It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 169
Episode Date: February 15, 2025All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. Why Trump Wants to Conquer Canada How the Federal Government Fell Constitutional Law Professor Reacts ...What's Happening To Gaza Under Trump: An Update with Dana El-Kurd Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #3 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/Links: Why Trump Wants to Conquer Canada https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0sg0782h https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/david-graeber-direct-action https://www.cnn.com/2025/01/07/politics/trump-expansion-ideas-what-matters/index.html https://www.businesstoday.in/world/canada/story/make-them-pay-canada-puts-trumps-first-friend-elon-musks-tesla-in-the-crosshairs-of-tariff-war-463097-2025-02-01 https://www.jstor.org/stable/jj.9669319 https://www.economia.gob.mx/datamexico/en/profile/product/motor-cars-and-other-vehicles-principally-designed-cars-for-transport-of-persons?redirect=true https://www.economia.gob.mx/datamexico/en/profile/product/oils-of-petroleum-or-bituminous-minerals?redirect=true https://oec.world/en/profile/bilateral-country/mex/partner/usa https://www.freep.com/story/news/politics/2025/02/01/michigan-poised-to-take-a-big-hit-under-trump-tariffs/78099053007/ https://www.ilscompany.com/products-imported-from-mexico/ https://www.trade.gov/country-commercial-guides/mexico-automotive-industry https://www.cnbc.com/2025/01/31/trumps-25percent-tariffs-this-is-whats-at-stake-for-us-auto-industry.html https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/imports/mexico https://www.businesstoday.in/world/canada/story/make-them-pay-canada-puts-trumps-first-friend-elon-musks-tesla-in-the-crosshairs-of-tariff-war-463097-2025-02-01 https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2025/01/why-buy-greenland-trump-annex-ronald-lauder-manifest-destiny/ How the Federal Government Fell https://shatterzone.substack.com/p/how-the-federal-government-fell Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #3 https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/02/imposing-sanctions-on-the-international-criminal-court/ https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/may/28/israeli-spy-chief-icc-prosecutor-war-crimes-inquiry https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2p19l24g2o https://prospect.org/economy/2025-02-11-vought-restores-cfpb-procedure-that-sustains-mortgage-markets/ https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2025/02/10/politics/tariffs-steel-aluminum-trump https://www.reuters.com/markets/rates-bonds/bond-traders-waver-trump-questions-us-government-debt-figures-2025-02-10/ https://www.reuters.com/markets/us/trump-says-us-might-have-less-debt-than-thought-2025-02-09/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to I can't happen here, a podcast about things falling apart
and them continuing to fall apart.
I'm your host Mia Wong. With me is James Stout.
Hi Mia. Glad to hear about whatever's going to shoot today.
Yeah, so before we start talking about imperialism, we're starting every f***ing episode with
this until you people stop, until you stop doing this.
It is the year 2025.
We are a quarter of a century into this millennia and people are still getting kettled by cops
on bridges.
They did this in f***ing Occupy in 2011, they did it in 2018 during the Occupy ICE protest.
The people did it in 2020, people did it last year during the power signing campaign, people
are doing it again this year.
Simply do not lead a march onto a bridge.
Yep, or a tunnel for DEI reasons, we would also include a tunnel.
Yes, don't do the tunnel either.
Yeah, if there's no side exits, just don't.
Yes, here's the thing, the moment you walk if there's no side exits, just don't. Yes,
here's the thing, the moment you walk onto a bridge, all the cops have to do is take both exits and everyone on the bridge gets arrested. You can simply not do this. If you must do it, you need to like make
1000% sure you can hold both sides of the bridge. Yeah. Both of them. You need to hold both of them.
Yeah. And almost certainly you can't. So only you, only you, dear listener, can prevent
4,000 more people from getting kettled on fucking bridges. And I am going to keep starting episodes
of Hockeywell Get It Don't Get Kettled on Bridges until this stops.
Alright, this has been Mia's public service announcement about bridge-kettling. Let's get
into the nature of imperialism and why Trump's is different.
So we've been covering a lot of Trump's sort of, I don't know, the trade wars, his call for the US to seize the Gaza Strip, a whole bunch of stories about the way that Trump is using the power of the American state to do imperialism. And I think it's worth actually taking a second
to unpack this because things are probably going to get worse. There is a non-zero chance
that we effectively start a war with Mexico in the next like few months.
Yeah, it's great. It's banging. Everything's going swell.
Yeah, but I want to start with talking about the way that Trump has been using tariffs
as a sort of political weapon and not as an economic tool, but very, very specifically
as a political weapon and how this differs from the previous economic regime.
Because I think there's been a lot of, you know, as the threat of tariffs go up in the
markets, sort of tank in fear of them, there's been a lot of sort of defense of like free
trade in ways where I don't think
people actually understand what's happening. And to understand how what Trump is doing
is different from the stuff that's come before, we need to actually understand what trade
is. Now, when an economist talks about trade, they go, Oh yeah, obviously, trade is when
two countries exchange a thing. Right? Yep. but that's not actually what most of the stuff on earth
That is labeled as global trade. That's not what it is, right?
Look at like US Mexico trade. We're gonna go a bit in more into detail about what that stuff is
But do you know what most?
Not most but you know what a huge portion of US Mexico trade is
It is the same company the same company moving an auto part from one side of the border to
the other side.
Yes, back and forth across the border.
Yeah, yeah, that's what I was going to say.
Yes, back and forth.
Right.
So it's a lot of different people being paid different wages to make the same thing.
Yeah.
Or someone paid lower wages can make it and someone paid more can QC it and then they
can send it back.
Yep, yep, yep.
Very, very common.
Yeah.
And this is actually a real substantive problem with the way that everyone thinks
about trade, because what is happening here, and this is an argument that the anti-globalization
movement used to make.
You know, David Graeber makes this argument a lot.
And they're right, which is that most things that we think of as quote unquote global trade
are just a single corporation moving a resource around the world so that they can produce
something.
Yep.
And exploit labor at the maximum possible exploitation rate.
Yeah.
You know, and this means that using nation states as a way to understand trade is an
absolutely terrible way to think about the global economy, right?
There are some things we're thinking about specifically nation state trade, like trade
is important because, you know, even the same corporation moving goods around right that does contribute to how much foreign currency?
A country right right okay?
There's things like balance of payments where if you run out if you're a country you run out of American dollars
Suddenly you can't import like fuel anymore in your country like explodes
That's a very common way that like this like happens in Sri Lanka, for example, pretty
recently. This is a way here for your economy to blow up.
But that's kind of an edge case in terms of how global trade actually operates.
But the problem is that it is to the advantage of the ruling class for you and everyone
else to think about trade as something that's like a war between you and the country next
to you instead of a corporation like fucking over everyone involved in this entire thing. Now there's a pretty interesting
book that I read recently called border economies cities bridging the US-Mexico
divide by James Greber. And one of the things he points out is that
the two largest trade relations between any country any two countries on earth
are the US and Mexico and the US and Canada and those are the countries with the
highest tariffs that Trump was attempting to apply. Yeah, and
It's worth actually understanding
what this does by looking at what actually is traded between for example the US and Mexico and
the place I want to start is that one of the largest kinds of goods that is moved from from
Mexico to the US is computer equipment and nobody fucking talks about this ever
Yeah, no one like zero fucking people talk about this. I am convinced this is because of racism
But Mexico is a huge sort of like assembly
Place for a whole bunch of things like monitors screens like computer equipment like computer equipment in general. And a lot of that stuff comes into the US.
Yeah.
And there's also, you know,
the thing that we started this episode on,
that's I think the thing that gets talked about the most now
is transportation equipment, right?
And this is a combination of consumer vehicles
and also like heavy duty cargo trucks,
which are unbelievably important
for the maintenance of the American economy, right?
Of the entire global economies.
Having these trucks is a sort of vital infrastructure thing for the United States.
You can move stuff around.
A lot of that comes from Mexico.
And then also, a lot of it is whole cars that are finished assembly in Mexico and they get
shipped across the border.
There's a lot of things there.
And these are also all the same international car companies that work in the US. So it's like Toyota, it's like Honda.
Yeah, I mean, these are your American trucks often, right? Or like,
yeah, yeah, yeah. Ford does this too. Yeah. What's GM now? Stellaris?
Yeah. Yeah, like Chevy, GM, like these as well as like Toyota. Toyota, I think, has a big
plant, I forget exactly where, but along the border somewhere somewhere if I recall correctly. Yeah, this is extremely common
Yeah, and what this is right? Like this is multinational capitalist companies who are moving their products across the border
Yeah, and this gets counted as Mexico doing trade
You know one of the things in one of the questions in this book is about why? Mexico's economy never had the kind of economic bump that China did from from the amount of
Industrial production if you look at like the East Asian Tigers, right?
Right and I think part of that is actually something that is not mentioned in the book
Which is if you look at the East Asian economies that developed their economies like say your South Korea's etc
Like a lot of those countries like Japan there was a lot of US military investment there
in a way that's just not true of Mexico.
Like, Mexico is not, like, a place
where you offshore your supplies to
because you need to move stuff to, you know,
fight the war in Vietnam.
But, you know, one of the other reasons is that,
yeah, okay, so, like, where is all the profit
from the international trade going?
It's like, well, it's going to a bunch of American
and Japanese car companies
Yeah, because it's those those multinationals are the people who actually reap all of the benefits
Yeah to a degree like post NAFTA right post 94
It has created a class of people in Mexico who have benefited from it
But it has it has not lifted up like the average income.
It's created a greater disparity of income than at any point previous to that.
You'll hear people talk to a friend about this yesterday in Tijuana, like how, like
what NAFTA did, like if you look at 1994, I think it's a really good example of what
you're talking about of like, yeah, we opened up that border to international companies
to do tariff free back and forth,
right? But we didn't open it up to people. Yeah. At the same time, we had Operation Gatekeeper,
right? Like enforced, much harsher border enforcement. And the two things in parallel
really kind of indicate what the free trade is going for. Yeah, yeah. And you know, and
this is another old anti globalization thing. Like, we were talking about this is like,
yeah, free, like free trade is about the free movement of capital and
The unfree movement of people right? Yeah, so it's about locking people down in place
So you can like you can you can dictate wages to them and then moving capital around the world to avoid them exactly
Yeah, yeah, we're gonna get into this more in a second
I want to talk about some you know some of the other things that are that are exported from Mexico fruits vegetables
Alcohol are like huge exports. Yeah. And then also, and this is something that I don't
think is people don't understand what's happening very well is there's a lot of oil from Mexico
that's shipped to the US. But the thing that's happening there and this is the thing that's very weird about the oil industry is that the refinery facilities
are not in the same country as the extraction facilities a lot of the time.
So this oil is getting shipped around because they don't have the refinery facilities for
like the refined the specific kind of like crude oil or whatever that they're extracting.
So like, yeah, it's again, one of these situations where it's not really like Mexico is sending
its oil to the US. It's like, I mean, kind of, right? That's like one of the more direct ish ones. But largely, what's happening is that like, again, like it's an oil company moving stuff to, you know, moving stuff around to do refinement of it so they can sell it. Now, there's been some other stuff happening with Mexico, that's a kind of reaction to Trump's previous thing
and I think the extent of this has been overblown to some extent but a
lot of
Very low-end manufacturing stuff has been leaving China for a long time
This is one of my media things on the show is that this has been happening for a while because labor prices have been rising in
China and one of the places that these things went to is Mexico
So there's been a lot of like direct investment from China, etc, etc.
And all of these things, you know, like these kind of movements, I'm talking about them because
these kind of like seismic global economic shifts, right?
Of the kind that we're going to be seeing are driven by a lot of things, you know,
I mean, stuff like the currency valuations, like local tax laws, like state corporate
planning policies, like demands are just blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But one of the single most important things is the state of class struggle in a country and
What what effect that has on wages or like, you know, like straight-up uprisings, right?
The geographer David Harvey he gets credit for popularizing the term the spatial fix
Although other people were already using it and I don't like his work much but he did he is the guy who gets credited with this
He describes, you know, there know the sort of free trade regime that
the persisted roughly through like now I mean it was it was it was taking shape
in sort of the 80s like the 80s through like roughly now as the spatial fix for
declining profitability right you know what else has declining profitability
well I don't know the worse things, the more people listen to our podcast.
We are back. Okay, so let's talk about this, this sort of declining profitability and the fix that
capitalism sort of finds for this, right? You know, through the 70s, there's this sort of declining profitability and the fix that capitalism sort of finds for this, right?
You know, through the 70s, there's sort of spiraling
unemployment and inflation and the economy is sort of going to shit and it's happening everywhere because it's sort of like structural
overcapacity and manufacturing and the solution to this is a spatial fix, right?
Which is destroying some manufacturing capacity and just moving it to other places
Yeah
And you know, and this is sort of what James was talking about earlier, right?
The goal is to sort of weaken the power of the working class by locking people down into
their countries and then moving capital to poorer countries, the weaker labor protections
and also a weaker level of sort of like workers organization, right?
Yeah.
And then it leaves like the previously well organized workers, like if you look at the
industries and the places where my grandparents come from, dock workers and miners, right?
Those are not really jobs that are employing large numbers of people in the UK anymore.
And like, as a result, those working class towns are just destitute.
So they get that previously thriving, well organized working class that we had in Northern
England is left kind of like it has to relocate or reorganize, right? I think that previously thriving a well organized working class that we had in Northern England
is left kind of like it has to relocate or reorganize right and it destroys those like
nexuses of working class power that existed in Britain up until the 80s with a minor strike right yeah and and this was this was done deliberately right i mean there's always a
debate in the literature about to what extent like neoliberalism was like planned or to what extent it was, you know, a sort of reaction to a bunch of crises.
But specifically this kind of like offshoring and the container ships a big part of this,
but like this specific kind of thing.
And even the transition from coal to oil was like was a very deliberate thing done by like
done done by sort of American and British politicians in order to sort of break the power like miners unions and
You know one of the major places that this went obviously like a lot of these things go to Mexico
That's the sort of first round of these go to like the original like Asian tiger economies
I was talking about but I mean places like it like Indonesia to with a lot of those companies sort of
Thailand those economies kind of blew up in the 90s
yeah, but you know one of the largest, most important ones was China.
And you know, it's important to sort of remember, I've talked about this on the show before,
a lot of this is also the product of Tiananmen Square.
Because I think it's important to remember about Tiananmen is that contra both sort of
liberal histories of Tiananmen and also the sort of CCP line. Most of the people who died at Tiananmen were that contra both sort of liberal histories of Tiananmen and also the sort of CCP
line. Most of the people who died at Tiananmen were workers, right? Most of the people who were
executed afterwards were workers. They were like students died, but it was mostly workers who were
killed. And a lot of what happened there was that, you know, Tiananmen was like the last time that
China's like trade union federation, which is like now such a joke that it's like it's genuinely a subject of academic
Debate and discussion as to whether you can even literally consider it a trade union
Like that's that's how fucked it is and the last time that that chinese trade unions took a political stand was
In favor of the Tiananmen protests and then the army shows up and just like like slaughters their base
Yeah, and what this does is it breaks the old Chinese working class, right?
It breaks the alliance with the students that they'd had. Mm-hmm
That was you know, and that was a durable political force dating back to like the 1920s
Right and it breaks this extremely militant well-organized Chinese urban working class
Replaces them with a more exploitable and less organized like migrant working class
Yeah, and that is the class that like to this day right now is like the engine of global capital or like those like 300 million
migrant workers
Yeah, and they can be in different parts of the world right like
By the way the 300 million number that's just the migrant workers in China Jesus to be clear. There are a lot more internationally
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's like a working market working population is like almost the size of the US it's like
it's like the fourth largest country in the world just by like itself it's yeah
that's mad yeah I was just thinking of today like the the scam compounds which
exists on the border between Myanmar and Thailand like they actually Thailand just
cut cut power off to them today I mean I can see that strategy there, but it's just going to end up hurting the people
who are in those compounds more.
Of course it is.
Of course, those people who are in those compounds used to be able to escape and go to places
where they could like get back to their lives, right?
Like be re taken care of.
And of course those were funded by USAID so they don't exist as of this week, which is
pretty brutal.
But like, yeah, these people
right these these migrant workers who come from all over the world, hoping for a chance
at the things that capitalism promised them are the people who have to be exploited so
that people in wealthy countries can have their treats.
Yeah, and those workers are the basis of modern global capitalism, right? Like, you know,
like those Chinese workers, for example, like it is it is illegal for them to form an independent unit. If you try to form an independent union,
you will go to prison so fast that like the dust clouds like Wiley Coyote will take you
to prison. Yeah, like even trying to get your union to like do something like trying to
have your own independent people elected to your to that union like cannon will get you
arrested and like and even like Chinese labor oppression
like is pretty intense but it's like you know that we're also talking about
countries like Colombia it's like well yeah okay so what happens union
organizers in Colombia it's like they get being shot by paramilitary machine guns
yeah right and that's that's that's what the sort of spatial fix was right was
moving jobs to places where the the ruling classes sort of control was more firm and their ability to use violence was higher.
Yeah, and so this is what the American imperial system sort of had been, right?
It's based on American capital flowing around the world and this is also like international capital too, right?
Like we've literally been talking about like Japanese corporations, right? Doing like the same shit, right?
But you know, it's like international capital flowing around the world extracting resources and labor from other countries and accumulating it in
American corporations like that. That's what free trade is. Yeah, and it's also you know, secondarily right it is a debt system
It's based on forcing countries to like payback loans that were taken out by dictators go go read Drabber's debt last
5,000 years. Yeah, it's very good
But yeah
It's it's it's based on like turning entire countries into just debt servicing engines
We're like all of the wealth that is produced by the entire nation is just going to like pay debts to Bank of America
Yeah, and you know the thing about this is that this is actually a very, very efficient model of empire.
It's one of the most sophisticated imperial systems that the world has ever seen.
Right. It works extremely well. It makes the U.S. an unbelievable amount of money.
It protects global capitalism and the people currently running it don't want it to work like that.
Now, do you know who else doesn't want the current system to work like it does because they can make more money?
I can guess.
It's the products and services.
I'm excited to hear which one we get.
You know, it could be anything at this point, who knows.
We are back. So we've entered, I guess what you could call the phase of mask off imperialism. US imperialism usually at least sort of like war human face and it did it for good reason.
Right? You know, Ronald Reagan did not give a single shit about democracy and human rights.
Right? Like, like, you know, and this is this has been true in the u.s
For like ages and ages and ages, right? You know that like they prop up right wing military dictatorships constantly
But the thing is democracy and human rights are things that like people like
Yeah, and so, you know, it was it's it's a weapon that he and and his sort of brand of conservatives like anti-communist conservatives
Like wielded against communism.
And it was a very, very powerful ideological weapon
because if your choice ceases to be between
like communism and capitalism and your choice is now between
like, do you wanna live with a dictatorship
or do you wanna live with a democracy?
Like that's a very different question.
And it's a very, very important question
for sort of how the Cold War was won
and how international power is
wielded, right? Because there's always been an illusion that there's an
international community and that countries are like working together and
this is a very, very powerful ideological thing, you know, I mean, and
this is something like you lived through this, like probably listeners who didn't
live through this now, dear God, but like the Iraq War Iraq war right the US didn't unilaterally invade Iraq now
It was called the quote-unquote coalition of the wielding and included like like they they dragged Australia in the war by threatening to like
Destroy their like milk shipping contracts with the Iraqi government like so, you know
Yeah, you had all kinds of people running around in Iraq for a while that like yeah
I've seen the United Kingdom played a big role in it like an outside troll given it being a relatively small country So, you know. Yeah, you had all kinds of people running around in Iraq for a while there. Yeah.
Obviously the United Kingdom played a big role in it, like an outside role, given it
being a relatively small country.
Yeah, and this is the way that you do, even just overtly straight up imperialist stuff,
like invading Iraq, right, was still done under the auspices of multinational coalitions.
And the thing that's different about Trump is Trump doesn't give a fuck about any of that, right?
Absolutely not. He has turned on Rob Ford a man who is like who boldly answers the question
What if Trump's smoke crack like that is Rob Ford like he's turning on his allies like people like right-wingers
Who should be his allies in Canada, right?
Who are exactly the kind of people who you would expect to do sort of like right-wing multilateral interventions
in countries, right?
Yeah.
And you know, he has caused with his like threat
to put tariffs on like he's causing people
to become anti-American.
And this is the same thing with Mexico, right?
Even the sort of like the nominally center left governments
in Mexico like have cooperated with American appealers,
but Trump doesn't wanna fucking do that anymore.
He wants to run everything just very purely and very openly as as an American empire.
Yeah, like America's always bullied Mexico.
Yeah.
When we talk about the deployment of troops to the border, Biden absolutely bullied Amlo into into bringing those troops to the border because they came before Donald Trump even came into office.
But now Trump is just doing it on true social.
Yeah.
Like it's it's it's kind of different. before Donald Trump even came into office, but now Donald Trump is just doing it on true social.
Like it's kind of different.
Or Panama, fuck.
Like, you know, I was in Panama September of 24 and I went to the Canal Museum and Panama
like is very proud of its history of independence, right?
It's relatively short and harder and paid for in blood.
But like, yeah, I traveled, I'm a US citizen, I traveled, you know gave me any shit it was fine everyone's very nice to me now they're
burning American flags in Panama City yeah yeah cuz Trump is trying to take
the Panama Canal back and before we get into like you know I guess we can get
into here some of the stuff that he's doing right he's pulled out of the
International Criminal Court and is putting sanctions on it he has been
trying to use the sanctions that he's been threatening to apply to Canada to
get Canada to join the US he been trying to use the sanctions that he's been threatening to apply to Canada to get Canada to join the US. He's trying to conquer Canada. Right. Yeah. He's been
trying to he's been trying to force the government of Denmark to buy Greenland, sell Greenland,
right? Like he wants to purchase Greenland from them. Yeah. He wants to buy Greenland.
Yeah. There was there was the whole sort of showdown with Columbia over Columbia's like
being pissed off about the treatment of deportees to Columbia and he used sanctions there.
There is again him saying the US is going to take over Gaza.
And this is a very, very substantively different thing than the kind of American empire that
we've had before, right?
The last time the US tried to take Canada was 1812, right?
It's been like 200 years.
This is how Britain returns to the world stage.
Right.
And the thing is, the last time the US tried to take Canada, they burned the Capitol down.
So like, you know, but like this is something that even under like, people like Bush, right,
who is like a Bush is like a very, very overt American imperialist, right?
Bush would never try to invade Canada. Like, what? Absolutely not.
Yeah, that's that's completely unhinged. Right. And this is this. This is just a
very, very different kind of imperialism than than what's existed before. And I
wanted to go into I think why this is the case. Yeah. And I think the reason why
this is the case. Okay, so the reason that there's been such a defensive free
trade is like people being like, oh, my god, if he puts terrorists in place, it'll raise prices. And like, yeah, that's true the case. Okay, so the reason that there's been such a defensive free trade is like people being
like, oh my God, if he puts tariffs in place, it'll raise prices.
And like, yeah, that's true, right?
It'll crash the global economy because the global economy has been turned into a very,
very efficient engine of extracting profit from countries and putting them in the hands
of corporations, right?
It's working exactly how Trump wants it to work.
Now, if the US wants to rebuild a manufacturing economy, that is technically possible, right?
Reagan was able to do this.
But what Reagan did instead of doing tariffs is that, well, I mean, kind of, but like the
the main thing that he did was this thing called the Plaza Accords.
And the Plaza Accords was this this thing he did in the 80s where he forced Japan.
Japan was the important one, but like Japan, West Germany, I think there are a couple other
countries.
He forced them to increase
the value of their currency relative to the dollar.
Because like if you know, so if you have a currency and it's worth a bunch of like another
person's currency, so like, you know, you have like the dollar, it's worth like a million,
like yen or whatever the fuck, right?
The currency that's worth less has a more has a more competitive manufacturing economy.
And Reagan was able to like restart the American like manufacturing economy for a while by doing this. But the problem is that it blew
up the entire world economy. And so to save the world economy, Clinton rolled back the
accords and it you know, and that was the thing that actually finally sort of like eviscerated
American manufacturing. And the exchange here was, you know, all the stuff that I've been
I've been talking about for the last few minutes. So there's a very, very good essay written right after 2008 called What's Good for Goldman
Sachs is Good for America by the economist Robert Brenner. And what the strategy became
and this is a strategy that was originally pioneered by Japan that we took was instead
of having like a manufacturing economy, like an actual production based economy, you have
an economy based on the value of assets, right?
So assets are things that you own, right?
This is stocks, bonds, like real estate, which is important for our purposes.
And the goal is to make the value of those things go up.
Right.
And so what you do is you speculate on you take out loans, you speculate on,
on the prices of, of stocks going up and the prices of houses going up.
Right.
And, and, you know, you make it very easy to borrow money yeah now obviously this produced a series of like
staggering economic collapses including like the dot-com collapse 2008 was you
know remember that one but the thing is in the wake of the financial collapse
the US mostly figured out how to sort of stabilize the system mm-hmm but the thing
is you know they were sort of able to stabilize the system. But the thing is, you know, they were sort of able to stabilize
the system economically, right? What they couldn't stabilize was the political sector,
where if you look at the two people who are currently running the United States, it is
Elon Musk, who is the human personification of the stock price goes up bubble economy,
right? And the other one is Donald Trump, who is the human manifestation of the real
estate class, right? Who wealth, like, belongs enormously.
And the thing is, right, because Elon Musk is like a tech bubble go up guy, right?
Those people don't think like the people who built, like, American financial capitalists, right?
Like, the people who designed the Traces.
They don't think the same way Trump does.
Trump is a fucking real estate guy, right?
And this is how he sees the world, right?
He thinks in terms of land and borders and territorial control, and he thinks in terms of like, what physical
thing can I steal from someone in order to make money? Right? And that, you know, this
is why you're trying to like steal the Panama Canal. And, and he thinks this way instead
of like things that are more abstract, like debt servicing and like, you know, the sort
of lines of power in the coalition building, right? He looks at a map of Greenland and
goes, this looks really big, I want it. And so now he's going to try to use the American Empire to just
seize this. Yeah, he sees things in terms of like, raw power. It's a very undeveloped notion of like
power, right? Like, yeah, yeah, I was thinking the other day, day like whoever is in the same room as Joseph nigh must be having a fucking field day right now
right the guy who the he was there he wrote books about soft power at the idea of the US power to persuade rather than power to
Kind of yeah, rather than like hard power which comes in tanks or tariffs, I guess
Joseph nigh is no longer relevant
Yes, yes
No
We're back We're back in pure hard power.
And something I think is very alarming that I want to close on is the extent to which
like the US media is just sort of just wants to do propaganda for it.
Yeah, I'm gonna I'm gonna read a quote from a CNN article. Again, this is CNN.
Quote, the subject heading is the US has been expanding for its entire history. This is an article, the title of which is Trump is Trump wants to redraw the map
of the Western Hemisphere.
So for fuck's sake, like 2025 Monroe Doctrine posting on CNN.
Literally, literally, literally.
OK, OK. You are so far ahead of this thing because the next
that I'm going to read the one I was going to read first.
Uplift civilizing Christianized. That's an experiment. The next section heading is going to read the one I was going to read first. Uplift civilizing Christian eyes.
What's the next paragraph?
The next section heading is, and I quote, what is Trump's doctrine and explains the
Monroe doctrine?
For fuck's sake.
This is, I cannot explain how like I have taught this as a thing in history classes
for more than a decade from the perspective of like that was fucked up and shameful and even the
Conservative students are like yeah hard agree look at these racist as fuck cartoons about Filipino people that
That we're using here to justify this and now we are back like it is
And like yes, CNN is just out there like fucking cranking the manufacturing consent
That's not even the worst part about it. Like I'm gonna read the section
So one of the other section headings is the US has been expanding for its entire history sick quote expansion
Expansion is built into the American DNA since retired
Ambassador Gordon Gray now a professor of practice at George Washington University and former Foreign Service career officer
Okay, yeah, look an angel sweeping across the plains fucking manifest destiny. Yeah. Yeah, it's
And this is this is this coming all sort of coming into like the way that Trump thinks about which Trump thinks about the US
Like like an 18th century land empire. Yeah, right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah 18th century land empires, you know got money by
Conquering people and like extracting tribute from them directly and then also, you know, they were mercantilist empires, right?
So they they got they got a bunch of
Their money and this is something that tropics busily talks about is like he wants he thinks he can raise revenue from like terrorists
It's like no he can't but like what he can do is use the threat of tariffs to like force countries to do
Whatever the fuck he wants and this is the kind of imperialism that we're in now
It is a definite substantive break from what we've seen in the US for a century more than a century
Yeah, and I think I think it's important for a century, more than a century. Yeah.
And I think it's important for people to understand exactly how this functions.
Yeah.
And yeah.
It's sick.
We're going into the new opium wars.
It's going to be so fun.
Yeah.
It's great.
Bob, this has been a Kid App in here.
Do not get kettled on bridges.
Go out into the world and make trouble.
If people want to read more about the early, like, globalization, the previous year of
neoliberal globalization, like, Naomi Klein has some good stuff.
And I think Joe Stiglitz does as well.
So we can...
Yeah, yeah.
I would also recommend David Graeber's Direct Action and Ethnography, which is him writing
about the original, like, anti- like, ultra-global like ultra globalization protests and his like time in them
Yeah, so, you know if you need direct action ideas, they did some fun stuff. Yeah
Yeah, dressing guys up like marshmallows. So police batons would bounce off
Great. Yeah, bring back clown block. That'll get us through it. Yeah Have you ever looked into the night sky and wondered who or what was flying around up
there?
We've seen planes, helicopters, hot air balloons, and birds.
But what if there's something else, something much more ominous, that appears under the
cover of night, silent, unseen, watching?
They may be right above your car late one night as you cruise down the road, or look
like mysterious lights hovering above your home.
Drones.
Or are they?
We used the word drone because it was comfortable to other people.
One minute it was there and one minute it wasn't.
Oh, that is beyond creepy.
Do you feel like this drone was targeting you specifically?
Yes, absolutely.
Listen to Obscurum, Invasion of the Drones,
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. Don't miss real-life amigos Wilmer Valderrama and Freddy Rodriguez in their new podcast dos amigos
Each episode is a party where the good friends get real with each other about life careers and everything about everything
And you're right there with them when I discovered acting it
I've just found my calling but a lot of that was just because I wasn't I wasn't good at anything else
You know join the two amigos straight from Wilmer Speakeasy for Toast to Good Times.
Don't be surprised if some special guests
and good friends drop in.
And always expect lively candid discussions,
plenty of genuine moments, and lots of laughter.
Remember here in this commercial,
are you between the ages of 16, what is it?
Oh man.
Are you between the ages of 14 and 16 years old?
What do you think it takes to be a TV personality What's that? Oh, man. Are you between the ages of 14 and 16 years old?
What do you think it takes to be a TV personality and commercials and Saturday morning shows?
Listen to Dos Amigos as part of the MyCultura Podcast Network, available on the iHeart radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Why would you do that to me when I thought we were friends?
We are friends.
Los Angeles, 2021.
A friendly neighbor appears out of nowhere and promises to make all my dreams come true.
Let's not forget that David Blum was a professional con artist, so you didn't stand a chance.
But my dreams soon turned into a nightmare.
Blum generally targeted people with money.
And I was not alone.
He took over a hundred people for over $15 million.
One of the victims was his own grandmother.
I was married to David for almost 10 years.
It was insane.
I was barely functioning.
And I just had this realization that he will not stop until he kills me.
Getting a con artist to pay for their crimes isn't easy.
I'm Caroline DeMore. Listen as I take down my scammer on Once Upon a Con on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Do you remember what you said the first night I came over here?
How goes lower?
I met Santi at a luau party in October. I'm Santi. Damien. Do you remember what you said the first night I came over here? How? Goes lower?
I met Santi at a luau party in October. I'm Santi.
Damien.
Oh, it was bizarre.
The guy just disappeared one day.
Santi has been missing ever since.
The hookup.
What is that?
I'm solving a mystery through sex and haven't made a private dick joke until now?
Like, no matter how hard I try, all roads lead to...
The hookup.
You think it's causing people to turn aggro?
I'm gonna rip your arms off and use them to...
Yeah, that's a word for it.
This is such terrible representation, I'm so sorry.
Poppers?
These aren't just any poppers.
Mama always used to say,
God gave me gumption in place of a gag reflex.
No, not my psychiatrist didn't laugh at that one either.
["I Heart Radio App"]
Listen to the hookup on the I Heart Radio App,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen
to your favorite shows.
["I Heart Radio App"]
The government of two weeks ago no longer exists. We are now in a fundamentally different country.
Under the authority of President Trump, Elon Musk is leading a de facto cyber coup of the
United States.
Using the intentionally vague and unaccountable Department of Government
Efficiency, Musk is seizing control of the United States' critical digital infrastructure,
literally rewriting the code that runs our country, and culling the federal workforce.
Using the justification of removing government bureaucracy, Musk and the Trump administration
have installed their own batch of bureaucratic tech oligarchs, made up of former Tesla and SpaceX
interns and engineers, Teal fellowship researchers, Palantir employees, eugenics
enthusiasts, and literal Nick Fuentes-pilled groipers. Career employees
have been locked out of their respective agencies, both digitally and physically,
as the DOJ team ransacks various departments and accesses wide swaths of sensitive government data.
Agency officials who have tried to resist Musk's seizure of classified materials have been fired,
and more federal employees have been put on leave, including the entirety of USAID.
This effectively amounts to Musk abolishing
the whole department, all without congressional
authorization or oversight, not even an executive order
from Trump that extends presidential authority.
On a whim, the unelected Elon Musk decided to carry out
the closure of an entire government agency.
And he is far from finished.
Doge has hijacked the treasury to withhold authorized payments to multiple agencies,
resulting in an ongoing battle of lawsuits and court orders.
This is It Could Happen Here.
I'm Garrison Davis, and this episode is an audio companion to an article I published
on the Shatter Zone Substack, linked below in the description. You can follow along online at shatterzone.substack.com and click the hyperlinks for more information
and sources.
Elon Musk has personally directed the General Services Administration to terminate leases
on quote-unquote mostly empty federal buildings.
The GSA, essentially the landlord of the federal government, was one of the first agencies
to receive Musk's quote-unquote, fork in the road deferred resignation letter, offering
to buy out the entire workforce.
The legality of the letter is still uncertain, as it promises to pay out currently unappropriated
funds.
IRS workers who accepted the resignation offer
have already been asked to return to work until May.
The newly appointed GSA Commissioner Michael Peters, a private equity executive that specializes
in downsizing corporate real estate, has decided that quote, non-DOD federal building space
should be reduced 50% unquote, according to a GSA employee who requested to remain
anonymous.
On top of planning to cut the entire federal portfolio by half, DOJ is seeking to cut GSA's
own budget by as much as 50%, with talk of consolidating GSA offices into a few major
cities using a quote-unquote hub model. Wired reports that Doge staff may be trying to use White House IT credentials to access
GSA computers remotely.
An anonymous GSA employee claims that few people at the agency have elected to take
up the voluntary paid resignation offer, with those who have mostly being of retirement
age. High-level Trump appointees used quote-unquote scare tactics in agency emails, pressuring
career employees to accept the deferred resignation offer, warning that cost-cutting measures
will eventually lead to a further reduction in force.
Employees are concerned that a reduced federal workforce would result in federal buildings
losing their operations and maintenance contracts, with disastrous consequences for the functionality of government
buildings.
Quote, the brain drain is going to cripple our ability to maintain the buildings even
more than it already was.
We aren't overstaffed, unquote, per a GSA employee.
They continued, quote, I think this process is already too far along to stop.
I'm hoping we just need to get to the midterms, unquote.
What is happening across the federal government right now
is unprecedented, but this is not Germany in the 1930s.
It's not the fall of the Soviet Union.
We grasp at analogies to help contextualize current events
that escape understanding.
There are similarities, but what's happening is new, very American, very 21st century.
Think of the growth of the internet, social media, tech startups.
In 50 years, what's happening right now could be talked about in the vein of what happened
to the United States in the mid-2020s.
Now rhetoric of cutting red tape and breaking federal bureaucracy has been common political
claptrap for decades.
And previous efforts have been largely all bark and no bite.
But now there's been a huge chomp.
So why now?
What happened?
Trump has blamed entrenched federal bureaucracy, or the quote-unquote deep state, for preventing
him from enacting sweeping change during his first term.
The obstacles Trump encountered didn't just come from Congress and the courts, but rank
and file government workers who run day-to-day operations. Last month, the far-right America First Policy Institute published a report titled,
Tales from the Swamp, How Federal Bureaucrats Resisted President Trump.
The author, James Schreck, a former Heritage Fellow, credits, quote-unquote,
hostile career employees for, quote-unquote, refusing to implement policies.
Shrek says, quote, many career employees refused or defied directives, withheld information,
slow walked projects that they opposed, performed unacceptably, and used strategic leaking to
undermine the president's agenda, unquote.
Trump himself realized this late into his first term and sought to remedy the situation
by revoking civil protections for tens of thousands of federal career employees, reclassifying
them as at-will employees under an executive order called Schedule F. This allowed Trump
to treat large swaths of government employees as political appointments.
In his article for the America First Policy Institute,
Schreck refers to career removal protections
as a quote, modern invention that protects
entrenched bureaucracy unquote.
Though Biden repealed schedule F,
Trump effectively reinstated the order
on the first day of his second term.
Trump promised to restore his authority to quote,
remove rogue bureaucrats back in early 2023 under his Agenda 47
plan, vowing to, quote, wield that power very aggressively, unquote. When Trump first ran on
drain the swamp in 2015, he was referring to corporate lobbyists, special interests,
and Washington corruption. But now the term is used to deride the so-called administrative state.
Federal agencies, regulatory boards, and bureaucratic career employees that maintain the basic functionality
of our government.
Both Schedule F and DOJ are part of a two-pronged assault on the administrative state, all in
service of consolidating, then amplifying executive power.
Trump has fully embraced the unitary executive theory proposed by the likes of Russell Vought,
Project 2025 co-author and the newly confirmed director of the White House Office of Management
and Budget.
Although it's understood that Congress has quote-unquote power of the purse, under unitary executive theory,
Trump now believes that funding appropriated by Congress does not need to be spent.
Rather, the executive branch controls the flow of federal spending,
and Congress merely sets a ceiling on spending that the executive must not exceed.
Under this interpretation of the Constitution,
the president has sole and complete
control of the executive branch, including all of its agencies and departments. But people
in Trump's circle, like JD Vance and Elon Musk, could be pushing Trump to go even further,
to where the president considers both the judicial and legislative branches as purely ceremonial and advisory. In the words of New Right Philosopher
Curtis Yarvin. And arguably, we are already well on our way to that point. This centralized
executive power allows the executive branch to achieve goals I would have previously considered
to be quite lofty. And I'll outline two of those examples, pulling from the aspirations of the modern conservative movement after this ad break.
Welcome back to It Could Happen Here, and get ready to say bye bye to the FBI.
Though the right has typically been thought to be firmly in the back the blue camp, this
isn't always the case, especially on the more extreme end. The far-right militia movement
has long clashed with federal law enforcement agencies like the FBI and ATF. In the aftermath
of January 6th, many mega-supporters found themselves at odds with the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
Republican politicians began to feed into right-wing uproar surrounding the FBI as Trump
himself became a target for investigations.
After the Mar-a-Lago raid in August of 2022, Marjorie Taylor Greene tweeted,
Defund the FBI!
Arizona Representative Paul Gosar joined in attacks on the
Bureau posting, we must destroy the FBI. We must save America. That same month
right-wing columnist and podcaster Liz Wheeler published an op-ed titled
Abolish the FBI, which called to quote farm out the vital functions of the FBI
and raise the rest, unquote.
The New Right publication, Compact magazine, featured a slightly
better written article by the same title, Abolish the FBI.
At CPAC in March of 2023, Matt Gaetz, noted pedophile, advocated
to get rid of the FBI among other federal agencies.
Either get this government back on our side, or we defund and get rid of, abolish the FBI,
CDC, ATF, DOJ, every last one of them, if they do not come to heel.
In April of 2023, Trump joined in in calls to defund the FBI after being charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying
business records. Next month, two former FBI employees testified in a congressional hearing
accusing the Bureau of weaponization against conservatives in regards to the January 6th
investigations. The same two former FBI employees, who had their security clearance revoked after espousing J6 conspiracy
theories later called to quote, abolish the FBI at a Heritage Foundation symposium on
the quote, weaponization of the US government in April of 2024.
You're given that magic wand, that ability to be Jim Jordan, what would you do?
I think you have to abolish the FBI.
That's where I'm at at this point.
What?
Now some people are gonna say, okay, yeah,
we're gonna have to, do you just abolish it?
What would you, is there a replacement?
I mean, you can't just not have federal law enforcement,
right?
I think in large part, you could just not have
federal law enforcement.
During a live episode of Donald Trump Jr.'s podcast on July 8th, 2024, he called to abolish
several federal agencies, starting with the FBI, as well as the CIA and the IRS.
Abolish the DEA.
You know, imagine of all the places to abolish, I don't know if that's the best one.
I'd start with the FBI, I'd start with the CIA, I'd start with the IRS.
There's a lot of, you know, the DEA.
Now, maybe I know the agent level guys, so if they're going after narcos and stuff like
that, I'm perhaps a little bit more forgiving.
They don't seem to be setting up or entrapping people like the FBI.
The Trump administration has already begun the process to dismantle large swaths of the
FBI before cash betel has even been confirmed by the Senate.
Eight top FBI officials have been fired or forced to resign by order of Acting Deputy
Attorney General Emil Bove, despite resistance from acting FBI Director Brian Driscoll.
A questionnaire was distributed to FBI supervisors
requesting agents provide information
pertaining to their own involvement
in the January 6th investigations.
This was believed to be used for the targeted removal
of agency personnel.
Last week, the FBI handed over a list containing
the information of 5,000 employees and agents
who worked on the January 6th investigations. FBI leadership
initially chose to withhold employee names. In response, Boeve accused the FBI leadership
of insubordination. This was ultimately a fruitless effort, as data seized by Elon Musk's Doge team
could easily match employee IDs to names. Trump has since agreed to not publicly release the names of agents until at least late March,
as lawsuits continue, and is required to give two days notice if the administration chooses
to publicly disclose names.
But individual agents are still worried.
An anonymous letter from an FBI agent warns, quote,
Currently, there is an effort to cull a significant number of career special agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, unquote.
Around one third of FBI agents were told they would be placed on leave, according to a government
source who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
FBI employees have lost access to systems only to later regain access, while others
were told to wait to find out about their employee status.
Agents are now trying to negotiate back into their jobs, with sources saying FBI employees
may be able to stay on if they can prove their loyalty to Trump and disown the January 6th
prosecutions.
I write all of this not in defense of the FBI, but to demonstrate how far Trump is willing to go to expand his executive power
and transfer law enforcement duties to agencies seen as more loyal to the president. Though I
doubt the FBI will be completely abolished in the next few years, the agency could become
unrecognizable, a shell of its former self, with hardline Trump loyalists replacing the existing and already
largely conservative workforce.
Alternative agencies perceived as being more loyal to Trump, like Homeland Security Investigations,
could start picking up the FBI slack.
According to a senior government source, on day two of Trump's second term, HSI was instructed
to reopen investigations into the 2020 George Floyd
protests to, quote, identify protesters, BLM rioters, like they did to us after January 6th,
unquote. For another once considered far-fetched goal of the conservative movement that now seems
oddly within grasp, let's talk about the Department of Education. Conservatives have advocated for dismantling the Department of Education ever since Jimmy
Carter signed its modern incarnation into law in 1979. Most notably, Ronald Reagan tried and
failed to abolish the department in 1981. But Reagan's commission, ironically, strengthened
support for the department. Once Reagan ran into roadblocks, he instead sought to limit the department's power and
influence.
Since then, calls to abolish the Department of Education have been a recurring Republican
talking point among certain think tanks and politicians, but they have struggled to land
sizable blows against the department.
Trump previously fiddled around with merging the Departments of Education and Labor during
his first term, but that plan went nowhere.
In Trump's own Agenda 47 plan released in 2023,
he expressed his goal of, quote, closing up the Department of Education in Washington, DC, unquote.
Later at the National Religious Broadcasters 2024
Christian Media Convention in February of 2024, Donald Trump repeated this promise,
quote, I will close the federal Department of Education and we will move everything back
to the states where it belongs, where they can individualize education, unquote.
Project 2025 outlined how to achieve the effective dismantling of the department by transferring
funding and duties to other departments such as Health and Human Services and the DOJ.
Opposition to the Department of Education was a frequent topic at the 2024 Republican
National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Robert, Sophie, and I attended multiple panels and events taking aim at the department, hosted
by groups like Moms for Liberty and the Heritage Foundation.
On the first day of the convention, the party ratified their official 2024 RNC platform,
which called to quote, close the Department of Education in Washington, DC, and send it
back to the states where it belongs and let the states run our educational system as it
should be run unquote.
And now the department seems to be next on the Trump-Doge chopping block.
The administration is drafting a sweeping executive order
while Trump says he wants his education nominee,
Linda McMahon, to quote unquote,
put herself out of a job.
The planned executive order would not just direct
the Secretary of Education
to begin dismantling the department,
but also ask Congress for assistance
in formally abolishing the agency.
It's unlikely that Trump would get the 60 Senate votes needed to pass the quote-unquote necessary legislation,
but even if they can't manage to technically abolish the department,
he could still try to rip its guts out, slash spending, and forcibly resign or fire employees.
Basically make the department simply non-functioning, much like what Doge did to USAID. cuts out slash spending and forcibly resign or fire employees.
Basically make the department simply non-functioning, much like what Doge did to USAID.
Upwards of 16 Doge staffers are currently listed in the Education Department Directory.
Federal education employees have already received the Fork in the Road resignation buyout offer,
while others have been fired for alleged links to DEI.
Without someone like Elon Musk and Trump's administration, there was no clear path towards
implementing some of the more lofty plans proposed by conservative thought leaders,
whether they be Trump's own Agenda 47, the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025, or Curtis
Yarvin's dream of a national CEO king.
Only Elon Musk could do this.
You need someone with his influence, connections, money, experience, and knowledge of fringe
neo-reactionary Silicon Valley political theory to propose and carry out something like Doge.
So how did Musk get here?
Though it's common knowledge that Musk has drifted pretty severely rightward the past five years, leading into the 2024 presidential campaign, he was not an out-and-proud Trump
supporter.
As recently as 2022, Musk deemed Trump too old to serve as president again, tweeting
that it was time for Trump to quote, hang up his hat and sail into the sunset, unquote.
Initially, Musk threw his support behind the doomed presidential bid
of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
But as it became clear Trump would be the Republican nominee,
Musk fell in behind his new party line.
But his implicit support of Trump was kept on the down-low.
The two met in Florida in March of 2024,
among other wealthy Republican donors,
as Trump was lobbying for campaign
funding.
The New York Times reported that Musk did not want to publicly endorse Trump as of early
2024, telling friends the most he would do was an anti-Biden endorsement.
Instead of public support, Musk would create his own super PAC to secretly help get Trump
elected, timing payments so his fiscal backing of Trump's campaign could only go public after the election.
But all that changed on July 13.
After Trump's brush with death in Butler, Pennsylvania, Musk seemingly took Trump's
call of fight, fight, fight to heart, tweeting less than an hour later, quote, I fully endorse
President Trump and hope for his rapid recovery, unquote.
This opened more frequent communication
between Musk and Trump.
Later that weekend, both Musk and Peter Thiel
called Trump to recommend JD Vance as vice president.
Next week was the Republican National Convention,
during which Elon Musk was frequently name dropped
both by official speakers and
regular attendees.
Talked about as almost some kind of mythic right-wing superhero.
On the final day of the convention, rumors circulated that Musk himself would make a
surprise appearance on stage.
Though said rumors did not come to fruition, Musk's spectre haunted the entirety of the
RNC.
Come August, Musk just finished overhauling leadership at his America Super PAC, and was
rigorously pushing pro-Trump messaging on X the Everything app.
On August 12th, Musk hosted Trump in a two-hour live-streamed phone call dubbed in X Space.
This conversation marked the first time Trump casually spoke at length about the assassination
attempt.
The pair also discussed quote-unquote migrant crime and the need to eliminate federal bureaucracy.
Trump gave a rare compliment to Musk, calling him the greatest cutter, followed up by saying
quote, I need an Elon Musk.
I need someone that has a lot of strength and courage and smarts.
I want to close up the Department of Education, move education back to the states, unquote.
News outlets were more interested in reporting on the stream's technical glitches rather
than Musk's idea for a government efficiency commission, to which Trump responded very positively.
Next month on September 4th, Trump announced that at the suggestion of Elon Musk, if elected,
he would quote, create a government efficiency commission tasked with conducting a complete
financial and performance audit of the entire federal government and making recommendations
for drastic reforms."
Musk himself agreed to be appointed head of the commission, aiming to cut trillions of
dollars.
This announcement was not taken very seriously.
The New York Times called commissions such as this, quote, a favorite Washington solution
for delaying dealing with hard problems, unquote.
And the Times later reported that the commission
quote, can issue recommendations around federal funding and regulations, but will be powerless
to enact them without executive actions by Mr. Trump or funding approval by Congress.
Even I can admit that both myself and some of my co-workers underestimated Doja's ability to
physically carry out Musk's suggestions
with no congressional oversight or authority.
As the election ramped up, Musk's super PAC mobilized thousands of canvassers across key
swing states, and collected data to target both enthusiastic and unlikely voters.
Throughout 2024, Musk spent over $290 million in contributions in support of the MAGA campaign, mostly via
his own super PAC.
On October 5th, Musk made his first appearance at an official campaign event, joining Trump
for his return to Butler, Pennsylvania.
Musk continued to appear at Trump rallies in the month leading up to the election.
By election day, Musk was firmly in Trump's inner circle,
spending election night and most of the next week with President-elect Trump at Mar-a-Lago.
After this ad break, we will return to discuss how Elon Musk is now trying to become the CEO
of the United States of America.
Okay, we are back. And now, a few months after the election, Elon Musk is doing to the United States exactly
what he did to Twitter.
By the end, it still might technically function on some level, just worse in every way.
Prone to glitches and full of Nazis.
The previous version was already bad and harmful, but the new one somehow sucks even more and no
longer has the aspects that made it semi-worthwhile. The fork in the road deferred resignation letter
sent to government employees used the exact same title as a similar email
sent to Twitter employees after Musk bought the company. The Doge team has
installed sofa beds on the fifth floor of the headquarters of the Office of
Personnel Management to enable working around the clock, mirroring Musk's
previous actions during his takeover of Twitter. Musk has brought on some of the
same exact people
who helped him take over Twitter,
all of whom are now special government employees
with odd job titles, but immense power.
It was reported in Wired that a Musk stooge
told general services administration workers
that the agency will now pursue,
quote, an AI first strategy, unquote,
and that the GSA should operate like
a quote unquote, startup software company. Musk has ordered the General Services Administration
to terminate leases for all roughly 7500 federal offices amidst a national call to return to
in person work. This again, is a classic Musk move taken from his takeover of Twitter, in which to cut costs,
he refused to pay rent for Twitter offices in London, New York City, and San Francisco
while the buildings were still in use.
A current GSA employee was quoted in Wired as saying, quote, they are acting like this
is a takeover of a tech company,
unquote.
Musk's own personal success hasn't been from his skill
as an inventor or a software engineer.
What he's proficient at is taking over corporations
and molding them in his image.
This is what happened to Tesla, SpaceX, and Twitter.
In 2020, Musk called the federal government, quote,
the ultimate corporation, unquote.
And now he seeks to become CEO.
In doing this, Musk is following the tech industry motto
of move fast and break things.
So far, all his actions bypass Congress,
the slow controller of stable government.
Having everything be done via executive order and doge helps to speed run a full reboot
of the administrative state.
The motto of the old government may as well have been, move slow and build things.
Progress is slow, but detonation is fast.
The breakage of government isn't a mere side effect or a bug of this expedited form of rule.
It's a feature. To reshape the government into their ideal technocracy, first breaking things
is a requirement. They might not get away with all of it, and they don't need to. They are doing so
much, so fast, knowing that they will only get away with some of it. But with new Supreme Court
approved presidential immunity and unlimited pardon power, they
can try as much as they want with zero consequence.
These are not the moves you would make if you wanted a stable government.
It's the moves you would make as a new tech company.
Which is why Musk's operation is masked with the Silicon Valley language of efficiency.
The inefficiencies of government are part of the point.
That's what creates stability,
makes the country a trusted ally,
and gives the dollar value.
Quote, regulations can be bothersome sometimes
and downright problematic, but that's kind of the point.
They act as a control on imprecise
and rushed decision-making. If the cost of
doing business is slowing down the process, that's the cost that has to be made. To quote
a government employee who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
But those inefficiencies and pesky regulations really irritate the Silicon Valley tech bros
who think they are the smartest people on the planet. It's their view that since they're so smart, shouldn't they run the country?
Musk has a personal interest in slashing the regulatory state as it interferes with his
own businesses and dreams of space colonization. Last year, Musk claimed that Doge, quote,
was the only path to extending life beyond Earth, unquote.
The White House Press Secretary has said that Musk himself will determine when there is
a conflict of interest involving his businesses and Doge.
SpaceX alone has received $15.4 billion in government contracts, according to the New
York Times.
The large reduction in the federal workforce
through the combined efforts of Doge and Schedule F,
there's a irrefutable similarity to a plan outlined
by New Right blogger Curtis Yarvin,
Peter Thiel's favorite philosopher.
Last year, Robert Evans did a Behind the Bastards
on Curtis Yarvin, and you should absolutely check that out
for more information. In 2022, Yarvin, and you should absolutely check that out for more information.
In 2022, Yarvin outlined how a second Trump term could quote-unquote, reboot the United
States government.
This plan amounts to a corporate takeover of government, which subsequently reshapes
the structure of government akin to a corporation.
Though in Yarvin's mind, it is not President Trump who assumes the role of CEO.
Instead, the President acts as Chairman of the Board, and before inauguration, should
select a CEO who is an experienced executive.
This appointed CEO could then quote, run the executive branch without any interference
from Congress or the courts, to quote Yervin,
while President Trump reviews the CEO's performance in the background. Yervin writes, quote,
Most existing important institutions, public and private, will be shut down and replaced with new and efficient systems. Trump will be monitoring this CEO's performance on TV and can fire him if
need be." Unquote.
Musk may believe that he has successfully maneuvered Trump into appointing him CEO,
but Trump could be well aware of Musk's ambitions,
but is keeping him around as an emergency patsy, ready to fire when needed.
The Trump admin is currently testing the limits of presidential authority,
and once those limits get surpassed by the standards of Senate Republicans, Musk is the
easiest guy to blame and push out of the administration's inner circle.
The first step in Yarvin's plan has the Trump campaign running on centralizing executive
power to eliminate government inefficiency.
This was both in line with Project 2025
and Musk's suggestion of an efficiency commission.
Once Trump gets into office, the plan is as follows.
Purge bureaucracy, what Yarvin calls rage,
retire all government employees.
This is essentially being carried out by Doge, Schedule F,
and by just pressuring career
employees to accept deferred resignation offers by threatening future mass layoffs.
Senior level officials have been replaced by a batch of loyal tech oligarchs with links
to Musk and Peter Thiel.
The stupidity of Doge was almost a secret weapon. The cryptocurrency memeness made everyone in respectable society not take the idea seriously.
What's the worst an advisory commission could do with no power to enforce its suggestions?
Oops.
Another step in Yarvin's plan is to nullify elite institutions of power, like the media
and academia.
Musk's takeover of Twitter has gone a long way in altering the country's
information ecosystem.
The Trump admin seems to be utilizing Steve Bannon's flood the zone strategy
to distract and exhaust the media, as well as more directed attacks.
On January 31st, the Department of Defense kicked out NBC News, The New
York Times, NPR, and Politico from their in-house press offices and replaced them
with one American News, The New York Post, Breitbart, and HuffPost. Under
direction from Doge, the White House has ordered government agencies to cancel
subscriptions to policy news services from multiple news outlets.
A White House advisor told Axios, quote,
The eye of Sauron is on more than just Politico.
It's all the media, unquote.
In terms of attacks on academia, the federal grant freeze has had devastating effects on
university research.
Another step in Yarvin's plan is to co-opt Congress and ignore the courts.
This is where we are at right now.
The goal is to reduce both the judicial and legislative branches to being purely ceremonial
and advisory, as advocated by Yarvin.
So far, the Trump administration has effectively sidestepped the legislative bodies via Elon
Musk and Doge.
It's highly unlikely Trump would ever be impeached or removed by this Congress.
Furthermore, this Congress seems to have willfully given up on their power over the federal budget.
To quote a senior government official, quote, the real challenge is that Congress is on
board for now in losing their own budgetary authority.
So far a lone security guard standing outside USAID and the Department of Education
has been enough to deter resistance from the Democratic Party.
Last week I interviewed Derek Black, a constitutional law professor at the University of South Carolina.
The full interview will air tomorrow, but here's his short take on the current situation.
When Congress is willing to hand the keys over to the president, then we no longer really
have a democracy, or at least the constitutional democracy that was created a couple centuries
ago.
So the bigger danger, I think, is that through law itself,
Congress cedes more and more power to the president with a new legislation. So if Congress were to pass new legislation giving the president more
centralized power, well, that would be a concerning thing to me.
Right now, the real roadblock is the courts. The Trump administration has
already displayed a willingness to ignore the courts based on the continued halting of federal spending and grants, despite an order from a U.S.
District Judge.
The Justice Department has argued that the order to resume funding, quote, contains several
ambiguous terms and provisions that could be read to constitute significant intrusions
on the executive branch's lawful authorities, and the separation of powers."
This past weekend, Musk raged against a federal judge
who ordered to temporarily restrict Doja's access
to Treasury Department data.
Both Musk and the White House have labeled the judge
an activist, with White House spokesperson Harrison Fields
calling the order, quote,
absurd and judicial overreach, unquote.
On X, the Everything app, Musk boosted claims calling this a judicial coup and
shared an announcement from California representative Darryl Issa to introduce
legislation to quote unquote stop these rogue judges.
But even without added legislation, Musk and
the Trump administration are gearing up to directly defy judicial authority.
On Saturday, Musk shared a tweet, reading,
I don't like the precedent it sets when you defy a judicial ruling,
but I'm just wondering what other options are these judges leaving us if they're going to blatantly disregard the Constitution for their own partisan political goals."
And on Sunday, Vice President JD Vance posted a statement
undermining judicial power.
Quote, if a judge tried to tell a general how to conduct a military operation,
that would be illegal.
If a judge tried to command the Attorney General in how to use her discretion as a prosecutor,
that's also illegal.
Judges aren't allowed to control executives' legitimate power."
Unquote.
So now it all comes down to force.
If the executive branch not just ignores judicial authority,
but blatantly defies it,
who would be left to enforce the power of the court?
That leads us to another step in Yarvan's plan.
Centralize the court. That leads us to another step in Yorvin's plan, centralize the police.
Nationalize local law enforcement to place them under federal control.
Trump has flirted with this tactic in the past when he deputized Washington police as
US Marshals to kill Michael Reinhold in 2020.
Doge staff threatened to call US Marshals when USAID security officials, who have since
been fired, denied them access to classified systems.
Yorvin believes this step is paramount. Quote,
Support of the Democratic public is a cipher. I think that actually all you need is command of the police. Unquote.
If you have all of the guys with guns who can physically stop you?
Support from the public doesn't hurt though, and if things get tricky,
Trump could employ the next step in Yarvin's plan,
mobilize populist support.
But crucially, don't wait until you're at your weakest
at the end of your term after losing an election.
Under popular mandate, deploy your empowered supporters
at the height of your powers to
oppose any obstruction from government agencies or the courts.
Trump may weaponize Supreme Court-ordained presidential immunity and his unrestricted
pardon power to make any willing actor carry out his bidding with zero risk of legal consequence.
Now, even if Trump himself isn't aware of Yarvin's plan, his vice president certainly
is.
On a far-right podcast in 2021, JD Vance laid out a very similar vision for a second Trump
term, using what the Peter Thiel protégé described as a de-wokefication program to
purge bureaucracy.
I think Trump is going to run again in 2024.
I think he'll probably win again in 2024.
I think that what Trump should do,
like if I was giving him one piece of advice,
fire every single mid-level bureaucrat,
every civil servant in the administrative state,
replace them with our people,
and when the courts, because you will get taken to court,
and then when the courts stop you,
stand before the country like Andrew Jackson did,
and say the Chief Justice has made his ruling, now let him enforce it.
Yarvin writes that the initial goal of this new administration should not be simply to
govern, but to, quote, figure out what the Trump administration can actually do when
it assumes the full constitutional powers given to the chief executive of the executive
branch, unquote. the full constitutional powers given to the chief executive of the executive branch."
What the administration can do once they fully seize this power is so incredibly vast.
Without checks and balances, all those crazy things Trump tried to do during his first
term would be a lot easier to enact, let alone whatever Musk and the tech oligarchs want
out of the United States, Incorporated.
But that's a whole separate topic. The current fight determines the degree to which this power
is seized. And Yarvin notes the importance of going all the way. Quote. If Trump in 2021 wants to have more than 0.001% of power, the only way he can do it is to
take 100%.
Take it all at once, completely legally.
The real Donald J. Trump would never have the guts to even think of doing this, and
he's just too old."
Funny pessimism from Yarvin there.
All of this doesn't even need to benefit average Trump supporters,
because Trump's main campaign promise wasn't mass deportations,
fixing the economy, or abolishing the Department of Education.
It was retribution.
As extremism analyst Jared Holt notes, quote, the right got its base so hooked on the idea
of revenge, it doesn't even need to pretend that any of this benefits their base in any
tangible way.
They just have to say it hurts the wrong people and that satisfies them, unquote.
If Trump and Musk continue to get their way, it could take years to fix.
But the past 10 years have shown us you can't really return to normal.
There probably is no going back.
The options are to hunker down and play it slow, and try to survive whatever happens
in the next two to four years, while offering passive resistance.
Or we accelerate to whatever comes next.
Put cards on the table, trigger a kinetic confrontation, and fully manifest the results
of this constitutional crisis.
We are dealing with managing crumbles versus a full systems collapse.
Sad face emoji.
Have you ever looked into the night sky and wondered who or what was flying around up there?
We've seen planes, helicopters, hot air balloons, and birds.
But what if there's something else, something much more ominous, that appears under the
cover of night, silent, unseen, watching?
They may be right above your car late one night
as you cruise down the road
or look like mysterious lights hovering above your home.
Drones, or are they?
We used to work drone
because it was comfortable to other people.
One minute it was there and one minute it wasn't.
Oh, that is beyond creepy.
Do you feel like this drone was targeting you specifically?
Yes, absolutely.
Listen to Obscurum, Invasion of the Drones
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast. discovered acting, I've just found my calling. But a lot of that was just because I wasn't good
at anything else, you know?
Join the two amigos straight from Wilmer Speakeasy
for toasted good times.
Don't be surprised if some special guests
and good friends drop in.
And always expect lively, candid discussions,
plenty of genuine moments, and lots of laughter.
Remember here in this commercial,
are you between the ages of 16, what's that? Oh man. Are you between the ages of 16? What's that?
Oh man.
Are you between the ages of 14 and 16 years old?
What it takes to be a TV personality at commercials and Saturday morning shows?
Listen to Dos Amigos as part of the MyCultura Podcast Network, available on the iHeartRadio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Why would you do that to me when I thought we were friends? Guy Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Why would you do that to me when I thought we were friends? We are friends.
Los Angeles, 2021.
A friendly neighbor appears out of nowhere
and promises to make all my dreams come true.
Let's not forget that David Bloom
was a professional con artist,
so you didn't stand a chance.
But my dreams soon turned into a nightmare.
Bloom generally targeted people with money.
And I was not alone.
He took over a hundred people for over $15 million.
One of the victims was his own grandmother.
I was married to David for almost 10 years.
It was insane.
I was barely functioning, and I just had this realization
that he will not stop until he kills me.
Getting a con artist to pay for their crimes isn't easy.
Charge David Blum!
I'm Caroline DeMore.
Listen as I take down my scammer on Once Upon a Con
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Do you remember what you said
the first night I came over here?
How?
Goes lower?
I met Santi at a luau party in October.
I'm Santi.
Damien.
Oh, it was bizarre.
The guy just disappeared one day.
Santi has been missing ever since.
The hookup, what is that?
I'm solving a mystery through sex
and haven't made a private dick joke until now?
Like, no matter how hard I try,
all roads lead to the hookup.
You think it's causing people to turn aggro?
I'm gonna rip your arms off and use them to-
Yeah, that's a word for it.
This is such terrible representation.
I'm so sorry.
Poppers?
These aren't just any poppers.
Mama always used to say,
God gave me gumption in place of a gag reflex.
No, my psychiatrist didn't laugh at that one either.
["I Heart Radio App," by The Bachelorette plays.]
Listen to the hookup on the I Heart Radio App,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
["I Heart Radio App," by The Bachelorette plays.] iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. This is It Could Happen Here. I'm Garrison Davis. Last week, I was working on an essay about how
the Trump administration is trying to shut down the Department of Education.
Now, very quickly, that project expanded to being about how Elon Musk is actually trying
to internally coup the federal government and become the CEO of the United States.
That article is now published on Shatterzone.substack.com and is also the previous episode of this podcast.
But during my research, I talked with law professor Derek Black about the Department of Education, the state of
disunion in the country, and if we still have a democracy.
Already some of the things we talked about have begun to happen, like Republicans introducing
legislation to expand executive power, while Trump and Musk flirt with denying the authority
of the courts.
But I decided to publish the full interview because I believe his perspective is still
helpful and the conversational format alters the way we process information compared to
me just reading a kind of depressing essay for 40 minutes.
So without further ado, here is the interview.
I'm Derek Black.
I'm a professor of law at the University of South Carolina. My area
focuses on education, law, and policy and really sort of how that relates to democracy.
But I teach constitutional law and courses like that. I'm author of a couple books,
Schoolhouse Burning, Public Education and the Assault on American Democracy, and then
more recently, Dangerous Learning, The South's Long War on Black Literacy.
Let's start by discussing what's going on at the Department of Education right now.
And maybe let's actually start a little bit further back. Attacks on the Department of
Education are not new. Reagan famously pioneered the right's focus on this. But it's been something
they've struggled to deal sizable blows against, especially in terms of wanting to abolish
the organization.
Could you talk about like the history
of conservative attacks against the department?
Yeah, I mean, you know, there's always been
this state's rights issue that's been with America
since its founding.
Obviously it was a big part of the Civil War,
big part of the Civil Rights Movement,
you know, big part of the Affordable Health Care Act debate.
So, you know, always have this state's rights argument going on.
And at least amongst the folks that are worried about that, public education comes up as being
a target because there's this argument always that, well, education is not in the federal
constitution.
So what business does the federal government have to be involved?
And so it's really more of a talking point as opposed to any particular substantive reason why they want to get rid of it
But that's really where it's come from but you know, it's it's often been not that serious of a critique
But obviously it's gotten very serious here in the last couple of weeks
Yeah, that's the general overall feeling. I'm having is that there's a lot of things going on that I would have
Previously thought are kind of like pipe dreams.
Calls to abolish the Department of Education, even this rallying call from the new right the past few years to like abolish the FBI.
General claims of, you know, like draining the swamp.
These types of like old, almost like stereotypical claims that now through Musk, they've been able to like weasel their way into actually dismantling large systems that make the everyday functionality of the government possible.
What should people know right now about the current attacks in the Department of Education?
Trump is still allegedly drafting an executive order.
He'll probably have to work through Congress, but we'll see the degree to which he even
needs to do that.
What are you worried about like right now? And what do you think people should know about
like the current attacks on the DOE?
Well, there's the sort of immediate worries and then there's the larger worries. The immediate
worries I'll have to say I'm not terribly worried about. I mean, if you look at the
reporting that we've seen, it is interesting that the White House seems to distinguish
between the things that it can do unilaterally, right,
without Congress and those things that would need Congress.
And I mean, it's a weird silver lining,
but that gives me like some like measure of comfortability
in this weird, bizarre world,
only because, you know, two weeks ago,
the administration was willing to do things that it had no authority to do, right?
It sort of was claiming authority to do everything.
And so there is this, at least, recognition
that there's not unbounded power.
So that's sort of the immediate threat is not that huge,
because the White House, Trump's power over the department
or to close it up is relatively narrow.
Most of the department is established by statute
and he can't just dissolve things or move things around
that are created by statute.
He can't take money that's for poor kids
and spend them on vouchers, right?
These things, you know, the law dictates.
And the fact that he's implicitly acknowledging
or rather his advisors are implicitly acknowledging
they need Congress's help gives me a little bit of comfort
because I think that getting rid of the department is, I'm not sure there's
a majority in the House for that, but there's certainly not a filibuster 60 vote majority
for that in the Senate.
So that's short term.
But I think there's something far more disturbing to me and it's the long term, this sort of
idea that there's something illegitimate about the federal role in education,
that there's something illegitimate
about public education itself.
Those are very dangerous ideas.
I have a piece that just came out yesterday in Slate
that says, look, the federal role in public education
predates the Constitution itself.
Probably not many listeners are familiar,
ever heard of the Northwest Ordinances of 1785 and 1787,
but before we even had a United States constitution,
this foundational document laid out
how our territory is going to become states.
And without going through all the details,
Congress embeds public education in the very fabric
of what it means to be a state
before we even have a constitution.
And so that's very important as where we start.
At the end of the Civil War, right?
Where we almost lost our democracy.
Congress, as a condition of readmitting southern states
into the union says that one of the terms of readmission
is that you create a public education system
and you never take those rights away, right?
Forcing public education into the South
in places where it never had been before.
You know, people are more familiar with the civil rights movement.
So, so I won't go through all that, but just to take one more pause.
I mean, Congress created a department of education in 1867, right?
To get this public education project off the ground.
So this isn't some wild new sort of fantasy of liberals
or unions that we need a department so that we can,
you know, hand over the spoils to teachers.
This is an idea of about what it means
to have democracy in America.
And public education is a centerpiece of that.
And the federal government has been pushing it
for 250 years.
And that's a good thing.
It's a good thing.
How do you think that relates to the administration's attempts
to centralize executive power, though?
Like, if you look at what happened with USAID, right?
This agency that has been has been in trial in law,
that may not be legally abolished now,
but they've been effectively abolished.
Like, all the employees are on leave.
It's been hollowed out.
It essentially no longer exists.
I feel like they're trying to, at the very least, test the bare limits of executive power and bypass Congress when they can.
Part of my fear is like Congress is not willing to fight them on that, seemingly.
Like they're not, they're not willing to call them on that.
They're almost willing to, to acquiesce their appropriations ability as well as the ability
to actually have to remove departments from existence or create new ones.
Yeah.
So you're picking up on a thread that's much bigger than a department, right?
So when Congress is willing to hand the keys over to the president, then we no longer really
have a democracy, or at least the constitutional democracy
that was created a couple centuries ago here,
in which the president executes the law,
the president doesn't make the law, right?
Congress funds programs, not the executive.
But if ultimately Congress is going to shift
all that authority over, like that's a dangerous place
for democracy to be, there are no checks anymore. So I think what you're raising up is the fear
that there aren't any checks in place. You know, fortunately there still is a
legal apparatus. I mean, even if Congress isn't standing up, shouting and
complaining, it's still the case the president can't just do whatever he
wants and hopefully the courts, you know, would step in. I use the word
hopefully. I think courts will step in to limit his ability
to do things that go beyond his statutory power.
So the bigger danger I think is that through law itself,
Congress cedes more and more power to the president
with a new legislation.
So if Congress were to pass new legislation,
giving the president more centralized power,
well, that would be a concerning thing to me.
Let me just stop and we'll get to your next question to go.
But we have a larger phenomenon.
It's just, it's not just about Trump
and people don't necessarily realize this.
I mean, look, I don't think that President Obama
was a dictator or had authoritarian tendencies.
I was part of the Obama Biden transition team,
but I testified against Arne Duncan in a case
or against the United States Department of Education
in 2012 or 14 or something like that,
because the department was taking power
that it clearly did not have
in regard to a No Child Left Behind waivers.
And I told the current administration,
as much as I hate it, right?
I wish we could just wipe away student debt.
I feel bad for my students who have huge debt.
But I said it is beyond the president's power
to just wipe away all this debt, and they did it anyway.
The real point here is that both Democrats and Republicans
have been asking things of their presidents
that their presidents don't have the power to do,
and their presidents are doing it anyway, right?
And it's because our Congress is broken.
Our Congress isn't doing its job.
So citizens are demanding that our presidents do things that they really
don't have the power to do.
And that's like the big thing that I'm concerned about is we talk about these
things that presidents are not quote unquote, like allowed to do.
And I feel like like both Trump and Musk right now are speed running,
like the limits of executive power.
And they are willing to test the boundaries a little bit more than previous presidents.
And they're willing to break the government temporarily to like their goals be enacted.
And at a certain point, it's really tricky when the thing that you always hear is, you
know, like, hopefully the courts will step in.
Hopefully, they'll do something.
If things get really bad, who will literally stop them in terms of like the courts told them to
halt the funding freeze? And there is there's still grants that they are refusing to issue
that were already approved legally need to be followed through on that they are still
withholding. And it's really frightening when it comes down to like basic level of like,
is there people, military police who will enforce this if things get really bad?
That's something I don't have like complete confidence in anymore.
Well, you know, I deal with this every year at the beginning of my constitutional
law class, right? This is not a new, a new problem.
It seems more real and frightening, but it's not a new problem.
And so what I tell my constitutional law students
is that the rule of law doesn't exist because of courts,
right, it doesn't exist because of police officers, right?
That the rule of law, when push comes to shove,
exists in the hearts and minds of Americans.
And if they don't believe in it, all is lost, right?
So for when Brown versus Board of Education was decided,
it was reportedly the case that the president said,
if the court wants to desegregate schools,
let it do it itself.
Because guess what?
What's the Supreme Court?
It's nine old people in one building
with a handful of Capitol police.
Like, they can't do anything.
They don't have the power to do anything. So our entire system really rests on good faith. Or as I tell my students, like what if
due to something, you know, President Trump or Biden or whoever had done, the federal district
court issued an order directing U S marshals to take President Trump into custody. So that order goes out, the Marshals receive it,
they march over to the White House,
they come in the door and they say,
we are here to take the President, signed.
And it's already been fast-tracked by the Supreme Court,
signed by the Supreme Court.
The answer to whether, we'll just use Biden,
the answer to whether President Biden
is escorted out of the White House by US Marshals is not a function of
military. It's not a function of police power. It's a function of when that piece of paper is held up,
does the Secret Service member believe that the rule of law exceeds his loyalty to the man standing
behind him? Yeah. That's where it's at, right? And so, you know, it really is a good faith litmus test.
And I think we used to live in an era
when I think we all had maybe more faith
in the idea that people put fidelity
and commitment to the constitution and the law
above personal loyalty.
But we increasingly live in a Congress and in a world
and a situation when it seems that people put
personal loyalty above the Constitution at times.
JD Vance was interviewed on a
far-right podcast about like two or three years ago.
And he expressed desire for what he called a quote unquote, de-woke-ification program.
Which again, like sounds, it sounds silly, but this is basically happening now.
He extrapolated and said, quote, I think Trump is going to run again in 2024.
I think what Trump should do if I was giving him one piece of advice fire every single mid-level
bureaucrat every civil servant in the administrative state replace them with our people and
When the courts stop you
Stand before the country and say the chief justice has made his ruling now
Let him enforce it unquote and I feel like we're getting closer and closer to like this scenario
I'm sorry, where did JD Vance make this statement?
At what context?
On Jack Murphy's podcast.
Jack Murphy is like a far-right commentator.
Vance is invoking the political philosophy of Curtis Yarvin, who is becoming increasingly
popular in the New Right.
Lots of what Musk and Trump, by extension, have been doing the past few weeks is taken
pretty directly out of Curtis Yarvin's playbook for seizing executive power.
And I feel like we're getting closer and closer to this.
And so much of what's happening in various agencies is about proving loyalty to Trump
so that if there is some kind of constitutional confrontation, people side with them.
Doge is basically installing loyalty tests and running through communications to see what the loyalty to Trump is for different levels of
administrative employees. The FBI are negotiations to stay on, but only if
they can prove their loyalty to the president. And it's all of these
scenarios that, again, originally would be kind of far-fetched when you're
hearing someone like JD Vance talk about this a few years
Ago on some like right-wing podcast
That's one thing to watch this like happen in real time for people like me who study like this type of like more like
Esoteric far-right political theory it's kind of surreal to watch the type of thing that you've been like writing about and thinking about
Like on background for years now happen. I just kind of rambled there,
but do you have any like, I guess,
thoughts on like this idea that like Vance is talking about
in terms of like creating this constitutional crisis?
Well, I mean, look, I tend to be,
I tend to be the guy in the room that says,
let's not overreact, let's see what happens.
There's a lot of institutional history
and there's a lot of Americans who,
I think the majority are good and decent people
and they don't want authoritarianism.
So this is me, right?
This is my predisposition.
But a week or so ago, I had a huge crisis of confidence,
shall we say, there were just a few events in the news
that I was just like, I just never thought
that this would happen in America.
I never thought a governor would,
I mean, some of this was what governors were doing.
I never thought a governor would do that.
I never thought a president would do that.
I just never thought, never thought, never thought.
And so I said to myself,
are any of my opinions or projections valid anymore? Because I'm the guy who never thought, never thought. And so I said to myself, are any of my opinions or projections valid anymore?
Because I'm the guy who never thought.
And so that was a tough 24 hours for me, I have to say.
So I don't know if I just rebooted for self sanity
and move forward or whether there is still some truth
and reason to believe in certain stability.
And I mean, I will say this,
as we started this conversation,
the fact that the White House is conceding
that it can't do everything to the Department of Education
that it wants to do without Congress is a good thing.
If you read the five executive orders
for however many that they've already issued there. It's a good thing that actually if you read them carefully
It's mostly
directing
Appointees to think about stuff not actually do stuff but to think about stuff and of course the president can
Appoint them to think about stuff if they do the stuff they're thinking about, that becomes a problem. But again, it is this sort of like,
can I grab a headline about what would sound
like an awful reality,
but really all I've done is to think about that reality.
That gives me some faith, right?
And not withstanding the fact
that this United States Supreme Court
granted an immunity to all presidents that
I never could have imagined, you know, this court does, you know, issue opinions that surprise us
every single term and they line up with the rule of law. It's just, it's unpredictable,
to some extent, which opinions those are going to be. So I have this faith, you know, these sort of
pieces of the puzzle that still suggest we're still a democracy and are going to be. So I have this faith, you know, these sort of pieces of the puzzle that still suggests we're still democracy
and are going to remain one.
But, you know, I have my really bad days.
I think like, you know, I think a lot of people
have a bad day every day right now.
It's, you know, I just feel thankful.
Mine are fewer and further between than others.
And maybe that's just psychological coping.
I don't know.
It's just psychological coping. I don't know.
Let's let's I guess close. We're talking about disunion and how that relates to the general feeling I think a lot of people are experiencing around the
country as well as, you know, linking back again to the attacks on the
Department of Education.
Yes, I spent a pretty good deal of time on this disunion question in my new book, Dangerous Learning, because most of that book is focused on the three decades leading up to
the Civil War. So that like the Civil War doesn't just happen overnight, it happens over the course
of late 1820s to 1860 with the South, this saber rattling over and over again,
openly talking about disunion, right?
So that you had a South that actually was diverse
in lots of ways in its opinions about various things.
I'm not gonna say that they were your bunch of abolitionists,
but there was a manumission society in North Carolina
in 1829 that had, I think, 1600 members.
The very idea of 1600 antislavery advocates
in North Carolina in the 1820s
is shocking to a lot of people.
But 10 years later, only 12 people show up
to the final meeting.
So you had something that changed there.
And so you have this sort of period
of escalating disunion and censorship and propaganda and sort of policing
what is publicly acceptable commentary in the South.
All this stuff is happening, sort of going in
and editing their sort of censoring textbooks,
demanding that books only be written by Southerners.
Like, oh, I make it go on and on and on.
We don't have time for it.
What I point out though, in my analysis
of what's going on right now over the last few years
in education is that there are a lot of policies
that are attacking public education
in the way that they previously had.
And a lot of them are symbolic of disunion instincts, right?
Sort of, just sort of anti-government, right?
Anti sort of whatever the current culture is.
And then there's actually policies that I argue
are facilitating disunion.
And one of those that I talk about
is our public school voucher.
I say private school vouchers.
You are so upset with,
you're so raging at the public school system
that we need private school vouchers, right?
And we are effectively paying, we're going to pay individuals to leave the public school
system.
And I call this a coded call for disunion, even if people don't think that's what they're
doing.
If we look back at where we started this conversation, which is institution of public education as
something upon which American democracy has been built. Of course, it had lots of flaws and it wasn't perfect,
but it's been part of how we build a democracy. It's always been a bipartisan project. Now
becoming the thing that we rage against, now becoming the thing in which we are going to
finance exit from, right? This is a step towards disunion from a fundamental
institution of American democracy. What happens to us if they actually execute
on that plan? I shudder to think about where we might be because it's not just
some private school that's the equivalent of the public school. We're talking about
people on the public dollar retreating into their religious silos, into their racial silos,
into their culture silos.
And if there's anything I think that we could all agree on is listening to only the people
that you like on Twitter or listening only to the people that you like for the evening
news is what got us here.
And if what we have is education that becomes the equivalent of MSNBC and Fox News and Newsmax
and whatever else, that is a dangerous place.
I don't know how we build democracy on such a system.
What's the solution here?
I mean, beyond people diversifying where they get their media from and for vast parts of
the country, I think that that line's been crossed a long time ago.
If you look at the way like Twitter functions,
the way that people just exist in their bubbles
and are happy to,
like people don't want to hear anything else
and with the most hostility coming from like
both extreme ends.
I don't know how to get around this problem.
This is something that, you know,
we've thought about a lot
the past eight years, but certainly longer.
Well, I'll say this, you know,
public schools can't solve all of democracy's problem,
you know, I'd be a fool to say otherwise.
But if what we're doing is talking about education itself,
I think number one is that I think our leaders
need to understand, better understand the dangers of vouchers, for instance.
Like right now, and I'm writing about this,
they think it's just a policy dispute.
And if you just look at the surface level,
it's like, well, who cares if we give some more vouchers
and that makes the most far reaches of our party happy.
But I think really stepping back
and appreciating how dangerous this is
to our democracy is step one.
That's hard, right? I'm talking about teaching adults to see things differently than what they
currently see them. But as to our schools, I mean, I've got a little bit of stiff medicine
for both sides. I mean, I do think that in the push for more justice in our public schools,
and I think we do need, I mean, that's what I've devoted my career to. I do think that, well, I don't think our schools
did any of the awful stuff that the writers said,
but I do think that they maybe were not as open
to people disagreeing with them as they should have been.
And what I really mean is, in the push for justice,
I think there was a bit of shutting down conversation,
not teaching children to reach their own conclusions,
but giving them conclusions and expecting them
to reach them.
And so one of the things I'm working on my new book
is that like, I really think we have to rethink
how we teach history, you know, how we teach literature,
maybe not so much literature.
I think our literature teachers are pretty good,
but rethink how we teach those things
such that we are not committed to our children
reaching particular conclusions. What we're not committed to our children reaching particular conclusions.
What we are committed to is our children engaging in free and open thought amongst themselves,
right?
With hopefully an adult in the room that can, you know, establish some guidelines.
But I think, you know, public education didn't do that very well five years ago, 10 years
ago, 30 years ago when I was there. But I think
in this moment of cultural fracture, we do really have to commit to free speech,
open debate, inquiry, listening harder, thinking harder, right? Not just bullet
points. Not just bullet points. What would cross the Rubicon for you? People throw
around the term constitutional crisis. What would actually the Rubicon for you? People throw around the term constitutional crisis.
What would actually happen that would make that something
that you would be like, this is like it,
like it is happening.
What is that like make or break moment?
You wanted me to imagine a realistic one
or just sort of give you some sort of example
that makes sense?
No, like what would that be like for you?
Because I think everyone has their own personal
Rubric for like like what is too far in my mind? Like what is something? That's like this is this is completely unacceptable
And for some people this this may have already happened, but like in terms of like legitimate like
constitutional crisis
Yeah, what is that for you?
Well, I's just rewind.
And this is, I guess, an example of why, you know, someone still got their finger in the
dam, holding back, holding it together.
You know, the president of the United States asserted unilateral authority over the entire
federal budget when he came into office.
Right.
He does not have that power.
Federal District Court enjoined it.
He then backed down from that, right?
But let's say he didn't back down.
It's like, well, okay, you know, maybe as a district court,
but if the United States Supreme Court
or a court of appeals told the president,
you lack the authority to sequester those funds
and he still did it.
So just the budget, that it. So just the budget.
That's it, just the budget.
You know, just the belief that the president
can spend our money however he wants with no constraint.
And that would be crossing the Rubicon.
Now I'll tell you, and this is why, you know,
you had to kind of be like a constitutional law professor
or, well, you don't have to be a constitutional law professor,
but you've been following it.
It's like, I've been alarmed.
And this goes back, this isn't just a Trump problem.
Like I was alarmed with the NCLB waivers.
Probably nobody in this even knows what I'm talking about.
It's like a decade ago.
Not that President Obama was gonna take over the country,
but alarmed that somehow or another
he thinks he can do this.
Why is he even testing the boundaries this way?
Executive power has been steadily expanding, certainly.
Yeah, but I was like, you can kind of get it.
There was some gray area, this is where you kind of need
to be a constitutional law professor to kind of figure out
why that was such a big deal.
But when Biden, I mean, think back,
and again, I don't begrudge people needing
their debts relief, but when President Biden
effectively asserted the power to allocate federal dollars
to pay off debts that was like, you know,
half of the discretionary funds
of the entire federal government,
like that's a big move to just say,
I can commit this nation to a 50% increase
in its fiscal outlays tomorrow.
That's not constitutional democracy.
But now, right, we have a president going even further
than that, but he, like Biden, at least thus far,
stepped back, at least from the district court, right,
when the court said can't.
So it's really this sort of defying of the court
at that point.
Yeah, they've all been pushing the boundaries.
He's pushed them further.
Thus far, they've all complied with judicial orders, but it would be the refusal to comply
with judicial order.
I mean, I guess the main difference there for me relates back to what you said about
acting in good faith.
Something that people on the left, I think, get mad about sometimes is Democrats
seeming a complete commitment to acting in good faith sometimes. And it certainly appears
that Trump is willing to push a little bit farther, especially in terms of like tests
for loyalty. And it's at a certain point, like, if he does something really bad, at
least for these next two years, like, I don't see a way that he'll get like impeached or removed from office.
Like certainly not with this Senate, not with this Congress.
Like that check and balance just no longer is viable due to the last election.
And acting with that popular mandate has, I think, given them a bit more courage on their side to go, you to go a little bit further, play a little bit more fast
and loose with some of these checks and balances
than what we've previously seen.
But this is certainly still developing.
Well, the thing that really sort of jumps out at me
and I was telling some several reporters is that,
you're right, he's pushing it further, it looks scarier.
But part of why it's scarier, to be quite honest,
well, I think it's scarier, I don't know,
is that he's doing it out in the open.
I mean, on some level, some of this stuff,
like telling people to cook up crazy plans to do this,
that presidents have been doing,
Nixon was paranoid, he was,
like this is what presidents do, but it's not appropriate to do it in public, right?
You do it behind closed doors, you know, offer some plausible rationalization for what you're doing.
And, you know, you minimize it, act like it's no big deal.
What's startling here is that he is out in the open expressing his designs to us,
giving us the sort of thoughts.
And that's very unusual.
And it does show that what's acceptable
from public officials is much different now.
Because had Nixon shared his designs with the American public,
he wouldn't have made it as long as he did.
And probably true of a lot of other presidents,
they would have been gone.
So what's actually acceptable as public behavior has clearly changed.
What's acceptable as a policy agenda has clearly changed.
And so he's just putting it out there.
He's putting his dirty laundry out there and people are like, oh, this is normal.
Unless you have anything else to add,
do you want to talk about where people can find you and your writing?
Yeah, I mean, I'm on Blue Sky more recently,
I'm still on Twitter, I sort of have, you know,
just lots of friends on there, so I'm still there.
Me too, me too.
Yeah, you know, I'm not on there as often as I used to be,
you know, I gave up blogging a long time ago,
so, you know, as we drink out of a fire hydrant,
you know, I spend a lot of time just trying
to explain basic things about public education
to reporters, but you can find me there. I'm a professor of
law at the University of South Carolina and like I said, you know, dangerous
learning just came out, you know, a week or so ago really helping us, I think,
helping us to see this current moment through a long lens of war on black
equality, black freedom, and to be quite honest, just free and open debate. We've had those wars before and we scarily are having them again.
All right.
Thank you so much.
Thank you. Have you ever looked into the night sky and wondered who or what was flying around up
there?
We've seen planes, helicopters, hot air balloons, and birds.
But what if there's something else, something much more ominous, that appears under the cover of night,
silent, unseen, watching?
They may be right above your car late one night
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or look like mysterious lights
hovering above your home.
Drones, or are they?
We used the word drone
because it was comfortable to other people.
One minute it was there and one minute it wasn't.
Oh, that is beyond creepy.
Do you feel like this drone was targeting you specifically?
Yes, absolutely.
Listen to Obscurum, Invasion of the Drones, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Don't miss Real Life Amigos, Wilmer Valderrama,
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Listen to Dos Amigos as part of the MyCultura Podcast Network,
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Listen as I take down my scammer on Once Upon a Con on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
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Do you remember what you said the first night I came over here?
How? Goes lower?
I met Santi at a luau party in October.
I'm Santi.
Damien.
Oh, it was bizarre.
The guy just disappeared one day.
Santi has been missing ever since.
The hookup.
What is that?
I'm solving a mystery through sex and haven't made a private dick joke until now?
Like no matter how hard I try, all roads lead to...
The hookup.
You think it's causing people to turn aggro?
I'm gonna rip your arms off and use them to-
Yeah that's a word for it.
This is such terrible representation, I'm so sorry.
Poppers?
These aren't just any poppers.
Mama always used to say, God gave me gumption in place of a gag reflex.
No, my psychiatrist didn't laugh at that one either.
But my psychiatrist didn't laugh at that one either.
Listen to the hookup on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Welcome back to It Could Happen Here.
This is a daily news podcast about all of the things happening here,
which is wherever you happen to be and also
the world in general. And today we are going back to talk about Gaza,
particularly what has happened and changed in sort of US policy relating to Gaza to what's going to happen as
the actual combat operations wind down to the Trump administration's so far promises to effectively, ethnically cleanse the entire area and turn it into some sort of weird US satellite.
And with me today is Dana El-Kurd, an assistant professor of political science, guest on our
episodes about Bibi Nanyahu over at Behind the Bastards.
Dana, thank you so much for being here with us.
How are you doing today? I know that's a dumb question. I just asked you so much for being here with us. How are you doing today?
I know that's a dumb question.
I just asked you that at the start of this too.
No, thank you for having me.
I think every Palestinian in the world is not doing great.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Again, like I said, a dumb question.
The short story of what is happening
is that Trump made an unprecedented announcement
about a week ago on stage with Netanyahu that
Gaza would be, that like the Palestinian population would be forced out and not allowed to return,
and it would be turned into effectively American condos, right?
Like that's, I think that's essentially the gist of the initial meeting, which was met
with a degree of chaos even from Israel, because I don't think anyone
entirely knew exactly what Trump was going to say when he got up on that stage, which
is pretty normal Trump fashion.
But yeah, how would you characterize kind of the initial reaction to that announcement?
Yeah.
So a couple of different audiences for that announcement to begin with.
For the Israeli side, I mean, what I'm hearing from analysts and people who follow Israeli politics is that this has really changed the permission structure for them.
Yeah.
I think you're right that they didn't expect something to this degree.
But now that it's been said, it's like that is the full extent of what we can expect to do.
Right.
And so I don't think a lot of people are thinking like, for real,
there's going to be a Gaza Riviera. But what this does is it just expands the scope of what they
think is possible for Gaza, whether it's preventing reconstruction, and, you know, basically keeping
them in this kind of stagnant condition
and allowing people to start trickling out and leaving
and anybody left is considered combatant.
That could be a possibility moving forward.
It could cover up for more aggressive action,
ending the ceasefire.
I mean, it's really upended the things
in terms of the Israeli perspective
and how much they've accepted it, I think.
Yeah, because I mean, my interpretation would be that what Trump's literal words leave the door open
to everything from, like you said, sort of slowly waiting for people to trickle out and not letting
them back in, kind of like what you saw in the Chago silence, or outright mass killing, you know,
like there's no closed doors in Trump's plan.
Other than about three hours before we recorded this
on Monday, the 10th, a series of articles went out
based on some of Trump's comments confirming Palestinians
wouldn't be allowed back into Gaza under his plan.
Like the plan is for ethnic cleansing, right?
Like that's the only way to describe that.
Yeah, no, it's very explicit.
And I think that the way in which
American allies, allied regimes in the region have have reacted to
this like shows a great deal of alarm. Obviously, Jordan and
Egypt already struggling as it is, with a variety of issues
don't want a bunch of Palestinians who are very
politically active to be absorbed into their population.
The Saudi government, you know, put out, I would say, a pretty strong statement.
I was surprised how strong it was about how much they do not endorse such a plan.
So yeah.
And it's interesting because Trump, in the way that he often just says shit has...
I'm going to read the exact quote.
I'm talking about starting to build and I think I could make a deal with Jordan.
I think I could make a deal with Egypt.
You know, we give them billions and billions of dollars a year.
And so far, Egypt and Jordan have both said, no, this is not something we're interested.
UN special rapporteur Francesca Albanese said Trump's proposal was nonsense, but has to
be taken very seriously, which I actually think is a reasonably good summary of how to handle everything that he says.
It's nonsense that you have to take it very seriously.
I mean, the man has the nukes, as we've discussed.
So yeah, I mean, the way that people have reacted is obviously a great deal of alarm.
And on the Palestinian side, it's like, different Palestinian political actors are bracing for the end of the ceasefire, essentially.
Yeah, I mean, that's a pretty stark term to put it.
And I don't know, I guess because, yeah, one thing that the door is open on is Israel saying,
well, now that we've announced this plan and people have to get out,
everyone staying is effectively a combatant.
Exactly. Yeah. I think that that's...
Yeah. I think that that's, yeah.
It's not, you know, what we've seen over the past 470 days
up to ceasefire is not that they have much respect
for non-combatants to begin with.
That really didn't stop them from targeting civilians
targeting children.
So you can imagine now that even, I mean
it's hard to even talk about it in these terms.
It's not like the Biden administration was really holding them accountable either.
But now again, because the permission structure has just been expanded to such a degree that
we don't know what kinds of things we're going to see for people who remain in Gaza in the coming
future. And obviously this derails any possibility for Palestinian and Israeli civil society actors who are trying
to move beyond this particular status quo. And there's no international actor that's really
empowering those efforts. And so it's really bleak. Yeah, I mean, it's bleak in so many
comprehensive ways. Like one thing and not to, I don't mean to like kind of take
the focus off of, of Gaza, but this is used to term permission structure on an international
level, the USA we are backing a forced expulsion and genocide of an entire population does
change the permission structure for every international actor in terms of like a variety of massive variety
of conflicts around the world.
This is like a sea change in international norms that so many millions of people outside
of Gaza will eventually and they're probably immediately be affected by.
I think that there has always been gaps in what is acceptable and what is permissible under international
law.
Obviously that has never been applied evenly.
And then if you were a particular group that didn't have American backings, for example,
the Armenians in Artsakh, it didn't matter if you were ethnically cleansed.
But like you said, this just expands it to such a scope.
Like now this is an acceptable policy solution to remove wholesale
huge populations. And when the ceasefire happened, there was an argument, and I think that this is a
valid one, that Palestinians, the fact that they were able to, in the ceasefire agreement, secure
their right to return even to the rubble, that was a huge obstacle to this kind of precedent. And I think Trump is now trying to upend that victory,
even if it's, you know, in terms of a precedent set
or in symbolic terms, like you said,
this is now gonna become how states operate.
I mean, the Syrian dictator during the Syrian civil war,
I think pushed the bounds of how states can operate.
And this is another level.
Yeah.
Well, and I think that this is, and I want to, I want to kind of zero back in on Gaza
in a second, but I really do.
I think that that broader point that you just make can't be made enough, not just the centrality
of Syria, but the idea that when on the international stage, the leader of a country is allowed
to do force displacements through massive aerial bombing.
There's this idea that you can just be like, well, that's just Syria, right?
It's never just Syria, just like it's never just Gaza.
These things metastasize.
You have to view those kind of actions on the international stage like a cancer.
Right.
No, absolutely.
There was a Syrian activist and political writer, Yassin Al-Hash-Salih, who said the
Syrianization of the world. And we're seeing the Gazification of the-Salih who said the Syrianization of the world. Yeah.
And we're seeing the gossification of the world. We will see the gossification of the world.
Yeah.
And that's very, very dangerous for everybody involved.
Yeah, that can't be overstated. A chill kind of goes down my spine thinking about that and thinking about that quote,
which makes this a very bad time to throw to ads, but that's what I'm going to do.
Then we're going to come back and we're going to talk about demining.
We're back. So to Zerubeckin on Gaza, obviously one thing that comes up when Trump talks about
this plan that is an actual thing that would have to be dealt with one way or the other is that huge chunks of Gaza are uninhabitable right
now and will be for the foreseeable future because of the sheer quantity of munitions
dispensed.
A number of munitions that have been used in Gaza are cluster munitions, but even munitions
that are not cluster munitions, when you're dropping bombs on particularly dense urban
targets, there's a wide variety
of things that can happen to those munitions on their way to their target, including them
getting deflected by debris, them getting deflected by pieces of metal and rebar and
the like that damages the device and stops it from detonating, but leaves it still in
an active state.
The estimate I'm seeing for munitions used in Gaza is about 10% of the munitions.
And there's no way of knowing how many have been dropped, but estimates are at least 30,000
in the first 70 days, I think.
Seven weeks, sorry, much less than 70 days.
Nearly 30,000 munitions in the first seven weeks of the war.
So a huge number, about 10% at least, are still active and live.
And for an idea of how long it takes to demine and render an area safe for munitions like
this, there are still people who die in France from World War I munitions, up to the present
day in 2025.
So this is a massive problem.
In the best case scenario, something has to be done with these munitions.
This is something that Trump has been bringing up and when talking about his desire to clear
people out of their demine and then rebuild effectively, what sounds almost like a vacation
colony for the United States.
One of the issues just with any sort of practical effect with demining is that USAID has been
gutted as an agency and that's the agency effect with demining is that USAID has been gutted as
an agency and that's the agency through which demining was done.
We've spent billions of dollars, put billions of dollars into demining around the world
through USAID.
The US military is actually not allowed by our laws to do demining operations.
There's a complicated history there.
So we both got this situation where the proposed justification for pushing the population out
is, well, it's not safe to be there.
We have to de-mine it.
And also we have created a situation in which the organizations that do de-mining can't
do it anymore.
Yeah.
And I think those same organizations asked for an exception to the stop work order and
were denied by
the State Department and no explanations were given.
And so, I mean, it's obviously a fig leaf.
It's obviously an excuse.
This has nothing to do with bettering conditions in Gaza.
And the fact that he's gone back and clarified and has been asked a number of times, including
last night after the Super Bowl or something, and he said, no, no, they won't be allowed to return.
Yeah. Well, all right.
What are you demanding?
You really think you're going to build hotels? Yeah.
My understanding is like people in the administration were
also surprised by this tack of reasoning.
So I wonder who's fed him this idea. Like, who's given him this idea
that he's going to be able to build hotels here? My understanding based on reading, I obviously
don't have any ins in the Trump administration, but the reporting I've seen suggested came from
Kushner that like a year or so ago, he was talking about this, like this is great, you know, a great
place to build a condo. It's beautiful, you know, wonderful weather.
I mean, we know just from the past that is kind of how Trump works is somebody people
tell him a lot of shit, but something sticks in his brain and that like with the Greenland
shit can become US policy.
And that appears to be, I mean, as best as I can tell, that's the origin of this.
It's just like the grift can really stick in his mind.
He's really good at holding
on to possibilities for grifting. Yeah. The fact that you are doing a genocide in order
to clear land for condos doesn't make it less of a genocide, but it is like a justification
for genocide. I don't think I've heard a country's leader make before. Right. I mean, parts of
this are familiar and go back, you know, even to the Iraq war in terms
of US policy and further back, right?
Like what, what is kind of the core of US support of Israel is our desire to have a
stable territory within the Middle East from where we can project power, right?
So to that extent, this is like a natural expression of US policy for decades in the
area.
Like, well, what if we just take this for ourselves
and then we have this stable platform
from where we can air strike whoever the hell we want.
And also Jared Kushner can have his condos.
Yeah, I mean, the thing is they can achieve
and have already been able to maintain American hegemony
with all sorts of bases across the Middle East,
some secret, some not. Qatar, like it's, it's, this is, I think this is another level where it's like
American hegemony is tangential to Jared Kushner making money. It's an interesting little,
I've never seen a hegemon kind of shoot itself in the foot in this direction to this degree.
Yeah.
I don't want the focus to be on the danger to Americans from this,
but this is extremely dangerous for Americans too, right?
Having your country openly back a genocide to this extent,
not just even arming it, but saying,
we are specifically going to take this land and profit off of it,
it so comprehensively escalates everything
on an international scale.
Like I can't think of a single decision
that's this reckless, that's been made in my lifetime
by American politicians other than the Iraq war.
Right, and that was I think maybe the first nail
in the coffin and we're reaching the last nails
in the coffin. Yeah, yeah, the coffin's almost done.
It's almost done.
We're dismantling the whatever remnants of the international order used to exist and
it's really going to be a free fall.
Yeah, I don't know what more to say on that.
I guess kind of the one thing we should get into is what we're seeing in terms of the
Trump administration and pro-Palestine protests in the United States.
Obviously last night at the Super Bowl, we had a moment where a member of Kendrick Lamar's,
the performance crew on the ground, I think it was one of his dancers as far as I can
tell, but I don't believe the individual has been named yet.
Maybe I missed that.
I think somebody has released his name.
I think the Intercept.
Okay, well, I don't feel specifically a need to do that.
But an individual who was a part of that
was standing on one of the cars that was on stage
that Kendrick had been dancing on,
unfurled a Palestine and Sudan flag.
It was a fairly small, a couple of feet wide,
couple of feet deep.
So not like a mass, certainly not a destructive act,
but like not only did that person get like banned for life
from all sort of NFL events and performing
or attending them, which I suppose was not super shocking,
but there were immediate announcements
by New Orleans police that they are trying to figure out
what to charge this person under,
which like, tell me what to charge this person under,
which like, I, tell me what kind of crime that is, you know?
I mean, it's not like he even invaded the pitch, right?
Like he's, no, he was supposed to be there.
He was kind of like an actor.
Yeah.
He did a thing that wasn't part of the script, I assume, but like, right.
I don't know how you even charged him.
Yeah.
I don't think charges are out yet, right?
But they're going to find something to do, which is also going to set a precedent.
Right.
Because this is nothing.
This, this person was not in a place they weren't allowed to be.
This person didn't damage any property.
They held a thing.
Like that's the definition of protected speech.
You know, if you were their employer, you can fire them for that, but you
can't charge them criminally for that.
I mean, they wanted to make an example.
And we'll see what kind of example that they try to make out of this person.
And like you said, it's really in line with the Trump administration taking aggressive
action against any forms of dissent around American foreign policy that is obviously, as we've mentioned,
like very tied up with the genocide that unfolded.
And so it's these executive orders
around deporting international students.
It's executive orders around like expanded understandings
of anti-Semitism.
And the idea is even if you don't go after everybody,
you're making an example enough that like you're chilling
people's abilities to engage,
whether it's on campuses or off campuses.
And so it's definitely,
I can tell you from like the academic perspective,
like a number of disciplinary organizations
and like Middle East Studies Association
and things like this, like they're very concerned.
Like this is a very concerning moment.
Yeah.
I want to kind of dig into that a little bit more and we'll continue our
conversation.
I've got to throw the ads one last time and then we'll be back.
We're back. Dana, yeah, we're just talking about kind of the chilling effects this has had. As an academic, do you want to talk a little bit about what you've experienced so far and
what you think kind of needs to be the response to this attempt to chill any kind of protected
speech in favor of Palestine?
Or not even in favor.
That's the wrong way to put it.
It's not even in favor.
Yeah.
Discussing the reality of the genocide.
Yeah.
I mean, that's the thing is like they have not, they've conflated.
Yeah.
Any, any attempt to give information.
Right.
With advocacy.
Yes.
So there's that conflation.
But then of course, advocacy in and of itself is protected.
Yes. You're certainly allowed to advocate if you're of course, advocacy in and of itself is protected. Yes.
You're certainly allowed to advocate if you're a student or things or, you know, a citizen
in the world, like, of course.
So there is that conflation.
And I will say that, like, we're seeing attacks on academic freedom and we're seeing attacks
on freedom of speech and freedom of assembly on academic campuses, both in public institutions
that have to uphold public laws and also in private institutions that have paid lip service to things like
free speech and are now ignoring that commitment in the past.
And so we've seen even tenured professors, like what happened in Muenberg College, like
tenured professors being targeted, losing their jobs.
And I can say that this has really activated organizations like the
American Association of University Professors, the AAUP, the Middle East Studies Association,
as well their Committee on Academic Freedom has been working to collect data on how this has
impacted people's abilities to engage on the issue of Israel-Palestine even in their research or
teaching. And then there was a study by two professors, Mark Lynch and Shibri Talhami, George Washington
and University of Maryland respectively, that found something like over 90% of professors
who teach on the Middle East are self-censoring.
Jesus.
And it's not because they're out in front of the classroom giving a crap about giving
their opinion.
Yeah.
I can tell you, none of us want to change anybody's minds about this.
It's like they're literally just self-censoring the content.
Yeah.
Like, we're just afraid to even address what happened, what's happening in a historical
context or, you know, teaching a course on Israel-Palestine or any of those kinds of
things is now completely under the microscope.
And this is all part of the whole kind of authoritarian chilling effect of any ability
to express anything outside of like what the regimes that you live under considers acceptable,
you know?
And it always starts with these, well, you know, if we talk about Palestine and what's
happening there, then maybe this department will get, you know, its funding cut and we won't, if we talk about Palestine and what's happening there,
then maybe this department will get its funding cut and we won't be able to talk about anything.
So really this is, it's the same decision a lot of hospitals are making around the treatment
for trans kids as well.
Oh, trans youth, yeah.
We'll lose our funding if we do this and we do all these other good things.
But they never stop, right?
You never actually are safe.
There's no point at which these people say it's enough.
They take your ability to talk about or to act in one way away,
and then they take it away in another, and they keep taking, you know,
until you make a stand.
And you might as well make a stand the first time they start trying to take shit from you.
Otherwise, you're going to get backed even further into a fucking corner.
Yeah, there has to be institutions and leadership at these institutions holding a line because
this kind of preemptive obedience hasn't served them. And it's not going to change fundamentally
the fact that this administration sees academic knowledge production as a political landscape
they need to control and see,
I mean, JD Vance says it like professors are the enemy.
Yeah.
So what are you doing trying to placate?
You know, it's like you're, you're just giving them an easier time.
No, and, and through the use of funding and their ability to kind of gin up
outrage in media groups like APAC have effectively blasted a salient in free speech in this country,
where you really, you almost can't talk about Palestine and you certainly can't acknowledge
what Israel is doing, right?
You can't say it state and plain terms, like we are watching a genocide be at least attempted
here, right?
And if you do that, there are huge consequences to most people in traditional organizations,
particularly professors, which is always where it starts.
And yeah, that salient is just going to get whiter and whiter and whiter, right?
That's the way this stuff works.
Yeah, yeah.
This is not a new argument, but it's like the ways in which the United States has engaged abroad.
It's very much boomeranging home, you know? And so it's not about, like you said, it's not just
about Palestine. It's not about people who study Palestine or teach about Israel Palestine. It's
so much broader than not the precedent that is being set. And what is like kind of a silver
lining is that the last year of the Biden administration,
the last year plus of the Biden administration, and then even now, I think at least it has
helped people connect the dots a little bit.
Yeah.
But like this is not an issue in isolation.
And just because you don't happen to work on it doesn't mean that you're safe from people
meddling in your syllabi or chilling your speech on other issues, whether it's
trans rights, whether it's, you know, reproductive rights, whatever issue, if you don't toe the line,
they're gonna come for you too, right? And so I think that, at least I've seen,
folks who are not, who have never been, you know, activated on the issue of Israel-Palestine, whether in their
advocacy or in their research, they are making that connection at least.
And maybe that's a silver lining that I'm trying to be less bleak here.
Yeah, yeah.
I think that's helpful.
When I think about the hypocrisy of this moment, I think about how much of the clamping down
on speech, particularly the attempt to punish student protesters in the United States,
is predicated on accusing them of backing Hamas. And it's so interesting to me because,
obviously, I don't think Hamas is a good organization, but neither is the IRA and the former president of the United States, Joe Biden, made pro-IRA statements. One thing is okay
and the other is not.
I don't know, I find it incredibly frustrating
that like there's this pretended act that like,
because you've got some people on one side
who have made statements in favor of this group that sucks,
that that is a reason for cracking down on the ability
of people to talk about a genocide.
Like it's just this hideous hypocrisy
that I don't even understand how like people can keep that consistent in their own heads,
but they don't need to, right? That's, that's always the thing with fascists.
No, there's no need for consistency. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's the thing is like, first
of all, the conflation that like the entire movement made such a statement or, you know,
I mean, obviously that, that in and of itself is dishonest and and like you said it's not that they care about consistency and
they don't have to maintain an honest approach to this they're just using
these isolated incidents of particular you know particular students or
particular groups to shut down any speech around it.
And I was featured in this like Vox video and it was just like an explainer.
And I received some harassment and like accusations that because I was providing context in a
Vox video, which is what I was asked to do based on my expertise, that I was making excuses
for what had happened on October 7th.
I was like, is the red line now just even discussing anything with any kind of expertise
or information?
It's mind boggling.
I mean, I guess I think that is what they want to make the red line.
What you went through there too makes me so angry when I read shit like, and this is
not on on Gillibrand, but Kristin Gillibrand was on someone's podcast recently talking
about why some of her Republican colleagues who had expressed opposition to some of Trump's
picks ultimately voted for them.
And she's like, they're scared of getting murdered.
And like, isn't everyone who says anything?
And like, you got death threats for a Vox video. Like why are these Congress people who have so many more resources to protect themselves,
why do they get to be scared?
Oh, well, that's, yeah, Congress and its inability to do anything, like, that's a whole other
level of demoralization.
Yeah.
Is there anything else you wanted to make sure we hit on during this conversation before
we sort of close things out? I'm not sure if maybe this is too in the weeds, but I think there's been a lot discussed around
Trump and the statements around Gaza and his and his supposed plans for Gaza and
some analysts have claimed that this has to do with like taking an extreme position so that then Arab Israeli normalization deals could
Make the claim that like we talked him down from this brink and like, Saudi is
going to make peace with Israel and claim that we convinced Trump not to do this kind
of thing.
And so that's been something I've read in some analysis and I don't think it's actually
correct.
I don't think that Trump is making these kinds of statements or possibly these kinds of plans
just as kind of like, I don't know, multi-level chess with Saudi Arabia to get them to sign
a peace deal with Israel.
And the conditions in the region, I think, have really shifted.
And I don't think Saudi Arabia, as I mentioned at the beginning, because they put out statements
to this effect, I don't think they're at all interested in this kind of move, right, at this point.
So I just, maybe I would only add
that Trump is not playing this long game
that we think he is.
Maybe we can take him at his word.
Yeah, no, I know,
because Biden was playing a long game,
a dumb long game, but a long game,
trying to brokers a deal with Saudi Arabia and Israel.
Again, I think deranged.
If there's clear evidence that the fact
that he was not compas mentis, it's that, right?
But it was a long game.
And I don't think that Trump is,
I don't think Trump cares about that.
Yeah, and the region has changed so much,
for whether we like it or not,
like Iran is not the threat it used to be.
Iran has closer ties with Saudi Arabia.
Saudi Arabia, I mean, has a huge influence on the new Syrian government.
Like, they don't need this.
They don't need this.
And like, this is not this kind of long game,
multi-level chess, you know, mastermind over here that Trump is doing.
So, yeah, I just wanted to add that.
People are just doing shit and trying to grab on to whatever they can.
Right. And like, let's see what sticks, essentially. Exactly. I mean, that and that people are just doing shit and trying to grab on to whatever they can right and like well Let's see what sticks essentially exactly
I mean that and that is so much of that is the entirety of
The current plan of the new regime in the United States is throw everything you can out there and see what sticks
You know, yeah, they're doing that in Gaza. Just like they're doing it everywhere else
Well, Donna, thank you so much
Do you want to plug anything at the end of this, your own stuff or something else?
Check out, I guess, the Fire These Times podcast.
I sometimes do episode for them.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
And if you're looking for organizations to help support Gazans right now, Heal Palestine
or Anera, A-N-E-R-A, are both doing really crucial work.
Excellent, excellent.
We'll check that out.
Definitely check out the Fire of These Times,
and that's a great place to send some aid.
Donna, thank you so much for being on the show again.
And yeah, I hope you, I don't know.
I hope.
I hope.
I hope.
That's what I got. That's all hope.
Yeah.
Yeah, thanks, Robert. Have you ever looked into the night sky and wondered who or what was flying around up
there?
We've seen planes, helicopters, hot air balloons, and birds.
But what if there's something else, something much more ominous that appears under the cover
of night, silent, unseen, watching?
They may be right above your car late one night as you cruise down
the road or look like mysterious lights hovering above your home. Drones or are
they? We used to work drone because it was comfortable to other people. One minute it was there and one minute it wasn't.
Oh that is beyond creepy.
Do you feel like this drone was targeting you specifically?
Yes, absolutely.
Listen to Obscurum, Invasion of the Drones,
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Do you remember what you said the first night I came over here?
Ow, goes lower?
I met Santi at a luau party in October.
I'm Santi.
Damien.
Oh, it was bizarre.
The guy just disappeared one day.
Santi has been missing ever since.
The hookup, what is that?
I'm solving a mystery through sex
and haven't made a private dick joke until now?
Like, no matter how hard I try, all roads lead to...
The hookup.
You think it's causing people to turn aggro?
I'm gonna rip your arms off and use them to-
Yeah, that's a word for it.
This is such terrible representation, I'm so sorry.
Poppers?
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Mama always used to say,
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Welcome to the Birds and the Bees, a podcast where James Stout makes animal noises. And also we talk about what's going on in the White House this week.
That's right. This is Nick Gadappen here, Executive Disorder, our weekly newscast covering what's happening in the White House, the crumbling of our world, and what this means for you.
That is Robert talking previously. James Stout is also here. I'm Garrison Davis. I'm also
joined by Mia Wong. This episode, we're covering the week of February 6th to February 12th.
Currently, me and Mia are inside New Orleans, Louisiana, And I am proud to report that fascism has
been defeated. The Philadelphia Eagles have beat the KK Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl.
Drake has been executed live on stage. It's a great week.
That would have been kinder than what actually happened to Drake.
Look, as someone as someone in my blues guy mentions says, capitalism currently, the rule of capitalism
seems inescapable, but the divine rule of the chiefs once seemed undefeatable too, and
they were fucking humiliated.
Oh my god, they lost so bad.
They lost so badly.
I can't even say that they were beaten up and down the field because I'd even fucking
get down the field.
Obliterated. beat down and yeah.
When I arrived here in New Orleans on Monday,
this is the Monday after the Super Bowl,
so a complete nightmare, but there was just an ocean
of an ocean of out and proud Eagles fans.
And the funniest thing I saw is when I was waiting
for Mia to fly in, there was this like half a full clothing rack of leftover Chiefs merch and no one bought it.
And all of the Eagles merch were gone.
I will see that Chiefs merch again somewhere in like a resource poor setting in a bucket 20 years from now.
Yes, yes that's going to be the uniform of a future Civil War.
It's Kansas City Chiefs jersey.
I love it when it's you, that's you.
Literally, Taylor Swift themed Kansas City Chiefs merch.
Oh, yeah.
Huge L for capitalism.
So funny.
Oh, man.
Well, I guess, yeah, the big losers this week,
Drake and unfortunately the nation of Ukraine
and most of the rest of Western
Europe.
Yeah.
I guess we'll start with the big news today, which is that Trump just had a really great
call with Vladimir Putin, went super well.
They're going to be meeting maybe in Saudi Arabia.
There's been some floating of the fact that they might meet at the White House, which
I don't think it ends well for Putin if he visits the United States.
I don't think it ends well for Putin if he visits the United States. I don't think it ends well for anybody if he visits the United States.
This country is too heavily armed and crazy right now.
But they're doing this because Putin and Trump have evidently reached some sort of agreement
about the end of the war in Ukraine.
Zelensky was not really consulted on this.
He's made a couple of statements like, yep, we're hoping that this is what pushes everything
towards peace, but it's very clear that what's happening
is Ukraine is going to be made to give up a decent chunk
of their territory.
Now, they do have Russian territory still
to bargain with somewhat, so it hopefully will not
be a situation where Putin gets his entirely his own way,
but that is kind of the what's happening.
And the sea change that will accompany this is that new
secretary of defense and alcoholic Pete Hegseth made a
statement at a meeting in Brussels that the United States
will no longer be the guarantor of peace in Europe.
Specifically, he stated that we're not going to tolerate an
imbalanced relationship, which encourages dependency.
But this was the an announcement that the post-war sort of status quo is no longer something
that we can rely on going forward.
And that is a really significant admission from the SecDef.
Yeah, it's sick.
It's really cool.
And it's going to be great.
It's going to be great if you're in the German arms industry.
It's going to be a banger year for you.
You're going to be making some left-footed tanks.
I think we can all agree the future is bright for German weaponry.
Yeah, once again Germany will rise to its former glory.
Huzzah.
Yeah, you say that as kind of a joke, but like
genuinely the fact that we are doing a bunch of stuff that is leading to the full rearmament of the German army at the moment
when the German fascist parties are like about to take power.
When AfD is getting into power.
Yeah, it's great.
And the Luftwaffe hasn't even bothered to change its logo since the last time.
So that's cool.
Well, and what you bring up there Mia is probably worth discussing in concert with all of this,
which is that AFD, AfD, the alternative for Deutschland, which is the new Nazi party in Germany, is not the
majoritarian party, but is taking enough seats that it is going to be included in the next
governing coalition, which is something that has not happened in the post-World War II
era.
In the immediate aftermath of World War II, every Western European nation basically came
to a tacit agreement, referred to as
the cordon sanitaire, which is when a right wing party starts to gain power, you do not
coalition with them under any circumstances.
Germany is actually like the last of the European countries to give up this idea.
But the fact that the cordon sanitaire has fallen in Germany is real bad news.
Yeah. And the ADF, like it's worth mentioning, right?
Like the ADF is so right wing and so Nazi that like the,
the Italian fascists who are in power right now will not work with them.
Like, yeah, yeah.
A bunch of stuff leaked a little while ago about these people at meetings,
openly talking about deporting every single Jew and every single immigrant from
the country. Like these people are, you know, deporting every single Jew and every single immigrant from the country like these people are
you know, I mean they're just Nazis and
Yeah, so now we're fucking handing them the fucking
justification to
Fucking rebuild their entire arms industry. So yep. Mm-hmm great stuff. It is dark
I mean and again when we say the Italian fascist these this is literally
Mussolini's
party, as in his granddaughter. It's a member.
Yeah.
So yeah, that's bad. I think that's probably most of what we can say about what's going
on in Europe and with Ukraine right now, but it's not good.
Yeah. Yeah, it's not good. It doesn't point to a great future. This is the multipolar
world that Russia has wanted for some time, coming to fruition.
I didn't want to talk about it.
There was a time when Vladimir Putin, some of you remember, was sanctioned by the International
Criminal Court for his war crimes in Ukraine.
The United States, however, the United States has not been a signatory to the Rome Statute,
so it wouldn't necessarily
have enforced that arrest warrant anyway.
But this week, Trump signed a little executive order titled, in block capitals, as we've
come to expect, imposing sanctions on the International Criminal Court.
In doing so, he followed the example of Putin, who in 2023 put out arrest warrants for ICC prosecutors after they put out a warrant for his arrest.
Trump didn't cite the Putin example.
He called the ICC's actions against Israel illegitimate and baseless.
That's a quote.
He specifically called the warrants against U of Golan and Benjamin Netanyahu baseless.
U of Galant and Benjamin Netanyahu baseless. He then went on to claim, quote, both nations are thriving democracies with militaries that
strictly adhere to the laws of war.
This is a thing that is not true.
His order then goes on to outline what it calls protected persons.
For people who aren't familiar, a United States person is distinguished from a United States
citizen.
It also includes any permanent residents.
It also includes US armed forces, government officials and contractors working on behalf
of US armed forces.
Contractors?
Yeah.
The people who could do no wrong.
It then goes on to include US allies, including all of NATO and sometimes contractors working
on their behalf.
It says that if the International Criminal Court investigates any of these people, Trump
will declare a national emergency.
It also imposes material sanctions and travel bans on both ICC prosecutors and people acting
on their warrants as well as the families of those people.
Interesting.
Yeah, this is an unprecedented American politics.
Sometimes it gets reported like it is.
I want to throw back to what they called the Hague
Invasion Act. That wasn't its real name, but that was George Bush's. It authorised the
president to use any means necessary to release United States people held by the ICC or at
its request. So people started calling it the Hague Invasion Act. Trump did also sanction
ICC prosecutors and their families in 2020 for looking into
US war crimes in Afghanistan. I think that happened in June of 2020. So you can be forgiven
for having this set because some stuff was happening at that time.
Oh, was it?
Yeah, things were going down. I'm sure the Philadelphia Eagles were, you know, beginning
their rise to glory again. That was a big thing. Kansas City Chiefs were doing some racist shit, shockingly.
I'm sure Taylor Swift was doing something too.
But yeah, this is like, Israel has for nearly a decade been trying to hack, smear, surveil
and threaten the court.
In the show notes, I'll include a link to a Guardian article that came out last year
about Israel's attacks and attempts to undermine the international criminal court.
And just, if I've been talking about something and you're like, what is the international criminal court? last year about Israel's attacks and attempts to undermine the International Criminal Court.
And just if I've been talking about something and you're like, what is the International
Criminal Court? Very briefly, it's based at the Hague. So if you've heard, you know, you
will stand trial at the Hague. That's what they're talking about. It has its most immediate
roots in the tribunal's investigative perpetrators of genocides in Rwanda and Yugoslavia. The
US and Israel are not members of the court. They never signed the Rome statute.
Russia withdrew in 2016.
Curious time to withdraw.
Interesting.
Fascinating.
Yeah.
They just decided that it wasn't for them.
Uh, and off they went to do some war crimes.
Um, the ICC has been criticized probably recently for the vast majority of the
people who have actually been prosecuted by the ICC being outside of the core neoliberal states. It's prosecuted a lot of people in Africa.
That doesn't mean that African people can't do war crimes in Africa. Of course they can,
but it means that they're held accountable more often than when countries in the global
north do war crimes, which they can do too. Okay, so Trump, just like everything else he does, was condemned internationally for
this, right, including by several NATO allies in so much as they really are NATO allies
anymore, given everything we've just talked about.
However, it's also worth noting that some of the countries like France, who condemned
Trump's sanctioning of ICC prosecutors, also allowed someone with an ICC warrant, i.e.
Benjamin Netanyahu, to transit their airspace.
So like their full commitment to the ICC perhaps can be questioned. This is a problem with the ICC, right?
It doesn't have an integral enforcement mechanism. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, like Canada previously promised, quote unquote, promised to arrest Netanyahu if they were ever like able to.
And like, yeah, I'm very curious to see how this is going to shake down with the US taking an extremely
firmer stance at least than we previously had.
We already quote unquote condemned Canada, but I'm interested to see Trump be more interested
in actually pushing this further than it has been.
Yeah, I guess we'll see how it goes.
For people who are unfamiliar, I do want to like really quickly mention that Palestine
is a signatory and therefore war crimes happen within Palestine and covered by the court,
even if states such as Israel are not signatories, right?
And therefore they're still under the court's jurisdiction.
That's how in this case, this is happening.
Yep.
It could also make the ICC's life very difficult in terms of using technology, right?
The tech back end of everything the ICC does, trying to remove that from any United States
involvement would be very hard.
Well, let's go on a quick ad break and return to talk about, I don't know, the Treasury
or something.
Yeah, let's talk about the Treasury.
All right.
Cool. All right, we are back.
Before we talk about the Treasury,
I first want to do some breaking news,
well, kind of breaking.
So when I was flying to New Orleans,
I was able to fly past the brand new Gulf of America. It was a life changing experience.
It really warmed my heart. And then luckily, a few days ago, Georgia representative Buddy
Carter announced legislation to empower Trump to enter into negotiations to quote-unquote purchase or otherwise acquire
Greenland and importantly to rename it red white and blue land. God
Let's get some quick reactions from the panel. Sorry as a person born in Europe the idea of Buddy Carter
Authorizing the formation of red white and blue land is simply just like the fact that this is not a parody
It's just fucking too much for me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, well, what it is, is purposefully ridiculous.
It's a, it's a flex.
It's a statement of the power that they have over their own party and the country.
It is purposefully absurd and everyone is going to go along with it because the chief,
the king supports it.
Right?
Like that's the point in my opinion.
Yeah. It's the emperor's new clothes of evading places.
Like it doesn't matter.
We can be as silly as we want.
Genuinely interested in hearing from people in Greenland.
Yes.
Honestly, I'm kind of surprised because I would assume, and maybe this is still in the
works, if Elon Musk can find a way to call this thing X-Land is really my concern.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But no, I'm really interested in hearing from Greenlanders genuinely.
You can contact us at coolzone tips at proton.me, which is an encrypted email address that
you can send emails to.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's talk about Trump potentially crashing the entire world economy.
He's taking more shots to just
literally blow this all up. Yeah, okay. So let's talk about the treasuries thing and
him potentially talking about not paying out our fucking treasury bonds. Okay, so many
recent quotes from Reuters. So this is Trump. We're even looking at treasuries Trump said,
there could be a problem. You've been reading about that with treasuries and that could
be an interesting problem.
Now, treasuries, again, are, of course, U.S.
Treasury bonds. We will get to what those are in a second, but I need to read the rest of this.
But it could be that a lot of those things don't count.
In other words, that some of the stuff that we're finding is very fraudulent.
Therefore, maybe we have less debt than we thought.
Now, that's a very scary thing to say.
Yeah.
Treasury bills are the primary underpinning of like economic stability in this country.
T-bills are what large corporate institutions when they have a lot of cash with like very
wealthy people.
It's where you park your money and it's where foreign governments park a lot of their money.
Like, yeah, and it's how our government gets a lot of its money because it's a
good, reliable investment.
So saying maybe we're going to declare some of these T bill investments bullshit
is very dangerous.
Yeah. For the global economy.
Yeah. Yeah.
And I want to read this next line because one of the things that's happening here right is that people just simply and this has been a real problem for this entire
administration is people simply do not believe that he means to do the thing he says he's
going to do right quote this is from Reuters again.
It could be treasury payments, which is not linked to treasury bonds said for shop Bahani
investment chief for Asia BMP Powerboss
Wealth Management.
I would be very surprised if they ever stopped a payment of treasury bonds to a holder.
It would be like shooting yourself in the foot, he said.
Now, this is something where these institutional investors, like they still have not quite
wrapped their head around the fact that no, he really will do this shit because he doesn't understand at all. He thinks that American debt works the same way as like
his own personal debt. And no, it doesn't. I mean, it's worth saying some bits. So I
mean, just a very, very basic shit about how national debt works, right? Like all of our
money, literally every single dollar that is in circulation, every dollar that is in
a bank account, that is literally government debt, right? Like that's that's what money
is. Right. And these treasury bonds are, as you're talking about earlier, right, this
is like the investment asset for literally the entire world, and there's trillions of
dollars of these. Actually, Japan is the largest holder of treasury bonds.
China's sort of been selling some of theirs, but they have a lot of them.
Yeah, probably good to be doing that.
Yeah.
And it's also, you know, like, the fact that he's saying he's not going to pay these, yeah,
like this can start a massive crisis in which I've been talking for a bit about, you know,
every day we sort of get closer to credit rating agencies, like downgrading the quality
of US debt, which is a real problem for us trying to like, get
money from people. And, you know, if you listen to what that what the sort of bond analysts
is saying, right, he's like, Well, it's fine, they'll just stop paying like us debt to other
things, which is like, unbelievably unhinged would also in and of itself, like, like destroying
the full faith and credit of the United States would absolutely just fucking annihilate the world economy.
And it's also another example of Trump not understanding how the empire he's
inherited works because like one of the, one of the ways the U S funds is
government is by getting its client States to buy like trillions of dollars
of assets, like that's partially why.
If you look at who's who buys us assets assets like it's China and US tributary states
like Japan, for example, which is just purely in American military protectorate, right?
It's sort of incredible system for the US, right?
You get a bunch of people and you know, you just you just sort of perpetually keep borrowing
money from them.
And it's this thing where they don't understand who actually holds the power in the relationship,
which is that the US having all this debt is the one with the power and is the one that's
getting everyone else's money for this sort of secure
asset. So, you know, who knows what's going to happen with this? If this actually starts
happening like, yeah, this is world rending economic crisis levels of stuff. Well, we'll
see if he moves on it. He may simply forget about it or we're going to wake up one day
and like the US is credits
going to be downgraded to like junk bond status and yeah, everything's gonna be chaos. So
speaking of Trump trying to sort of like take shots at pillars of the global economy. Starting
in March, he's trying to implement a 25% tariff on all imported steel and aluminum. Most of
that's actually from Canada and Mexico.
I think in their minds is the thing about Chinese steel, but it's mostly from Canada and Mexico.
This is also a fucking shit show because the US manufacturing capacity that we still have,
and we still actually do have a decent amount of like very high tech manufacturing capacity,
right, relies on this stuff. And this is going to make it more expensive
It's bad. It will do nothing to deal with the fact that he just doesn't produce steel anymore, which is the product of
One day I'll do my structural Chinese steel over capacity episode
but you know, it's it's the product of like half a century of of the global manufacturing economy, you know becoming zero-sum and
They're simply not being a large enough consumer markets for all of industrial goods, which means the production
becomes increasingly, you know, it becomes impossible to expand production in one place
without, you know, getting ready production in another place. And Trump thinks you can solve
those with tariffs. You can't mostly it's just another like throw things at the economy shit.
Now, you know, Trump is sort of throwing bombs at the economic system. One of the largest ones that he's thrown is he just straight up stole 80 million
dollars in FEMA funding that they had already paid out, like just straight up stole it from
like New York, a New York City bank account. They're like, so you've been paid to the government
in New York, right? This happened earlier today, right? This is literally, literally
breaking news breaking news on Wednesday.
This is coming out Friday.
This episode is being recorded on Wednesday.
Everything that you hear, if shit has happened in the last few days,
that's from the future. We didn't know.
But yeah, yeah, he literally like they have taken 80 million dollars
just from this bank account.
They just stole it.
The US federal government is just straight up robbing banks.
It's OK. They came out today and said that don't worry, your bank accounts are
still safe, everybody.
Yeah. And this is like appropriated funds for FEMA being safely secured in
banks that have like literally been stolen.
Funds that were approved by Congress for this specific purpose, right?
Yeah. And what's actually going to happen with this, right?
Because you would expect
a even like a normal shitty mayor of New York to like go sicko mode. However, however, come
on, here's some Yahoo news quote. Eric Adams has said he will not publicly criticize Trump
or his administration. Instead, he'll take his concerns to Trump and private. On Monday,
Adams convened a meeting with his own top officials to urge them not to speak
badly about the president in public, saying if they were to do so, it could risk federal
funding.
Later that day, that same day, Trump's Justice Department ordered the prosecutors in Adams'
criminal case to drop the charges against him, in part arguing Adams must be free of
the burden of his corruption indictment to help carry out Trump's immigration agenda
in the city.
Great. Cool.
This is the most like quid pro quo thing I've ever seen.
It is the single most corrupt thing
I've seen out of US politics.
Yeah.
Like blatantly.
It's staggering.
I mean, it would come from Trump plus Adams, right?
Like we're gonna see it.
That's what we're gonna see.
We've hit a singularity of corruption, yes.
Yeah, Istanbul is always the first stop.
Yeah.
The only way they can go further than this is that Eric Adams is going to appoint Rob
Blagojevich as head of like bank robbery or something.
One can dream, Mia.
One can dream.
There are a few other ways they can go further with this, I'm afraid to inform you, Mia,
but we'll be hoping those don't happen.
On the corruption index, on the corruption index.
OK.
Speaking of corruption, let's pivot to ads.
Alright, we are back and I'm going to close by talking about the war on woke, my new favorite
news beat that I'm forced to pay attention to every week.
There was a transport ban that Trump did an executive order about using a whole bunch of children as a prop,
very clearly trying to steal the charisma from whatever that governor who lost the election did with his free school lunch there.
Anyway, instead now you just hurt other children in the school by not making them be allowed to play sports.
So that happened. And then a few other things have happened the past few weeks that I'm kind of just like catching up on,
because I've been really focused on like reporting on like Musk specifically,
and there's been a lot of other stuff the past few weeks. So I'm going to kind of get to that now.
The State Department's travel website changed the acronym LGBT to LGB on a web page like
warning about like how dangerous it might be to like travel to like other countries
with like worse legal protections.
Say LGB travelers can face special challenges abroad. Laws and
attitudes in some countries may affect safety and ease of travel. Many countries do not
recognize same sex marriage. Many countries don't recognize the ex gender marker in passports
and do not have IT systems at ports of entry that can accept sex markers other than female
and male.
So they've only changed the title part
They haven't even bothered to edit the text
No, because because they also have another info page where they have just like control F LGBT to LGBT
As well, so this is this is like one of like many changes
We're seeing across a whole bunch of federal websites in relation to Trump's order to like remove wokeness and gender ideology.
Previously, the CDC removed like HIV and trans related like health info pages from their
website.
And as of yesterday, February 11th, the web pages for the FDA, Health and Human Services,
and the CDC were allegedly brought back online, restoring their January 30th status.
They did this like right before a court mandated deadline to restore these pages.
Like, I can now go back on to the CDC's HIV page.
Verge first reported on this and they said that, you know, they've been unable to verify that all of the pages have been restored exactly to how they were before.
This is something that we're still working on because this literally happened like, you know, yesterday.
This is like a small part of their current war on wokeness.
Another aspect of this is there's been a whole bunch of orders from federal agencies
to ban specific woke keywords across their databases, their websites, training information, including from agencies
like NOAA, so just like the Weather and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
they released a memo banning specific words across the agency, including words like ability,
acceptance, access, affirmation, aggression, allyship, androgyne, asexual, belonging, bias, binary,
bisexual, black, culture, DEI, discrimination, diversity, empathy, empowerment, equity, ethnicity,
fairness, gay, gender, gender dysphoria, handicap, homosexual, LGBTQ, intersex, pansexual, queer,
transgender, transvestite, as well as words like impartial,
inclusion, indigenous, intersectionality, justice. The word white has been banned. Safe space,
social justice, underserved communities, race, privilege, power dynamics, Native American,
multiculturalism. So just all of these, like, again, this is like the party of free speech has banned all of these words.
And it's not just NOAA, also the National Science Foundation has released memos saying that they cannot have these words included in their documents because it could cause them to lose grant funding.
Well, it's the end for race science then. They can't do race science anymore. There's a lot of similar words flagged in the National Science Foundation list of banned
words, like activism, activists, advocacy, barrier, bias, black, Latinx, community, diversity,
equity, cultural differences, cultural heritage, culturally responsive, diverse, you know,
diverse community, diverse groups, diversified, diversifying, all this
kind of stuff.
Ethnicity, equality, inclusion, inequality, LGBT, institutional, marginalized, trauma,
underappreciated stereotypes, systemic underrepresentation, undervalued victim. I love that you can no longer do scientific papers
about systemic infections of your internal organs.
Like, yeah, no, there's a lot of issues.
Anything that has a barrier.
Yeah. Exactly.
There's so many words that are just used
in how studies function that they cannot use
because the word is too woke
and then they're gonna lose their funding.
Like, you can't at like things being equal.
You can't look at any kind of like scientific bias.
Like you can't like, just very basic stuff.
It may just result in like the TikTokification of this.
Like trying to spell these words with like different letters.
Talking about cute little boots or whatever it is in my-
And like I'm laughing because it's all like absurd and that's kind of like a different letter talking about cute little boots or mice. And like I'm laughing because it's all absurd and it's kind of like kind of like a coping mechanism.
But like this is all like very bad. Well, but like, like, hold on.
There's something else. There's something else we need to talk about, too, which is like you are required by law as part of your grant
proposal, like have things that talk about like how this is going to affect different communities, et cetera, et cetera.
It's a legal requirement for you to put that in your thing. So like if you were to like strictly enforce this, this kills every fucking grant.
And this is one of these things where it's like, like,
they're literally just running straight into the federal law tells you,
you must do this thing.
And the Trump administration says these words are banned.
So like, who knows?
It's a really weird situation.
Yeah, you can't do IRB right now.
Like most grants will go through an institutional review board
that will determine, like, if there are human subjects,
like, their ethical boundaries and like, whatever you're doing is okay.
But I can't see it being possible to do an IRB and not say these words.
Yeah.
No, and like, we have to do scientific studies on like,
how various disabilities affect people's lives. lives like like very basic stuff like this.
All of these types of things.
It's really bad. And these things like are going into effect.
I know like this is this stuff is still happening.
Columnist Dr. Lucky Tran reported quote, the CDC has instructed its scientists to retract or pause the publication of any research manuscript being considered by any medical or scientific journal.
The move aims to ensure that quote-unquote, no forbidden terms appear in the work.
Banned terms must be scrubbed.
Great.
It's all really bad.
Yep.
And we're seeing this sort of like lists being formed increasingly, including this DEI watch list, put together by a conservative
oppositional research group called the American Accountability Foundation, who released a
DEI watch list, which publishes the names, photos, occupation, and personal information
of mostly black employees who work under the Department of Health and Human Services. When
the website was first discovered, the employee profiles were labeled under targets.
This has since been changed to dossiers. Like very, very frightening, like very bad stuff,
like very obvious intimidation. For each target, the website lists a collection of alleged DEI
offenses, which includes donations to Democrats, social media posts, having pronouns in their bio,
or previous work on since deleted diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
Columnist Jamal Bowie says, quote, they are mostly targeting black employees.
So this is quite literally just a repeat of Ridgerow Wilson's segregationist purge of
the federal government.
And, and like, yes, like all of this, all of this, like push against quote unquote,
DEI is like very clearly just like white supremacists
segregation in action. Like this is the whole point is that if any employee is a person of color,
that means that they that they must be unqualified because they were hired only due to DEI and
to avoid doing that you could only hire white people and Trump's transportation secretary
Sean Duffy sent out a memo directing staff on
where to direct like grant funds.
And he said, quote, give preference to communities with marriage and birth rates higher than
the national average, unquote, which is a very clear dog whistle to just like only hire
like white Christians, hire Christians with big families, you know, parenthesis, like
white people.
This is like very, very obviously what they're doing.
Yeah, and they're, I mean, this is extending to the military now under Hegseth.
West Point has just announced effectively the banning of a number of clubs,
including the Society of Black Engineers,
which is like three quarters of a century old, something like that.
Also ending programs that are focused on like recruiting into the military,
black soldiers, but have
like pivoted to recruiting from NRA gatherings, even though there's internal agreement that
this brings in a lower quality type of recruit.
I was going to say, I've seen some NRA members.
Yeah, I've seen a few NRA members, right.
And it's just one of these things, like there's a very good book that I think people need
to read if you want to know kind of the operational impact this is going to have both on the US
military and probably to an extent law enforcement.
We look at agencies like the FBI.
There's a book called the Dictator's Army that heavily focuses on how changes like this
impact operational efficiency.
And the gist of it is that the goal and clearly what Hegseth's job is, is to make the military
into something that can't pose opposition to the new regime.
That's the goal here because there's a very realistic understanding that the military
was one of the things that stopped him from maintaining power in 2020, both because the
military was not willing to be used to crack down directly on protests
and because General Milley acted as a barrier to Trump's attempt to do a coup the last time.
You have an understanding, which is very common when regimes like this take over in democratic
societies, in the early days of the Third Reich, the military was the primary concern
Hitler had because they were not Nazis,
right? They were conservative, but they were not in the tank for the Nazi Party. And there was a
lot that he wanted to do that the military establishment at the time the Third Reich came
to power wouldn't let him do. And that was so one that was one of the first things. And this this
took several years, but that was one of the first goals of the Nazi regime and power was reforming
the military as much
as possible in their own image.
And like so much of like what Hague says doing here, specifically with like the West Point
like club banning is like, like, these things are not like DEI, these things are like, very
old.
These are like pretty like standard, standard things that have been like roped into like
what it means to like be in America.
And we're now just seeing this this crusade against DEI being used
to just reverse affirmative action and specifically select for white Christian applicants. And
that's the entirety of this point here. They're using DEI as this magical wand to frame things
that are pretty standard and accepted parts of how do like hiring practices, how you don't
do discrimination to just specifically only only like uplift white Christians. And that's part of
this like very basic like Christian nationalist project that people like heritage have been trying
to do for a long time. I think it's also worth noting too that like the other thing that this
mirrors you know, and like specifically in the way that this targets queer people is the lavender scare, which is a thing from like the sort
of late 40s to the 60s, where the US is part of this like, giant anti communist purge it
was on basically went through and found every gay government official and fucking ran them
out. That's like another aspect of this whole thing, right? Like the way these people understand
the world in order to sort of like purify their like white state, right? Like you have to get rid of the non-white
people and you have to get rid of the queers and you know, especially people who are fucking
both. And so this is this sort of transformational project of changing this, this sort of like
just changing the composition of what the U.S. is into into, like, and how its state functions and
how they can, to what level of violence they can bring about on people.
And they've roped these things together so closely now, like the anti-trans, like, school
executive order.
Only the first half of that executive order was actually about the gender ideology stuff.
The second half was aimed at curbing what they called
discriminatory equity ideology, DEI. Basically, it was proposing a program for
quote-unquote patriotic education across the country. Basically, trying to rewrite
history to make like the United States like this like noble historical project.
It's like stuff that they've tried to do
before with that like 1776 project that the New York Times reported on. Part of Trump's
order called for quote, inaccurate, honest, unifying, inspiring, and ennobling characterization
of America's founding and foundational principles. A clear examination of how the United States
has admirably grown closer to its noble principles throughout history.
The concept that commitment to America's aspirations is beneficial and justified.
The concept that celebration of America's greatness and history is proper.
And then the order goes on to try to ban the concept of white guilt,
saying that teachers can get in trouble if any of their students feel guilty
about things that people of that same race have done in the past and
like making sure that teachers do not teach things in a way that could possibly make a student feel
guilt. Yeah, they use the word children actually not students, which like is fundamentally something
we don't do in education. Right? We refer to our students as students because we respect them as
people. We don't think of them as like lesser than, especially when we're getting to the points where we're discussing things
like race and equity. Like these are high school students, right? Maybe we know we certainly
do discuss these things in university. And like it's fundamentally shows a complete lack
of understanding of how education works to call them children.
Yeah. And I think it gets to what this is actually about. And this is something that
I would argue both Trump administrations were about, right?
If you look at when Trump comes down the fucking elevator for the first time.
So I think people may remember, after Ferguson in 2015, there was Baltimore, where there
was huge riots, massive confrontations with the police, massive anti-racist actions.
And that's the thing that really, truly tipped a bunch of the Republican
Party even further right from where they'd been with the Tea Party into this sort of Trumpism.
It was a reaction to that. And then this entire campaign, right? All of the stuff that he's
talking about here, this is about 2020, right? This is about reversing the gains that have been,
obviously there were incomplete gains. One of the things that did happen was that a bunch of teachers were trying to
change the way the US history is taught to reflect that this country was like,
again, a settler colonial empire built by slave labor. And you know,
that expanded its territory through genocide, which is just,
this is just objectively true about how the US started.
But the thing is like, that's not good for, you know, these people's projects,
right? Like saying that out loud is a fucking issue for them.
And so, you know, their their attempt to roll back everything that was gained from sort of the black
uprisings is culminating all of this shit with like the purge of black workers for the federal
government with all of these things ordering you to like that's why they're talking about all of
these weird all they keep banning all of these weird like terms that don't make any sense. Like we're talking about like empathy, right? So why
the fuck are they talking about banning empathy? Yeah, because specifically these things come
from the purges they've been trying to do in the education system where they're they
have a bunch of very specific grievances about like, kinds of education stuff that teachers
that teachers were implementing, like particularly in sort of middle and high schools.
Well, I'm going to close here with two pieces of breaking news.
One, like earlier today, we learned that the NIH has finally acknowledged that the grant funding freeze is illegal.
And this is probably due to pressure from news coverage about all of the temporary restraining order violations
through the continued freezing of funds.
And now the NIH is saying, because of these orders, we will resume funding.
The first TRO was like two weeks ago on February 1st.
So it's not like they just learned about this.
It's that they have in some ways like perhaps caved to pressure.
Again like these executive orders do not enforce themselves.
These are enforced by people at agencies.
These things do not become automatically enforced.
So this is one step now.
You can go to popular.info,
who has been breaking the news on this specifically.
And then some breaking news that I have here on Dropsite,
quote unquote, armored Tesla forecast,
estimated to win $400 million of State Department contract funds.
What?
So, this could go one of two ways.
This could either go a really funny way...
Yeah, I was gonna say.
...or it could go a really sad way.
Yeah, I do like the idea of a lot of Trump appointees
being in Teslas that are armored when the
batteries catch and maybe the jaws of life can't cut through those.
You know?
Yep.
Yep.
Yeah.
This is very funny because Trump went off on a tangent about electric tanks.
Horrible idea.
On the campaign trail a couple of times.
Horrible idea.
Yeah.
Well, he's had a come to Jesus moment and he has changed his mind and he wants a more sustainable
Sure.
Beast, as they call it.
What everyone always says the problem with tanks is, is that they don't explode enough when hit by munitions.
Or by themselves when not hit by munitions.
Or by themselves.
Just because batteries do that sometimes.
Yeah, yeah.
You never know what you're going to get.
I'm excited. This is going to make everything a lot safer for our men and women in Greenland, I'm guessing.
Yeah, batteries thrive in the cold.
Red, white, and blue.
Yeah, I do love the new M1A whatever, 7 Abrams that gets 4 miles on a charge.
And then again, detonates.
Wait 6 months to use a solar panel to field recharge.
It doesn't get light. Six months, yeah. Magnificent.
Upwards of 10 miles a year, yes.
All right, well, that is it for us today on It Could Happen Here.
James, do you want to talk about the tip line again?
Yeah, yeah. So everybody, we have an email where you can reach out to us
if you have things that you think we should be reporting on.
It is a Proton mail that doesn't mean that it's super secure.
It simply means it's sent to end encrypted.
If you send from a Proton address, the email address is coolzone tips at proton.me.
You can send story ideas, things that you think we should be reporting on, things that
you've seen that you think you'd like to draw to our attention, to that email address.
We will try our best to get through all of those.
We've been getting a lot of tips.
Please don't take it personally, we don't get back to you, but we do appreciate you all reaching out.
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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