turn over to our immigration and border correspondent, James Stout.
That's me.
Yes, please report the news.
I'm ready to report the news.
I have never been more ready.
Okay, this is going to be a long run because there was a raft of executive orders about
the border in the...
A flurry.
A flurry, yeah.
A sounder.
It's the only word we're allowed to use.
Okay.
A flurry of executive orders.
Okay, we can't use a murder.
Like crows, you know, the collective noun for crows.
I mean, this is going to result in a murder. Yeah, well, so let's start with a couple of the big ones, right?
The first one was essentially revoking the right to asylum to anyone, quote, engaged
in the invasion across the southern border, end quote.
I want to highlight this invasion language because obviously, like I'd like to say, I've
spent more time at the southern border of the United States than anyone in the executive branch and most people reporting on it too.
The idea of innovation is laughable.
I've been at the border twice since Trump was inaugurated.
It's extremely quiet.
I've never seen things more quiet.
The only remarkable thing I saw was a pig, a Vietnamese potbellied pig, which some people
have released, which now lives there.
But I think it's being rehomed because of some other stuff that we will talk about later. But this invasion language is
important because it's used as a justification for some of the things that the executive
branch is doing, which would otherwise seem to be outside of its authority. It's getting
the national security and counterterrorism treatment. And anyone who's followed US politics
for the last 20 years will understand that that means an effective waiver for all of your
constitutional rights and migrants have always been people who don't have rights
and this is just something that we're now seeing like further pushed. So let's
go through some of these orders aside from the effective asylum ban. He
directed the United States Northern Command to quote-unquote seal the
border. This has resulted in a deployment of about 1600 United States troops.
Most of them are military police or engineers.
We've got Marines and we've got Army in the San Diego sector.
It's first Marines out of Pendleton.
They're the ones that I've seen locally.
He has directed various government departments and the attorney general to begin
quote, identifying countries throughout the world for which vetting and screening information is so
deficient as to warrant a partial or full suspension on the admission of nationals from those countries.
This is effectively the travel ban that we saw in the first Trump administration or version of that,
right? It's a visa revocation
or travel ban for people from certain countries. And we can guess what those countries will
be. Last time they were, for the most part, majority Muslim countries, right? And we might
well see that again. They have attempted to rescind birthright citizenship for children
of undocumented families. Right?
This is one, if people go back to our, like, what can Trump do for mass deportations podcast
that Robert, Sophie and I did sometime in November, I think, you'll get more information
there on like what is and what is not possible than we have time to go into today.
But you're seeing a lot of the things that we talked about there coming into reality
now, I guess.
Specifically, the attempt to rescind birthright citizenship
relies on the idea that they are not, quote unquote,
under the jurisdiction thereof of the United States,
which is how the 14th Amendment is phrased.
Generally, it is understood that people who are not considered
to be under the jurisdiction of the United States
and therefore don't get citizenship when they're born here
are the children of diplomats because they have some diplomatic immunity, right? So they're
not necessarily governed by United States laws in all areas. And that is why children
of diplomats don't get citizenship even when they're born here. The Trump administration
is arguing this applies to children of undocumented people as well. There are five court cases
challenging that already. So they've got an uphill battle in the courts there.
He has attempted to restart the Migrant Protection Protocol,
MPP, better known as Remain in Mexico, right?
The Migrant Protection Protocol requires migrants
to wait in Mexico, whether immigration cases are processed.
In practice, it puts them in a lot of danger, right?
Some of them are fleeing Mexico.
Others are fleeing group sort of states
that can reach them in Mexico.
So it leaves them in an unsafe place.
The other thing he did while Trump was still in the inaugural ceremonies,
like literally minutes after taking office was canceling CBP-1.
CBP-1, there was a lot of misinformation about what CBP-1 is.
CBP-1 is an application that allowed migrants to make an appointment,
and they had to be either in southern border states of Mexico or north of Mexico City.
They could then make an appointment to approach a United States port of entry,
those are the places where you can enter across the land border,
and make their case for their asylum, right, do their first asylum interview.
Like this is like following the law, like this is like the process.
Yeah, making a CBP-1 appointment is quote unquote the right way.
Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
You have a legal right to enter between ports of entry and still make an asylum claim,
which is what we saw in the outdoor detention situation. Right. But but doing it via CBP one
is like the belt embraces correct way to do it. People who had appointments at noon Pacific
on the day Trump was inaugurated saw those appointments cancelled.
They can't make appointments anymore.
CBP one is gone.
Those people who have waited an average of nine months in dangerous places have wasted their time.
They now don't have a pathway to asylum in this country.
If you go back to my episodes on the Dalyan Gap, you will hear some of those people, right?
Those people are now stuck in Mexico without
really any legal means to enter the United States and claim asylum. Trump has directed
ICE to increase detention capacity. We spoke about this in our previous podcast. The amount
of detention beds they would need to hit the 13 million deportations they talked about
is immense. But one of the things they are doing is starting to house people.
It's people whose countries won't accept them for deportation, right, which is a thing that
has happened.
The United States has begun using military aircrafts for deportations in the last two
weeks.
I want to stress that this isn't a capacity issue.
Biden deported 8,000 people in a month in the September to October of 2021. Trump
is aiming to hit 5,000. Biden did it all with contractor flights. Trump is doing a lower
number and using Air Force flights. This is not because he can't get the contractors,
it's purely an aesthetic choice. And it's an aesthetic choice, which has ruffled enough
feathers in South and Central
America that you have Honduras saying that they're going to revoke the US mission to
have a military base in Honduras as they mistreat migrants. We had Colombia briefly refusing
US military flights with deportees, Mexico doing the same.
Briefly entering a trade war with Colombia.
Yeah.
Which lasted about two hours.
The one hour trade war, about the same length as the civil war in western Yugoslavia.
The trade war with Colombia was averted when Colombia sent its own military plane to get
these deportees.
Yeah, Colombia caved immediately.
They will continue to accept US deportees, as they have done for a long time, right?
Again, if you listen to my Darien series, you'll hear of some Colombian people being
deported.
We're now getting into things that are like more, these are orders that we haven't seen
realized yet.
One of them is he has talked about having the attorney general remove as far as possible
federal funding from so-called sanctuary jurisdictions.
These are normally places where local law enforcement would cooperate with federal immigration enforcement.
ICE makes a majority of its detentions from people who are already detained.
People who are arrested by police.
Yes, exactly. For whatever.
Then there's police notify ICE and ICE come get them.
We've seen a lot more of door to door ICE
raids in the last two weeks and they've been ramping up even really this week, but ever
since Trump was inaugurated. We've seen ICE attempting to enter people's homes. Often
they just have a warrant issued by themselves rather than a judicial warrant. So we've seen
people refusing to let them into their homes. We've also seen the removal of the quote unquote, sensitive places doctrine. Yeah. The sensitive
places had previously been understood to be schools, churches, and hospitals. Now ISIS
conducting quote unquote enforcement operations in those places. Those are actually places
that like the sensitive places doctrine had been in place for a long time. This wasn't like a Biden thing. This was a this had been a long
term thing. So ICE is now and we've seen immigration actions conducted at a church in Atlanta,
for instance, we've seen I think there were actually Secret Service agents who identified
themselves as ICE agents at a school in Chicago, because a child had
posted an anti-Trump video.
And then I guess the last thing that we are seeing is this designation of
organized crime groups as foreign terrorist organizations.
This is an interesting one.
We haven't really seen any action on this yet, but it's one of
his executive orders in day one.
In his first administration, he designated Iran's Quds Force as a
foreign terrorist organization and then proceeded to kill that leader.
Right?
So this FTO designation opens up the possibility of a lot of like covert
activity, I'm talking like CIA and like tier one special forces units.
It also allows him to bring about economic sanctions on anyone
materially supporting these organized crime organizations.
In practice, that would encompass huge swaths of the Mexican economy, right?
Because there are people in agriculture, people in business who are paying
protection or they're being extorted to pay money, right?
And so in theory, those people are now materially benefiting a terrorist organization and they could be sanctioned as well.
We will have to see how this plays out, I guess. And they're still, the directive was to look into and then name these groups.
And this is something that Hegseth has previously been in favor of and he has now
been confirmed.
Yes.
Yeah, Hegseth has talked about using special forces in Mexico.
Oh, yes.
And this was Agenda 47 stuff.
They've been talking about this for a while.
Yeah.
It's also in our Agenda 47 episodes, if you want to go back there.
Direct action raids in Mexico, drone warfare in Mexico. Obviously, doing this without
the permission of the Mexican government would be an act of war, right? Like killing foreign
nationals without the permission of their government, conducting direct action raids,
bombing another country. That is an act of war. The US has had an FID, Foreign Internal Defense
Mission, right? Where it trains, advises and assists Mexican law enforcement and military for a long time.
The guys who arrested El Chapo, for instance, were trained, I think, by Marsoc.
But this has been happening for a long time.
But to go from that to unsanctioned direct action would be a huge, huge step up.
The only really analogous, directly analogous thing I can think of is Clinton with the plan Colombia designating FARC as a foreign terrorist organization.
But that was very much with the cooperation and support of the Colombian government.
We're seeing a much more adversarial relationship between the United States and Mexico right
now.
The last thing I want to mention is this deployment.
I'd spoken about it, but there are about 1600 troops deployed right now.
Biden deployed 1500 troops in the summer of 2023. This is not a vastly different number,
they are doing different things. They seem to be chucking razor wire on top of the wall and being
photographed at their two major jobs at the moment. We will see how that plays out. Also,
with reference to a military, Trump immediately canceled the refugee resettlement program.
This left people all over the world stranded, including Afghans, many of whom worked for
the United States or family members of US service people.
The refugee resettlement program, people don't come to the southern border, they go do all
their background things and then fly into the United States.
It's a different status to entering a claiming asylum.
Those people, many of whom had booked flights, found their flights were cancelled. They're now stranded, lots of them are stranded
in Pakistan and facing immigration enforcement there, in the case of the Afghans.
So yeah, that is a speed run of all the terrible Trump immigration executive orders. We'll be
reporting on this pretty extensively, so you can keep coming back for more.
But another thing that we have more of right now is advertisements.
Okay, we are back.
I have a few other notes I want to add for the woke front that I'm recording on right now.
I think there's been a lot of conflation between you know, like DEI and like what we would consider like
affirmative action. DEI refers to like these specific like corporate training
policies and diversity initiatives, which is, you know, separate from long
standing affirmative action policies, which has been used both in the
corporate world and in like the government for decades at this point. And
what a whole bunch of this DEI rollback type stuff is essentially doing is just openly
discriminating against people who are not straight white men.
It's like, if you are a straight white man, we cannot hire you because that would mean
we are doing DEI.
And this is what a lot of the stuff that we're seeing kind of looks like.
There was a mass email to federal agencies about DEI and calls to report DEI policies in their department if they're going by like other names, right?
So that would be stuff like affirmative action, right?
If there's anything that that is about, you know, trying to trying to increase the diversity
in your workforce or any quote unquote woke topics, including, you know, gender ideology,
anything, anything that seems vaguely woke, you're supposed to now report
to make sure that gets removed because that's not part of the new federal government.
I believe someone from the NSA did leave a tip on that email line reporting DEI masquerading
as another name.
Similar to this, there was a memo or an email that was leaked to Ken Klippenstein from the
Defense Intelligence Agency, which
basically said that they're not going to be observing any woke holidays, including Martin
Luther King Jr.'s birthday, Black History Month, Women's History Month, the Holocaust
Remembrance Day, Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month, Pride Month, Juneteenth, Women's
Equality Day, National Hispanic Heritage Month, National Disability Employment Awareness Month, Pride Month, Juneteenth, Women's Equality Day, National Hispanic Heritage Month,
National Disability Employment Awareness Month, and National American Indian Heritage Month,
with a small asterisk saying that the pause on observing these will not affect the federal
holidays, which would be MLK and Juneteenth. Although, who knows, they might try to even
remove some of those as being federal holidays.
I did wonder that, like, at some point, you're're gonna lose people when you take away their days off work. That's right, right. So like I
think they might leave those like actual federal holidays in but you're not
allowed to observe any of these any of these other awareness months or you know
Pride Month, Black History Month, like you're not allowed to acknowledge that
at all in these federal agencies now, at least for the Defense Intelligence Agency.
Support for most of Trump's executive orders does fluctuate.
According to a poll from Reuters,
the support for closing all DEI offices
is actually pretty split.
51% oppose the closing of these offices.
According to their poll, 44% are in favor.
And it's very segmented, renaming the Gulf of Mexico to be the Gulf of America.
Pretty disliked with 70% being in opposition.
Look, the one thing people hate most is changing names.
Having the names be changed.
Nobody likes that.
Yeah, yeah. He did Denali as well, right?
Yeah. I guess that was changed more recently, but the Gulf of Mexico has been the Gulf of Mexico for longer than it's...
America has existed as a country. The United States, right?
I mean, Denali has been Denali for longer than America has existed. It's just...
Right, right, right. But there was a period where we called it McKinley. No one's ever called it the Gulf of America.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm not saying the Denali thing is right.
I'm just saying like that's a much harder sell.
Yes, yeah, yeah.
You're not going to get much buy-in on that.
Yeah.
Pardoning J6 protesters, new tariffs or taxes on Canadian goods and ending birthright citizenship
are all around 60-30, 60 opposed, 30% in favor. Trump, during his first week, did see a record high
approval rating that has slowly, I think, gone down. But I don't know, it's hard to
gauge the level of general enthusiasm for his actions right now. And there's, I think,
part of the general strategy that we're seeing is there's just so much happening every single
day that you can't even keep track of it all,
let alone like internalize it.
Like he's, he is trying to sign as many of these orders every day so that both the courts,
all of these like NGOs, advocacy groups are always working and we're never sure what is
real, right?
We're never sure what's going to stick around.
All of these memos about funding and grants.
It's just so exhausting.
And that's like part of the design
is that this just feels like a constant stream of nonsense
that we maybe have to deal with, maybe we won't.
One of the more odd things
is Trump openly embracing manifest destiny language,
which I guess isn't actually odd.
That's actually makes sense.
It's just one of those things
that it feels very Rubicon-esque, But he does have this new distinct focus on territorial
expansion. During his inaugural address, he praised quote unquote, our American ancestors
for having quote, won the Wild West. Now, apparently, the call about Greenland to Denmark
did not go very well. Denmark did not realize how serious Trump was,
and was apparently quite angry during that phone call. And, you know, seemingly upset that Denmark
is not going to easily hand over Greenland, he seems to be pivoting more towards retaking Panama.
Yeah.
Which is something that he also mentioned in his inaugural address.
Let me tell you, Panamanians, not stoked. I've been receiving communications from Panama where I was in September.
They are burning American flags.
The quote from the inaugural address is, quote, the United States will once again consider
itself a growing nation, one that increases our wealth and carries our flag into new beautiful
horizons.
And we will pursue our manifest destiny into the stars.
Wow. Yeah. I don't't know what do you have to?
That's not a good thing
I
Think that's bad like obviously that's you know not great not ideal
You know invading Panama not ideal going to war with Greenland slightly more funny because it's cold
I think specifically is focused on like why why he believes the US has a vested interest in Greenland.
Isn't just picking out a spot on the map.
I think this also could be like related to trying to prepare for climate change.
Having territory in the Arctic is going to become an increasingly valuable commodity to have.
And I think there is a part of this that could be legitimately on that side.
Because I mean,
I don't know, maybe Trump should just get really into Alaska.
Well he did deregulate drilling in Alaska.
Drill baby drill.
I will be up there later this year talking to people in Alaska about drill baby drill.
Very excited for that.
But I don't know, I think it's also generally not super useful to make huge generalizing
statements about what this type of stuff Trump is doing right now and how it will reflect on his entire presidency. People have been doing this kind of about Trump's
flip-flopping opinions on TikTok, you know, being very into like, you know, saving TikTok and then
calling it worthless, but then going back to actually making sure that Microsoft buys it or
something. And, you know, people are very easy easy or quick to jump onto these sorts of things.
Trump's flip-flopping tendencies, maybe not sinking every single easy bucket, and acting
like these would be emblematic of his entire presidency.
That's not the case.
That does not actually mean that.
Trump just says things.
Even though he's going to call TikTok worthless does not mean that he's going to not do that
easy layup.
We're all aware of how much he just says what is on his mind.
Yep.
And I think these sorts of things do not necessarily mean that he's going to plummet to being the
most unpopular president ever because he refuses to use the right messaging around TikTok or
something.
The other economic situations he might walk us into would be, you know, much much more affecting to his general popularity
Yeah, yeah, he's he is doing again. I talk about this a lot why fascists succeed is that they they try
like they're constantly reaching for stuff and
Oftentimes like they overreach but nobody pushes back so they get the thing, right? That's what he's doing here.
Do I think that he's willing at this point to commit to a full-scale military invasion
and armed occupation of Panama, a thing that could be a real problem for his presidency,
right?
Like US troops dying in meaningful numbers in attacks in a country that we had no fucking
beef with before, that could be a real fucking
problem for a guy who ran on the things that he ran on.
But maybe he gets a bunch of concessions for nothing.
It's the same thing with Greenland.
You make the push, you try to scare Denmark, you try to scare Greenland, and you see if
they'll accept something.
And then you walk away maybe with a coup and you do it fucking widely enough, you might
get something, right?
Like that's it.
He's always testing his limits.
Cause that's what they do.
I mean, look at Columbia, right?
He immediately went to like 11 on the retaliation scale
and effectively received concessions.
Yeah.
So I think, similar to how, you know,
it was annoying in the first like resist lib era
to take every single crazy statement Trump says seriously or like, you know, do was annoying in the first like resist lib era to take every single crazy statement Trump says seriously
Yeah, or any or like, you know do this performative outrage over every single thing he does
I think it's also useless to do fast mimetic reactions that form generalizing statements about you know
How how something that Trump is doing is is emblematic for the rest of his term and and now he's like doomed to failure
I think those statements are actually pretty useless
and at the very least are not helpful right now.
Let's close by talking about Guantanamo.
I guess Robert and James, I'll have you take this.
So Trump has signed an executive order saying that they're going to create a facility
capable of storing 30,000 migrants in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
First, we should probably just talk about how realistic this is.
If you ever looked at a topographical map of Guantanamo Bay, it's quite a large, like
the US concession in Cuba is a sizable degree of land, but it's not easy land to build things
on.
It's rugged terrain, you would say. So making a camp like this is almost certainly going to be extremely expensive and at least
under kind of the way things currently work, it will probably take a good amount of time
to get set up.
Like this is not a quick thing.
This is not an overnight thing.
And one thing I want to remind people of is that they have already have expanded a number
of camps and facilities in the US to deal with all the migrants they are taking in.
So this is not the start.
If you want to call this, and I think it's fair to call this a plan to start a concentration
camp system.
That system began early.
And in fact, it started before Trump took office.
A decent chunk of it was anticipating him coming into office, but this, this is not
the first camp, right?
Yeah.
And like Biden did significant legwork for detention that is cruel and unusual with his
legal defense and his establishment of outdoor detention for migrants since the end of Title
42 in May of 23.
And I think like we have to acknowledge that. I know people are very much into that, like don't criticize the Dems right now.
Like if they don't change, if taking a fat L in what should have been one of the easiest elections of the century doesn't change them,
then nothing will. And like we have to acknowledge that we are going to concentration camps quicker.
I mean, there were foreign outlets that called the outdoor detention sites
in, in Hukumba concentration camps.
Yeah.
Right.
Because they sure as hell look like one.
And they are, this is a big personal frustration to me.
I'm seeing a ton of people going online and comparing this to the Nazi concentration camp here after referred to as the KZ system.
Right?
Yeah.
There's one post I came across on Twitter where a person who I'm not going to name just to not cause a bunch of bullshit for them.
Time from taking office to opening a mass detention camp.
Mussolini, eight years.
El Al Gheila and others.
Libya.
Hitler, 51 days.
Dachau, Germany. Trump, Dachau Germany, Trump 9 days.
That's fucking horseshit.
Yes, Dachau took longer to establish.
Dachau was not the first concentration camp.
The concentration camp system in Germany under the Nazis started as soon as the Nazis took
power with a series of what were called wild concentration camps.
And this was involved a huge number of people, largely political enemies of the regime, members of
the opposition party, being taken into custody, beaten, tortured, and stored in a series of
airsats facilities.
200,000 people were taken into custody under the wild concentration camp system in 1933,
the first year that Germans were in power.
These are not comparable systems.
That does not mean that I don't believe what Trump is doing is a concentration camp.
It is a concentration camp made in the model of the American system.
This is part of the American history of concentration camps, which goes back something like 200
years, right?
To the, I mean, we were one of the first countries
to employ concentration camps.
The concentration camp as a concept began
with what were called Reconcentrados.
In Cuba, at the behest of a Spanish general
fighting an insurgency, there were US officers embedded there.
They came back and those tactics were adapted
for our wars with Native American tribes on the
frontiers and the plains.
General Sherman was one of the very first Americans to carry out concentration camps.
What we are seeing here is part of America's tradition with concentration camps.
It is not part of the German tradition with concentration camps.
You're going to be mistaken about how this is going to proceed and what the
dangers are.
Because I do not think the dangers at this point are that we build a death factory capable
of incinerating a million people in less than a year.
That's not the threat.
The threat is huge numbers of people are taken into custody and stored in places that are
not safe, that do not have good hygiene, that do not have good food standards.
And a significant number of those people will die
or suffer permanent physical injury,
but it won't look like Auschwitz.
And if that's what people are expecting,
they'll be like, well, maybe this isn't that bad.
Maybe this isn't a concentration camp after all.
So it's important to get things right,
both for that reason and because it's also disrespectful
to the people who died during the fucking Holocaust to be like, yeah, Trump's a lot worse than Hitler right now.
Like, no, no, stop it.
Yeah.
Like we have, you can trace a line from like Bosque Redondo, right?
Where they sent the Navajo people.
Right.
The Bosque Redondo is a great thing to bring.
Yeah.
Yes.
And you can trace a direct line from that to the outdoor detention camps we saw in 2023, where people were forced to remain in one place without food, water or shelter, and people
died as a result of that last year, two years ago.
And like from there to Guantanamo Bay, it is not a massive leap.
And yeah, just being like we don't have Auschwitz, it's just asinine.
Like if you can't acknowledge that America has a long history of doing this, then you really need to examine your own preconceptions before, like, speaking for others.
Yep.
All right.
Is that this episode for this week, everyone?
I think that's the episode.
I think we're done.
We reported the news.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of
the universe.
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