It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 181
Episode Date: May 10, 2025All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. Who We Talk About When We Talk About Borders Trans Journalism In the Era of Trump Trump vs. DC: Inside t...he Takeover You’re Not Hearing About feat. Bridget Todd The Gang Reviews Andor Season 2, Ep. 4-6 Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #15 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: Who We Talk About When We Talk About Borders https://www.patreon.com/posts/127235976?utm_campaign=postshare_creator Trans Journalism In the Era of Trump https://ashevilleblade.com/ https://thefreeradical.org/ https://www.madycast.com/subscribe Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #15 https://www.reuters.com/world/india/one-killed-seven-injured-militant-attack-indias-kashmir-india-today-tv-says-2025-04-22/ https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/05/05/trump-defends-toy-tariffs/83455040007/ https://www.tokyoweekender.com/japan-life/news-and-opinion/us-visa-applications-from-japan-require-disclosing-social-media-history/ https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/06/us/politics/trump-libya-migrants.html https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/press-release/2021/07/libya-horrific-violations-in-detention-highlight-europes-shameful-role-in-forced-returns/ https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/63406/sudanese-war-refugees-recount-libya-horrors https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/62731/scores-of-bodies-uncovered-in-libyan-mass-graves-linked-to-human-trafficking https://www.context.news/money-power-people/sudans-refugees-face-deadly-game-of-snakes-and-ladders-in-libya https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/61979/david-yambio-life-in-libya--living-a-nightmare-part-2 https://www.aclum.org/sites/default/files/field_documents/2025-05-07-105954.pdf https://cnnespanol.cnn.com/2025/05/06/eeuu/inteligencia-ee-uu-venezuela-tren-de-aragua-ley-trump-trax https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/judge-blocks-trump-administration-requiring-proof-citizenship-register/story?id=121134512 https://www.foxnews.com/us/california-home-suspect-accused-doxing-ice-agents-raided-searched https://www.axios.com/2025/05/05/israel-gaza-destroy-trump-deal https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/israel-is-heading-for-a-full-occupation-of-gazaand-all-the-risks-it-entails-58516d60 https://www.axios.com/2025/05/04/un-rejects-israel-gaza-aid-plan https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/ship-carrying-activists-aid-gaza-attacked-by-drones-ngo-says-2025-05-02/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Good morning podcast fans and welcome to It Could Happen Here. It's me, James, today and
I'm joined by my friend and colleague, Garrison Davis. Hi, Garrison.
Hello.
Hey. So what I want to talk about today is a little piece I wrote. I wrote it on my Patreon,
but I want to kind of discuss it a bit here, read it to you, and talk about it, about what we talk
about when we talk about immigration. Sophie recently sent me an Associated Press piece on
the Dalyan Gap, and the piece was reflecting on the loss of economic opportunity for the
Embraer people who had previously sold, as you heard in my
series, right, products, services, accommodation to migrants coming through Garey and Gap.
But if you read that whole piece, you'd never know they were Emperors, because the word
Emperor doesn't occur once in the piece, right?
You'd never know that the Emperor people existed.
They never appear in the story.
Instead, the AP, which is currently going
toe to toe with the Trump administration on whether it should call the Gulf of Mexico
the Gulf of America or not, and was ejected from the White House press pool at one point
for refusing to call it the Gulf of America, used the phrase Comarca Indigenous lands
in its reporting, which I don't know where this came from.
It has kind of a strange capitalization.
If you were just reading the piece, you might think that that was the name of the Comarca,
like that it was a proper noun, but it's not.
The Comarca is like, I guess you could, you could roughly equate that to an American state.
It's like an administrative division of Panama. The name of the comarca
is Embraunan, but that doesn't appear anywhere in the AP piece. And you could, to be clear,
like I understand that some reporters don't speak Spanish. I understand that some reporters,
like, you know, they are not like particularly expert in a given region. Neither am I. That
was my first time in Panama. But like, this is something you could find out on Google maps, right?
It's not unique to the AP.
It happens all the time, right?
And I want to talk about that today because it happens at the
U S is southern border too.
One of the reasons that I wanted to go to the Dalyan was because I felt like
the MBR story was not being told when people talked about the Dalyan gap.
When they're mentioned at all,
it's kind of in passing or not as people who have agency, right?
And even I think these stories about like the lack of income that they have after migrants
leaving kind of strip them of agency in the way that they're told.
When people talk about the Darien Gap in media, they kind of use this heart of darkness construction.
Obviously, it's Joseph Conrad novel,
but this idea that it's where the wild things are.
I don't know, it strikes me as very almost orientalist.
Yeah, orientalist is what I was gonna say.
Yeah, and it completely discounts
that there are thousands of people who live there,
who've raised their families there, their children play fucking basketball there.
They spend their whole life there and they bury their elders there,
and they have done for thousands of years.
For them, it's their home.
And I understand that the jungle could be scary,
and I think anyone who's listened to my series will understand
that the jungle was scary
for me sometimes.
And it can be a very harsh environment.
But if you're someone who belongs there, if you're comfortable there, it can also be home.
And it can be beautiful and it can be bountiful.
And I think the same thing is true of the mountains and deserts and rivers that make
up the USA's southern border.
The desert can kill people.
I'm well aware of that.
But for the people who call it home,
the desert is somewhere that contains their memories
and their sacred spaces, their childhood recollections
and the remains of their ancestors, right?
And the omission of indigenous perspective
is something that we saw again
when Kristi Noem decided to waive a number of laws
in order to facilitate faster construction of the border wall.
So I want to highlight again the AP coverage there.
The AP, and again, they're far from unique in this, right?
Lots of other outlets did this too.
They seem to have only engaged with the DHS press release as opposed to the actual Proclamation
by Noem, which you can find in the Federal
Register, right? So the press release only focused on the environmental laws she was
waiving. DHS said, and I quote, to cut through bureaucratic delays, DHS is waiving environmental
laws, including the National Environmental Policy Act that could stall vital products
for months or even years. This waiver clears the path for the rapid deployment of physical
barriers where they're needed most, reinforcing our commitment
to national security and the rule of law.
The rule of law thing kind of made me laugh as they were like,
here we are waving like a dozen or so laws, but I'm not a big rule
of law person, so I guess like that's fine.
It seems to almost every outlet though, like,
that's what they read. And that's what they ran with, like, that they're waving these
environmental laws. And I think that can sometimes be this like, we still see this all the time in
the legacy press, like, when they talk about environmental laws, there's this idea that it's
like some kind of like, people who want to protect the flowers and the plants and like that it's like some kind of like people who want to protect the flowers and
the plants and like that it's not that serious you know and that like these environmental laws
are something that's not that are nice but not necessary yeah and like some of these
environmental laws like specifically the ones that regulate water will determine the future
places like California like and obviously places south of the border, right? The water doesn't
know where the border is. In the previous Trump administration, they waived some environmental laws,
including ones about floodwater, which that combined with the expedited way which they built
the border wall, I guess, led to them not putting floodgates in part of the wall, which then led to
the wall damming up with dead trees and dead cacti when it rained heavily, and then the wall damming up with like dead trees and dead cacti, right, when it rained heavily,
and then the wall becoming a barrier to water and then the wall getting broken or washed
away, right, because it didn't have like sluice gates so they could open to let the water
out.
The AP went to someone called Earth Justice for comment, and to their credit, that person
said, quote, waving environmental cultural preservation and good governance laws that
protect clean air, clean water, safeguard precious cultural resources and preserve vibrant
ecosystems and biodiversity will only cause further harm to our border communities and
ecosystems. That person is the only person who mentioned the cultural damage is being
done here. And unless a reader themselves that the Federal Register isn't linked in any of these pieces,
it really is.
I try and link to it when we talk about something in executive disorder.
But unless you found that yourself, you wouldn't know that along with waiving these environmental
laws, and like I've said, those are important, they also waive something called the Native
American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.
According to the Department of the Interior, I was kind of surprised this was still up
on their website actually. I thought this might have been purged. So like a lot of maybe it just
Maybe it's just like skirted by.
Yeah, like, well, I mean, apparently no one fucking talks about it. So,
maybe they got away with it, you know, like, it's always funny going on government websites now
being like, oh, it's gone, like finding dead links to so much stuff, even in stories I've written in 2020, those
links are dead now.
NAGPRA requires any federally funded entity to return human remains, funerary possessions,
objects of cultural patrimony, and sacred objects to the deceased persons and their
descendants by, and I'm quoting from the website now, consulting with lineal descendants, Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations on Native American human remains
and other cultural items, protecting and planning for Native American human remains and other
cultural items that may be removed from federal or tribal lands, identifying and reporting all
Native American human remains and other cultural items in inventories and summaries of holdings or collections and giving prior notice to repatriating or transferring human
remains and other cultural items.
So the waiver allows them not to do these things, right?
Crucially in the context of border wall construction, what it allows them to do is not to conduct
an archaeological survey before they dig the border wall construction, what it allows them to do is not to conduct an archaeological survey before they dig the border wall. And again, I don't know why this isn't something the
legacy media isn't concerned about. It wasn't in 2020 either, right, when they started doing this.
They were blasting areas where something called midden soil was found. Midden soil is soil that
contains evidence of cremated human remains. I wrote
a piece in 2020 for Sierra about this. Normally, before these digs, there would be an archaeological
survey done and a tribal representative would be there to take part in that. That would
take time and it would delay construction. Instead, right now, the construction will
continue without considering the
damage done to the cultural patrimony and ancestral remains of the Kumeyaay
people here in San Diego, whose homeland spanned both sides of the border and
who were here long before the US or Mexico was.
Talking of...
I can't think of a good f**king ad pivot.
Yeah, there really is no good ad pivot for stuff like this.
No, there's not.
We're just going to do adverts now.
And we are back.
The Kami'i are not the only indigenous people whose homelands have been
significantly, permanently damaged by the construction of border barriers, The Kami'i are not the only indigenous people whose homelands have been significantly and
permanently damaged by the construction of border barriers, right?
For the East, in the homelands of the To'an'ot'am people, where I've spent a lot of time, wall
construction has destroyed sacred saguaros.
Saguaros, that's the big cactus, like when you think of a cactus, right?
Like the cactus that kind of looks like a die-wafing.
Yeah, with the two arms, you, yeah, yeah. Yeah, with the
two arms, you could put a little hat on the cactus if you wanted to maybe give it like
a little six shooter and it would look like it was a cowboy. Yeah, it's the it's literally
the cactus. It's in all the Western films that were filmed out at Old Tucson there.
Yeah, we used to ride our bikes from the Pasco Yaqui Res to the place where they filmed all
those Western films.
So that was our loop.
A very, very weird experience that place.
It's like a one day I will write my fucking five part documentary about the myth of the
old West, but you can find it.
You can find it there in Tucson.
The saguaros, people like aren't aware, are afforded the highest respect as ancestors
by Othman people. And they play an important role in ceremonial and culinary traditions
that have been kept alive despite centuries of genocide and assimilationist policies from
state and local government.
Under the Biden administration, the government accountability office wrote a report about
damage done by border wall construction.
Again, for now, this is on the internet and I
will link it in the show notes. I don't know how long that will remain on the internet. It's a PDF,
so look at it. It's going to be out and about. It can't just be taken down, but maybe it won't
be on government websites. They highlighted the case of Monument Hill, which was damaged by
explosives in the previous Trump administration, despite being a sacred place for the Tond of Odham,
and the site of ceremonies conducted by the Hyasid Odham, who were their ancestors.
Kito-Bakito Springs, which is a sacred site and oasis in the Sonoran Desert, and it's a really special place,
was irreparably damaged in the last Trump administration, including the destruction of a burial site that the tribe had sought to protect. In some cases, the Biden administration made this worse. One of those was that on entering office,
Biden said they were going to build not one more foot of border wall in 2021. He was full of shit.
They built lots more border wall, but they did put a pause on some of the contracts.
Right. It's sort of that they finished some of them and they were like, oh, we can't go back on this federal funding,
which has not been an issue for Donald Trump four years later.
They were like, Congress approved it, so we have to,
we have to pay it, which was great.
But the bits that they were able to cut
included a program that had people taking care of,
so they attempted to transplant the saguaros.
They didn't just cut them down
because they were, say, created, right?
And they're very old.
They wanted to take them somewhere else.
And this was part of the agreement that they came to.
Unfortunately, the Biden administration cut the funding
for the people who were taking care of them
in their new location.
So nearly all of them died.
They were being watered and stuff
to get them settled
into their new root structure. Because the Biden administration cut back funding, it stopped them
from being watered and so many of them died. In areas where barriers were built but drainage
culverts were not finished, the culverts were never installed. So that was flooding I was talking
about earlier, right? Sometimes they just went ahead and built wall.
When they build the wall,
it comes in about 50 foot sections
and they truck those out there
and like just put them on the ground flat
and pull them up, right?
And then they dig a foundation,
they mix a sand, make concrete
and put the wall sections up.
But then they, I guess it's my understanding
that in the end of the last Trump administration,
Trump made a claim in a debate But then they, I guess, it's my understanding that in the end of the last Trump administration,
Trump made a claim in a debate about the number of miles of wall that had been built.
And that claim was largely inaccurate, but they sort of started trying to ex post facto
justify it by claiming repairs were miles of wall, right?
And in the final months of the Trump administration, maybe like from late summer to January, maybe certainly to November, they were really speed running wall construction.
And part of that was putting sections up where there should have been culverts and just putting
regular wall sections there and then attempting to come back later and do the culverts, which
because of the funding pause they didn't do. So then we've seen a huge change in how the desert drains, right?
Because it backs up at the, all the detritus, all the dead branches and stuff get caught
in the wall and then the water gets sort of pushed along the wall until it finds a weak
point to undermine it or push it over.
Very little of this gets reported at all, right?
Occasionally there are media moments when everyone wants to report on the borders damage
to indigenous communities.
We had one in 2020 when they started destroying saguaros
at the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument,
but these appear to be, when they just pop up like this,
it seems like it's without context or precedent, right?
And when outlets ignore indigenous people for 90% of their
border reporting, it doesn't give the context it's necessary to explain these incidents
which are outrageous in decades of policy, which has been outrageous. If our listeners
are not aware that the border is on native land, all of it, just like all of America, right?
It can seem confusing for them, right, when they see something like Organ Pipe Cactus
National Monument and they think, well, that's not on a reservation, because a lot of outlets
don't give that context, right?
That obviously reservations do not contain all the spaces that are sacred to indigenous
people and that like a reservation is illegal, not a cultural construct.
It can seem alien to them.
And lots of these spaces that are being, that will be militarized under this Roosevelt reservation
declaration, right?
Reservations are not militarized under that, but spaces that are sacred to people still
will be.
But because reporting so often lacks that context, people don't understand it. The admission of tribal lands was again missing in lots of pieces on the
Roosevelt Reservation. The Washington Post article on the Roosevelt Reservation, the
one that broke the story, it doesn't contain the word tribal lands at all. It doesn't mention
the fact that these areas are not part of the militarization proclamation.
The problem here isn't just the ongoing erasure of Indigenous people. It's a failure in basic journalistic practice in my mind, right?
We can't properly understand the borders unless we acknowledge the people they
impact. There's no way I could have experienced a daring gap in the way that I did if it wasn't for
the MBR people who literally let me live in their homes. Without the same generosity that they showed
to me, the people crossing would die in much greater numbers. And it's precisely because
would die in much greater numbers. And it's precisely because migrants arrive
in indigenous villages and not in like government Panama,
that a system exists where they're ferried up river
on those pit aguas that I reported on, right?
And it's precisely because they enter government custody
at Las Blancas, a place that the AP called a river port,
by the way, which I mean,
it's one of
the more miserable places that one can end up.
It's terrible.
And calling it a river port fundamentally undersells how appalling it is what happens
to people.
People are stored there for months, right?
And that is because they are entering the system of bureaucracy, the system of the state,
the system of fees and identification papers and all these things.
More importantly, I think we can't understand the relatively new and
invasive nature of borders, especially borders with physical barriers, without
acknowledging the much, much longer history of indigenous people moving
freely through these areas.
Like I said, it's not just people, it's water and wildlife.
And in all cases, the damage done will be unforeseen and likely irreparable.
But if we only treat the border as a rhetorical thing, like something to
discuss in Congress, not a physical place, then we miss what's really happening.
We miss the people it really impacts.
I don't want to pick solely on the AP.
It's a tendency in the whole US, right?
Where the overwhelming media narrative erases the existence of indigenous people,
unless it's some kind of novelty or trope through which they can be deployed.
The Daron example was a particularly stark one to me, because I spent a decent amount of time there,
and I obviously have a great deal of affection for the people who looked after me.
But as more and more laws are waived, both in terms of border wall construction and human rights, more damage will be done. It's already the case that people who speak indigenous languages tend to have much worse
outcomes in the US immigration system, right?
I've seen this firsthand.
It can be very difficult when someone arrives and they speak an indigenous language from
Mexico, from Peru, from these places where like the people speak
these languages, their first language and it's hard for them to very hard for them to
get legal representation, right?
Even US citizens like that incident from just a few weeks ago where that 19 year old who
was born in the state of Georgia, but primarily spoken indigenous language was like put into
ice detention overnight.
Yeah, which I think these two narratives
sort of play into each other, right?
Because indigenous people don't exist so much
in so much coverage, it can be much easier
for the state to make them disappear, right?
Like that guy.
Well, yeah, literally being arrested
and charged with entry as an unauthorized alien.
Yeah, like absolutely.
And it's happened to indigenous people who are like indigenous to the United States, right?
Like, yeah, and it will continue to.
I think I've heard some stuff about it happening on another Horez relatively recently.
Obviously, I should say if that has happened to you or someone you know, you can reach out to us at coolzone-tips at proton.me.
And like, I know that there are lots of big border reporters, big outlets who fucking
hate me.
And I really don't care.
I just want to...
Any one person coming into this country who needs a bottle of water is more important
to me than all of their collective opinions, right?
Like, my job is not to make them happy. My job is to tell the stories of the people
who come into this country and often suffer greatly to do so. I care more about them than
my ability to be objective, which, you know, I don't think we should be objective in these
situations. And like, I want to kind of end on this idea of like objectivity because,
not objectivity, I don't know.
I'm glad that the Washington Post is running a story about a Venezuelan
teacher who got deported today.
I'm glad that they're giving these people human faces now.
But it's fucking hard to look at the reporters who wouldn't drive half an hour
down a dirt road to come and see people in concentration camps when Biden was president because I know they were worried about getting their rental car
dirty or they don't speak Spanish or the desert's cold at night.
I don't know why people didn't come.
I suspect it's because their commitment to writing about migrants is more a commitment
to doing it when it makes money than it is to doing it because it's the right thing to
do.
And like when we write these stories now about deportations being terrible, they seem to
pop up without context, right? And the context of how these people came into this country
and the amount that they were forced to suffer by choice by the Biden administration in 2023,
it's completely absent from these stories, right?
The reason some folks are choosing to leave is because what they've seen of the US government
are weak in an outdoor detention camp where the government didn't even bring them food
or water, right?
And then they're passage through this system which doesn't give them a pathway to permanent
residency, which doesn't give them a pathway to citizenship.
And then they see these deportations like from the migrant perspective, this is just
a sort of steady escalation.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that what's happening now is the same as what happened
before.
It's worse.
It's considerably worse and it's abhorrent.
But like, that doesn't mean that we shouldn't tell the truth about what happened before
either.
And it doesn't mean that we should ignore the physical border,
as well as the sort of rhetorical and internal and technical border, right? All these things
that we're seeing now. And like the way that borders have worked in this country is that
it's like a ratchet that only moves to the right. And the Republicans move it to the
right and the Democrats never move it back. And until we hold them accountable for
this, it will continue to get worse. The Democrats completely ceded the narrative on migration
under the Biden administration, and that's part of why they lost, right? Rather than making an
argument that these people have a right to come here, that many of them are a massive benefit to
our society.
And it doesn't matter whether they are or not, they still deserve to be treated with
dignity and respect.
And even if you're a big law and order person, like according to international and United
States law, they didn't do that.
They didn't treat them according to international and United States law, nor did they make an
argument that it's morally right to do so.
And that's one of the reasons they lost, right?
This is why I really think that we need to
be conscious in our media consumption
and be conscious as journalists of like,
why we do this, because I'm finding it really hard
to see this outpouring of care
from people who I know didn't care
when they were shivering little babies in the desert,
from people who could have
said something, could have done something, right? Like this could have stopped earlier. If there
were big, major legacy media op-eds, if the pictures of shivering babies were like on the
nine o'clock news, right? Coming into people's houses every night, this wouldn't have lasted
for as long as it did. People wouldn't have suffered and people wouldn't have died. But
it wouldn't have lasted for as long as it did. People wouldn't have suffered and people wouldn't have died.
But because I guess Joe Biden was in office, it didn't matter.
And I'm glad that people care now.
Don't get me wrong.
But I want especially listeners to think about holding those people accountable
to caring when it's not profitable, caring when it's not convenient.
And our listeners have, to be fair, we raised almost $50,000 for migrants in the desert.
And that was fantastic.
But yeah, I still think we do immigration reporting wrong.
I still think for most outlets that's because they treat migrants as a rhetorical device,
not as people in the same way that they are.
And that upsets me and I wanted to write about it.
So I have, I guess that's all I've got.
It's not the best ending. If you are somebody who wants to get in
touch, right? Like I said, especially with with regard to
immigration activities on reservations or indigenous
people, you can reach us at coolzone tips at proton.me. If
there's other stuff you want to share with us, you can do it
there too. It is end to end encrypted only if you send from another proton email
address. That's all I got.
I found out that was related to the guy that I was dating. I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast, Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls from anonymous strangers all over the world
as a fake
Gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains and learn a little bit about their lives
I know that's a weird concept, but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give it a shot matter of fact
Here's a few more examples of the kinds of calls we get on this show
I live with my boyfriend and I found his his jar in our apartment. I collect my roommates toenails and fingernails
I have very overbearing parents even at the age of 29
They won't let me move out of their house
So if you want an excuse to get out of your own head and see what's going on in someone else's head search for
Therapy gecko on the I heart radio Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's the one with the green guy on it.
This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler,
Connie Britton is here.
I think you should encourage your friend to go ahead
and not be holding out for any man to have her babies.
If she is passionate about becoming a mother
and she has her eggs frozen and she has her life together,
go for it.
She could be waiting another 10 years
before she finds the right guy.
Connie didn't meet her right guy until you were what, 50 Connie?
How long have you guys been together?
Yeah, no, 52.
52.
I adopted my son as a single mom because I kept thinking,
oh, I'm going to meet the guy.
I'm going to meet the guy.
I'm going to meet the guy.
I finally was like, what am I waiting for?
And I did it.
And I'm just so glad that I did.
I wanna change the narrative about single parents
and also help to create a community for single parents
so that they can not feel alone in it.
One of the big things is it's so hard,
especially for women, to ask for help.
Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My husband has a secret son from a past partner.
Hold up, Sam, how do we know how we done the DNA test?
Well, John, luckily it's Mother May I Have a DNA Test Week
on the OK Storytime podcast, so we'll find out soon.
And this wife writes,
my husband received a Facebook message
from a woman saying that he is the father
of a five-year-old.
Whoa! At first, he didn't remember her, but then he realized they had a one-night stand right before we started dating.
Wait, but do we have proof he's a dad?
Well, the author says there's no confirmation the kid is even his son,
but the woman from Facebook has a meeting with her lawyer soon.
I think she's going after our money.
If the kid is actually my husband's, she would be entitled to it too.
So what's the husband got to say about's, she would be entitled to it too. So what's a husband gotta say about this?
This could be his kid.
Well, apparently he broke down
in the middle of the living room apologizing,
but this is what scared me.
His first instinct, if the kid is his son,
is to pay the child support,
but not be an active father in the kid's life
because he only wants a family with me, his wife.
Oh, this is a mess.
To hear the explosive finale,
follow OK Storytime on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, my name's Jay Shetty,
and I'm the host of On Purpose.
And I'm excited for my next episode with Khloe Kardashian.
God, I've been through so many things
that at this point I would rather not feel
than feel because feeling is too much for me to handle.
All right, we're ready.
I am Khloe Kardashian.
Khloe Kardashian, everybody.
Khloe Kardashian.
No one understands how it's, I'm not just a TV show.
There would be times that I was like, I don't even want to go out to the grocery
store because I feel like I know what they're thinking about me.
And that was scary to me because I've never been in a dark place for that long.
You've always taken care of others.
Have you discovered anything about why you've seen yourself
take on that role in so many relationships in your life?
How do you even find the courage to trust again?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here,
a podcast about transgender.
I am your host, Mia Wong.
Now, we have spent a lot of time on this show
covering a bunch of really bad stuff
and also some cool stuff. We've had some cool trans time on this show covering a bunch of really bad stuff and also some
cool stuff. We've had some cool trans things on this show too. We're going to have some
more in like the coming weeks, but it is a bleak time to be trans really anywhere in
the world. The United States is also pretty fucking bad right now. But in the words of
Langston Hughes, between the darkness and the dawn, there rises a red star. And one of the things that has happened as this sort of like, you know, sort of the crisis
of transphobia and the crisis of the genocide and the sort of multiple genocides the government's
doing and as sort of transphobia as like an institutional state discourse has like solidified
is that I mean, honestly, multiple generations of trans journalists
have really kind of like risen, risen to the forefront. And yeah, we've been, we've been
seeing a bunch of extremely cool reporting and a bunch of very, very good work from a
bunch of like more radical trans journalists. And that's the thing that kind of like, there's
been so few of us for so long and suddenly there's several and it rips and I'm
really happy about it. And with me to talk about sort of, you know, what trans journalism is like
in this moment, how it functions, and you know, and how it can be sustained going forward and why
it's sort of important is David Forbes, who is the editor of the Asheville Blade and also an
independent journalist. Mira Lazine, who is a freelance, who is the editor of the Asheville Blade and also an independent journalist.
Mira Lazine, who is a freelance journalist
who recently launched the outlet Free Radical.
And Maddie Kast again, who's an independent journalist
and the creator of Maddie Kast News.
All of you, welcome to the show.
Thank you.
Happy to be on.
Thank you for having me.
Yeah, I'm ecstatic to have all of you on
to get to talk about this because...
I don't know, I guess the place that I want to start is like, I'm ecstatic to have all of you on to get to talk about this because I don't know,
I guess the place that I want to start is like I remember this kind of like period in
like 2024, it was like, I mean, it still is really bleak for trans journalism in a lot
of ways, like, you know, I'm just in trans media in general, like I was just watching
like the space that had been opened a little
bit in like the 2010s for there to be trans people in media just like closing, you know,
and like I've been watching like pretty immediately around me, like I've been watching the number
of like trans fams, especially like non white trans fams just like disappearing from media.
And it was, you know, it was, it was like watching the stars disappear from the sky.
And the thing about the stars disappearing from the sky is, you know, there's, you don't
notice it unless you're looking at them, in which case the light has fucking gone forever.
And it was this really, really bleak thing. But also, you know, as it's happening and
as we've been sort of like resisting this, I've been getting to watch like the stars
go back on in the sky and like watching new like people emerge and watching people who've been doing cool work for a really long
time sort of like come out into the open and like get more sort of national recognition.
And yeah, I don't know. I guess I guess that's the sort of place I wanted to start is just
talking a little bit about like what it's like to be fucking doing journalism right
now because Jesus Christ.
I'll go ahead and start. I've been a journalist for over 20 years. And for those who might
be wondering, since you referred to trans femmes, I am a trans woman, I use she they
pronouns. I also like the name David. So, but I have seen it kind of wax and wane. I've
seen it go up and down. And to some degree, what we're facing now, it is a much worse and escalating version, but it is also some
of what I've seen trans journalists face. I came out publicly in 2016. I started my
transition in 2015. And immediately, my freelance career basically died overnight.
And it wasn't like I was writing for right-wing outlets or something.
And honestly, the fact is, and this is, I think, unusual among trans journalism, because
a lot of it admirably focuses on international level stuff, because what we face is so vast.
But if it had not been for the local support, because
the Blade, a lot of the Blade subscribers are local, though we certainly welcome people
to subscribe from wherever they are, you know, I would be homeless and there's a good chance
I wouldn't be talking to you all right now. But at the same time, in this kind of what
I kind of call the quiet purge, which I think has been escalating in recent years that you
talked about, about, you know, just, we've got trans journalists who used to write for national magazines living out of their cars now. That
is the reality we face. Our publications, all working class trans people. And, you know,
we've had journalists arrested twice for doing their jobs. Two of our journalists were taken
to trial in 2023 on a minor trespassing charge, which is almost unheard
of in the U.S. as bad as the U.S. often is.
As you mentioned, also, this was like trespassing for fucking reporting on the cops doing an
homeless encampment sweep like on Christmas.
Yeah, yeah.
Christmas.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like I just like unhinged police state shit like, yeah.
Yeah.
Even in L.A., they'll like sometimes they'll act like accidentally on a quote-unquote arrest journalists
But then don't be like, okay, let you go because you're a journalist. They don't actually take you to trial
This is one of those kind of welcome to Asheville moments
I think people buy the marketing sometimes and think we're this super progressive city and actually it's an incredibly repressive like tourism Fife
And that's this is kind of really to a point though, like the city government city council
here is six Democrats and one kind of like Bernie Sanders type independent, though, even
more tepid.
And the DA is a Democrat.
And still, you know, they were hell bent to persecute trans journalists.
One of our one of our journalists, Matilda Bliss was openly mistreated
and misgendered based on her gender during that.
So to some degree, what's happening now is certainly a worsening, but it is also
an extension of what's been going on for a very long time.
So, okay.
Like it is getting worse.
I don't know where we're going to be in a two, three, even one year, but also like
this is not a new fight.
Yeah, I can speak to it a little bit too. I've been a journalist for, I guess, what
last six months, because it's a long story, but I kind of got into it more out of fear
for myself. Sometimes people think I'm selfless and maybe I am a little bit, but
a lot of it is really selfish and just feeling like I have to do stuff to protect myself
and my friends, basically. But even in that short period of time, I have faced a lot of
bad stuff from, honestly, predominantly the left and liberals and sometimes even other queer
people being a trans woman of color. And that wasn't really initially what I was afraid
of. You know, I was afraid of like, I'm going to get death threats and Nazis up and like
for any docs being actually none of that's happened. I can't really explain why other
than I just don't use Twitter and I guess so they don't know I exist. But I have like one of the first national news story that I broke, or one of them, I
guess, it was about like Meta AI being like super racist.
And I like kind of figured that out.
I like proved that it was racist.
Basically, I just like use my brain to make it tell on itself and explain its prompt and
all that. And it
became this huge international news story but it was like immediately
co-opted by a Washington Post journalist who retweeted me and then recreated the
conversation and posted it again. And then I had to go on like this weeks long
like kind of campaign to try to just get basic credit for that. And eventually she
did credit me in the
column to give her credit but that was not something that was forgiven and a lot of others
that I said the thing to also didn't credit me and that's just been a recurring trend that uh
yeah like I'm kind of invisible even though I make a lot of important news so that kind of sucks
yeah there's something happens fucking constantly I'm like my like welcome to
the this is before I was out too and it's also like you know part of what's
going on here is like one of the things you learn really quickly in media is the
extent to which so much national media is just like what they do is steal
stories from like people like who are you know from sort of like like more regional media or people they think they can get away with steal stories from like people like who are, you know, from sort of like
like more regional media or people that think they can get away with taking stuff from like
if this goes all the way up the chain, right? Like if you want to know what's going to be
on Rachel Maddow show, look at look at what's happening on Behind the Bastards whenever
they cover someone on the right. And within about three weeks, you will get a Rachel Maddow
episode that is five minutes a thing. But like, you know, but like, you know, it's obviously
like it's significantly worse with like trans people But like, you know, but like, you know, it's obviously like,
it's significantly worse with like trans people because like, yeah,
they can just fucking sell stories from us.
Like I remember, God, my, like my fucking, like the first like journalism,
well, that's not true, but the first journalism-y stuff that I did with
like cool zone people was like, we would dream when like the Atlanta spa shooting.
We tracked down there, there was like, there was a Facebook post that people were
circulating purportedly from the shooter that was like basically blaming
like anti-China media stuff for it.
And we tracked down that this person did not have a Facebook and that all of this
was fake, but that person that posted it, circulating to the national news.
And we were like, well, yeah, this is like fake.
Right.
And then like every single news, like every single, like CNN fucking Fox news,
like every single major news outlet just like took all of our work and like repackaged it and
then never fucking mentioned that it was like Gare and I who did this because you know, why would
you credit the transgender anarchists when you could simply repackage the story yourself? And
this is a problem that's like goes all the way up to like, this is part of the reason we're here right now, right?
like we're complaining about this on sort of like professional level because like it's annoying but also like
The reason we're fucking here right now is because the person who got to write about trans stuff was fucking Jesse Singal
Who is a cis man whose only qualification it was the thing he previously wrote about was men who fuck other men who don't consider
Themselves gay and because he was the person who got to write all of the, like, trans coverage, even though
he's just like some fucking cis dipshit, right?
Like, he's now the guy who's, like, been being cited in fucking legal cases for ages and
ages for why you should restrict trans healthcare.
Oh.
The Atlantic and its consequences on society.
Disaster.
Disaster.
Yeah, Amir, do you want to talk a bit about your experience with it?
Honestly, what you just described has been happening to me this week.
So I've been in the industry for about three to four years now consistently and consistently
for a little bit longer.
And initially, it was way easier for me to get gigs.
Like within the first few months of me seriously starting, I got accepted pitches into the
Scouter for magazine and places like that.
And then like, within like six months after that, it became a nightmare to get pitches
accepted.
Yeah.
It just so happened I became more out as trans.
They're on the timeframe.
Definitely not a coincidence at all.
But more recently, this week I launched my independent newsletter, the free radical.
Go subscribe.
Yeah, go subscribe. It's legitimately great. You will get reporting there that you won't
fucking get from... Well, okay. You will get recording there that you won't get from anyone
else until about three weeks later when all the national outlets pick it up and it will be better and you will have it
first for the first new ad you're reporting it.
In every art guard written so far I've taken a second to basically be like okay
here's some anarchist shit you should read y'all.
This is what audiences mostly like, and and I'm just like, here, here, read this,
please.
But, um, my first story I broke this week was about a trans woman who was legally held
in Guantanamo Bay.
And that story got picked up by bigger media outlets pretty quick.
Within the first like 12 hours, the news outlet, Ben, did a very good story that basically just cited me every
chance they got. Come to find out this is because a trans woman wrote that she's awesome.
I just followed her the other day. Oh, but then the zillion news outlets started taking
up on this. Yeah, this was a Brazilian trans woman who got like sent to Guantanamo. Yeah. And the first one to do this was the newspaper, forgive me if
I am mispronouncing this, Folha Deus South Paulo, I believe it's called. I might be mispronouncing
that. I apologize if I am, but they are one of the biggest newspapers in Brazil and definitely
one of the oldest. And that story was all right. You know, they credited me for breaking the story.
Yeah.
I was talking to the person who wrote that.
She's sweet.
And even did a ritual recording.
It's awesome.
And then right after that, like,
dozens of other outlets came in.
None of them credited me.
Yep.
And they posted, like, social media stuff about the story.
Not a single one of those credited me.
And they're getting like
thousands of likes and comments and shares and most egregious, I think, is I've seen
a few of them credit the journalist with full ha as breaking the story. And I've seen one
sink them as breaking the story. Oh my God. Whose article, mind you, literally in a subheading,
says I broke the story.
Yeah.
And I didn't check in on it today yet,
but last night I was like up late
just looking at all the news outlets I was boosting
and it's like, I'm glad this story's getting coverage.
Don't get me wrong, it's an important one.
It's just like.
Yeah, no, it's great
Yeah, all this none of them are seeing where they got the story from it's just like oh wow
There's this bigger outlet covering. I'm gonna credit the bigger outlet
So to explain why we're also sort of concerned about like the way this attribution stuff works, right?
this is a
Incredibly material problem for us, right?
And like, I am very lucky in that, like, in terms of trans journalism, I have like a stable job.
But the thing is, right, unless you fucking got really lucky and you got hired like as a cis person
and then you have a bunch of very, very supportive like coworkers and like your bosses are supportive, you are like trying to cobble together like every scent that you can possibly pull out of a fucking couch cushion.
Because like, you know, I said this on the show before, right? Like, if you're a trans person in the US, even when even before all the turf tariffs hit, right? Like you were living in like 1936 Great Depression
levels of unemployment. And so that means that like it actually matters a lot when other outlets
steal your stories and don't attribute it to you because like you have to find a way to fucking
make money. And like almost all trans journalists are like the most hideously broke people you've
ever heard of in your entire fucking life. And this is also you know, and this is this is also part of the way that like class plays out in in
the transmutee you see is like
You know the people with the biggest platforms tend to be trans people who were already doing okay
because those are the only people who can afford to fucking do this and
like that's why most of you have heard of me and most of you probably have not heard of David Amira, even though David Amira do like, quite frankly, more important
journalism than I do. And like, in terms of especially in terms of like, like, and like
break a lot way more fucking stories than I do, because that's not kind of like not
exactly like my thing. Right. But that's because I was like, you know, like I was already sort
of like in a place that was financially secure and everyone else is so unbelievably fucking
broke all the time and it matters when fucking stories get stolen because the
only way that if you're a trans journalist and you're you know you're
working at your own outlet because an outlet won't fucking hire you because
that's just the way that the fucking media is structured the only way for you
to get paid is by like people seeing your stories.
And that's part of why there's like just not that many trans journalists, because like the level of discrimination on top of
the kind of like erasure of independent journalists that already happens makes it just like financially impossible to fucking do it.
Yeah, it's not just a liberal media. It's not just like the cis
It's not just liberal media, or it's not just like the cis have liberal media too. Sometimes like I had a similar thing with when I broke the story of Rain and some other
sexual abuse nonprofits removing all of the trans people from their websites.
That became a national news story and the Washington Post picked it up also.
And I think part of that was because I complained
so much about the previous time where they almost didn't cite me that maybe they were a little bit
more cautious about me is my theory. But anyway, after that initial news story that cited me,
same thing happened where it's like everyone's like, oh, well, we can just cite the Washington
Post now and so this person no one knows. And The first website to do that was like a queer news outlet.
And then I just kept watching it.
I think it was like three or four different queer or feminist women-focused news outlets
did the same thing of not citing me.
And there was even like a really long piece from this other outlet that felt like it was
going out of its way not to cite me because it was talking about this entire issue about nonprofits censoring people
and that was an entire conversation that was started specifically because of a news article
I wrote but it specifically did not cite me even though they mentioned how one of the
organizations that I reported on had reversed course, which is something that they
emailed me and said it was because of me. So that's how deep this goes. They will go out of their
way to carve you out of a story that exists because of you, even if they are ostensibly,
not just a liberal New York Times outlet, but a left-wing progressive-facing outlet that's trying
to market itself like that. They
just, they just want to exclude trans women from their own stories. It's kind of crazy.
Yeah.
The extent of it is actually telling of a local level too. Here, the Blade did a number
of reporting and we also featured some like really well thought out and pretty sharp opinion
columns, which is one thing we kind of specialize in. So I think they're really good for like
raising issues in local level about how awful the tourism development authority is, which is one thing we kind of specialize in, because I think they're really good for like raising issues in the local level, about how awful the tourism development authority
is, which is this hotelier cartel that takes every dime of all the local hotel tax, every bit of it,
and then uses it to market the place to more rich people and push crackdowns on pretty much everyone
else. So we pushed this, It became a widespread public demand.
A lot of organizing happened around it.
And there was Zip, Zilch, Zero mentioned that like spurred by investigations and editorials
in the Asheville Blade, even one of the people who wrote that editorial, it was a local resident
activist who dealt with some tourism stuff, was literally being quoted the fact she'd
written a piece for the Blade and that, you know, was just not mentioned. And it actually
became kind of a running kind of grim joke because we're all working class trans people
and you know, half of us are trans femme is just the Asheville blade does not exist. And
some of that was for liberals, but honestly, Asheville has a massive trans misogyny problem.
We think we were the first media outs to do do a quick guide to trans misogyny, which we did a slideshow about in
our Patreon and stuff because it was that extensive. But even the left in Asheville
has some real problems with trans misogyny. And it's applied to everything, not just from
trans issues, but even to bread and butter kind of local stuff, which we also do a lot
of reporting on. We can't admit that trans leftists and anarchists are shaping the discussion
any way, shape or form.
It's funny because like, like even us like even like the podcast, it could happen here,
which is like a pretty big national thing.
Like there's no one else talks about us.
It's fucking amazing.
You could just like see, you could like literally watch
like every other podcast that's like a 10th of our size,
there's like media coverage of, and there's nothing.
And they will never admit that we fucking did anything.
It's awesome.
It's so cool. And I think there's like a convergence of accuracy too,
because like, you know, on the one hand,
like in terms of sort of the way that hyper visibility works,
right, hyper visibility for trans femmes only works negatively.
Like there's only the kind of like you get fucked by it.
But then also on top of it, you get the reverse version of it
where it's like, yeah, you know, your labor was stolen. And this is, you know, this is true both in movements, this is true
of the way the sort of capitalist media functions. And then on top of that, we have the kind of like
trifecta of like, we will never mention that you exist, which is trans, independent and radical at the same time.
And like, this is what happens to like every fucking trans
family journalist, like friend of the show,
Maya Arson Crime W has had this happen to it,
like a billion fucking times.
I want to talk a bit more about kind of just like
the financials of how this plays out
and how independent media is sort of being supported in
this era because you know like it's also really true that like even even the like nominally trans
outlets like a lot of it functions of labor exploitation and yeah let's let's talk a bit
about that. I have a lot of strong cakes. Seen some shit.
Oh, boy.
I have so many opinions.
So I mentioned I kind of more formally got a start three to four years ago.
My first article was published in like 2018 and it was just like a local thing when I was living in Scranton, Pennsylvania area where nothing happens, but I found something to report on
The reason I got started
That would have been like early 2022 reason I got started then
Look because I was homeless and I needed a way to make money and where I was living at the time was a complete job Desert there. I didn't have a car and there was nothing in walking distance to me.
The only things that were were like minimum wage food service jobs that over half an hour
walk.
And I'm disabled.
My body is in pain if I stand up too long.
So those jobs did not last long because I physically couldn't.
And so I tried to find something that I could do remotely, more consistently.
And I went all in into freelance rating and journal with a...
Really the money making career.
Oh yeah, I'm totally...
I'm just in this for the money, you know?
I made such amazing profits that year, which is why I ended up homeless again.
And by the end of the year, I was living in a motel.
God, yeah.
And a lot of the writing I was doing at that time, I was very generalist and I
hadn't really found much of my niche yet.
But as I began to zero in more on trans issues over time. And just politics and stuff like that.
As an aside, I also tried to break into gaming journalism because I unfortunately am a gamer.
Regrettably.
Many such cases.
Many such cases.
And that industry is just dead.
It was dying at that point and now it's just like, do you want to get a job as a gaming
journalist?
You're not gonna.
I tried.
We need more people to do it, but
it does not pay. So I ended up going into politics journalism, which pays like marginally
better. And by marginally better, let me talk about some of my rates. Oh, God. Yeah. One
outlet I've written for pretty consistently over a while. to start, it paid me about a hundred bucks in article
flat rate.
And this includes for highly researched in depth reporting articles.
My God.
Yeah.
This is again, like shit that's going to be stolen by a national outlet in two days.
Like, and by you, a lot of these stories took weeks to make and fell for a hundred bucks.
And so I eventually got quote, upgraded to that outlet to doing 75 a piece,
but four pieces in a month. Um, and so that,
that was great. You know, that two hun- two hundred dollars a month for each
individually reported piece that really paid the bills.
And eventually it changed into 150 a piece for in-depth reporting
pieces that often took over a month's worth of work to get going. And I had to meet my
deadline or else they would get really angry at me. And they would be really dickish. And
that was one of my better experiences. Certainly not the best. I've had plenty of people
who were wonderful who I've written for and who I've had great times with. But the through line of
all of it, even the places that pay better, they're for one-off stories. They're for things that
do not give key sources of income long term. Even the places that have paid me the best for individual
stories, it's not enough. Not the least of which because, you know, the cost of living
is more or more right now, terrorists are going show up and, oh God, what the fuck is
happening? But also, because none of it's consistent. The closest to consistent I had
was overworking myself by writing like upwards of like 10
articles a week, sometimes upwards of like five to seven in one day and all of them being
reported in and in that and it's not sustainable doing that.
No, no.
But that's just common.
That is just normal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, and it's like the sort of bleak thing about it is
your options are you have money already, you won the fucking lottery basically, and like you got a stable position, you work at a rate that is like genuinely hideous, or you have a second job.
And sometimes it's a lot of these things combined.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think there's a tendency to talk about discrimination
as something that's sort of like abstract
or something that's even just kind of like
point of hiring stuff, which is all true.
And like, you know, it is like, yeah,
like part of the problem with this is that it's impossible to get like fucking staff positions and like, and like
I would, I could say this is like, so I mean, I got hired like as a cis person, right? And
like, they would have hired me if I was trans, but like, that's also just true for a lot
of people, which is that like, that's like the way that you can do it. So like there,
there is the like front door discrimination, but then also the second aspect of it is that
like the way that all of this stuff plays out structurally in the economy is that you
get reduced to sort of contract labor unless you try to go out by yourself.
And because of the incredible just material financial oppression of trans people, this
is another big part of the reason why there's just so few, you know, and like there's becoming
more right.
And I'm incredibly happy that like, you know, like I'm fucking talking with three trans
journalists, this rules. And also the reason there's not more of us, which is important because
like cis people trying to cover our stories is a fucking disaster. Like that's how we got here.
But like part of the reason why there's not more is just that like it's so difficult to survive
doing this. And yeah, you know, and that's also, I'm going to turn this into a miter plug, which
is like, go subscribe to the actual blade, go subscribe to free radical, go subscribe
to many has news because like literally the difference between like people being able
to have an apartment and pay their rent or like living in a car is the amount of support
that you get from this stuff.
That's absolutely true.
Yeah.
I should note the, you know, the blades of co-op, we've been one for, for half a decade
now.
And part of the reason for that was we'd seen how unfairly like income was treated, just
in the press in general.
And also I'm an anarchist. And while I love
being an editor, I don't want to be a boss. I want to like work with other people. And
it's made us a lot more effective. I would say we wouldn't exist if we hadn't become
a co-op. But also, when we do hit a difficult financial spot, we operate in a shoestring
budget, especially post-Helene, as sadly a lot of folks have been driven out
of Asheville by the refusal of various governments to do anything about rental aid by the resumption
of, like very quick resumption of evictions and a lot of other horrible stuff. Like it's
a struggle. We all are working class folks. We all work over their jobs and face trans,
you know, the discrimination, trans misogyny and transphobia. So it's difficult.
And even with being a co-op, we do the best we can.
And we do, unlike other places, pay freelancers fair rate.
But sometimes it's legitimately difficult to divide up our tiny budget.
And at some points we said, hey, look, we can't cover this right now.
Or we have to say, okay, in some cases, I've done it before, certainly, I'm covering this, but I am going to literally
have to split up payment for it over multiple months because we just don't have the money
in there. But I feel it does need it does need to get out there. And even if those decisions
are made more fairly, it is still a real problem that we are dividing up a fairly small pool
of resources. We do a lot with that, but it is a real limitation
Yeah, I'm kind of in a similar goal in terms of
My publication Maddie cast news
So I'm in one of the categories you mentioned actually I'm in two of them where I
Find what I'm doing not from my work, but from my my first job my main job
I guess which I got I guess pretending to be cis or maybe, you know, non-binary, they them or whatever, and then kind of jump scare them.
But anyway, that job pays pretty well, thankfully, you know, software engineering, one of the lottery professions for trans women, you get your health care, you get your money.
and you get your health care, you get your money. But I've been trying to go beyond just me
and try to help other people as well.
So recently we just applied for fiscal sponsorship
with 501-23, which hopefully let us become a charity,
tax deductible and all that.
And I've also been putting a bit of my own money
and I've also been pretty much begging all my readers
to give us money because one of the the biggest goals of
my publication has it kind of started off more about like you know reporting
on the news of course but now it's reporting on the news and also you know
making sure the people who report on the news aren't homeless actually maybe
that's a bad thing everyone I know in my life knows people like all these journalists who report on this news
But a lot of them probably don't even know how much like they suck
They struggle just like getting through their daily lives
So I'm really trying to hopefully create some structure for us to have at least one nonprofit that will
fund trans journalists at like a living wage of at least you know
$25 an hour which I honestly don't think is a lot especially like in a place like LA but
$25 an hour is probably more than you can get almost anywhere as a trans journalist also
I've heard a lot of jokes about you know, we're passing around the same $20 in the trans community
And it's a little bit more of that
but I'm also hoping to see if I can try to fundraise from other people and try to
You know raise awareness for this issue
Because I don't have a lot of time myself to be writing articles these days because I do have a full-time job
but yeah hoping to kind of make a dent on this issue and raise awareness and
It's really a win-win for all trans people that you know if we're paying people who need this money to survive but they're also creating really important news
coverage that literally is like life-changing for hundreds of thousands millions of people
at many times and that's how I see it's an exceptionally important issue that is completely
unaddressed.
This is also part of the issue with the way that like trans issues are reported on by the media
is that they're largely, you know,
it's not something's like healthcare aren't important, right?
But like just the raw class dynamic of all of this
just does not get talked about, right?
The homelessness rates that I don't actually fuck.
I should have the homelessness rates off top of my head.
Things like three or four times at the very least more likely across the entire
trans population to be homeless than cis people.
And like, you can just fucking see that if you know trans people, it's like, yeah,
fucking everyone's spent a bunch of time being homeless and like, you know, that's
just the conditions of this.
And you know, this is a thing that like, as you, the listener, like it is possible for
this, it doesn't have to fucking be like this.
Like it doesn't, you have the power in your hands to like to keep people off the street
and like with a roof above their head.
And you could do this by clicking the links in the description.
From our co-op, thank you for repeatedly mentioning that aspect. I think also this does, this
class dynamic does shape the type of trans coverage you see too, quite a bit. We did
some reporting one time on the city of Asheville spending over a million dollars to the Salvation
Army, which is basically a queer and transphobic
cult. But that piece was reported very differently from if it had been reported by say a trans
journalist who'd been very well off their entire lives, you know, because a lot of us
people in our co-op have either been close to or been homeless before. And so we were
able to bring in the experience of knowing that if you are a trans homeless person, the Salvation Army isn't letting you
in or is one of the worst possible shelters you can end up in. And that piece was written
and read very differently because we were drawing from that on the ground experience.
Yeah. On that note, I have written so many stories that have been about just the poverty
rates of trans people and what we've all gone through.
I used to be a daily contributor for LGBTQ Nation.
They were one of the outlets that I was trying to crank out as many articles as I could for.
And the editors, lovely people there, no issues with them, lovely folk.
Yeah. They just, they didn't have enough money no issues with them, lovely folks. Yeah.
They just, they didn't have enough money to begin with to pay me enough, so you're gonna
do.
Yeah.
But I remember working on a story sometime like the summer of last year for them where
I was, I was writing about some new report that came out talking about just like poverty rates job discrimination rates of trans people and
one thing I've noticed is
Like David mentioned there is a huge disconnect between even if you have like a wealthier trans people write about an issue versus those who?
are
in poverty like yeah a lot of the sources I had for
Like, a lot of the sources I had for specific articles, I don't remember the headline because I wrote like 500 or Goldstor Q Nation last year.
But a lot of the sources I used for that article and like other ones like it are like big nonprofits.
And obviously your mileage may vary depending on which nonprofit, but most of the folk who
like were writing these reports or who were doing the press
releases and stuff like that, you could just kind of tell that they maybe did not have
quite the same experiences as, say, trans people who have been homeless, trans people
who have had to deprive themselves of medical care because they couldn't afford it, trans
people who have had to go without food because not enough money. And it's almost like a lot of people who didn't have to go through this stuff
intellectualize it more. They see it as like these abstract numbers and they know it's bad,
but they don't have that like individual connection. Like even many of the nonprofit folk, a lot of their friends, even their social circles
are all going to be on average, you know, I can't say for every single person, obviously,
like on average, more wealthy, more stable.
They have family to back them up.
They have plenty of options.
And I don't know, rambling a bit, but there's just a disconnect, you know, whenever reaching
out to folk who won the birth lottery a little bit.
Yeah.
One of the most expensive articles that we did at Maddiecast News earlier last month
was about Maryland prisons and how they're basically torture chambers for trans women, as most prisons
are. But it seems like they're especially bad in Maryland, you know, despite it being
supposedly a safe trans fate, you know, 70% Democrats. And that was kind of an example
of just like how unprofitable, how impossible to not just unprofitable because when you
think unprofitable, it's like, oh, oh you're not making money It's not about that
It's like if you're losing like 80% of the money to put into these articles
Because it takes so many like I'm very strong believer of paying people, you know a living wage
So I was paying the journalists like well over $25 an hour for you know
dozens of hours of work and
That adds up really fast and then court fee,
like pacer fees, every, all these other costs are adding up and it ends up being like around
a thousand dollars for the single article.
And it's a really important article that, you know, raise a lot of awareness.
Everyone in Maryland in the trans circle, they're talking about it.
But at the same time, it's basically a charity project, right?
This is why I'm trying to become a nonprofit because there's simply no other way to be able to fund this stuff.
There's no capitalist model for reporting on trans women in prison.
It's not something that people are, you know, like, I definitely get, there's a lot of people who support us out of the goodness of their hearts.
And that's really nice. But even that is not enough because of, that's just how it is.
There's just not enough people who care about these issues, sadly, especially the more intersectional it is.
You know, even a lot of people in the queer community aren't as worried necessarily about people in prisons.
They're more worried about people not in prisons.
And, you know, of course, everyone matters.
But I think it's really important to focus on those most intersectional issues, because when you really think about it, like prisons are basically, you know, where they do everything they want to do to transform and warrant in
prison, that's where they get to do all of it. And no one's looking, no one's watching
them, no one's holding them accountable. But yeah, I think it's basically a complete failing
of capitalism. Like it's, there's definitely be some outlets that, you know, maybe they
could be doing better, but at the same time, a lot of the time, it's basically, you know, be really shitty, the people are closed down. And neither of those are great options. And personally, I would close down, but I can't tell other people what to do. And I think really is a systemic issue that society doesn't care about us that the cis people who really should be funding these things and trying to solve these issues, just pretend like we don't exist and go out of their way to even erase our presence, even when we do
create national news.
I think part of the difficulty of it, right, and this specifically the way that
trans issues function around class and journalism or a microcosm, it's like the most intense
version of the stuff that's happening to the entire journalism industry, right?
Or like, you know, part of what we're seeing is like, is just, it's been the destruction
of local news, right?
And the product of this is that the only people who can be journalists are like a bunch of
fucking rich dipshits.
And you know, like, yeah, you've all fucking read like New York Times columnist is like
platforming a genocide denier today.
Right.
Like that.
And that's, that's sort of the product of this.
And it means that like, unless like literally like people like you, the fucking listener, and I guess this
doesn't apply to you if you're, you know, statistically a good number of you are like,
you are also transgender and you make fucking $9 an hour running a forklift or something.
Like this is not on you.
I know a bunch of you are going to be like, holy shit, I actually get money this evening.
It's like, okay.
But this stuff is only possible if people are actually fucking willing to support it like until we can like
Fundamentally change the way that the entire political and economic system but works in this country and in this world
And until then it's like yeah
Like it's this is a fucking problem for like us here too
Cuz you know like I get like I got fucking lucky
like I am extremely dissimilar.
Like I am the trans woman, like one of the trans women who you will hear from
the most.
And I have like a stable job.
I haven't been homeless and I haven't done sex work.
And this makes me completely unlike a huge portion of trans people, especially
trans femmes, right?
And yeah, it's like, yeah, I have fucking colors the way I do this shit in ways
that like I don't see because like I haven't had to like do this shit. And this is a real fucking
problem. The only way that it can not be like this is if people are actually
willing to support the people who understand these things because they
fucking gone through it. And so so your options are like, all of our stuff gets
reported on by Jesse Singalal and we all fucking die
or we fund trans journalism and we fight them and we all live in a fucking better world.
My backup option if trans journalism doesn't work,
you mentioned sex work is quite literally to write furry smut and hope that pays.
The last year the Asheville Blade marked our 10th anniversary. So I think that is worth
mentioning too. I think sometimes things, and they truly are precarious. They truly
are difficult in some ways. They're only getting more precarious and more difficult. But at
the same time, despite our journalists being arrested, despite being kind of like targeted and ignored by a lot
of liberals and even some leftists in town. We're still here. We're still doing journalism.
We just put out a really powerful investigation about, you know, more mouth, yet more malfeasance
in the police department. So, so yet like it can be done. It's not impossible. And as
tight as things are, there is also a lot of resilience and we do get a lot of very genuine support.
I do think that's worth emphasizing too.
So like there is strength and there is some hope here.
Yeah.
And, and, you know, and again, it's like, it's, it's not impossible.
It just requires a, it requires a bunch of fucking work from the trans people who are
doing it.
And then also it requires, you know, putting on my fucking NPR fudge to my voice,
it requires viewers like you to, you know, it requires people to care enough about it,
to support it and make it exist. And yeah, I think that's a, that's a kind of good note
to start sort of wrapping up. Do you have anything else that you want to make sure you
get in before we move to plugs. I guess, yeah, for me, as I'm also kind of in that spectrum of like being a little bit
more privileged as far as trans women go financially.
And my message to other people who make, especially if you're a cis person, you make over $100,000,
you're comfortable and you're feeling bad listening to this, you know, go
give a trans person money, go give Myra Lezine money, go give David Forbes money, like we
have to, we really need everyone to start pitching in, especially people who aren't
trans and we really need, like, it's literally life saving the money, like, and I think one
thing to consider is, you know, $1,000 to someone who makes a lot of money is completely different from
$1,000 to someone who is like a month away from being homeless.
And that's $20 functions like that.
Like $20.
Like, no, I know so many people like $1,000, like they'll go, they'll spend $1,000 in a
couple of weeks on restaurants.
Right.
And then there's people, there's trans
people with a thousand dollars that like change their life forever.
The look on your face, like the look of horror.
No, that's true.
Like, holy shit.
No, there's people who spend, and I don't even joke, $20,000 a year on sushi.
Holy shit.
Having worked in the service industry, yeah.
I feel bad when I spend like 20 bucks on Popeyes once a week. Like,
Yeah, exactly. So if you spend $20,000 a year on sushi, please spend $19,000 a year on this
year instead and give $1,000 to a trans person. That's my advice for you.
Double the income of a trans person today. This is also like, you know, part of what
I was talking about with like the Great Depression, like we don't live in the same economy that everyone else does.
Like it is literally a different fucking world.
And the more fucked you are, like down the fucking scale of like, of like trans poverty,
the more it's like you literally like the reality that like the people live in is just
completely alien to you.
It's like, what the fuck?
You want that kind of money?
Fuck.
Mira, David, yeah, do you have anything else you want to say before we wrap up?
Please support trans journalists.
Please dear God, please.
Everyone I know who is primarily a journalist for work
is broke.
We need the money, please, dear God.
Yeah.
I would, yeah, add to that.
But I add another thing is, look,
you should support trans journalists
because trans people deserve to be supported
and to be able to make a living.
Also, frankly, we're really good at this.
Like generally as a whole, like we have a lot more perspective, I think, on how this
hellscape social structure actually does and doesn't work and a lot more determination
to actually tell the truth in general.
And so, you know, dollars to the Ashfall Blade, for example, or to, or to Mira or to Maddie
cast, like they go to journalism.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, they're not going to like some Baroque hierarchy of, you know, of gentry administrators
or something or CEOs, like it goes to journalism.
It goes to actual interesting reporting and views and things that need to
be said. So if people are even just looking, if some journalism is something they care
about or think needs to be stronger, this is the way to do it.
Yeah. And like, like this is also a directly political thing because like the word that
y'all do, like I have literally watched it change the sort of political landscape. Like
that's, that's just like a thing that happens.
You know, like, and I think we're all very cynical about sort of the power of like the
truth to do anything because it requires people to act on it.
But you know, if you don't know anything is happening, it is not possible to act on something.
Yeah.
So like, you know, you are simultaneously, you are supporting, like you're supporting
trans people in like the most precarious position we've been in in fucking
ages.
You are supporting journalism and you are not even poking a stick, you are helping build
a lance to stab into the side of the people who are destroying this world.
And yeah, I think that's fucking important.
So if people want to support you, where do they go? Where do they go? Go go go go
Yeah, so if you want to support me go to the free radical dot org that that that is my newsletter on
there's stuff to just subscribe and
And and give money you can do a free subscription, you know, if you especially for broke, please do a free subscription like we do
I don't need your $20. I'll give you my $20. And also I have a COFI. Um,
if you know, like a one time thing, it's mirror, Luzine. I'm the only one only mirrors Luzine
on there. And if you subscribe, you're supporting some of the only trans anarchist national news
coverage.
Yeah.
Basically, in every single article I write, I try to find a way to shoot or anarchist
theory and what fucking and fuck it.
Like my first article, I was like, Hey, go check out crime thing.
Yeah.
The one I published yesterday, I just, I went on a whole like page long tangent where I'm
like, okay cool, so this is what
more liberal people are saying, but here's, go read Lorenzo Comboa Ervin, go read Quarry
and Anarchism, go read this shit.
And yeah, that's, I just want to shoehorn anarchist theory and get more people to be
anarchists.
Yeah.
Yeah, so if you ever want to support Maddie Castcast News, to be clear, I don't take any income
from the website.
I actually have plans to put lots of money into it.
But all of your money will be going towards supporting other trans journalists.
So that's one way to contribute to the cause.
Or even if you just give me your email, I appreciate that too. But my website is maddycast.com and that's only one D. So M-A-D-Y-cast.com.
And roundbluebluesky too with the same website name.
And yeah, thank you.
People can find our co-op's work at ashfullblade.com and there's a giant link to our Patreon there.
For 15 bucks a month you can get a lovely Gentry Tears
mug which we're particularly proud of.
It's so cool. It rules.
Thank you for the endorsement. And at the end of each article, we have, in addition
to our Patreon, a link if folks just want to send us some one-time support. We'll certainly
put that to use as well. And if they would like to see some of my personal writings
about trans survival, as well as some anarchists looks at various periods of history, patreon.com
slash David Forbes. If that is more than a cup of tea.
Satistically in our audience, I know there are a bunch of you who special interest either is or
could be medieval peasant uprisings. You are not going to find better writing on medieval peasant uprisings anywhere else.
Yes.
There is a limit to the extent to which you can actually talk about the structural problems
that are happening and you can't fucking talk about how to solve them.
And this is also partially why like I've become a journalist, like I kind of jokingly refused
to call myself a journalist because like, I fucking refuse to be associated with like all of those goddamn Atlantic motherfuckers who's institutional job is to endanger trans people like you know, but also no ground to fascist though.
That's true. That's true. Yeah. You know, because it's like we're the ones actually fucking doing this shit. But also, yeah, like this is, you know, to do my one, to do my one Karl Marx quote, it's like, you know, philosophy
has hitherto only sought to describe the world. The point is to change it. And that's a thing
that we could, that like, we like have the power to collectively do together. And that's
something that like, the New York Times does not want you to know that you can change things.
No.
Yeah, they, to borrow a term that David has recently gotten into my vocabulary a bunch,
the Gentry really fucking do not like the idea of solutions.
Their idea of a solution is, go vote for Pete Buttigieg, go sign the ACLU's petition.
Yeah.
I want to, I want to read this, this fucking post that I saw from at Kendra writes about the New York Times
I think a lot about the top New York Times editor who I told the historians were warning were in a similar period to the
Ramp-up to the Holocaust and maybe we could look back and see what MIT had done wrong did not repeat his mistakes
He shrugged New York Times didn't really cover the Holocaust. Oh my god
What so don't support these people support the people who actually do this shit.
You know, like I'm going to I'm going to make a kind of comparison.
But it was like at the time this shit was happening, there was a bunch of very good
coverage of the Holocaust and of what was happening.
But it was because it was all happening
from fucking like because it was like largely Jewish radicals who were doing it.
All that shit fucking got ignored and shit that could have been fucking prevented wasn't.
And we don't have to live in a world where that shit fucking happens.
And we can make it not be like that.
But like the structural, the structural, like structural nature of the media is one of the
ways that this fucking happens.
And we don't have to let the New York Times do this again.
No, and that's a good reminder.
There is another way with journalism.
Ida Wells was able to detail the extent and horror of American segregation and lynching
and also called for people to shoot the Klan.
The modern idea that you have to be detached and everybody attached from a pretty gentry
perspective, there's a world elsewhere. There's other ways to do things. I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast, Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls from anonymous strangers all over the world
as a fake gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains
and learn a little bit about their lives.
I know that's a weird concept,
but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give it a shot.
Matter of fact, here's a few more examples
of the kinds of calls we get on this show.
I live with my boyfriend,
and I found his piss jar in our apartment.
I collect my roommates' toenails and fingernails.
I have very overbearing parents.
Even at the age of 29, they won't let me move out of their house.
So if you want an excuse to get out of your own head and see what's going on in
someone else's head, search for therapy gecko on the iHeart radio app, Apple
podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's the one with the green guy on it.
This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler,
Connie Britton is here.
I think you should encourage your friend to go ahead
and not be holding out for any man to have her babies.
If she is passionate about becoming a mother
and she has her eggs frozen and she has her life together,
go for it.
She could be waiting another 10 years
before she finds the right guy.
Connie didn't meet her right guy until you were what, 50 Connie?
How long have you guys been together?
Yeah, no, 52.
52.
I adopted my son as a single mom because I kept thinking,
oh, I'm going to meet the guy.
I'm going to meet the guy.
I'm going to meet the guy.
I finally was like, what am I waiting for?
And I did it.
And I'm just so glad that I did.
I want to change the narrative about single parents
and also help to create a community for single parents
so that they can not feel alone in it.
One of the big things is it's so hard,
especially for women to ask for help.
Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My husband has a secret son from a past partner.
Hold up Sam, how do we know how we've done the DNA test?
Well John, luckily it's Mother May I Have a DNA Test Week on the OK Storytime podcast, so we'll find out soon.
And this wife writes, my husband received a Facebook message from a woman saying that he is the father of a five year old.
At first he didn't remember her, but then he realized they had a one night stand right
before we started dating.
Wait, but do we have proof he's a dad?
Well the author says there's no confirmation the kid is even his son, but the woman from
Facebook has a meeting with her lawyer soon.
I think she's going after our money.
If the kid is actually my husband's, she would be entitled to it too.
So what's the husband got to say about this?
This could be his kid.
Well, apparently he broke down in the middle
of the living room apologizing,
but this is what scared me.
His first instinct, if the kid is his son,
is to pay the child support,
but not be an active father in the kid's life
because he only wants a family with me, his wife.
Oh, this is a mess.
To hear the explosive finale,
follow OK Storytime on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, my name's Jay Shetty, and I'm the host of On Purpose.
I just had a great conversation with Michelle Obama.
To whom much is given, much is expected.
The guilt comes from, am I doing enough?
Me, Michelle Obama, to say that to a therapist.
So let's unpack that.
Former First Lady Michelle Obama
and someone who knows her best, her big brother Craig
will be hosting a podcast called IMO.
What have been your personal journeys with therapy?
We need to be coached throughout our lives.
My mom wanted us to be independent children.
And she would always tell me me stop worrying about your sister.
Having been the First Lady of the entire country and representing the country in
the world I couldn't afford to have that kind of disdain.
What would you say has been the most hardest recent test of fear?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Welcome to another episode of It Can Happen Here.
I am your guest co-host, Bridget Todd, host of There Are No Girls on the Internet.
I'm joined by the lovely Molly, host of award-winning podcast on Pool Zone, Weird Little Guys.
Molly, how you doing?
Great, glad to be here, Bridget.
OK, so I wish we were here to talk about all the exciting
stuff going on in your life.
But I wanted to bring this topic to the It Can Happen Here
audience, because I live in the district.
I know you're a Virginia gal, so you
might know a little bit more about how
it works in the district than your average person.
But I don't know that people really understand what is happening to residents
of the District of Columbia like myself.
So I live in DC.
I've lived here for most of my life.
I have a lot of hometown pride.
This is not just where I happen to live.
It's like my city, my home.
You know what I mean?
And you don't have representation.
It's true, right?
It's something that infuriates me. And so, you know, the first thing to know about DC
is that it's not a state.
So that means that what happens federally
has a huge impact on the day-to-day minutia
of the life of people like me who live in the district.
If you don't live in the district,
when it comes to decisions about how your local tax dollars
are spent, that usually lies with your state and local leaders.
That's not really the case for me
and the other over half a million residents
of the district.
All of this is made worse by the fact
that we are essentially disenfranchised,
just like you said, right?
All of this stuff is playing out in our home,
like all of these big national conversations
are happening in our own backyard,
and we arguably have less electoral power at agency
because we aren't a state.
Fun fact, DC residents only got the right to vote
in 1961 in presidential elections.
What?
I know.
I didn't know that.
We have not been voting in presidential elections
for very long when you think about it
in the fullness of time.
So when people are like, oh, call your congressperson,
call your elected official to oppose X, Y, Z,
we really have nobody to call.
Our congressional representative, Eleanor Holmes Norton,
cannot vote on bills that are being considered
by the full House.
And so we really just don't have a say.
Whenever those big campaigns are going on,
I'm like, oh, it must be nice to have,
even if that person ignores you,
it must be nice to have someone you can call, who would know. It almost seems disrespectful I'm like, Oh, it must be nice to have even if that person ignores you, it must be nice to have someone you can call wouldn't know.
It always seems disrespectful to be like, Oh yeah, you guys, you guys have a
representative, but it doesn't do anything.
Exactly.
It's just vibes.
It's just vibes.
So all of this matters for Trump's return to my hometown because as president,
Trump has a lot more authority to dictate how things are run locally for D.C. residents like myself.
You know, we all know that the Trump administration
is hell bent on making all of our lives worse,
but imagine if Trump was also in charge
of how your local police force in your city
policed your city.
Like, that would be horrible, right?
That sounds like a nightmare.
And that threat is like literally the reality
that we are faced with here in D.C.
So there's been some pretty big changes this time around in the Trump administration.
During his first administration, I feel like Trump largely ignored D.C.
Like he would pick a fight every now and then, but he didn't really seem to meddle in how
D.C. was run like locally.
That does not mean that he was not out in the district
doing terrible things, which he very much was.
You might recall in 2020,
during the racial justice uprisings
in the wake of George Floyd's death,
Trump cleared protesters using chemical agents
so that he could go out in front of St. John's Church
and like pose.
With an upside down Bible.
Upside down Bible, remember that?
Distressing.
It was distressing.
I was there that day and I'll say like it was like genuinely very excessive.
I'm not going to get into the nitty gritty of it, but in the aftermath of that event,
internal reports made it clear that like it wasn't exactly clear what happened and under
what authority.
Like was it DC's local police force, Metropolitan PD?
Was it federal park police? Like it really underscored the tensions of DC locally versus
the federal government.
And it doesn't help that there's half a dozen different police forces operating on any given
block of DC.
Oh my God, girl. Like you genuinely never know. When you see flashing blue and red lights,
you genuinely, it's like, you're like, this could be federal aid. Like this could be federal. You never know. When you see flashing blue and red lights, you genuinely, it's like, you're like, this could be federal aid. Like, this could be federal. You never know.
Have I just committed a federal traffic violation?
Exactly. And so the New York Times actually described that event as, quote, a burst of
violence unlike any seen in the shadow of the White House in generations, and possibly one
of the defining moments of the Trump presidency. And so I remember that as like a moment that played out nationally,
but also it felt very local.
And like, I think it underscored how we really felt the impacts
of how militarized the city could locally get
during Trump's first administration.
So that was like something that really sticks out to me.
I mean, I rarely visit D. visit DC because I'm afraid of traffic.
Like just the act of driving through Northern Virginia
to get to DC is too frightening for me.
So I try not to go.
But I think people who don't live in the area
don't think of DC as a place where people live.
They don't think of it as anyone's home, right?
It's like Congress lives there, the laws live there,
but like a lot of people live there,
people who have nothing to do with the federal government,
mostly a lot of black people, honestly.
I mean, DC used to be called chocolate city for a reason.
These things were more like a latte city,
but exactly, I can confirm that people don't think
of the, you know, over half a million DC residents
who have nothing to do with the federal government sometimes, who have nothing to do with politics, who just like live here and is our home. Like,
I was born in DC. Like, this is, I didn't just, you know, move here to work in politics. Like,
my family can be traced back to our roots in the district through generations. And so I have a B
in my bonnet about this because I feel very unseen. And I think the way that the Trump administration is playing out, I feel like the reporting really
can sometimes overlook the way that this is playing out
in the life of your average, you know, DC resident
who might have nothing to do with politics
or, you know, the federal government.
Like seventh graders trying to get to middle school.
Exactly that, exactly that.
So during Trump's first administration,
after the incident at St. John's Church,
our mayor, DC's mayor, Muriel Bowser.
She's still the mayor?
She's still the mayor.
She's still the mayor.
She is holding strong.
She erected what became known as Black Lives Matter Plaza,
where she wrote Black Lives Matter
in like big yellow letters
outside of the White House, you remember this?
I've had some unpleasant experiences in that zone, yes.
Yes, you and me both.
This could be a separate conversation.
And so I will say when she did that,
it was largely like a symbolic move.
And a lot of DC activists thought the mayor was kind of
co-opting a racial justice ethos
that she didn't really embody in practice.
But I do think that that really set
the tone for the mayor's relationship with Trump
during his first term.
She was defiant.
She was someone who was going to stand up to him publicly.
And something to know about DC's mayor, Muriela Bowser,
is that she kind of has two modes.
Defiant, like the version of herself
that painted Black Lives Matter
outside of the Trump White House,
and then sort of diplomatic, right?
Like somebody who wants to find common ground, which
I think is the version of her that we're seeing this time
around that is very different than how
she was the last time around.
She started Trump second term sort of touting the goals they
have in common.
And she met with him even before he was in office.
And so I have a lot of critiques about DC's mayor,
just like anybody would have their political leader.
But I do think it is important that folks understand
that she is navigating something that literally no other elected
official in the United States has to because
of DC's lack of statehood.
Our city is uniquely threatened by Trump,
and she knows this and Trump knows this,
and so she really has to, like,
walk a tightrope greased in shit, if you will.
She's, like, navigating this public relationship
with an unstable, lying fascist
and has to do so in a way that's going to end up
with, like, what's best for the city.
So you can say whatever you want about Mayor Bowser,
like, I certainly do, but this is a complicated thing to navigate.
I do not advocate for anybody complying in advance
with a fascist, but in this situation,
I do think it's fair to ask,
well, would being defiant toward Trump
make things worse for DC residents like myself?
But it resulted in martial law in the city.
Exactly, exactly.
So like, I don't like it, but I get it.
I guess if there was like a mantra for my feelings on this,
it's like, I don't like it at all, but I get it.
It's a no-win situation.
It is a no-win situation.
And you know, Trump spent,
even when he was on the campaign trail
before he was president, he talked this
time around about how he was planning to take over the city. And because DC is not a state,
any president does have the authority to interfere with how DC is run. Any president can take
over the police department and the powers of the mayor and the DC city council. Any
president has the power to federalize DC's local police force, Metropolitan Police,
deputize the National Guard, and give law enforcement powers in DC, and activate the
military and federal law enforcement agencies such as the park police in DC.
So the governor of any state has control of their National Guard, but DC has its own National
Guard, right?
Correct.
And they don't have a governor, so those are the president's National Guard?
Correct.
Oh, that's not great.
So it's not great, it's not great.
And you know, the prospect of,
just just like, let that sink in,
the prospect of Trump having his own military
and police force in the district,
like I cannot tell you how much this terrifies me.
Like I cannot stress to listeners
how much of a shit hittinghitting-the-fan moment
this would be for the city.
To give you a sense, like, I have a go-bag
and a, like, get-the-fuck-out plan
for that scenario playing out.
Virginia's so close. We'll take you.
I know. I mean, yeah.
Honestly, anybody in the DMV,
if you're in Maryland, Virginia,
you should all be thinking about this.
-♪
-♪ The Trump has continued to pressure the mayor and threatening to take over if she will not do the things that he says.
Things like clean up the city.
Trump notified Mayor Bowser that she has to clean up all the unsightly homeless encampments
in the district, especially around federal buildings.
If she is not capable of doing so,
we will be forced to do it for her, he said.
And so far, her strategy has really
been one of, like, quiet appeasement.
So that Black Lives Matter plaza that she erected in defiance
during his first term, that came down.
Did it really?
They painted over it?
I think they paint, they dismantled it.
I think that they were like, oh, we're
going to take it up so that it can go someplace else.
But we're removing it from this part of the city,
if that makes sense.
That's a symbolic moment, right?
Just like pouring the asphalt over the words
Black Lives Matter.
Yeah, and I do really think it underscores this moment
that we're in right now where it does,
I mean, I'm curious for your thoughts,
it does sort of feel like a pendulum swing in some ways
where all of these largely symbolic gestures
are now being bulldozed over, oftentimes voluntarily,
without even really being pressured into doing so. Right, I guess it's hard, right? Because like painting Black Lives Matter on the sidewalk
did nothing for black people, right? Like did that help you? Did that material improve
your life? No, it was purely symbolic. But negating that symbolic gesture, I think, does
a lot more harm than never having had it, right? Because that is a that is a an imposition
of of will over the over what, again, a symbol that did
nothing and accomplished nothing and didn't actually help anyone or change any situation.
But taking the time out of your day to bulldoze that symbol sends a strong message.
I feel the exact same way. And Republican Representative Andrew Clyde actually wants
it to go further. He introduced a bill that would have amended the US code
to withhold certain funds from DC
unless Black Lives Matter was taken off the street
and that area was renamed, quote, Liberty Plaza,
and for the district to remove all Black Lives Matter Plaza
references from city websites and official documents.
So they wanna like, memory hole it
and be like, it never happened.
That's such crybaby bullshit too, for for the like these free speech warriors, right?
Like oh the facts don't care about your feelings.
Free speech is the most important thing.
Like the marketplace of ideas.
Like I guess you can't compete in the marketplace of ideas, bucko.
Exactly.
Clyde said quote, it's time for our nation to leave this failed agenda behind.
Starting with the removal of BLM Plaza from America's capital.
Trump is 100% right.
We must clean up DC for the American people.
I believe that removing BLM Plaza must
be part of this critical effort.
After all, BLM is a radical, defund the police organization.
But we are not a defund the police nation.
So I know this clean up the city rhetoric is sort of fascist
in and of itself.
That's scary rhetoric, regardless.
But pairing it with back to back in the same breath,
like we have to clean up the city,
we have to get rid of BLM Plaza.
Like are you saying being reminded
that black people have civil liberties is dirty to you,
that that's what's making the city dirty,
is the black people?
I would argue that's exactly what he's saying.
But DC, it's like getting upset about black people.
It's like going to the beach
and getting upset when they're saying, right?
It's like, we can have a whole conversation about DC's demographics, but like, we upset about black people. It's like going to the beach and getting upset when they're sand, right? It's like, we can have a whole conversation
about DC's demographics, but like, we are a black city.
That is what makes DC what it is.
It's like why I continue to live here, right?
It's like, I think that's exactly what he's saying is
we don't want our nation's capital to be one
that honors the agency of black people,
black bodies, and black lives, right?
Like I think that's like, what do you say?
Then move the White House to South Boston, I guess.
I don't know what to tell you.
Exactly.
So, you know, the mayor pretty quickly relented,
and BLM Plaza is no more.
She basically said, like, you know,
we've got bigger fish to fry,
like focusing on DC's autonomy and budget.
And to be honest, like, a lot of residents agreed with her
that, like, it probably was not worth the fight.
That's kind of the theme here,
is that all of these little things
that individually are probably not worth the fight,
but then collectively, you're like,
well, who is sort of in charge of this city, you know?
And if none of these little things are worth the fight,
are you fighting?
That's a great question. Are you fighting?
If nothing is worth the fight, are you fighting?
And I feel like that's kind of, I don't know, on a larger scale, sort of the National Democratic
Party's line has always been, we've got to keep our powder dry.
We've got to keep our powder dry.
Keep it dry for fucking what, dog?
Right.
You're going to end the war, you know, with a pile of bodies and a bunch of dry powder.
Exactly.
So the next demand that Trump made of
Bowser was the need to clear homeless encampments near the
White House saying that if Bowser didn't do it, he will be
forced to do it for her. So within hours of Trump's call to
Bowser, DC city crews arrived at these encampments to tell
residents they had to be out the next day. It's not great. Like
to be clear, it is not like our mayor does not clear encampments in DC.
In fact, her administration said they have been planning
to clear the encampment in question,
but just doing so in like a more planned, rolled out way.
So it's not like she's like someone who is not, you know,
down with clearing encampments.
The Washington Post spoke to some of the people
who were residents of those encampments
when they were cleared.
Shelly Byers is someone they spoke to
who has been chronically homeless in DC for three years.
She was living in an encampment that was cleared in 2023
before winding up at the one that Trump wanted cleared.
And she said they were basically given no notice
that they needed to vacate.
She said, now we have only less than 24 hours to get out.
As she threw her clothing out of her tent, I liked it here.
They keep shoving us off from place to place,
making it so we don't have anywhere to go.
The Post also spoke to the president of Miriam's Kitchen,
which is a big nonprofit here in DC that provides services
for the homeless.
And he said that it wasn't even clear,
like he wasn't even sure if the city followed
proper protocols with this hasty encampment clearing
at Trump's direction.
Encampment residents are meant to be given two weeks notice,
but people who were cleared said that they only
learned about that action within 24 hours.
And so I think that's a part of the issue here.
DC, like any city, has issues like crime and homelessness.
But hitting people housed takes time.
Just wanting to quickly move people
who might not have anywhere else to go
because they look, as Trump said, unseemly or unsightly
is not solving the problem.
What you're actually doing is just traumatizing people who are already vulnerable and then
forcing them to go elsewhere exactly like that woman told the Post.
Even in the best case scenario, even the most organized clearing of an encampment is, I
mean, it's violent and it's inhumane and it doesn't really serve a greater purpose
other than, I don't know, so that people don't have to think about homelessness
on their way to work.
But there is a way to do it that is,
at least theoretically,
could result in something that is not monstrous.
You know what I mean?
Like I said, there's no good way to clear an encampment
unless you're giving everyone an apartment.
But right, like you're giving people two weeks notice,
let's social services get involved,
let's them go tent to tent for those two weeks,
talking to people about where they could go,
giving them options, connecting them with services
if that's what they choose.
But if you're just rolling up overnight
and throwing people's shit away, you're not solving a problem.
You're not even trying to solve a problem.
You're not even pretending
that you're trying to solve a problem.
But I think that's exactly how Trump thinks about this issue.
It just looks bad and unseemly to him
So I don't care where they go. I don't care how you do it
Just I don't want to be looking at them right because for him
It's not it's not about getting these people connected to services so that they might eventually find stable housing
It's about I don't want to fucking see these people because they're gross
Exactly. And like he is encroaching on how our city is run, right?
And so like if that is the ethos that you have,
I don't wanna see these gross people,
I don't care where they go,
this is not an ethos that responsibly
is able to run a city.
That is really like-
It's disruptive.
Yeah, it's absolutely disruptive.
Because they'll go somewhere else.
They'll go somewhere else
and now their lives have been uprooted.
Maybe their documents got thrown away
and it's gonna be even harder for them to find stability. Like, you have not addressed the problem.
Exactly.
And I think that's what, that's like the name of the game with the way that Trump has already
been meddling in the way that DC runs its local affairs.
This next example, I got to say, it really gets to me.
So DC's Attorney General, Schwalb recently dropped a lawsuit
against the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers for their behavior during January 6. So this suit was
initially filed by the former DC Attorney General Carl A. Racine. It initially marked the first
effort by a government agency to hold the individuals and organizations civilly liable
for violence at the Capitol on January 6. But a federal judge in DC granted the district's request
to dismiss that case.
The suit was fashioned after a modern version
of the 1871 law known as the Ku Klux Klan Act
that was enacted after the Civil War
to safeguard government officials
carrying out their duties to protect civil rights.
This was actually a similar challenge
that prevailed against groups involved
in the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville,
which, Molly, I know you might know a thing or two about.
Let's just say I'm very familiar with Klan Act lawsuits. And they are effective. They're effective.
It's one of the only things that we still have from reconstruction that hasn't been taken away from us
is this civil remedy for civil rights violations. And it works.
It works, but like you have to carry it out.
And basically the city decided that it wasn't worth it given all of the threats to DC's
autonomy by the Trump administration.
So it's extortion.
I mean, yeah, like that's exactly what it feels like.
I mean, this is extortion.
They're being prevented.
They're being prevented from seeking a viable civil remedy through the courts out of fear
of retaliation.
That seems very bad.
It's like, I mean, I'm glad that you use the word extortion
because it really does feel like,
if you've seen one of my favorite movies, Goodfellas,
it feels like what Henry Hill, the mobster,
calls real grease bullshit, right?
Like, ooh, great city you have here.
It would be a shame if something were to happen to it.
Like, extortion.
Right.
God, but usually, I mean,
sometimes you get something out of a protection racket.
DC's not even fucking getting anything out of this.
I guess you could argue that they are like
not raising the ire further of the Trump administration
and that like that might lead to DC having more autonomy
and like DC, you know, like Trump officials
not meddling in DC's affairs?
I mean, I don't know if any of these people
have read a book, but appeasing of fascist
has historically not resulted in you getting what you want.
No, and I gotta be honest, girl, this one's fucking stung.
Like, it sucks hearing people like the proud boys leader
Enrique Terrio basically brag about having this case dropped.
The Oath Keepers founder Stuart Rhodes, his attorney said,
we are very pleased to see the District of Columbia
has come to the same conclusion that the American public
and President Trump have.
The narrative that January 6 was some sort of armed insurrection
to overthrow the government was false from the very beginning.
Enrique Terrio posted after the district requested
to dismiss
this lawsuit saying, another exoneration, if God is with us, who can be against us? Like,
it just chaps my ass to hear this shit. Like, God didn't do this, baby. God didn't do this.
You also have DC's Metro Police investigating the vandalization of Teslas as a hate crime.
the vandalization of Teslas as a hate crime. This, again, it really makes me wonder,
as far as I know, Trump is not in charge of our metropolitan
police department.
But stuff like this makes me wonder,
we're like, is he kind of in charge?
I mean, pressure is clearly being exerted.
Correct.
Basically, somebody wrote, quote,
political hate speech on a Tesla.
The statement from the metropolitan police
department said they were investigating these offenses as being motivated by hate or bias.
To be clear, Mayor Bowser was like, I didn't tell them to do this.
Like she was like, I have nothing to do with the police department's decision making on
this.
Like, that's them.
Hate crime typically implicates a protected class, like race, gender, religion, national
origin.
What is the protected class of being a Tesla owner?
Is it like being a big loser of protected class?
Uh, unclear.
And they wouldn't even say, like, what was the nature
of what was written on this car that made it a potential hate
crime? Like, we don't even know.
Which is so funny because these guys never believed
in hate crimes before.
Unless it's against, like, Elon Musk and people who like him.
I'd say that's the best I can figure.
But I've heard full-throated arguments
against the existence of the category of hate crime.
And now suddenly they're very important.
Yeah.
Now they're very important.
And I do think, I mean, like, when I heard about this,
it really made me think about how different categories
of crime and legislation around it
is very well-intended and well-meaning.
And I understand who hate crime legislation
is meant to protect, but then you also have the ways
that it can be perverted to protect a protected class
that is not a protected class.
It's the same as the language around terrorism,
that terrorism wasn't something
that we were talking about or charging.
It's not even very well defined in the law, to be honest,
but it's something that became part of the conversation when America became very afraid of Muslims, became very afraid of
Middle Eastern people, right? So terrorism had that implication for a very long time. And then
there was this brief window in the last couple of years where they were using it against domestic
white extremists. And now they're not doing that anymore. And they're just going to charge you with
terrorism for looking sideways at a Tesla. Exactly. Here's how my co-host and friend Michael Schaeffer, who writes the Capital
City's columns for Politico, put it. He says, now the White House is beating the drums about
Tesla vandalism, creating another incentive for locals to play ball. The FBI director
called Tesla vandalism domestic terrorism. The president suggested sending vandals to
jail in El Salvador. If likening the run-of-the-mill political graffiti
to criminal bigotry is what it takes to keep the feds
from padlocking City Hall, the logic goes,
maybe it's worth it.
No, it's not.
I would say it's not.
No, it's not.
Maybe they want to do an extraordinary rendition
to vandals, but maybe it's worth, no, it's not worth it.
Baby.
It's not worth it.
You're not holding back the tide of fascism
if you allow fascism to happen.
Unlike local governments in Cleveland or Boston,
DC is really stuck between a rock and a hard place.
And I mean, I understand why city officials
are taking this appeasement angle,
but I guess, as you said,
I don't know how you can make the argument
that it's
like worth it.
Like, what are we getting?
If every single day it's going to be a new threat to DC's autonomy, a new threat to DC,
a new EO from the Trump administration, what are we really getting by playing ball in this
way?
Right.
And if you're saying you're saving your energy for the big fight, it's like, well, what do
you think the big fight is going to be if it's not the slow erosion of the safety and civil liberties of everyone who lives here? Exactly. What is the big fight?
Well, some might say the big fight is DC's tense budget showdown, which is ongoing. It's a little in the weedsy,
so like I'm not going to get too, too into it, but I'll try to give you the quick and dirty version
of what's going on. The district is overseen by Congress thanks to a provision in the Constitution.
So this means that DC is occasionally treated like a federal agency rather than like a city or a local
government under various laws. This used to mean that DC's budget was regularly delayed because of
this. The city had to wait for Congress to approve that DC's budget was regularly delayed because of this. The city
had to wait for Congress to approve DC's local budget alongside other federal agencies, which
Congress almost never does on time. So pretty much everybody agreed this was a problem.
So in the early 2000s, they changed it so that if Congress was behind schedule,
DC could just keep spending at its current budget levels without disruption until Congress is able to formally
approve a new budget.
But in March, that all changed because the language
was omitted from a new funding bill
that Congress passed in March that would basically
force DC to omit $1 billion from its budget.
Just to be clear, if DC were to omit $1 billion
from the budget, we basically could not function as a city.
The things that you need to run a city,
schools, garbage collection, all of that
would be cut to the point of not being viable.
I'm not even sure what that would mean
for the city to make that deep of a cut.
And the worst part is,
nobody really knows why Congress did this.
In my capacity as co-host for a local DC podcast,
City Cast DC, I've spoken to a lot of people in DC government and reporters and the best I can come up with is that
Congress just really does not understand what they have done. A reporter that I spoke to said that there seemed to be confusion with lawmakers
that we were talking about DC's local tax money and not federal money.
And so this was happening in March during the height of like doge efficiency.
I'm putting efficiency in like heavy scare quotes.
It was at the height of that.
And so the best I could think was that
lawmakers thought like, oh, this will,
we will be able to like say that, you know,
making DC cut a billion dollars from the budget
will be a big show of federal tax dollar savings, but we're not talking about federal money
We're talking about local tax money not federal money doesn't save anybody any federal money
And so I think that from what I've heard
It sounds like people like Mike Johnson just maybe like did not really have a good understanding of that
It is a little bit complicated, but like if you're a lawmaker like come on, dude
But again because you have no representative who is really
involved in this process, there's nobody in that room
going to bat for DC.
There's nobody in that room whose constituency is
DC who understands what it means to run DC.
Exactly.
And what's funny is that for all the talk about how we're not
a defund the police nation, this bill would kind of defund
DC police.
It would mean...
Who defund everything.
Yeah, it would mean like $67 million cut from the DC police budget along with cutting funding
for DC public schools and the Department of Human Services, which serves the city's poorest
residents, right?
So like it would defund everything, including the police.
So it's like funny to be like, we're not down with defund the police, but we are down with
this bill that kind of does it? Wait, like who do you think is going to fill the potholes? Who's going to be like, we're not down with defund the police, but we are down with this bill that kind of does it?
Wait, who do you think is going to fill the potholes?
Who's going to mow the grass?
Nothing will get done.
The city will fall apart.
Well, so our mayor has really been
doing her diplomacy thing and appealing to exactly that,
right?
Trump has been really clear about all these goals
he has for the district, like beautifying DC and cracking down
on crime and homelessness.
There is no way to do that if you
are slashing the budgets of these departments that are meant to work on those things by tens of millions of dollars
Who's gonna prune the cherry trees? Yeah, Donald? I mean it was gonna prove almost as if Trump doesn't really care about doing any of this
Stuff. He's just like talking big and doesn't give a shit about how it actually plays out. He doesn't know how anything works
Yeah, I mean that's really the bottom line for me,
is that when you have Trump really loudly talking
about the ways that he is meddling
and the way that DC is run, he's not
someone who is good at efficiently governing.
And so like, you know, same with you all about DC,
we have a functioning local government,
a functioning city, putting somebody like Trump
in charge of how things get done,
what happens to encampments, what happens to education,
what happens to crime, like that's just a terrible,
terrible move for the city.
I mean, it's like, you know, at a shitty retail job,
you get a new assistant store manager
and they try to change the way the schedule gets made
just so they can look like they're doing something
so they can feel like they're in charge.
And it's like, yeah, dog,
that's just not how things work at this store.
Like it won't function if the key holder doesn't open.
I wish I could tell Trump that like,
I'm taken back to my days of working retail at the mall
where you could just be like, actually, Greg,
that's not how it works here at this Claire's.
I used to work at Claire's.
It just won't work like that.
Like I know you're very important and you're in charge here, but it's just. It just won't work like that. Like, I know you're very important
and you're in charge here, but it's just like, it won't work.
It won't work.
So yeah, I mean, as of today, there has not
been a vote on DC's budget.
Trump actually signaled that he is on board
for a fix that would prevent this billion dollar cut,
and he urged the Senate to vote for it.
He posted, the House should take up the DC funding fix
that the Senate passed and get it done immediately, all caps.
But everybody's on recess.
And so in the meantime, it's not clear what's going to happen.
And the city did announce that they're
looking at making cuts and furloughing staff
because it's not clear what's going to happen.
So it's not that the city doesn't have them.
It's not like the city is broke.
The city has the money.
They're just not allowed to budget it. Yes, exactly that.
And for no reason, it's a fake problem.
Fake problem.
But again, I don't know that people like Mike Johnson understand
that there are people who live here who, you know, just want to have their trash
taken out, just want to be able to educate their kids, just want to be able to, like,
live our lives in the city.
And I think I said this on it could happen here before, but I have to feel like it's
punitive, right? Like DC, nobody didn't vote for Trump like DC didn't vote for Trump. Like,
you know, Nikki Haley won DC's Republican primary, not even Trump, right? So like we
have made it very clear that we don't like him and we don't want him here. And I guess
I just have to say the only thing that makes sense as to why Congress would
do this is punitive.
It's to be like, fuck DC and the progressive, hippie-dippy, educated people who live there.
It just feels like a punitive attack on the district.
But again, just like shooting themselves in the dick.
Because if the city falls apart, you still work here.
You still have to drive on the streets here.
Well, I mean, if Trump gets his way
and DC just becomes like a, instead of a city,
like a military compound that is controlled
by like his goons.
Right, like a Trump Vatican city
where he's the king of this little tiny country.
That is my ultimate biggest fear
about what is on the horizon for D.C.
That is like the ultimate ultimate like negative fear that I have.
And I guess bottom line is like this is why D.C. needs statehood.
Like we are facing such unique threats from the Trump administration that no other place
in the United States faces.
You know there are a million reasons for DC to become a state, but this is, I think
that the way that Trump is acting toward our city, toward our mayor, toward our council,
with regards to our budget, like, it all just makes so much sense that our residents should
not be at the behest of somebody like Trump to have our city run the way that we want
it to be run.
And yeah.
It just doesn't make sense.
It doesn't make sense. It doesn't make sense. It doesn't make sense.
The city should be able to make its own budget.
There's no reason for it to function like this.
There is no reason for it.
So from your lips to God's ears, hey ho ho.
Yeah, so like, I guess what should people look for?
Like what's the next step in this process?
Like when's the next vote on this?
So when lawmakers are back in session,
we should have some sense of what's going on with DC's budget.
The thing I would end with is, like, give a shit about DC.
Like, don't be somebody who perpetuates the idea
that the only thing happening in DC is, like, national politics
and, like, where national conversations are happening
because, you know, there are 600,000 people who live here,
and we want to be able to control our city conversations are happening because, you know, there are 600,000 people who live here and
we want to be able to control our city and control our tax money. Like I pay taxes just
like anybody else and it's ridiculous that I get less of a say than everybody else.
So if you don't live in DC and you hear about Congress or the Senate voting on stuff that
impacts DC residents, like you might hear about them voting on the DC budget fix bill,
you can call your representatives and advocate on our behalf and kind of be our voice because
we don't really get one.
Hopefully this all gives you a sense of what's at stake for us.
So please give a shit about DC.
Give a shit about DC and hopefully you guys still have garbage services.
We'll see.
Molly, thank you for running through all of this with me.
You're such a good co-host.
Yeah, this was fun.
Yeah, I listened to Bridget's podcast,
There Are No Girls on the Internet.
Listened to Weird Little Guys.
A Webby award-winning podcast.
Yes, so deserved.
Are you like keeping your wedding secret?
Is that something I can talk about?
Well, I did tell the listeners
just because there's gonna be some reruns coming up
and I'm getting married soon. So I will be out of town for a little bit.
But yeah, so I got a lot going on.
I got my weird little guys.
I got my weird little wedding.
Well, congratulations.
I was telling you off mic that I love it when women who do work in the extremism,
right-wing space, have happy, thriving personal lives.
So it brings me a lot of joy.
Deeply, congratulations. Thank you. Yeah, it brings me a lot of joy, deeply congratulations.
Thank you.
Yeah, I am experiencing a lot of joy.
You deserve it.
Thank you.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating. I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast, Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls from anonymous strangers all over the world as a fake
Gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains and learn a little bit about their lives
I know that's a weird concept, but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give it a shot matter of fact
Here's a few more examples of the kinds of calls we get on this show
I live with my boyfriend and I found his pizzeria in our apartment.
I collect my roommates toenails and fingernails.
I have very overbearing parents. Even at the age of 29, they won't let me move out of their house.
So if you want an excuse to get out of your own head and see what's going on in someone else's
head, search for Therapy Gecko on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's the one with the green guy on it.
This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler, Connie Britton is here.
I think you should encourage your friend to go ahead and not be holding out for any man
to have her babies.
If she is passionate about becoming a mother and she has her eggs frozen and she has her life together,
go for it.
She could be waiting another 10 years
before she finds the right guy.
Connie didn't meet her right guy until you were what, 50, Connie?
How long have you guys been together?
Yeah, no, 52.
52.
52.
I adopted my son as a single mom because I kept thinking,
oh, I'm going to meet the guy.
I'm going to meet the guy.
I'm going to meet the guy.
I finally was like, what am I waiting for?
And I did it.
And I'm just so glad that I did.
I want to change the narrative about single parents
and also help to create a community for single parents
so that they can not feel alone in it.
One of the big things is it's so hard,
especially for women, to ask for help.
Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My husband has a secret son from a past partner.
Hold up, Sam, how do we know how we've done the DNA test?
Well, John, luckily it's Mother May I Have a DNA Test Week
on the OK Storytime podcast, so we'll find out soon.
And this wife writes,
My husband received a Facebook message
from a woman saying
that he is the father of a five-year-old.
Whoa!
At first, he didn't remember her,
but then he realized they had a one-night stand
right before we started dating.
Wait, but do we have proof he's the dad?
Well, the author says there's no confirmation
the kid is even his son,
but the woman from Facebook has a meeting
with her lawyer soon.
I think she's going after our money.
If the kid is actually my husband's,
she would be entitled to it too.
So what's a husband gotta say about this?
This could be his kid.
Well, apparently he broke down in the middle
of the living room apologizing,
but this is what scared me.
His first instinct, if the kid is his son,
is to pay the child support,
but not be an active father in the kid's life
because he only wants a family with me, his wife.
Oh, this is a mess.
To hear the explosive finale, follow OK Storytime
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, my name's Jay Shetty, and I'm the host of On Purpose.
I just had a great conversation with Michelle Obama.
To whom much is given, much is expected.
The guilt comes from am I doing enough?
Me, Michelle Obama, to say
that to a therapist. So let's unpack that.
Former First Lady Michelle Obama and someone who knows her best, her big brother Craig
will be hosting a podcast called IMO.
What have been your personal journeys with therapy?
We need to be coached throughout our lives. My mom wanted us to be independent children.
And she would always tell me, stop worrying about your sister.
Having been the first lady of the entire country
and representing the country in the world,
I couldn't afford to have that kind of disdain.
What would you say has been the most hardest recent test of fear?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeart Radio app, What would you say has been the most hardest recent test of fear?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Welcome back to It Could Happen Here, a podcast normally about it happening here being, you
know, the real world where you live.
But for the next two weeks after this and for the week before this and for this week,
we're talking about it happening in a galaxy far, far away.
That's right.
This is the second in our four part series reviewing and discussing Andor Season 2, which
due to a series of incredibly unlikely events has become the most radical media to reach
a wide audience in the United States in quite some time.
I am here with Mia Wong and Garrison Davis.
How are we all doing today?
Hanging in there.
Hanging in there.
As we always are.
Yeah.
Just watched episodes seven through nine last night, which is really helping with the hanging
in there.
I have not seen that shit yet, so.
Yeah, that's for next week though.
We have to say that for next week.
Yeah, well we're not talking about them now, but we watched them this week and I'm happy.
I did watch them and oh boy.
But we still have a lot to talk about for episodes four to six.
It does kind of set up what we see later on, but I think there's a lot of interesting stuff
there with like building an underground resistance, a lot of spies and espionage mixed in with like the personal cost of rebellion and how it affects like
your personal life, your relationships. So there is a lot to discuss here, but oh boy,
I am excited for next week.
Yes, I am very excited for next week. I'm very excited for this week, which we should
talk about. So kind of there's a few themes running through these three episodes.
One of them is, yeah, the cost in terms of your personal life
on being part of a rebellion.
And yeah, I'm interested kind of,
what are some of the, I mean,
there's one real standout moment in these episodes
that I know we're all gonna wanna talk about,
which is a speech given by Saul Guerrera.
Saul, yeah.
Played by Forrest Whitaker, just amazingly.
Yeah, the Nitro speech.
Yeah, the Nitro speech.
We'll get to it. We'll get to it.
We'll get to that, but yeah,
we should start with the first of these episodes.
Yeah, episode four, Ever Been to Gorman.
I guess once again,
if you do not want to be giving Disney Plus your money,
you can be like Hondo Anaka
and acquire the show that way. Remember the torrent combinations. Remember the variations.
Gotta keep them all in your head.
Yes, yes.
All nine or eight variations.
Let's do a quick recap of this episode,
then we'll talk about some of these aspects.
So, one year later from the previous episodes,
Cassian and Bix are on the planet Coruscant,
staying at a safe house in between running missions for Luthen.
Bix is severely struggling with PTSD, while Cassian is stressed about having to avoid
surveillance while hiding in the capital city.
And Bix is also, we find out, abusing space annex.
Yeah, later on we can see that she's using space drugs to help her cope with the massive amounts
of trauma that she's been forced to deal with the past few years.
Now, our favorite weasel, Cyril Karn, has been transferred to the planet Gormont, where
he's running the local Bureau of Standards in the capital city of Palmo.
He refutes Imperial propaganda about Gormont while on a FaceTime call with his Fox News
addicted mother.
She's talking about like, yeah, the Imperial News says the Gormans are super arrogant,
just real assholes.
You gotta stop watching Imperial News, mom.
But this may be a ploy from Cyril because Cyril knows he's being monitored and surveilled
by members of the Gorman Front, a small underground
resistance group. While working as a double agent for his ISB girlfriend, Dejra, Cyril
gets invited to a town hall meeting where he's introduced to the leader of the Gorman
Front, a local businessman and city councilor, and then Cyril is recruited into the resistance.
Yeah. I want to say a little about the Gorman Front because they're very clearly French
resistance and World War II coded.
They developed a whole language for them to speak, which is basically like French.
With French phonics, but different words.
Different words.
And so it sounds a little bit like French and German got mashed together.
People who speak both have told me.
I don't know.
I'm not a language guy, but it sounds distinctive.
And they're very clearly like, again,
the whole industry of this planet is high quality textiles
that come from like spider silk.
But also clearly the guy who's leading the resistance,
his business is kind of meant to evoke
sort of like a classic like French vineyard.
Like so he's not a poor man, right?
No, he's like wealthy.
He's like well off.
Yes, yes. I mean, that's a big part man, right? No, he's like wealthy. He's like well-off. Yes. Yes.
That's a big part about Gorm is this is like a middle-upper-class status planet.
This is a big part of Luthen's interest in the planet.
If he can bring a planet with that status into the Rebellion,
that could have a whole bunch of advantages.
That's why he's at least looking into them as an option
and eventually setting them up for an accelerationist push.
Yeah, because I actually think it's a slightly different even than that, but we'll talk about
that when we get to episode nine. Yeah.
Sure. There's an ISB board meeting where they discuss a batch of new raids and arrests
on rebel activity and how to deal with this influx of arrests that's making it hard to
process and obtain useful information.
Luthen's ISB spy informs them of the Empire's increased interest in Gorman and that the
ISP is running covert operations on the planet.
Meanwhile, Senator Mon Mothma unsuccessfully lobbies against the Emperor's re-sentencing
directive and at Saw Gurira's hideout, Willem teaches Saw as partisans how to safely deploy
a fuel pipeline diverter.
Yeah, and specifically, Saw puts him with one of his guys
who's kind of coded as being like a close to Saw,
like this is somebody that he really trusts.
And it's kind of implied fairly soon that like,
Saw doesn't want this guy going back to Luthen
with information, right?
He wants to keep Willow.
Yeah, he has just like kidnapped this guy.
It's like...
Well, he wants to kill him at first.
That's the statement he makes to his guy is like,
once you have these variations down, we're gonna ice him.
Saw doesn't really trust Luthen very much anymore.
He never did.
Luthen's slowly losing a lot of the trust
that he's built up throughout the galaxy.
Yeah, but like one of the things that's interesting here
is that like we kind of see Saw's paranoia
where there's a bunch of variations you need to know
to get fuel out of any number of different things.
And the guy's like, I have to memorize too many.
If you just let us know which one we're trying to go after.
But that would make it clear which fuel station
they're going after.
So Saw doesn't want to say shit initially.
So this episode, we're introduced to the planet Gorman,
like, in person.
It's basically like northern Italy mixed with French culture.
The massive set they built is just gorgeous.
It's huge.
Huge town square for the capital city of Palmo.
The amount of money they spent on this show.
The protesters, I think, is really interesting because it's like...
The protesters at the monument of the Tarkin massacre.
Yeah. They're sort of fascinating because it's like...
The way that their banners are designed really, really remind me of, like, pictures you see from, yeah, they're sort of fascinating because it's like the way that their banners are designed really really remind me of
Like pictures you see from like 1917. It's like very very similar to that and also they have a thing
That's a very common protest thing where it's like there's a there's you know, there's protests going on
So there's like just like ten guys in the square all the time. Yes, kind of like chant and stuff
Yeah, always making noise
They're kind of keeping a vigil because basically what happened is,
and this is another interesting,
Tony Garoui is kind of famously not a Star Wars fan,
like prior to working on this.
And so there was a lot of like anxiety
from big Star Wars nerds that like,
oh, this isn't going to feel like Star Wars,
but he clearly has a lot of folks who understand
not just like the stuff that's come out, you know,
since Disney started in the different books and comics,
but like the old legend stuff.
Cause in legends, like a major spark of the whole rebellion
was the Gorman massacre, which is in Tarkin lands.
And Tarkin's the old guy in the Death Star in A New Hope.
Right?
Like he's the guy who's Darth Vader's boss
in the first movie.
And he lands a craft on a crowd at Gorman.
And that's supposed to have been one of the major sparks.
And they've retconned it a little,
but to the point where that still happened,
but it's clearly the setup for a larger massacre
that this season is building towards.
Yeah.
And Space Box News, very good.
We see the Ministry of Enlightenment's efforts
to weaponize public opinion
and how much it's working on someone like Cyril's mother,
who then becomes convinced that the propaganda that she's being fed
is stuff that she already believed, absolutely, right?
It's stuff that she's retconned into her own memory of being like,
no, I've always never trusted the gore, right?
Meanwhile, she's sitting in front of her like TV, like 24 seven, watching this like
garbage get beamed into her brain.
And I'm wondering, did you all wonder for a second if
Cyril was legitimately getting pilled by
the goremen?
Yeah, because it's good, right?
There's like that moment where I'm like, well, fuck is he is our
boy like starting to have a break already?
And then he realized like, no, that's
that's what we're getting.
That's kind of what's being set up is like how like will will this experience
for Cyril like change him as a person and like I think yeah the audience is
meant to not fully know and I think I think it's it's definitely like
possible but but Cyril might be more of a hard-ass than what some people give
him credit for yeah because he is he's very excited to get invited to this
meeting he purchases a spider from one of like the Gorman front like recruiters than what some people give him credit for. Yeah. Because he is very excited to get invited to this meeting.
He purchases a spider from one of like the Gorman front,
like recruiters that has information on how to go to this like public town hall,
where he talks about, hey, you know, if maybe we can start working together,
maybe we can start feeding information.
One point hilariously, he gets accused of being an Imperial spy in like a joking manner.
Yeah.
And denies it, and then he gets on the phone with his isp girlfriend. He's like I'm in
This is this is sort of first time she is the Gorman front people
These people have no idea what the fuck they're doing. They are amateur agree. They are like
Yeah, like their operational security is unbelievably dogshit. They like wiretapped one guy and we're like, hey
Let me introduce you to the leader of our organization.
We have met you one time. We have listened to one phone call.
You're in now.
I just...
I think they probably listened to more than one.
Yeah, but it's still like...
They've definitely been watching him for a while.
They didn't vet him much. They just were kind of like,
hey, you're going to like meet our leader now at the first meeting you've shown up to?
He met like the public facing aspect of like, hey, you're gonna like meet our leader now at the first meeting you've shown up to.
He met like the public facing aspect of it, I guess. Yeah, you can see the Gorman, like they have some degree of sophistication and that they're tapping like him and they've been listening probably for quite a while.
And they sweep their shit every day for bugs.
So you understand that like they have an idea of what they need to be doing.
But when it comes to all of the in-person stuff,
that's where they're incompetent, right?
Where they don't have the actual operational experience
to know when someone feels off, right?
Like, that's the stuff that they're missing.
Like, man-to-man, on the ground is where the problems come in.
Like, you can tell they're thinking this stuff through,
but they just don't know what they're doing enough.
This is the thing, Eugene, what you run into like in the
field a lot where there's people who like have read a lot of stuff about operation security,
but haven't done anything. And so they don't under, and there's, there's varying levels
of this, right? But you get this to do people where it's like, they don't know what the
important things are. So they do some of the stuff, right, that they've read, but they don't understand how to put all of it together
to like do something securely.
And so you'll get these things where like,
some of their stuff is like unbelievably secure
to a point where it's useless.
And then some of it is like-
Very open.
Yeah.
Yeah, they're just like, hey, have, I don't know.
Yeah, they'll just bring people into stuff
that instantly compromises everything that they're doing
because they haven't like thought it through.
Yeah. I mean, and this is something that Cassian talks about in the next episode, which we will get to shortly.
Yeah.
I mean, so much of these episodes is built around like paranoia and like surveillance.
Like Cassian's talking about not wanting to go like on a walk in the park because the Empire just put up cameras.
Yeah.
He's nervous about like where they go grocery shopping.
Like he's trying to like like, do everything right,
but it's, like, hurting his relationship with Bix.
And it's just making their life, like, very, very challenging on Coruscant
as they're, like, stationed there in between missions.
Like, meanwhile, like, Luthen's just trying to gain as much information on Gorman as possible.
He has a line that I like,
a smear campaign is an opening move, not an end game.
I need the endgame.
Yeah.
Talking about the limits of the Empire's Fox News style propaganda is only a starting position.
This is obviously leading somewhere and I need to know where that is.
And he's going to obtain that information slowly over the course of the next few episodes.
And then I think the other thing I want to talk about before we go on break is Mon Mothma's
lobbying against like the prison sentencing guidelines.
She says, quote, sector boundaries, civil liberties, personal freedom, respect for local
traditions.
You've been voting with me on these issues for years.
And the Gorman senator replies, this is security, Mon. You're confusing criminality and politics here.
Mon says, really? Are we finding criminals or are we making them?
Yeah.
This is where you see senators parroting, like, fake crime stats about how there's been, like, you know, this increased wave of crime.
But that's not true! Yeah.
Just because they're arresting more people, so that makes there be more crime.
And, like, we see this in season one, where Cassian's arrested at the beach planet for no reason,
and then sentenced to the Forever Prison.
Yeah.
Like, yeah, they are arresting more people.
So if you just look at those stats by itself, without any context on how other policing is working,
then yeah, it can look a certain way.
And this is what Mon's trying to push back on.
And the other senators are just too bought in to the Empire or too scared.
The Gorman senator believes that voting against the Emperor at this point would further endanger
his planet, even though this type of thing is actually going to end up biting him in
the ass in the next few years.
Yes.
And yeah, he is very much desperate to like, no, please, we can calm this down if we just
don't piss the Empire off enough.
No. The thing I think is actually interesting about the crime-sysistic stuff is that this We can we can calm this down if we just don't piss the Empire off enough. No
The thing I think is actually is interesting about the the crime statistics stuff Is that this is actually a more sophisticated operation than what happened in real life
We're in real life all the actual crime statistics were like crime is falling, but everyone just kept saying there was more crime totally
This is like arresting more people to jack the crime rates that he's a more sophisticated
Thing than what we actually
dealt with, which was the media just lying.
No, our own version of this, our not outer space version of like propaganda news media
can just say something and you don't even need the stats to back it up.
Yeah.
Let's go on break and we'll come back to talk about episode five. I have friends everywhere.
Ah, and we're back.
Yeah, so yeah, let's start with the summary of this episode.
All right.
Luthen wants a first person assessment of the Gorman front, but he's too high-profile to go himself, so he sends Cassian undercover as fashion designer Varian Skye.
The ISB stages a performative raid of Cyril Karn's office
to gain more cred with local rebels
as Cyril begins to feed them select information.
And he does such a good job of seeming pissed at it.
Oh, yeah.
He loves pretending to be pissed at the ISB.
He has so much fun kicking his little trash can across the room.
This is outrageous.
Yeah. Very good stuff.
And I do like, yeah, like the weaponization of like state repression
as a tactic to actually increase state repression, like long term.
Doing this like performative show so that Cyril like builds trust and like solidarity with the other rebels. Very good.
Luthen visits Bix at the safe house and grows concern for her well-being as she uses space
drugs to cope with trauma.
Yeah.
Cyril arrives back on Coruscant to report to ISB Command, has a one-hour meeting with
his girlfriend where they turn off the lights.
After arguing, because she's had him followed.
After arguing. Yeah, he's a little bit pissed that she's having him followed,
and then she orders him to turn off the lights, and then they do something for an hour in their apartment.
God only knows.
I don't want to know. I don't want to know what they get up to.
These fascist weirdos.
But at ISP command, they plan how to carefully push the Gorman front into taking action against the empire.
Cassian makes contact on Gorman and is unimpressed with their operational security and warns against trusting an imperial source, as the ISB could be feeding false intel.
Some of the best moments in this episode so far, because it's, they don't know shit about
Cassian, so they don't know who they're talking to.
And when he's like, you guys shouldn't do fuck right now, because you don't know shit
about fuck.
They're like, well, you're not a real revolutionary.
You don't get it.
And like, honestly, I understand what's being expressed there too.
And like, we'll get to that in a sec.
The Gorman front is adamant that their source
is vetted and reliable,
even though they haven't really been vetted.
The plan is that the resistance seeks to expose
the construction of an imperial military base on Palmo,
something that the empire denies,
though it seems most of the citizens
actually already take this to be true,
and or questions the necessity of this plan,
and relations sour with the group.
Back on Coruscant, Kleia learns through radio chatter that one of Luthen's listening devices
may be discovered during an artifact reappraisal.
Saw kills an imperial spy and his crew forcibly recruits Willem and while on mission installing
a fuel diverter, Saw convinces Willem to huff the fuel fumes.
Yeah, we'll talk about that in a second.
I wanna talk a little bit about Cassian on Gorman.
Yes.
And there's a lot of interesting stuff there
and specifically when the Gorman front leader
calls Cassian out for not being a real revolutionary,
which I think is kind of true.
Cassian at this point is a thief and a soldier. He thinks about things purely from that, like, operationally, like, tactical point of view.
He doesn't have, like, a larger, like, politics he's, like, focused on, right?
Like, like, Luthen is more of, like, a revolutionary. A very, like, manipulative one.
But, like, he is focused on, like, this, like, larger political game.
And this is something that, like, at this point, Kassian's not fully, like, interested in.
He's more interested in, like, on the ground, like tactical preparedness.
He is interested in what he can do and get away with. Right?
Exactly.
As opposed to Luthen is interested in what does more damage to the Empire. Now, what's
interesting to me is that the Gorman front are actually in the middle. They think totally
that they are willing to do whatever,
but they don't understand what that is.
And part of what you are seeing here is the Gorman front
are adamant, we are ready for war.
We're already in a war.
And they're not technically wrong about that
because the empire is planning to wipe them out, right?
We know the empire does not plan for there to be a Gorman
in the future. So
the stakes are where they're saying they are. But even though they're saying that, most
of them don't truly believe or understand it. And Cassian understands what war is. And
what he is telling them is that you are, and he's right about this, you are not ready for
what you think you're ready for.
Yeah, totally.
Because what you're going to do is die. All of you.
That's what makes all their interactions so interesting,
because there is that unspoken tension,
which slowly gets, like, aired.
Because, like, they're really assessing different things.
Like, what Cassian's assessing is different
from what Luthen wants assessed.
And that's different from what the Gorman front
actually, like, want to do.
Like, they're okay with the degree of casualties,
like, being had, because they just want to, like,
have control over their planet again
and put up any resistance,
even if it ends up leading to hardship.
But I think the other angle of that too though is that
they don't know what they're doing, right?
No.
Like, their plan is genuinely really bad.
Right?
Like, the plan is they wanna steal an Imperial weapon shipment
and then reveal that the Empire shipping weapons in
But if you do that, then you've just like an end report is I was like, okay
So if you do this then you reveal that you did you hijacked the shipment?
So they're just going to like raid you all and they're okay with yeah
Yeah, but like and they're like okay with that visibility at this point and there's this this very standard
It's also this very common, and this is part of
what Cassian recognizes, this common myopic thing that you get with people who, again,
think they want a war that they don't truly understand the meaning of, where they're like,
we need weapons.
And when they think of weapons, they think of guns that they can hold.
And so that's what they're focused on getting, and that's what they think will let them fight
the empire.
When Cassid understands there's no fighting the empire
with what you can possibly get from a raid like this.
All there is is suicide.
And then there's the other level
of what Luther understands is so the fuck what.
Sometimes that needs to happen.
What matters is that these people die in public
and it pisses people off.
Yeah. Right?
And that's, there's this escalation of like the Gormans think
having guns means you can fight back. Or like guns, guns means that they'll be safer.
Right. And they're wrong. Cassian thinks staying alive for a future moment means that you can fight
back. And he is wrong. Lutheran understands that the only ammunition that really counts in this war is human life.
And that sucks.
And that sucks.
That's why he's lost his mind and soul.
Yes.
And that's why people are starting to really like dislike working with him.
Yes, because he's-
Even though he might not be like completely wrong here.
Yeah.
I like it so much this episode is built around finding bugs.
The ISB looks for bugs in Cyril's office.
The ISB is planting bugs in Cyril's office. The ISB is planting bugs in Cyril's office.
Bugs are hidden in the artifacts that Luthen's selling to high society.
Everyone's listening.
Everyone's always, everyone's trying to collect more intel.
And there's this, this issue the Empire and Luthen's organization are having with like,
we're getting too much.
You know, the Empire's like, we're arresting too many people.
Like number one, it's like cutting into our ability to get into these organizations.
And it also is just like, we're drowning.
And Lutheran says the same thing.
I'm always spacing on her name, but she's wonderful to his cons lady.
Like we're drowning.
We have too much shit.
Yeah.
Something I love is when Cyril's talking with the Gohmans Front about the ISB raid
of his office, the Gohmans Front remarks, remarks quote we think the ISB is running a shadow government without the emperors
And it's a real you hear this
Would you read about histories of like czarist Russia like even a lot of people who take part in the 1917 revolution?
Right right up till it started their attitude was like all of the czar knew what his advisors were doing in his name
He'd exactly be on our side and the same thing happened in the Third Reich if only Hitler knew was a common phrase
Well, like well Hitler cut doesn't know the Gestapo is doing all these awful things, of course
And it's it's so sad because like this is this is they're like local like resistance group
Who still has that level of delusion because they come from like high society, right?
They come from this like diplomatic background where they can solve things through free trade.
And they're like, surely the Emperor doesn't actually know what's going on here.
It must be the CIA. It must be the FBI. The ISB is running a shadow government.
They're the ones that are actually ruining things.
Yes.
And you're like, no, your enemy is the entire empire. Yes, your enemy is the ISB.
But it's also Cyril Carr and it's also Emperor Palpatine.
Yes.
And I love that's part of what I love about that
that laddered interaction between them and Cassian
and Cassian and Luthen is they're not really
revolutionaries either.
They they are protesters, right?
Totally.
They still think that the overall empire,
once it realizes how bad things are, will be on their side.
And Cassian thinks they can wait,
yeah, it's Luthen who's like, no, no, no,
there's one way out, right?
You know, going back to season one, there's one way out.
Before we talk about the Sagrera stuff at the end,
I do want to point out how wonderful it was
to see Cyril Carr in the ISB control room where he remarks that this is the greatest day of his life.
Oh, God.
It's just amazing.
Talking about going to Libby shit. It's like Libby finally getting to spy.
And Pardegas even makes that great comment where he's directly talking about the Gorman
front and he's like, yeah, there's a lot of people who think they understand shit better than they do,
because they're new to it.
But he's also, he's clearly talking to Cyril,
like, you don't know what you're doing,
but I'll use you, fine.
It's so good.
Cyril gains cred amongst the Gorman Front when they find out
that his background is that he lost his job because the ISP found out how badly he fucked up Ferex. Yeah.
And like, they're like, ah, I see.
Serna must have good reason to hate the Empire because of this.
And you're like, no.
Oh, you stupid fuckers.
He's desperately trying to like become some like ISP secret agent.
Yeah.
Like, he just wants approval from like, the daddy state.
And from his girlfriend, right?
Who has taken over for his mom in being like the primary source the
Person he's trying to impress the last thing I want to talk about in this episode is
This episode displays like two different types of drug use yes
Yeah, we have Bix who's trying to get over the immense amount of fucked up stuff
That's happened to her yeah by taking space Xanax if you will
amount of fucked up stuff that's happened to her by taking Space Xanax, if you will. She's barred out every night holding a gun watching TV and hey, who amongst us?
Yeah, and it's like...
It is disrupting her personal life. It's also disrupting her like operational capacity.
She has been sent out in the recent past and she can't be sent back out again.
And the specific, we don't even see the mission that most recently fucked her up,
but through her nightmares where Lydwen first,
she and Cassian captured an Imperial pilot
and Cassian killed the guy because he'd seen her face.
And she's, in addition to having been tortured
in season one, fucked up because like,
we didn't need to kill him.
And Cassian's like, yeah, we did.
Like, he saw your face. That's it.
The weight of resistance is really getting to Bix.
Yeah. And like, like, Luthen comes over to, like, check on her and also, like,
see if she's able to, like, work, see if she can, like, appraise some weapons
or something. And he realizes, like, she is not, like, well enough to
to to work at this point.
Yeah. And becomes like getting worried for her and like, like, try to
to, like like plead with her
like you have to you have to make sure that you like stay healthy.
I don't know. It's definitely it's definitely hard to watch.
I think this is definitely like this moment.
It's like I don't know.
Bix has always had a lot of agency taken away from her.
Like you see this like in season one and we see this kind of now.
And I definitely would like to would like to see her get put back in the driver's seat
of her own life at a certain point.
But like, living through PTSD and living through these types of political movements does destroy people.
And this does happen.
Well, and just what torture does, right?
Yeah.
Torture breaks people. That's its purpose, you know?
So we have Space Xanax and then we have Saw Gerrera.
Yeah, we fucking do. So let's... I want to talk a little bit about his background,
some stuff that's not in the show.
In the show you see him when he is already basically
the hardest son of a bitch in the rebellion, right?
He is the only leader of a rebel faction
that Luthen treats as an equal, right?
Where like Luthen is meeting with him,
we see Luthen meeting with him directly.
Luthen is not willing to sacrifice he and his men in like, in order to maintain the cover of a spy, which he is
willing to do.
Yeah, because they're like serious militants.
Yeah, they are serious and they're, and every time we see them, there's more of them and
they have more ships. They're the first ones, they're the first rebels to use X-Wings.
First ones to have X-Wings.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And Saw's background, and you have, this is way way a bunch of the expanded stuff, but he started out as
essentially a local rebel on this planet during the Clone Wars that was not aligned between either major faction
But basically the Jedi taking the role of space CIA
Yeah armed him and his sister to lead like a rebel group against the other power
They were fighting in the Clone Wars occupation Occupation like separatist forces.
He was meant to be Mujahideen coded, right?
Initially, right?
So he's like a space Mujahideen
who's armed by the space CIA, who are the Jedi.
And then when the Republic ends,
he immediately starts fighting the empire.
And one of the kind of like moments that form saw
is his sister dies in the process of this failed attempt
to gain independence for their home world,
this place called Onderon, right?
You don't need to know any of that
to perfectly get and enjoy his character in these shows,
but the moment that we're about to talk about means more
if you understand his backstory with his sister, right?
Yeah, and he's been doing this ever since he was like a kid.
Yes, and yet this has been his whole life, right?
I think he's supposed to be like 46 when he dies in Rogue One
Hard 46. If you look at him, you know, he looks clearly older, but also he looks like well, yeah, he's been
fighting his entire life that ages people.
And he has this so the first thing that he does is he executes this guy who was set up as his friend when it
Becomes clear that that guy was a spy and it's insinuated
He thinks it's a spy for the Empire that guy might have been a spy for Luthor someone else
We don't actually know sure we know he was sending info to someone he was transmitting
Yeah, saw things that they were gonna set up like an ambush at their next mission
Yeah, and instead they evacuate their base and saw blasts him and basically says hey
To the kid your mind now and we're gonna go steal this fucking fuel
Yeah, so the next time we see them they've they've busted on to this imperial fuel lot and they're fueling up
Their ships and while the kid is like working out to set this thing up to allow them to take the the the ribo
Which is the
Rydonium, Rydonium, Rydos, sorry, the starship fuel. While the kid is like doing this job,
we've been told if you don't do it perfectly, it kills you and everyone around you. Saw
is monologuing and he's talking about his childhood where he was like, I was a child
slave, you know, forced to labor in these Rite-O mines, right? And one day there was
a gas leak and all everyone ran and you know, this stuff, it was so bad out there, the old
people would die and you'd come back the next day and the jungle was so thick, they'd been
eaten down to bones and one day everybody has to flee because of this leak, but I don't
run away because like I'm huffing this gas, I get high and I like realize for the first
time I'm alive, you know, he has has this like this moment and then when the kid figures out how to get the fuel hooked up
Saw immediately leans in and starts huffing what is effectively gasoline and
Going and the kids like what the fuck the kid who's wearing a gas mask. Who's like where I guess
He is like, what are you doing? And he's like, she's my sister, Raito. She's my sister and she loves me.
I want to read it here.
I have this back of the monologue quote.
You feel how badly she wants to explode.
Remember this moment.
You think I'm crazy?
Yes, I am.
Revolution is not for the sane.
Look at us, unloved, hunted, cannon fodder.
We'll all be dead before the Republic is back.
And yet here we are.
Where are you, boy?
You're here.
You're not with Luthen.
You're here.
You're right here, and you're ready to fight.
We're the RIDO Kid.
We're the fuel.
We're the thing that explodes
when there's too much friction in the air.
Let it in, boy.
That's freedom calling.
Let it in.
Let it run.
Let it run wild.
And he is, just for one thing.
The kid is choking on the fumes.
Is nearly dying from the gas fumes
that clearly Saw is barely affected by anymore, right?
It's again, this thing I love that they do
in terms of they're calling back to the older lore
when he calls this his sister.
But you don't need to know that his sister died
to get this moment.
It just makes it, adds an extra layer of meaning if you're a nerd for the lore
Which I appreciate a lot and it also sets up in Rogue One when we see saw near death
He's huff. He's on his own oxygen. He's a well, I think he's on oh, too
Because he's destroyed his lungs huffing he's huffing this now
This is this is what he's huffing that has been like like likened. Oh, wait, was it confirmed it wasn't oxygen? Okay.
Yes. Bo, the writer, called Tony Gilroy and said, hey, what if we have him huffing fumes?
And they went for it.
Well, yeah, but I think that was to try to explain because Tony said he didn't know why
Saul was on oxygen when he put it in Rogue One. And so they came to explain it, but I think he's on oxygen because all this.
I think it's been retconned to being that he's just huffing right now.
Is he just huffing right now? I don't know.
I saw it in an article, you know?
Yeah.
So.
Either way.
We'll see. We'll see. I could be wrong.
I was wrong last week about one thing. I miscredited the quote about the Empire's grip tightening
and systems falling through because the Theory Twink's British actor has a has an accent very similar to the
one Carrie Fisher poorly tries to imitate in A New Hope where she says that line.
So sorry George, sorry George that was your line.
Good line. The Theory Twink just has some very similar ones.
So I got confused. Accountability.
Wow. Mean to Carrie Fisher, Garrison.
Everyone knows her accent's bad in that movie.
We all know it.
I fucking love this speech by Saw.
Oh yeah, this is the most Robert thing I've ever seen.
Yeah, it's perfect, it's perfect.
Everything about it makes me so happy.
Bo Willemann continues to be like,
maybe the best modelogist writing for TV right now.
It's just such a raw scene.
And it explains both like why Saw is still around
because he's the most paranoid crazy son of a bitch
there is.
And because he, unlike everyone else,
and unlike the Gormans, unlike even Cassian,
he's the only guy who understands what Lutheran understands,
which is that like,
we're not here to see the other side of this.
We're here to catch on fire, you know?
Like that's the whole thing.
And hopefully that fire will grow.
And yeah, if that means we get burned up in the process, that is, that's how it be.
If the fire will burn very brightly.
Yes.
All right.
Let's go and break and then come back to discuss the final episode in this arc. Okay, we are back.
And or season two, episode six, what a festive evening.
Luthen sends Mon Mothma's cousin Val to reestablish relations with the Gorman front after Cassian's
icy reception.
Cassian and Bix reunite on Coruscant, but then Cassian shows up at Lutheran's
shop to confront him about checking in on Bix at the safe house while Andor was
on mission in a possibly like opsec irresponsible move.
Huge opsec fuck up.
Huge opsec fuck up.
Cassian Andor's face is known.
Yeah, not good. This is like Cassian's emotions getting the better of him here.
Senator Mon Mothma and her husband Perrin attend a party of the Empire's elite where
she debates Krennic on Imperial cruelty and the mindset of a rebel underdog.
Meanwhile, Kleia uses their undercover ISB agent to help remove a listening device hidden
in the prized collection of artifacts.
Vel reunites with Cinta as they help to lead the Gorman Front's first attack, stealing
Imperial weapons on a cargo transport.
At first, things go according to plan.
Cyril watches from a distance and reports to ISB headquarters.
We should note ahead of this that during the meeting where they had about this, one point
that they had made is none of you have guns.
None of you carry guns on this. Me and her are the only people with blasters.
You don't need them. You're not competent to use them.
Yeah.
So near the end of this operation,
a civilian confronts the rebels about what they're doing.
And in the struggle, Cinta is accidentally shot and killed
by one of the members of the Gorman front,
a guy named Sam with two M's. I love Star Wars.
This episode ends with Bix and Cassian going on a mission one of the members of the Gorman Front, a guy named Sam with two M's, I love Star Wars.
This episode ends with Bix and Cassian going on a mission to kill the Imperial interrogation
expert Dr. Gorst, which they succeed and then walk away heroically from the explosion, similar
to...
Kill him by torturing him the way he tortured her.
And then they blow him up.
Then they blow up the building and they play the music cue from the very first arc,
the very first season, where Cassian is walking away with that fast drum beat.
So this episode has so much about relationships complicating political activity, right?
We have Andor and Bix, we have the lesbians, Val and Centa.
They killed my lesbian!
They did kill your lesbian.
They killed my lesbian they did kill your lesbian
Yeah, well I'm like they also have they also have serial and Deirdre We have like a like a lot of a lot of like how relationships and politics like function how we're where there's friction
When things can go well with things can go bad
Let's talk I guess a little bit about
this party where where
Where? a little bit about this party where, where, where, uh,
Luthen talks with Krennic very, very briefly.
And at the end, I mean, this is, this is a very effective scene where they like build tension with Kleia trying to remove this bug while Krennic's like in the
room, seeing, seeing these other artifacts and it's like debating Mon.
But when, when Luthen and and Clea leave they jokingly remarked
so good man we should have killed the critic when we were up there and they laugh and you're like
yeah yeah no you guys should have that's not a joke really you really should have killed credit
you really should have killed credit it would have fucked things up but then the Death Star
may not have been completed yeah and this whole thing would have gone differently although you
know you know in in a way the Death Star Death Star operation does lead to the fall of the Empire
in a paradoxical way.
But also, like, to be fair, they don't know that Death Star exists.
They know something's being made.
But he's like a super high up guy.
And man, that is tough.
That's a tough scene.
It's a tough scene.
Also, what's interesting is that it's a tough scene in light of the rest of the lore.
It's a really nice, cause they've been fighting,
bickering for this whole cycle of episodes.
And like your things are breaking down.
And this is a moment where like they get back
on the same page and you're like, ah.
Tension eases.
Yeah, well cause part of it,
cause like part of what's going on here is like,
Luthen is losing it, right?
And this is the thing, cause like he's,
he's struggling to make threads at once.
And like, yeah, you, everyone's fucking seen this. Like, yeah, your friend is juggling many threads at once. And like, yeah, everyone's fucking seen this.
Like, yeah, your friend is juggling 15 projects at once.
They're losing their goddamn minds.
And then, like, the girl in your group was on top of it,
has to just slap them and be like, lock the fuck in.
Yeah, no, Clea is a scary monster.
She is on it.
Yep.
Well, and it's made really clear in these cycles,
she is not his subordinate.
Oh, no. they are equals.
They are handling very different parts of the operation,
but she is not working under him.
No, and she is like the one who like,
is the reason any of this shit works.
Absolutely.
And it's like, that's a thing you see very often.
There's a line in the season one
where things are looking bad for them,
and he specifically asks her, is your go bag ready?
And he doesn't check his own.
So I think he understands, if one of us has to get out,
it should be you.
She has to survive. Yeah. Totally.
And I think that is where things are gonna be moving.
Yeah, I mean, when Cassian's coming back from Gorman,
like, Luthen picks him up and they start, like, arguing over,
like, is the Gorman front, like, a real thing
to, like, spend effort and, like, time on? Like, they're kind of all, like, green the Gorman front a real thing to spend effort and time on?
They're kind of all green. They don't really have good op-secs. They're just not ready yet.
And Luthen pushes back and says to Cassian, like, you're thinking small. You're thinking like a thief.
And Cassian rebuts, like, no, I'm thinking like a soldier.
And Luthen's like, no, you have to think like a leader.
You have to think like a leader. You have to actually...
And from Luthen's point of view, a leader is like a very like
manipulative role.
And like, you have to start using these guys as pawns for this like larger game because
the empire is bigger than just Gorman.
The empire is bigger than us.
We have to think bigger.
You can't just think like a, you know, a small illegalist who's going to steal your food
and not pay for parking and and just like get by
While still doing crime, but like, you know, try to like outsmart the Empire's like no like we are we are we are beyond that
We ain't robbing banks anymore
Yeah, exactly right like we are beyond the
illegalist like point of view we have to start thinking like much more much more like
Strategically and with like
the bigger picture in mind. Because like we are slowly getting closer to the Battle of Yavin here.
Yeah. And I find their little argument there really interesting. And then their secondary
meetup where Cassian's mad about Luthen checking in on Bix. And I think like I can understand both
their point of view here is this, I think this is still a big fuck up from Cassian, but it's like, it makes sense.
But like, yeah, the relationships getting like the better of him on like a strategic
standpoint like at this at this plot point.
And Luther still trusts them though, like, Luther still gives them the assignment to
kill Dr. Gorse.
So like, Luther still is able to work with these people and he still actually like oddly
enough like prioritizes empathy and like says says like like like empathy like you can you cannot have a
You cannot have a revolution without empathy. That's what this is built on and and even though he's a bit of a hard-ass sometimes
He still does like trust them. Yeah
Yeah, but he thought he also is deliberately fucking with him like like one of the yeah
He's very manipulative like he's like he's being unbelievably negative like like one of like one of the things here is like he deliberately gives
He's very manipulative. He's like, he's being unbelievably manipulative.
Like, one of the things here is like, he deliberately gives Bix, tells Bix about this assignment
that he was going to give her and then doesn't specifically to see if she would tell Andor
about it and to test how Andor would react to that.
Which is like, don't do that.
That's unhinged.
Like, that's like not, and this is like also part of like, you know, the thing you have
to like balance here, right?
Is like, you know, you have to be able to balance like getting people to do things that need to be done with
like not being a fucking asshole and alienating everyone and this is like a
Especially when you yourself because like like Luther is also falling apart. He's not gonna change. He's not he's never gonna change
Yeah, he's not changing. But that's like he's like the thing though. That's not his job
Yeah, no, he's not changing. That's the thing though, that's not his job.
Right? His job was to make the later stages of this where people act differently inevitable.
Totally.
And he understands that you need something that horrifies people to do that.
Right? And that's all he's trying to set up.
Lucid is absolutely like a moral, very manipulative.
I am still, I'm still team Lucid. A hundred percent. Even though he like sucks as a dude.. I am still Team Luthen.
A hundred percent.
Even though he like sucks as a dude.
Like I would hate to work with him.
Yeah, well it's like-
But like I still gotta be Team Luthen in the end.
Yeah, well I would just say like,
the thing is like if you try to act like this in like an actual organizing space,
this isn't gonna work.
You're just gonna piss everyone off.
Luthen's not in organizing spaces. No, he gonna be doing that right that's that's
what I'm saying though right like yeah yeah like this this works because of
the exact specific thing that he's doing which is he is the guy who was
coordinating a bunch of networks the thing is in order for networks to hold
together and work people have to have relationships with each other yeah and
if you behave like this in that situation it will fuck now everything and
this is like the conflict that's happening.
Like even inside of his own limited network,
is it like he's, he is like fucking with everyone.
And we'll get to that with the lesbian too.
You see how, you see the different levels
at which networks work here.
Like the Gorman front works because they're all friends
and neighbors who care about each other, right?
And that's why they are able to- Like real tactile solidarity. And they're able friends and neighbors who care about each other, right? And that's why they are able to...
Like real tactile solidarity.
Yeah, and they're able to stick together, even though they're not,
they don't have perfect competence.
We see Saw's group where someone made the comment that like,
well, he's basically a fascist.
And because of like the hold he has on his group, which is not what I saw at all.
I saw as soon as he shoots that spy, he has to prove...
But he's not a fascist. He has to prove to the rest of his group,
that guy was a spy and needed to die.
And once he does, they're like, all right,
well, back to the job, right?
I mean, yeah, no.
And he gets fucked up as part of just the necessity of,
it's literally the only thing he has
in between acts of terrifying violence.
But that's how that group bands together.
And then we see, you know, these smaller cells of experts, right?
Who they have their connections with each other and they have their little moments of vengeance.
And that's what keeps them going.
And the only thing that keeps Luther going is the pure logic of the calculus of what he's put together.
That's all he's got.
Yeah.
Information collecting boyfriend, always collecting information.
Yeah.
Alright, let's talk about the space lesbians who are running the French resistance.
So I liked a lot of what they did with them this episode.
I liked how they were like reuniting.
I liked the way they talked about
the on-again-off-again style of their relationship based on like having to live in this
rebellion like life. Like they can't always see each other. They're always being moved around by
Luthen. But they both specifically took this assignment like hoping and like and I think
like knowing that it would mean that they could see each other. So I liked the development that
we had with them as people who like you are like in the same spaces
But you not have the luxury of actually having like a life together
At this point in time they advise the little resistance group. They're they're much more friendly then
then
Then Cassie and is a whole thing. Did you come in or like all right you motherfuckers like you people are amateur
Yes, yes, oh, yeah, yeah, all right, you motherfuckers, like you people are amateur. Yes
Oh, yeah, yeah, no fucking guns. Yeah
No, like I guess they have more of a willingness to put up with the amateurs than Cassie I think I think is kind of what's going on there and you know, they're hoping that after this mission's over
maybe they'll be able to spend more time together and
Then Cinta does get killed.
And I've seen a lot of criticism of this.
I've seen people invoking like a like a like a barrier gaze type trope.
And I don't think that's my personal outlook on what's going on here.
I think a lot of people die throughout this show.
We had Brasso die.
And this sort of thing, like just happens.
That's that's the point is, yes, she's really good. She's really good. She's incredibly skilled.
And it feels so, like, purposeless.
Welcome to war.
I think that is part of the point.
And the upset, like a reaction that you have, I think is like, that's showing the strength of this.
It sucks to see a lesbian get killed, but I think we're
seeing so many relationships get like fall apart. We're seeing a lot of people
get killed. Brasso didn't die for any better reason, right? This is just how
war works. No, I mean I think I think the reason and this is an interesting part
of this. I talked a bit about this last episode, but it's like this is the most
like this is by far the most like gay Star Wars we've ever had, right? And it's
the most like I'm trying to think of the number of other shows the only time they didn't lean away from it or insinuate it
Yeah, no like well that is kissing this episode. It's like I'm like genuinely like I'm like racking my brain
I'm trying to think of like the number of like major TV shows
I have ever seen in my life where a non-white lesbian gets to kiss someone
It's like not that high
I think that's why people because like yeah, like this is this is this is an increase
This is the best representation of my culture, which is like de left this lesbian
Yeah, like gonna see each other like I've ever seen and it's like yeah, she fucking dies. It's like I think like
We were able to watch these characters develop over the course of like a few arcs, right?
Like we saw these in the Aldani heist where they were like basically the only two people to survive besides Cassie
Like everyone else on that on that heist died, right? Yeah
So the lesbians made it out of that they they struggled to maintain their relationship in the interim as as things happened
They had this emotional reunion here. I think you know, you could you could make an argument
Maybe you'd be better to kill Val, but we've had more development with Val because of being related to Mon.
So like, yeah, it is tough with like the disposability,
but that is a part of fighting in an environment like this.
Yeah, it's not that they're disposable. It's that combat is random.
Like, and fuck-ups are random.
Like, this exact thing, somebody screws up
and shoots when they're not supposed to and the bullet doesn't stop happens all the goddamn
time. And like, it's part of what fucks people up. If you talk to people about their, who
have war experiences, one of the things that'll fuck someone up the most is watching someone
they know and care about get turned into pink mist. And it's usually a situation where somebody hits or steps on or whatever,
an IED or takes a rocket at a bad time.
And there's this person that you knew and you care about,
and they're three dimensional to you.
And you probably plan to keep knowing them after that.
And then they're just fucking mist.
And it just it shatters people's minds.
And that's what happens.
Like...
And then Val's little speech to Sam afterwards being like,
you now have to live your entire life knowing that you took this person away.
And every action you take for the rest of your life is going to be all an attempt to make up for this.
Every Imperial you kill will just be one for Cinta.
Yeah, because like a Cinta was like a professional.
This is like the life that she led. Like you will never be able to understand how important she was.
You'll never be able to understand like how good she was at this.
And you're like a fucking like French kid.
Yeah, like you don't know what you're doing and now you have to spend your entire life
making up for it. And it was a very hard speech.
But I think Val did a really good job with that and like understanding like the
political necessity of like you can't let this be like in vain either.
Like you have to like you have to use it.
Making making his life worthwhile.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I mean, yeah, it's it was rough.
I mean, I would love I would love more more like gay characters living happy lives in Star Wars, but we rarely see anyone living a happy life in Star Wars.
This is not about happy lives.
I also that's not what we're seeing love the thing that doesn't get a huge amount of attention in
These episodes but is interesting to me is the guy that he was he pulled that Matt or whatever his name was
Sam Sam mama with the guy that Sam. I'm with two hands hold his gun to try to stop
It's just this random Gorman dude. Who's like, hey, no, I'm not gonna like leave. This is like my city. What are you doing here?
What's going on? He realized that he carries her body like he goes with them, you know
And we it's kind of unclear is he likes him service bar or is he literally a Gorman who at the whole time?
Was looking for a way to get involved and once he realized what was happening is like, yeah, these are my people
I'm with this was that the guy from the meeting or was it a different the the one from the he was
Yeah, okay. Yeah was at the meeting. Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I guess he just wasn't in the inner circle, but like he hops on, you know?
Yeah.
But no, I do understand like the racial disposability and like the barrier gaze like aspect that
can be read into this.
It's a tough thing to thread here.
And I think if you view this in context of all of the people that we have seen get killed,
like the entire Aldani crew, like Brasso, basically, you know, the droid from season one gets abandoned on that planet.
I think it does make sense, I think, in that larger context.
I think there's a way that not everyone has to to die to lead to rogue one like besides Cassian
No, not everyone but but someone likes it and like frankly like someone like Cinta the type of militant
She is they do have a short lifespan like that is that is part of the specific thing Cinta is doing is
Like you burn fast and you burn bright and sometimes you will die in a way
That's like really purposeless and that fucking sucks.
And that happens in war, that happens in activist spaces.
That happens in the United States with people here.
And often they are non-white gay people.
That's what happened in Atlanta.
So these things happen.
The number of people who committed suicide to after 2020, you know, like
Yeah, do we have anything else you want to want to say Mia?
do you have anything when I like close out on as the
Resident non white lesbian on the podcast
What is the next time I'm getting a non-white lesbian in Star Wars?
Like, I am going to be raising a black flag over Shenzhen by the next time we get another one of these fucking characters in this series!
You know, we had a non-white lesbian in Acolyte who also died.
She did die, yeah.
I do not see people talking about the barrier gay stuff with the acolyte as well nobody
And I think it's also worth it's I think it's also worth remembering like like this is this is a show starring like a non
White leading role like like Cassie Cassie is not wet
Yeah, so I think the racial politics are a little bit a little bit more more complex
I think yeah people are discussing. Yeah.
All right.
Well, these episodes have been amazing.
Everybody get into inhalants
and steal fuel from the military.
That's the message of Andor.
Run wild.
Don't do that, that's a joke, legally.
Okay.
Don't do that. That's a joke. Legally. Okay.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast, Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls from anonymous strangers all over the world
as a fake gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains and learn a little
bit about their lives.
I know that's a weird concept, but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give it a shot.
Matter of fact, here's a few more examples of the kinds of calls we get on this show.
I live with my boyfriend and I found his piss jar in our apartment.
I collect my roommates' toenails and fingernails.
I have very overbearing
parents. Even at the age of 29, they won't let me move out of their house. So if you want an excuse
to get out of your own head and see what's going on in someone else's head, search for therapy gecko
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. It's the one with the green
guy on it. This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler,
Connie Britton is here.
I think you should encourage your friend to go ahead
and not be holding out for any man to have her babies.
If she is passionate about becoming a mother
and she has her eggs frozen and she has her life together,
go for it.
She could be waiting another 10 years
before she finds the right guy.
Connie didn't meet her right guy until you were what, 50 Connie?
How long have you guys been together?
Yeah, no, 52.
52.
I adopted my son as a single mom because I kept thinking,
oh, I'm going to meet the guy, I'm going to meet the guy, I'm going to meet the guy.
I finally was like, what am I waiting for? And I did it. And I'm just so glad that I did.
I want to change the narrative about single parents
and also help to create a community for single parents
so that they can not feel alone in it.
One of the big things is it's so hard,
especially for women, to ask for help.
Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My husband has a secret son from a past partner.
Hold up, Sam, how do we know?
Have we done the DNA test?
Well, John, luckily, it's Mother May I Have a DNA Test Week
on the OK Storytime podcast, so we'll find out soon.
And this wife writes, my husband received a Facebook message
from a woman saying that he is the father of a five-year-old.
Whoa.
At first, he didn't remember her,
but then he realized they had a one-night stand right
before we started dating.
Wait, but do we have proof he's a dad?
Well, the author says there's no confirmation
the kid is even his son,
but the woman from Facebook has a meeting
with her lawyer soon.
I think she's going after our money.
If the kid is actually my husband's,
she would be entitled to it too.
So what's the husband got to say about this?
This could be his kid.
Well, apparently he broke down
in the middle of the living room apologizing, but this is what scared me.
His first instinct, if the kid is his son,
is to pay the child support, but not be an active father
in the kid's life because he only wants a family
with me, his wife.
Oh, this is a mess.
To hear the explosive finale, follow OK Storytime
in the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Hey my name is Jay Shetty and I'm the host of on purpose and
I'm excited for my next episode with Chloe Kardashian.
God I've been through so many things that at this point I
would rather not feel than feel because feeling is too much for
me to handle. All right, we're ready. I am Khloe Kardashian. Khloe Kardashian, everybody. Khloe Kardashian.
No one understands how it's, I'm not just a TV show.
There would be times that I was like,
I don't even want to go out to the grocery store
because I feel like I know what they're thinking about me.
And that was scary to me
because I've never been in a dark place for that long.
You've always taken care of others.
Have you discovered anything about why you've seen yourself take on that role in so many relationships in your life?
How do you even find the courage to trust again?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating. on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now,
and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast,
Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls
from anonymous strangers all over the world as a fake
Gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains and learn a little bit about their lives
I know that's a weird concept, but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give it a shot matter of fact
Here's a few more examples of the kinds of calls we get on this show
I live with my boyfriend and I found his piss jar in our apartment.
I collect my roommates toenails and fingernails.
I have very overbearing parents.
Even at the age of 29, they won't let me move out of their house.
So if you want an excuse to get out of your own head and see what's going on in someone
else's head, search for Therapy Gecko on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's the one with the green guy on it.
This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler,
Connie Britton is here.
I think you should encourage your friend to go ahead
and not be holding out for any man to have her babies.
If she is passionate about becoming a mother
and she has her eggs frozen and she has her life together,
go for it.
She could be waiting another 10 years
before she finds the right guy.
Connie didn't meet her right guy until you were what, 50 Connie?
How long have you guys been together?
Yeah, no, 52.
52.
I adopted my son as a single mom because I kept thinking,
oh, I'm going to meet the guy.
I'm going to meet the guy.
I'm going to meet the guy.
I finally was like, what am I waiting for? And I did it. And I'm just so oh, I'm going to meet the guy, I'm going to meet the guy, I'm going to meet the guy. I finally was like, what am I waiting for?
And I did it.
And I'm just so glad that I did.
I want to change the narrative about single parents and also help to create a community
for single parents so that they can not feel alone in it.
One of the big things is it's so hard, especially for women, to ask for help. Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My husband has a secret son from a past partner.
Hold up, Sam, how do we know how we've done the DNA test?
Well, John, luckily it's Mother May I Have a DNA Test Week
on the OK Storytime podcast, so we'll find out soon.
And this wife writes,
my husband received a Facebook message from a woman
saying that he is the father of a five year old. Whoa!
At first he didn't remember her,
but then he realized they had a one night stand
right before we started dating.
Wait, but do we have proof he's a dad?
Well, the author says there's no confirmation
the kid is even his son,
but the woman from Facebook has a meeting
with her lawyer soon.
I think she's going after our money.
If the kid is actually my husband's,
she would be entitled to it too.
So what's a husband got to say about this? This could be his kid. Well, apparently he broke down in the middle of the living room going after our money. If the kid is actually my husband's, she would be entitled to it too.
So what's a husband gotta say about this?
This could be his kid.
Well, apparently he broke down
in the middle of the living room apologizing,
but this is what scared me.
His first instinct, if the kid is his son,
is to pay the child support,
but not be an active father in the kid's life
because he only wants a family with me, his wife.
Oh, this is a mess.
To hear the explosive finale, follow OK Storytime
in the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, my name's Jay Shetty, and I'm the host of On Purpose.
And I'm excited for my next episode with Khloe Kardashian.
God, I've been through so many things
that at this point I would rather not feel
than feel because feeling is too much for me to handle.
All right, we're ready.
I am Khloe Kardashian.
Khloe Kardashian, everybody.
Khloe Kardashian.
No one understands how it's, I'm not just a TV show.
There would be times that I was like,
I don't even wanna go out to the grocery store
because I feel like I know what they're thinking about me.
And that was scary to me because I've never been in a dark place for that long.
You've always taken care of others.
Have you discovered anything about why you've seen yourself take on that role
in so many relationships in your life?
How do you even find the courage to trust again?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is It Could Happen Here, Executive Disorder, our weekly
newscast covering what's happening in the White House,
the crumbling world and what it means for you.
I'm Garrison Davis.
Today I'm joined by Mia Wong, James Stout, and Robert Evans. That's right.
This episode, we're covering the week
of April 30th to May 7th.
Yes, when you think of ED,
you think about rigid cylindrical things.
No.
Flying at high speed towards,
Sorry, that's a bad way to introduce
the fact that there's now a war going on
between India and Pakistan.
Jesus fucking Christ. I don't know, what else are we supposed to do? How are we supposed to go into this? Bad way to introduce the fact that there's now a war going on between India and Pakistan
I don't know. What else are we supposed to do? How are we supposed to go into this?
Pakistan and India are shooting. Yeah, let's okay. Okay. I'm going to attempt to do a very very very very brief Please God like do not let this be the extent of your knowledge about this conflict. But yeah, okay
Here is one paragraph about this conflict, but yeah, okay, here is one paragraph about this.
So when India gained and Pakistan eventually gained independence from the UK and the British Empire,
there was the partition. This is a process in which millions died and India and Pakistan were split into two states.
Millions die as a result of the disruption to infrastructure and as a result of mass
killings.
Yeah, and people fleeing back and forth between the two places.
There's been dissidia territory for fucking ever.
One of the most contentious parts of this has always been Kashmir.
There's a whole complicated thing here. So so Kashmir was sort of split into there's an almost entirely Muslim like
territory that ends up under the control of India and India has waged a brutal
military occupation of Kashmir since they got it basically. It ramps up and
down in terms of like how bad it is, but it's never good.
Yeah.
And this has been a constant source of tension between India and Pakistan, where, you know,
Pakistan has played its card of like, we are like the defenders of Muslims in India, and
there's been a series of wars also, but this is one of the few times you can say there
are genocides on both sides and it's true because like one of the wars that they fought was because of the the genocide that Pakistan did in what became Bangladesh
So like there are no heroes in this story
There is only I mean, I guess like, you know, there are people resisting repression from both states
They're good people, but neither of the states have clean hands. Yeah, but the states suck shit, right?
Like, you know, let's be clear about that.
Kashmir is one of the most militarized places in the world.
It got much, much worse after 2019,
when India withdrew the autonomous status
that Kashmir had had.
This sparked a bunch of protests.
They were horribly repressed.
There's been like staggering numbers of people
have died over the past like 30 years there.
Like a lot of like,
has access to the outside world has been cut off. It's difficult to get
people like in to it and obviously, you know, the thing about occupations is that there's been a very very long running series of sort of
insurgencies and
militant groups in Kashmir of various kinds
Pakistan has funded some of these groups as a way to sort of like poke a
stick at India and in late April a group killed 20 odd 26 I think yeah 23 26 I
don't think yeah I think that's the final number like Hindu tourists in
Kashmir it's worth noting there's no actual evidence that Pakistan is behind this, but no.
But that's India's claim.
Yeah, that's India's claim.
And this is causing things to get really, really bad in Kashmir itself, which is the
part of this, I think, has gotten lost in a lot of the discussion here, which is like,
like, if you if you read statements from from like, I mean, like, a, there's just been
like an incredible intensification of oppression and be if you read statements from
Indian officials they are they're just straight up talking about quote like Indian style final solutions for Kashmir
It's completely unhinged the Indian state has gone into this
I mean it like you know, it's it's Modi right Modi is running
Probably the world's most effective fascist government
Yeah
and his thing is always like a huge part of it has always been specifically about like wanting to repress Muslims and
this you know has has has kicked these homophobia into an absolute fever pitch and
The product of this is that they have started doing strikes inside of Pakistan
I'm gonna pass it over to Robert talk about like what those have looked like and what this conflict has been
Yeah, so and it's important
You know that during this terrorist attack, one of the big things
that is alleged is that husbands were executed in front of their wives.
That is going to be relevant for the name of the operation that India is in the process
of carrying out right now.
Prior to in the immediate wake of that attack, everyone knew some shit was going to go down
on the border. India was going to do something in part because India said they was going to go down on the border.
India was going to do something, in part because India said they were going to do something, right?
J.D. Vance, the peacemaker, as we call him, I don't believe anyone else has ever been called that
in the history of government or popular media, so yeah, that seems like a good nickname for him,
went to India like a day or two before this all happened to calm things down.
This is after making a visit to the Pope.
Or to tell Modi do whatever.
We don't know actually what he said.
Some people are like, Vance must have given them the go ahead.
I think it's just as likely Vance was like, hey, we don't really want a war right now.
Can you calm shit down?
And Modi didn't listen.
Or that Vance just didn't even have anything meaningful to say.
We actually don't know at the moment. But last night,
India started carrying out what they are calling Operation Sindur, S-I-N-D-O-O-R, is how it is
generally anglicized. The name of the operation comes from, again, I mentioned a little earlier
that during that terrorist attack in Kashmir, Hindu men were killed in front of their wives.
Sindur is a word that refers to this kind of colored dye that I believe it's like a
bridal thing that like women put in, I think it's in their hair, but it's a reference to
something that is part of like the traditional Hindu wedding and something that the bride
does.
And so it was specifically named this in order to make it very clear.
This is vengeance for that attack, right?
Like that's why it was named what it was.
Okay.
Does that all make sense?
Yeah.
Uh, sorry.
I've got to hear.
So send doors, the Hindi word for Vermillion, which is the red pigment Hindu women apply
to their forehead.
Right.
So like that, that, and so it's, it's a reference also to the fact that these terrorists are
said to have like shot their victims in the forehead.
Right.
So there's, there's a lot going on there basically.
Yeah. But that's what's relevant.
So when it comes to this, what's happening? First off, perfectly reasonable to call what's
happening war. India has launched cross border strikes. They appear to have launched both
cruise missiles and air strikes using modern jets. Pakistan has responded with modern military air defenses. What we can safely say right now is that this is the first full 21st century
here on peer military action.
And I know as came up in the meeting, people are going to say, well, Ukraine, not entirely.
Ukraine and Russia, there is a degree to which that is true because Ukraine is armed by states
that are peer or more than
peer to Russia in terms of military technology.
But Ukraine does not have an industrial base that is in any way comparable to Russia's.
They are not capable of manufacturing the weaponry that they need to compete with Russia
on the battlefield on their own.
That's why international aid has been so critical.
Pakistan and India are both effectively peers in that they both do purchase weaponry a lot
from other countries, but they also have domestic arms industries and they have potent domestic
militaries that are armed to a comparable standard.
And so there's a few things happening here.
I do not want to lose count of the fact that people are dying.
Obviously, civilians died in that attack in Kashmir.
At the moment, it looks like the death toll
from the initial Indian strikes is somewhere around 40.
Pakistan is claiming the vast majority
of those are civilians.
India is claiming that they only hit infrastructure
associated with the terrorist group
that they believe carried out the attacks in Kashmir
that they claim is being supported by Pakistan.
There is substantial evidence that the majority of the dead are civilians.
People have claimed that large chunks of their families were wiped out in these strikes.
I don't see any reason to doubt that, knowing how airstrikes work.
A good number of the dead though have also occurred as a result of cross-border artillery
fire and it's unclear to me if India and Pakistan have had a full on
artillery duel across the border or if this is Pakistan's artillery firing back
in response to the airstrikes, that part is unclear.
There are also videos where you can hear small arms fire.
So machine guns and the like, and reports that that is coming from Pakistan side
too, it's possible there is a cross border direct arm engagement.
It's possible no one died as a result of the small arms fire given the distances that this
is occurring at, right?
That the only deaths have been due to field artillery and due to missile strikes, right?
That seems likely at this point.
It's possible the death toll is much higher than 40, but that's somewhere around there
is what's been confirmed right now.
Now we have talked about the deaths.
Obviously the biggest concern is the loss
in human life here. I am going to talk about what this means on a military level because that is
relevant both how this conflict is going to proceed and how future conflicts are going to proceed
because we have not seen a peer on peer fight like this before in this century. One of the more
important things as to how this is proceeded is
that a number of the jets that India launched across the border are what are called Rafals.
R-A-F-A-L-E. This is a French fighter jet. It is broadly considered to be equivalent to an F-18
Super Hornet. Now, I say that if you go online and you listen to people who are nerds about fighter jets
They will pull a knife on you for claiming that right there are major differences between the two airframes
One of them is that the Rafale is a larger plane, which means it's theoretically capable not theoretically
It is capable of a significantly higher payload
However, there's a couple of problems that come with that one is that the Super Super Hornet, not only is it a smaller craft, but it is built for carrier
duty, which means it's wings fold, you can fit more of them on a carrier, they take off
and land more easily from a carrier, or a fall can take off and land from a carrier,
but it has to have a different loadout, right?
The other issue, a Super Hornet can stay supersonic with its full payload for longer periods of
time.
That means that it can be breaking the sound barrier consistently, not just using its afterburner
for like a quick burst of speed.
That matters because the faster you're going, the harder you are to shoot down.
The primary air to ground package it has is what's called a HAMMER, and that's an acronym,
H-A-M-M-E-R.
I don't know what it stands for off the top of my head, but they are between 250 and a
thousand pounds each, right?
These are their air to ground munitions that they are equipped with standard.
It's possible India has a separate loadout for them.
I don't actually know.
This is their standard armament.
Now they can only have their full compliment if they're not going supersonic.
So they cannot go supersonic for a comparable period of time to a super Hornet if they have
a full compliment.
From a military technology standpoint, the biggest news from the initial stage of the
strike is that at least one of these Rafals has been destroyed.
There's decent evidence that potentially another two.
If India lost three of these jets, they have 36.
That is a meaningful degradation of their entire Air Force capability to strike, right?
Losing these jets and they cannot be replaced on any kind of timeframe that is comparable
to how quickly they're being shot down.
Pakistan is claiming significantly more that they've Pakistan's claim is that they've
downed three Rafals, one MIG 29, one SU 30 MKI, and at least one Israeli made Heron drone.
People generally say Pakistan is probably exaggerating.
However, British authorities have confirmed at least 1 Rafale and there's 2 more that
possibilities that are being looked into.
It's possible 3 planes were downed but only 1 was a Rafale.
We don't really know yet, right?
But even 1 is a meaningful loss and the fact that it was downed says a couple of things.
One thing is that there's a decent chance chance what I suspect we might hear, especially if
three of these went down, is that India sent these things off with a full strike package.
So they were not able to go as fast as they normally can and thus were not able to evade
Pakistan's anti air defenses.
That may be what happened.
The other thing that we're seeing here is that Pakistan is equipped, they buy the best part, and Pakistan has a lot of S-300s and S-400s,
I believe, which are like what we've seen in Ukraine. Those have had a very mixed operational
history in terms of their capability to take out modern aircraft. Pakistan also has a lot of PL-15
radar-guided anti-air missiles. These are Chinese anti-aircraft missiles. They have never
been used in combat before. If you're a nerd for modern military technology, one of the things
people have been talking about in that field for a long time is how are these going to function?
We just know that they've been used because wreckage from them has been found and photographed.
People who are experts in these missiles online have confirmed this is from this weapons package.
It is very likely that the Rafale that was down was downed by this missile.
And if more than one was downed, they were all downed by these missiles.
So that tells us a lot about the comparable capabilities of both this modern Western fighter
that the French are selling and of this Chinese anti-aircraft missile.
And so that's really relevant if we're looking at both how this conflict is going to proceed
because I don't want to be coming at from this bloodless like, oh, I'm just interested
in the military strategy part.
This is relevant because if India has lost three of these advanced fighters that they
cannot replace on any kind of comparable timeframe in the first few hours of strikes, that suggests
one of two potential future outcomes.
Number one, the tempo of use of advanced aircraft in this war is going to change considerably
as it drags into the next stages, right? Because they simply can't maintain that tempo. They
can't continue to take those sort of risks. And that either means moving on to a lot more
ground engagements between infantry, between tanks,
between artillery, like direct face to face shit, or a potential for escalating things
to the next level.
And the only next level higher than where we're at is nuclear, right?
I don't think that is the likeliest outcome.
I do not think a nuclear exchange between Pakistan and India is the likeliest thing
at this point.
However, the rate at which India is attriting air assets
means that they're going to have to make a choice
in the not too distant future, right?
Although it's also worth noting,
we don't know entirely the degree to which
Pakistan's anti-air defenses have been attrited by this,
right, there's a lot of open,
there's a lot of unknown unknowns and known unknowns here,
right, as our good friend Rumsfeld would say.
I will say the other issue here,
if there is a nuclear exchange,
it's going to be the greatest humanitarian catastrophe
of the century.
That doesn't mean it's going to be a nuclear war
across the entire world.
And that shouldn't be your first concern.
Your first concern should be that
that would still mean millions of deaths
in India and Pakistan potentially,
at least hundreds of thousands, right?
The concern is not they start so everyone else does, it's they start and thus the
worst humanitarian disaster since World War II occurs.
Yeah.
I mean, some of the most densely populated cities on earth are in this region.
Like a strike in any major city there would be devastating.
Yeah.
A strike in Islamabad would be the worst thing that's happened possibly since the
Holocaust in terms of like human death toll due to human actions.
Yeah, it's pretty bad.
I know India claimed that they were launching a quote non-escalatory strike and it's so much as that means shit.
Yes.
They also claimed that the PL-15 didn't have its interceptor head, which I guess the French intelligence refuted.
Yeah, and this is all there's a lot that's unknown about kind of how these weapons have performed still but these are
From a in terms of both how this conflict is going to proceed and how future conflicts will proceed
These are things you should be looking at because these weapons platforms these are this is important
In terms of what war is going to continue to look like. Yeah, I think it's also worth noting a couple of things
One is that this is by far the largest like clash that these countries have had
in a long time, but also like there have been like periodic like cross-border skirmishes around
Kashmir for a while now, right? Like there was a pretty big flare up in 2020 that kind of lasted
in 2021. And so there is a chance that this doesn't turn into a full-scale war and that you get something more like what happened sort of recently with Israel and Iran where they like bomb
each other a few times and then everyone sort of packs up their bags and goes
home and continues to like poke each other with militant groups instead of
it being like tanks and I think that is like orders of magnitude more likely than like nukes flying.
Yeah.
Just to sort of like, yeah, like the chance at which these people start shooting nukes
at each other is not very high.
Like yes, just like in the history of nuclear weapons too, you have to understand that like
some of the most unhinged people who have ever lived like Curtis LeMay, like the US
and the Soviets never did it, like the soviets never did it like bow mao and the soviets never did it like
Apartheid South Africa had nuclear weapons and never used them some of the worst people who have ever lived have had access to nukes
And never fired them the odds that you're gonna die in nuclear fire are very very very very very low
It's not good. No everything is happening here is very bad, but like you do not need to be like
living in existential terror of like fire raining from the sky. That's not like a reasonable reaction to this.
And I've been seeing a lot of that.
So no, it's it's it's far from the likeliest outcome.
And your primary concern should be to people who are living there right now.
Yeah. Yeah. Right.
You know, it's worth noting that the 1999, the cargo war, that was not an insignificant
death toll, right?
Like you're talking probably, like certainly more than a thousand, I think, a thousand
to a couple of thousand people.
So that would not be, that's not certainly not out of the question without it escalating
in that way.
I think the primary concern that you always have,
the way I bring up weapons systems is that countries think in terms of stuff like this a
lot. This is a big part of why we get World War I, right? You have these nations that are arming
and they're always concerned with how do my weapons compare to my neighbors? If we go to war now,
I feel pretty good about where I'm at. And if I wait another two years, maybe they'll be in a
better position. And thinking like that is part of the planning that's going on in these states
and the planning about when do we escalate and how do we escalate?
Right?
Do we, do we move to a point where we've got masses of infantry shooting at each
other?
Well, maybe if we can't risk the continued attrition of our advanced air
assets, we do that, or maybe we make another decision.
That's why it's relevant to know about this stuff not because you want to nerd out over
Who's got the coolest missile and who's got the coolest planes?
But because that is very much how states think right anyway before we go to add to take this back to the executive dysfunction
Because that is what this is about not yeah
Not the current wars podcast in the immediate wake of all of this President Trump was asked about hey
How about these two nuclear-armed states going to war what do you think about that?
And he gave a you know just a
Traditionally eloquent you know donald trump response. It's a shame. We just heard about it
I guess people knew something was going to happen based on a little bit of the past
They've been fighting for a long time. I just hope it ends quickly
Me too, buddy. Great. I guess they've been fighting for a long time. Okay.
Anyway, let's go to ads.
All right, we are back. I'm going to talk now about some other horrifying geopolitical news.
Hey, this is Garrison from Friday, May 9. I have a correction to make on the original
copy of this episode. I made an error
in saying Greta Thunberg was aboard a humanitarian aid ship off the coast of Italy that was air
striked by Israel. The ship was indeed attacked, but she was not on that ship. I watched a video
of her discussing the attack and it sounded first person and then we recorded shortly thereafter.
But now it's clear she was not on the ship, but instead planned to board later that day
on the way to Gaza as a part of the humanitarian aid organization, the Freedom Flotilla Coalition.
More than a dozen other aid workers were aboard the vessel when it was hit.
And this relates to the larger humanitarian aid crisis in Gaza.
Now back to the larger humanitarian aid crisis in Gaza. Now back to the episode.
The past two months, Israel has forcibly cut off all food, water, machines, supplies, and
other humanitarian aid to Gaza.
Starving the Palestinian people as Netanyahu continues to reject ceasefire deals.
Reports from the UN say that Gaza will run out of food in days.
Yep.
I mean, it looks like a starvation genocide.
I don't know how else to phrase this.
There's really nothing else.
This isn't the time to mince words.
Every piece of evidence suggests this is a starvation genocide being carried out.
That they're trying to starve this population to death or until they all leave, which is
the same.
Yeah.
Genocide does not necessarily mean you kill everyone.
It is the forced killing and or displacement of a population.
Yeah.
Israel says that the Palestinians still have food for a few months, but the UN and other
aid organizations say that is not true.
Now last Sunday night, Israel's security cabinet approved a plan to re-occupy and hold the
Gaza Strip if a new ceasefire deal isn't reached by May 15th, while Netanyahu and Israeli
officials continue to undermine negotiations for a permanent ceasefire.
This plan is called Gideon's Chariots.
Jesus fucking Christ.
The plan is for the IDF to invade with four to five armored infantry divisions, mobilizing
uproots of 70,000 reservists, which would gradually occupy and secure basically
the entire Gaza Strip. According to Israel's finance minister, this IDF occupation would
be permanent, not even pulling back with the release of any remaining hostages. Though
other Israeli officials disagree on this and say this would be a temporary occupation.
Pretty hard to take their word on that. All remaining buildings
would be destroyed, flattening the entirety of the Strip, just like Rafa and the northern
side. Amir Avivi, the founder of the Israel Defense and Security Forum Think Tank and
a former deputy commander of the Israeli forces, say, quote, This is the only way to eradicate
Hamas, militarily and governmentally, is to take over Gaza and to conquer the area and
destroy them unquote. There's some added complications with
like legally like occupying Gaza under the Geneva Convention. A
formal occupation would require Israel to have the capacity to
operate as an official government authority in this region.
Now, there's no indication that Israel will follow the Geneva Convention
as they haven't.
Yeah, it's Israel. They never have given a shit.
Yeah, I don't see why we'd expect that.
But if they do occupy, they would be more liable
for the well-being of the Palestinians that would be inside the territory.
And the IDF does have a plan for this. They are planning to forcibly relocate around 2 million Palestinians to a single quote-unquote
humanitarian area, which is positioned in the rubble of Rafa, where secure quote-unquote
compounds are being constructed to distribute food and supplies to Palestinians who are
screened and approved as not being
members of Hamas.
This area will be managed by private US companies and a quote-unquote new international foundation
which works with Israel and the United States.
Established aid organizations in the UN announced that they would not be participating in running
these quote-unquote compounds, calling this a tactic to give the Israeli military even more power over how aid is distributed,
saying in a statement, quote, It contravenes fundamental humanitarian principles and appears
designed to reinforce control over life-sustaining items as a pressure tactic, as a part of a
military strategy. It is dangerous driving civilians into militarized zones to
collect rations, threatening lives, including those of humanitarian workers, while further
entrenching forced displacement."
An Israeli official said the only alternative to being moved to this quote unquote humanitarian
area would be to leave Gaza quote unquote voluntarily to other countries, citing Trump's plan to resettle displaced Palestinians.
Robert, James, Mia, do you want to comment on this?
It's not much to say, it's like, it's, they're just saying the thing that they've been going for for a while now,
which is the removal of all Palestinian people from the Gaza Strip,
either in body bags or to live somewhere else, I guess.
It's just straight up a genocide.
They're describing a genocide.
There's no doubting it.
I don't even know, what is there to say?
At this point, I almost think,
other than obviously documenting what's happening,
it's important, the only important thing
to try to talk about is how can this be stopped
and or how can a degree of
Like what does justice look like at some point down the line? What should be done?
you know, like these are questions to ask but like
To just like I don't know what to keep saying other than like yep. They're trying to wipe out gaza like
Well, and specifically the use of these, like, quote-unquote, compounds, you're like rounding
up and keeping people inside one secure area.
Concentrating them in camps.
Like, come on, guys.
You're just setting up camps for Palestinians on the south side of the Strip.
And like, that's all that this is, as they reoccupy and hold the entirety to, quote-unquote,
eliminate Hamas.
So this Monday, Trump's going to start a three-day visit to Saudi Arabia Qatar and the United Arab Emirates
This is while the US government has taken a back foot on Gaza negotiations
While still backing up Netanyahu and any actions taken by the Israeli military
Yeah
So we will know more about what Israel is actually going to do
So we will know more about what Israel is actually going to do immediately in the region in like a week's time. It looks like they are going to be going forward with this May 15th reoccupation plan.
Cool. Well, yeah, so more good news from me. Immigration update.
The New York Times today on the, this is Wednesday the 7th, is reporting that the Trump administration
is as soon as today, I checked this before recording, the plane hadn't taken off, planning
to ship people to, migrants to Libya.
The nationalities of people being renditioned there are not clear, but my guess would be
that these are third party nationals that the US can't deport to their home countries.
They previously deported these people to Panama and to El Salvador. If you're not familiar with migrant detention in Libya, conditions are horrific. Among the worst
things that can happen to people. The situation in Libya is currently the country is divided
between the Tripoli government, which is recognized by the UN and which the US has formal government
to government relationships with and Haftar's government based in Benghazi,
which the Trump regime has associated with before.
We have covered conditions in Libyan migrant detention camps before, which
I'll chuck in the show notes.
And we also talked about the dangers faced by people leaving Libya towards the EU in
a different episode, which I'll also list.
But to recap, reports document starvation, rape, murder, slavery, and organ harvesting
occurring in Libya.
Mass graves, including one last year that was found with 65 bodies in it are not uncommon. To quote from David
Yambio, David Yambio is someone who was sold and then forced to fight in a militia in Libya. I
believe he escaped and I think he's in Italy, but he's relatively outspoken on this stuff.
The slave trade is alive and thriving in Libya. It thrives in the silence of nations,
in the shadows of complicit systems, and in the unchecked
racism that dehumanizes black lives.
In other immigration news, the government's attempt to delay Rumeysa Ozturk's return to
Vermont was rejected by the Second Circuit.
So that means that she will have to be returned to...
She was arrested in Massachusetts, if you remember, for writing an op-ed.
At Tufts University, yeah.
Yeah, moved across state borders to Vermont and from there sent to Louisiana.
So the habeas case was transferred to Vermont and the Second Circuit has ruled that the
government cannot delay bringing her back there anymore.
Another flight containing 81 migrants left Panama yesterday at the United States' expense.
This is a continuation of a plan that the Biden administration installed in summer last
year, and the Trump administration has continued whereby the US funds deportations from Panama.
Meanwhile, Tokyo Weekender in Japan is reporting that the United States is asking people to
show five years of social media history in order to obtain a student visa.
Just to put that in perspective for people, so you have to, even if those accounts are
deleted or no longer used, you have to declare them all on your form.
If you're applying for a student visa and you're at the younger end of a traditional
aged undergraduate, you could have to list every social media account you've had since
you were 12 on this form. The US has required disclosure for a while, but it hasn't been
a practical thing. I haven't really ever heard from anyone of anybody's visa being denied
or asylum being denied based on social media posting, but this is now something that they are asking people to disclose.
Well, and requiring, not like...
Requiring, yeah.
Not asking.
It is going to be like an enforced requirement in a way that before it really hasn't been.
The term that the law firm used in this piece is like, in the past, this has been mostly
quote unquote negligible. Yeah. And now this is something that the Department of State is really being adamant about.
Yeah.
Which will massively delay the time to process these replications on top of everything else.
People in Japan have compared this to policy similar to that of China's cultural revolution.
Yeah.
I mean, I've been to other countries to to be clear, where they open up your social media
and look at it when you're entering, but this is not a thing that anyone has ever associated
with the United States.
Finally, I guess, the Freedom of the Press Foundation got some documents released under
the Federal Freedom of Information Act that outlined that the intelligence community did
not believe that the Maduro regime was
controlling Ctendea-Aragua, which was one of the claims that Trump administration has
made in its invocation of the Alien Enemies Act.
I think most people who pay any attention to the situation weren't really buying that,
but it's showing that this was documented by the US intelligence community as well.
So yeah, anything to add?
The Libya stuff is bleak.
It hasn't got much coverage in the US.
We have covered it before, but the European Union is already complicit in the terrible
treatment of migrants in Libya.
And it has happened for ages.
The so-called Libyan Coast Guard are bringing people back to Libya and are literally selling
them from shelters to human traffickers.
I mean we've more or less kind of lined up behind some of the worst places on earth in
terms of migrant detention, right, with Secot and this.
Yeah.
More and more families are figuring out that their their family members have been sent to Sikot
Like people who have not been named in official documentation
They've been able to like search through these propaganda videos and like identify more people
So they're launching court cases to have them returned
People who very clearly have had no gang affiliation not that that should even matter when you're sending people to the forever prison
Yeah, they I saw one guy we had a Donald Duck tattoo and that was I guess a decisive claim there
right, there's a form that ice agents fill out and
There's a number of points they have to amass
I believe it's three points and one of the things that can allow you to amass three points
It's like I think two points come from a tattoo
Yeah, which which they decide to be gang-affiliated.
And again, they seem to just be saying tattoos, period.
Anything is Trin-da-ah-guah, right?
Yeah.
People who have soccer tattoos, people who have,
I love my mom and dad tattoos, it doesn't matter.
There's an autism awareness tattoo.
Yeah, some guy had an autism awareness.
Yeah. That one like haunts me because I have met young neurodivergent people and their
families who are bringing them to the US to get better, what they thought was a
better standard of care, right?
To allow their children to progress and have a beautiful life.
Yeah, man, that one, like, I honestly really struggled with that.
I spent lots and lots and lots
of time with Venezuelan migrants. And like, they're my friends. And that particular one,
people whose children have any need for medical care, right, are overrepresented in the migrant
population because they just can't access it there. And so they upend their whole lives and
carry their children across the continent to give them a chance at a better life. And that one is particularly hard for
me to witness.
I did just want to mention on the topic of asylum, I've heard from so many migrants
stuck in Mexico who are having a god awful time to include robbery, kidnapping, sexual violence, all of the things that we
know can happen to migrants along the migrant trail because they have no pathway to get
to the US, they're now just stuck there.
Mexico continues to take migrants and move them back south if it catches them near the
United States border, even if some of them move up as far as Mexico City, right,
because they have access to services there. And then again, sent back south to places
where migrants have routinely been murdered. So I know we're focusing a lot on migrants
being kicked out of the US, deported, conditioned, conditions for migrants who aspired to come
to the United States who took great risks to be Americans and are stuck in Mexico are also dire.
All right, let's go and break
and then come back for a few more updates
before we close out.
Yeah.
["Tariff Song"]
We're back in, wait a second, is that that is that the tariff song?
All right guys, I actually don't know do we have anything to say about tariffs this week Rockin' the Casbah, rockin' the Casbah.
All right, guys, I actually don't know. Do we have anything to say about tariffs this week?
Yeah, we actually do have some tariffs.
So on Friday- Okay, okay, all right, good.
We gotta get all of our use out of that song
because again- We really do.
We really had to suspend the whole team's healthcare
to pay for it.
It was monstrously expensive.
The full cut of that song is 17 and a half hours.
We actually brought in the remaining members
of Fleetwood Mac as well as several Rolling Stones.
It was just disastrous.
So far attempts to resurrect Joe Strummer have failed
but we have spent millions of dollars.
We only use the clip with our friend,
the narcissist cookbook, but yeah,
there is a 26 minute drum solo
with the guy from Rush.
Geddy Lee, he's still alive, right?
Was it Geddy Lee?
Yeah, yeah.
He's still alive.
The joke works, the joke works.
Not cheap.
Not cheap.
Yeah, yeah.
It's much like the dire wolf thing.
We've put Joe's drummer's DNA into another coffee man
and we're waiting to see where it,
we've released him into the wild
and we're gonna see how he develops.
So far, he just has a lot of blood clots, but we're hoping but we have Nathan Fielder on the case though. He's training them up
Well, we'll get him. We'll get him on here. All right. Yeah. Yeah, good bad. What do you think?
Okay, so all right, let's let's actually do this shit
So what is it? One of the things that we've been talking about a lot on this show is the de minimis exemption
Which was this exemption that formally allowed you was particularly used in trade with China where you could
Like if you were sending a package that was under like $700
You didn't have to like it didn't have to like go through customs in the way that you would normally would have to do it
That shit's gone that ended on Friday of last week
this has already skyrocketed the cost of doing imports of shit from China because huge amounts of stuff being
shipped from China was
you know like reliant on shipping it in packages that were exactly
$699. Uh-huh. And you know this has like like Temu's entire business model has changed basically every night
We're like they're no longer shipping stuff in from China. They're only selling stuff from like American
distributors.
This is going to have catastrophic effects on so many supply chains
you've never even thought of in the weeks to come, because, again,
there are so many different like tiny screws and shit, like just like
really, really small items that you used to be able to get from China for like
fucking five dollars for like a hundred of them that now have like unbelievable tariff
rates on them and have to go through a really, really convoluted customs process.
There have already been sort of massive supply chain disruptions in a large number of industries.
It's going to continue to get worse.
Sophie was talking about metal imports hitting the construction industry because there's,
you know, there's tariffs on a bunch of different kinds of metal as we've covered on the show.
Aluminum, God knows what's gonna happen to Diet Coke.
We'll put it in lead, like God intended.
Maybe that'll finally change Trump's outlook,
is when his Diet Coke stops.
Yes, I hope so.
Yeah, Trump and Musk both become inoperable.
You know, Garrison, we will know when that's hit
when the missiles are in the air.
Like, oh, shit, he ran out.
A federal occupation of the Coca- Like, oh shit, he ran out.
Federal occupation of the Coca-Cola headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia.
Yeah.
So, you know, and this is also like, this is going to have a profound impact on Chinese
economy.
Again, we're still in sort of the waiting room until sort of mid-summer when all of
the rest of the tariffs that were supposed to go into effect go back into effect and
literally everything collapses.
You're probably three to five weeks out from really starting to see it hit hard in like
the stuff you buy on a day to day basis, right?
Yeah.
People who are doing stuff like remodeling houses or building houses are starting to
notice now.
Yeah.
I think people, car repair businesses and whatnot, people have to order parts, that
is starting to hit.
But your grocery store, that's really going to be most noticeable somewhere between three
and five weeks from now.
Maybe, maybe sooner, probably not much longer.
Well, and other things are about to get significantly worse.
So this has been talked about for a long time.
The buzz right now is that they're happening soon.
I don't know exactly what that means.
But there has been for a long, long time, Trump has been doing talking about doing tariffs
on pharma So congratulations get excited for all of your medication costing a lot more money
He also put into place a 100% tariff on foreign movies. Well, we'll see yes
Yeah, but then he walked that back. He had a conversation with John Voight and announced
Yeah, I was getting to that
100% tariff on all movies. Yeah, not made in the US. Yeah, no're getting to that hair hundred hundred percent tear off on all movies
Yeah, not made in the u.s.. Yeah, no one knows what that means How can you do that? What's a rough on a movie? What are we talking about?
It's literally it's literally just like like he's doing tariffs in the way that like there's that but that guy for the wolf of Wall Street
Is like what guy walks out of the room goes short everything has ever touched like it's like that thing
Yeah, like he's gonna be terr terrifying like fucking ocean currents in two months
The responses to it have been have been so funny cuz Gavin Newsom arch-dip shit of the Democratic Party was immediately like
We love the idea of working with our president to keep the film jobs in California
You know meanwhile Trump immediately was like well, maybe we won't do that
I think because there's still,
at the very head of the studio system,
some scary old mob type dudes, right?
And I think a few of them made some like-
Also, Tom Cruise is terrifying.
Tom Cruise, Tom Cruise like sat down,
listen, Donald.
No one's heard from David Miskevich's wife
in a long ass time,
and they don't have to hear from you either.
Like, you don't want to fuck with me.
Yeah.
Even that, or Trump believes he actually is the Mission Impossible guy.
You could convince him.
That's true.
Somebody convinced him?
Yeah.
Somebody convinced him de Niro's is-
Didn't he reopen Alcatraz after the Alcatraz film aired on the
level there is evidence yes but it was the it was the Clint Eastwood one and
not the much better Alcatraz film the rock starring Sean Connery and Nicolas
Cage a banger ages perfectly watch it everyone watch it tonight
fuck reading any more news okay there's more news though unfortunately yeah well
okay there's one funny thing.
And there's like the actual news here is part of what's going on here is just
everything is just chaos.
And this is something that like I've had this conversation with a bunch of people
who work in shipping over the last couple of weeks is that like it's just chaos.
Right. Like everything is changing all the fucking time.
And this means every time one of these things changes, a bunch of like the import
codes and stuff just changes on the level of like
customs people and
Like just like the literally the process of importing this stuff changes and it's just a complete fucking disaster
People are getting laid off constantly too. So like every single part of the government is supposed to be doing this suddenly has less people
It's it's an absolute rolling catastrophe. It will continue to get worse
There's also good evidence that like they know that it's gonna get worse
I'm gonna read this quote from USA Today
Well, this is from Trump. I don't think a beautiful baby that's 11 years old needs to have 30 dolls Trump told meet the press host
Kirsten Welker
I think they can have three or four dolls because what we are doing with China is just unbelievable
We have a trade deficit of hundreds of billions of dollars for China. I'm just saying they don't need to have 30 dolls. They can have only four dollars and 50 pencils. They can have five
Five pencils everyone. Hell. Yeah pencils and three dolls this christmas
Imagine if joe biden announced like all right, we're gonna have to cut down on christmas gifts this year. We can't do it
Uh, the fox news would be like freaking the fuck out. We're like
Joe biden's taking away your kids' Christmas and the pencils.
And yeah, who cares?
Yeah, but I mean, like the actual thing here is like, yeah, I know.
Like these people understand that you're going to suffer.
They don't give a shit.
They want you to suffer.
That's the whole point of their political project.
Yeah. So, you know.
Yeah. Owning the libs.
Anyway, is that all for tariff talk via?
Yeah, that that that's all we got on that's all we got on the tariffs
I am excited for for Trump to meet Ethan Hunt on his last mission
There's still hope. All right. I have a few more updates before we close out here one on the federal judge
Back and forth of last week US District Judge blocked the Trump
admin's efforts via executive order to require what they deem as proof of
citizenship to register to vote. The judge stated that this case was about
separation of powers and undue presidential interference in how states
and Congress run and regulate elections, writing, quote, Our Constitution entrusts
Congress and the states, not the president, with the authority to regulate federal elections.
No statutory delegation of authority to the Executive Branch permits the President to
short-circuit Congress's deliberative process by executive order."
So we'll see how that develops for now.
I'll also be doing an update on the SAVE Act as it makes its way through Congress as well
for those interested.
Another kind of voting suppression bill that's getting pushed through.
This Tuesday, the Supreme Court upheld the trans-military ban.
At least for now, it'll still process through appeals.
But the Trump administration is now allowed to enforce the ban, which they previously
couldn't because a lower court put the enforcement on hold.
Yeah, so I think the actual scariest part about that is if you read the language
of what the court was talking about, they've been describing it as like someone who thinks
that like they are a woman when they're actually a man, like isn't someone who can perform
at like the standards of like honor and whatever that like a soldier needs.
And this is I think a ramp up to the really, really dangerous thing that is coming, which
is their attempt to just straight up brand being trans as fraud.
I mean, this is the Trump admin's argument, correct? This is what they were writing.
Yeah, yeah.
This is the statement, I guess, that the DOD is claiming that expressing a, quote, false
gender identity divergent from individual sex can't satisfy the rigorous standards necessary
for military service. And they specifically talk about a soldier's commitment to an honorable, truthful, and
disciplined lifestyle even in one's personal life.
And they then go ahead to claim that being trans inherently contradicts that.
That's the Trump admin's argument, which is going to be used to undermine transgender
rights in the future, possibly threatening Title IX. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it's very concerning.
So the fact that they were able to, at this point, win this case in the Supreme Court, extremely worrying.
Yeah. I will just say that if this impacts you, someone you care about, someone you know,
you can reach out to us. Obviously, there's a
fair little we can do about it, but we are here to listen to report the news.
And you can do that at coolzontips at proton.me. It's only an encrypted email
end to end if it comes from an encrypted email address to our encrypted email
address.
We are reading all of those. We may not respond to all of them, but we are taking note of them and we'll report on
stuff in the future.
The last thing I do want to add is like a raid that happened last week in California.
Homeland Security Investigations, ICE, and Secret Service raided a house in Southern
California looking for a man who months ago
posted flyers around Los Angeles last January warning about ICE agents in the area with
names, photos, and phone numbers, reading in Spanish, quote, careful with these faces,
unquote.
The feds served a criminal search warrant on the home of this guy's parents, even though
he moved to New York last March.
At least 15 armored vehicles pulled up to this upscale neighborhood with full militarized
federal SWAT. They seized routers and hard drives.
Yeah, that's not great.
Acting ICE director Todd Loins was on the scene for this operation. He told Fox News
that he took it personally, that someone would put a target on his agents in an effort to interfere with them and put them at risk, saying the person will be held accountable.
What they're using here is probably likely U.S. Code 119, protection of individuals performing
certain duties. Whoever knowingly makes restricted personal information about a covered person
or a member of the immediate family of that covered person publicly available with the intent to threaten, intimidate, or incite the commission of a crime of violence against that covered person or a member of the immediate family.
So this is likely what they're using, arguing that posting a photo on a flyer with the person's name and phone number is enough to threaten, intimidate, or facilitate the commission of a crime.
Yeah. What constitutes covered persons under this?
That's a good question, James.
That's a screenshot, right? So you can't click that.
That is a screenshot and probably a question for a lawyer. But they are arguing that the
ICE agents fall under this purview.
Yes. The term covered person means A, an individual designated
to section 114, B, a grand juror, petty juror,
witness, or other officer of the court,
and inform a witness in a federal criminal investigation
or prosecution, state or local officer or employee
whose restricted personal information is made publicly
available because of the participation in or assistance
provided to a federal criminal investigation. So it's part C.
Yeah. So that's what they're going to argue. The people's addresses weren't posted here.
It was just their names and photos. But ICE and HSI are being very protective of the faces
of agents doing immigration raids and student crackdowns right now. They're really nervous
about agents possibly being targeted.
So any attempt to identify these is being treated as a threat.
A Homeland Security spokesperson told Fox News, quote, these pathetic activists are
putting targets on the backs of our law enforcement as they shield MS-13, Trendalagua, and other
vicious gangs that traffic women and children, kidnap for ransom and poison Americans with
lethal drugs.
These individuals will be held accountable for obstructing the law and justice. This
shouldn't be controversial."
Yeah. So five people died after a panga carrying migrants capsized off Del Mar, which is in
North County, San Diego. The search is ongoing. I believe another five are still
missing. One of those is a 10-year-old girl from India. And Kristi Noem has said she wants
the DOJ to pursue death penalty charges against the smugglers who bought these people over.
These boats have been a thing for a while, but this is not the first of these tragedies.
And it's obviously like we shouldn't lose focus of the fact that someone's little child died, which is horrific.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Uh, tough news week, as usual, I guess.
Tough news week.
Yeah, the only way to feel better is by fighting.
But we did report the news.
We did.
We reported the news.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of
the universe.
It Could Happen Here is a production of Cool Zone Media.
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