It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 195
Episode Date: August 16, 2025All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. - Infrastructure as Control feat. Andrew - Why Trump is Obsessed with the Autopen - How Tucson Beat Amazon&rsq...uo;s Data Center - Tariffs and the Corruption State - Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #29 You can now listen to all Cool Zone Media shows, 100% ad-free through the Cooler Zone Media subscription, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts. So, open your Apple Podcasts app, search for “Cooler Zone Media” and subscribe today! http://apple.co/coolerzone Sources/Links: Why Trump is Obsessed with the Autopen https://www.shapell.org/behind-the-scenes/the-robot-pen/ https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1908354 https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/lead-investigator-james-comer-biden-autopen-digital-signature-rcna216719 https://www.cnn.com/2025/06/05/politics/autopen-trump-biden-analysis https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/13/us/politics/biden-pardon-autopen-trump.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/13/us/politics/biden-clemency-interview.html How Tucson Beat Amazon’s Data Center http://nodesertdatacenter.com https://apnews.com/article/electricity-prices-data-centers-artificial-intelligence-fbf213a915fb574a4f3e5baaa7041c3a https://vermaland.com Tariffs and the Corruption State https://www.cnn.com/2025/08/01/economy/tariff-more-expensive https://www.nbcnews.com/business/business-news/trump-hikes-india-tariffs-50-percent-buying-russian-oil-rcna223374 https://www.cnn.com/business/live-news/us-tariffs-take-effect-08-07-25 https://www.cbsnews.com/news/nvidia-amd-chip-sales-china-15-percent-h20-mi308/ https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/08/business/tariffs-switzerland-trump.html https://www.cnbc.com/2025/08/07/trumps-reciprocal-tariffs-come-into-effect-hitting-dozens-of-us-trading-partners.html https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2025/8/12/trump-extends-china-tariff-deadline-for-the-second-time-what-does-it-mean https://www.tradecomplianceresourcehub.com/2025/08/12/trump-2-0-tariff-tracker/ https://www.cnn.com/2025/08/07/business/trade-exemptions-tariffs-trump https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cg7jjkvzmkxo https://www.cnn.com/business/live-news/us-tariffs-take-effect-08-07-25#cme17o5l400003b6ns7mwdwnv https://www.cnn.com/2025/08/06/tech/apple-investment-us-trump https://www.nbcnews.com/business/business-news/trump-tariffs-latest-round-takes-effect-thursday-august-7-2025-rcna223461 https://www.cnn.com/business/live-news/us-tariffs-take-effect-08-07-25 https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/trump-administration-tells-foreign-military-junta-wants-hear-raising-e-rcna221569 https://restofworld.org/2023/foxconn-iphone-factory-china/ https://www.cnn.com/2025/08/06/tech/apple-investment-us-trump https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/i-wont-humiliate-myself-brazils-president-sees-no-point-tariff-talks-with-trump-2025-08-06/ Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #29 https://www.cvesd.org/parents/family-and-community-resourceslausd.org https://www.lausd.org/cms/lib/CA01000043/Centricity/Domain/577/Parent%20Resources/ComResourceGuideEng.pdf https://www.kpbs.org/news/border-immigration/2024/11/21/with-trump-back-in-power-advocates-criticize-gloria-for-shuttering-immigrant-affairs-office https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/12/business/trump-bls-ej-antoni.html https://x.com/AngulusTerrarum/status/1955320816855294169 https://x.com/JosephPolitano/status/1955041060197114136 https://www.wsj.com/economy/central-banking/stephen-miran-federal-reserve-board-e7855877 https://www.newsweek.com/trump-bls-appointment-ej-antoni-alarms-economists-2112440 https://www.cnn.com/2025/08/11/business/bls-nominee-trump https://abcnews.go.com/Business/ej-antoni-trumps-pick-lead-bls/story?id=124579471 https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/08/restoring-law-and-order-in-the-district-of-columbia/ https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c8600x7dnn4o https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/texas-democrats-return-after-governor-ends-special-session/story?id=124592449 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5loldo4Vmno https://abcnews.go.com/US/suspected-gunman-cdc-shooting-fired-500-rounds-officials/story?id=124577732 https://www.scrippsnews.com/health/rfk-jr-in-interview-with-scripps-news-trusting-the-experts-is-not-science https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/supreme-court-formally-asked-overturn-landmark-same-sex/story?id=124465302See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hello and welcome to It Could Happen here, and it could.
My name is Andrew Siege.
I'm also Andrews, I'm on YouTube,
and I'm here once again with...
James. James Stout.
People have said I'd never say my last name,
and they can't work out who I am,
so I guess I'll do that more.
Welcome, James Stelitt.
Thank you.
So lately, and I mean, this is an unfortunately common pattern of thought for me,
but I've been thinking about just how totalizing the system feels.
And it's like everywhere you turn, you know, walking down the street,
look at the city, pollution, that every inch of land has been claimed by the system.
Every bit of, you know, the ways you live and operate just feels like it's been manipulated
and controlled in some way.
And so that's really what I want to highlight in today's episode,
the infrastructure of the system and how it's used to control,
you know, both in terms of the physical infrastructure
and the digital infrastructure of our lives.
So I suppose to start off, I'd ask,
when was the last time that you noticed infrastructure shaping your choices?
That's interesting.
I mean, a lot in a certain ways, right?
Like, the infrastructure of labour shapes a lot of my choices.
Like, I have to work a lot to make ends meet, right?
Like, which means I can't do sometimes things I want to do.
Like, there are mutual aid efforts I'd like to participate in more that I'm not able to
because I have this obligation to capital.
I guess that's one of them.
Or just, like, the physical infrastructure limiting the people I get to see, right?
Like, there are places I love to go out.
There are some really nice vegan places in Tijuana that I don't go to as much I'd like
because someone has built a giant wall and then another giant wall next to it
and then stationed a bunch of people with guns to check if I have the right piece of paper
to go back and forth to somewhere that otherwise I could ride my bike to.
Yeah.
Borders are very unfortunate and big one.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's really frustrating.
And I think that's one of the most obviously detrimental.
aspects of physical infrastructure that sort of manipulates our lives today. I think on the
digital level, there's things like just the way that social media is laid out. I think it really
controls like how much time you spend on it, how much energy you invest into it, and of course,
even just our neighborhoods or environments or cities with their laid out, it tends to affect
you know, just how often we go out, where we go, what means the transportation we use,
And I mean, where physical infrastructure is concerned and how it's been used to control people, that goes way back into history.
You know, colonial powers often built transport infrastructure, you know, like roads and railways and ports, with the very explicit purpose of extracting raw materials from the colonized territories to get to the imperial core.
You know, the systems were not designed to save the mobility needs of the local populations.
They usually created direct lines from the mines and the plantations and the resource rich areas to the coastal ports where they could be exported.
Yeah, yeah.
And so for the British imperialists and lovers of empire, they often brag that, you know, we've built ports and we built bridges and we built roads and we built railways.
Well, it's the same pattern everywhere.
You know, in India, it was used to move cotton, tea and other resources from the interior to the shipping ports.
in Ghana, it was used to move gold and cocoa.
But in any case, it wasn't to interconnect within the city.
You know, the actual economic self-determination of the people in that area didn't matter.
Yeah, very much.
I think about this, like, I cycled around Rwanda in 2020, which is an interesting time to be traveling.
But I remember riding around, the Kenya Rwanda word for dirt road is Ikitaka, right?
And so that's what mostly, we cycled on these dirt roads.
And it was lovely, you know, we'd go through the village and everything.
everyone would come out and wave at you and like the little kids would come out and be like,
what the fuck is this bicycle?
And it was kind of fun.
You know, and then we'd find someone, it's not really set up for like restaurants.
So you just find someone and pay them an amount upon which you agreed and they would give
you some food.
And that was a beautiful experience.
And then there are these roads that they call Chinese roads that just go directly from the mine
to the place where the raw material can be extracted because, you know, China is doing a lot of
what you could generously call foreign direct investment or like neocolonialism in lots of places
in Africa right and it was just the contrast between those two traveling experiences was so
profound like obviously you travel faster on the smooth roads but like you don't immerse yourself
in the human experience of meeting and sharing that travel with people which is why I do these
things in the first place with just like such a profound contrast I remember it really
striking me at the time.
Yeah, I mean, and this is what empires and rulers in general have been doing, right?
They wield their control over labor to set things up in a way that fulfills their interests.
Yeah.
And then, you know, even when people came some sort of nominal independence and they inherit these colonial infrastructure grids or, you know, they have investments coming in and they have sets of,
up, they have these companies, it's the multinational companies setting up infrastructure.
It still continues, you know, the sort of extractivist and top-down nature of the way the infrastructure
is set up.
You know, it doesn't reimagine, all of them don't reimagine the logic of what came before.
You know, in part for lack of funding and in part for lack of imagination.
And so in a lot of places, the peripheral regions in these countries are still lacking in
connectivity, they're still lagging behind the rest of the country.
They still don't have access to some of the basic social services and resources that
the urban core has because, you know, the urban rural divide in many ways mimics the
core periphery divide on the international stage.
And then you have these new colonial development aid programs coming in with the IMF
for the World Bank and you have even more infrastructure projects to just repeat this extractive
pattern under the banner of development. Of course, real development would be connecting people,
encouraging people to participate in society and distribute opportunities, but the infrastructure
tends to be set up is more so for consolidating state power and channeling the movement of people
in predictable, surveillable ways and prioritizing access for certain populations while
excluding or marginalizing others.
So, of course, infrastructure development has a capacity to help people, you know, it can increase
accessibility, can make people's lives easier, and it can also just manage and contain them
and their resources.
And we see a lot more examples of this sort of infrastructure control.
When you look at the class and racial dynamic within societies,
Those sorts of divisions and separations and stratifications, they of course manifest physically.
You know, in the U.S., you had literal segregation areas that were designated for black people,
listening to for white people, water fountains and neighborhoods and all these different things.
You also had redlining policies, and nowadays you have spaces that were redlined and thus lacked investment
and thus were neglected infrastructurally due to that racial and economic inequality.
those spaces are now ripe for development in the form of gentrification because the property is so cheap, so undervalued, and to the people who made something out of that lack are now being pushed out.
And in South Africa, I mean, up until recently, these apartheid era policies created townships that were deliberately located far from white urban centers that were lacking in services and transit options that physically reinforced.
the racial division of that society
and even today around the world
you have human zoning laws
and transit access limitations
and public housing policies
that recreate
historical class divisions
and racial divisions ethnic divisions
and I'm sure you and you're
with all the
I mean every time I talk to you have like a new travel story
to tell I'm sure you've witnessed something like this
yeah I was just thinking of how like
I was thinking, like, if we think about the Syrian state as a contiguous colony, right,
like it's called the Syrian Arab Republic, but not all the people who are contained within
the territory in which it once claimed the monopoly on violence are Arab people.
So we think of the parts of like north and east Syria, with majority Kurdish areas, as colonized.
We can see that reflected in the infrastructure, right?
Part of that is, as you say, this sort of lack of
investment, but then also part of it is every government-funded building, right? Schools,
hospitals, the buildings you go in to do the paperwork you have to do to exist under the state.
They're set up, like, strong points. Like, they're designed with a big kind of wall and then a
big courtyard and then thick exteriors. Like, they're designed to be militarily defensible
against the people they're supposed to serve, right? Like, the school is designed to be used as a
fucking machine gun position.
Wow.
And once you see it, you see it everywhere.
And you think about the nature of the state that designs infrastructure with that
explicitly in mind, right?
It's fascinating.
The other example I think of is like Chris Elam's done some fantastic writing on the development
of Barcelona.
And you have like the unregulated working class of Raval, like this area just next to
the Rambler where the streets are just fucking small and winding and crazy.
and there's never not laundry kind of over, you know, over your head.
And it's a very, I like to go there.
It's a place that I enjoy.
And then you have the Ejampler, which means extension, where the infrastructure is
extremely, like, it's probably one of the earlier grid cities that you would see, right?
And the idea was that, like, these overcrowded kind of what were in the 1920s and 30 slums
would be, like, where the working class would be kept.
And the working class, to be clear, what, like, seen.
as there was a colonial relationship between the bourgeois and the working class in Barcelona
because most of the working class were not Catalan.
They would actually put signs atop of these working class areas saying like Murcia begins here, right?
These are the Murcianos, the people from Murcia, the people from outside of Catalonia.
Catalonia stops here where the working class exist.
That later reflected in the working class self-identity.
They came to refer to the Raval as Chinatown, not specifically because of a high,
concentration of people from the Chinese diaspora, but because they'd seen Chicago gangster
movies where Chinatown was like the area where the gangsters were. And they were like, yeah,
we're fucking gangster. Like, we're going to call it Chinatown. You want to come in here?
We'll fucking shoot you. Like, I thought that was this really fascinating, like, response to the
way that they had been alienated by infrastructure. Yeah, I mean, and that's why when you look at
they sort of claims that
oh, you know, it's just
roads, it's just
zoning, it's just
a city grid.
Yeah.
It's just an embassy.
It's just a government office.
It's like, no, these sorts of
spaces, these buildings,
this infrastructure could never be neutral.
Yeah.
And when you see that, you can't unsee it.
Because you look at the amounts of decisions
it would have had to have gone into,
you know, some of the examples you mentioned
or the examples I mentioned.
Yeah.
You know, the design decisions is like, okay, we're going to put this road here instead of here.
Yeah.
We're going to use this material instead of this material.
Who you employ to build those structures, that infrastructure also has an impact in the surrounding area.
Are you employing people within the community, employing people outside?
What's happening there?
Who's funding this infrastructure?
Who's maintaining the infrastructure?
Yeah.
What level of surveillance has been implemented?
where are the public transportation routes
and why are they here and up there, you know?
Yeah, exactly.
Like, there's people whose opinions and views matter in that process
and there are people who are excluded from it.
Exactly.
Yeah.
One of the authors I tend to go back too often
is Yvonne Elish,
because he critiqued a lot of this stuff,
particularly infrastructure as control.
In tools for conviviality,
he spoke about how modern transport and open design
have been used to alienate people from their own bodies and communities.
So he called out the usual suspects, suburbanization, car-centric infrastructure,
how it is-lis-laced people, and increases dependence on vehicles.
And he called this dependence a radical monopoly,
because all the other choices have effectively been eliminated.
Technically, you could walk along the highway, but you're not going to.
You're going to get a car.
Yeah.
Right?
You can't choose to walk or cycle in that sort of scenario.
of someone who's going to call the cops if you try that in America, right?
Yeah.
So as Elish saw it, it's really a cultural imposition
that shapes how we end up living, interacting, moving,
and it's frustrating.
And on the global stage,
you also see how infrastructure has the capacity
to control the whole geopolitical board.
You know, the Suez Canal, the Panama Canal,
the Red Sea, the Strait of Fomuz, all these places,
have a lot of power militarily, trade-wise, diplomatically,
because they control the flow of oil or of goods or of data.
Yeah.
Particularly in the areas where the undersea internet cables run.
Oh, yeah.
And so speaking of data, actually, the realm of digital infrastructure is also very insidious
when it comes to control. We tend to think of the internet as that sort of ephemeral,
cloud, right, but the cloud is hosted physically.
You know, there are servers, there are fiber optic cables, their data centers, all these
things, they're not as obvious as roads and railways and, you know, neighborhoods, but
they are just as, if not in some ways, even more powerful in terms of controlling what
people access, how fast they access it, under what terms they access it, or because it's so
intangible, it's so hard to pin down, and it can often escape scrutiny, but there are
companies that own these things. There's a small group of very powerful corporations
that pretty much dictate how things are in it. Most people, they know about China's great
firewall and how it's used to cord north China from the rest of the internet in some ways. You know,
it censors websites and search results. It monitors people's activity, and it usually has
the state-monit alternatives to some of the popular global platforms like Google and Facebook,
right? But Google and Amazon and Meta and Microsoft, it's not like they're any better.
You know, they're not running things through public good. So if we'll call out what China is doing
with the Great Firewall, and I agree, I don't think that any government should have any
control over what people access. But, you know, it's not like censorship, data harvested,
and surveillance are unique to China. You know, a lot of other.
governments in collaboration with these companies deploy soft censorship.
You know, they derank things in the algorithm.
They filter certain keywords.
They selectively block certain things.
Yeah.
You have things that may be automatically flagged or moderated.
And that often affects people from the LGBTQ community in countries where, you know,
that's a big no-no.
Or you have even the manipulation of language, the words people use.
As people try to get around censors, hence the proliferation of terms like grape and essay and self-delete and unalive and all these other euphemisms, which, I mean, honestly, I don't use any of them. I despise them.
Yeah, me too.
The thing is, a lot of people assume that these words are censored on all platforms.
Yeah.
But they're not.
You know, they may be censored on one platform, usually it's TikTok or limited in one platform.
And then the people take that sort of TikTok sort of way of speaking and spread it across the rest of the internet or worse yet, bring it into real life and end up saying things like unalive in real life.
Yeah, yeah, and then you have allowed fucking TikTok's algorithm to determine the way you can express yourself.
Exactly. Exactly. And I mean, TikTok gets a lot of heat these days because, you know, rightfully so it's very popular. It has a lot of influence and it's, you know,
very blatantly interventionist
with its content
in some
damaging ways.
But again,
the other big corporations
are not immune either.
Facebook was
famously found
culpable for genocide,
right?
Yeah.
They played a major role
in the sort of
attitudes that were
developing and the
marginalization
that was sort of
targeting
Rohingya community
and the subsequent
genocide.
Yeah.
So I was on a panel
with some
Rehingya people the other day, and they are still a physical and technical infrastructure being
marginalized. So something myself and my union friends are trying to do is help the Rehingya
podcast initiative start podcasting, right, such that they can share their own voices with the
world and their positions and their opinions. It's very important at a time when, like, they're
facing marginalization even from revolutionary forces within Myanmar. And we cannot sustain
an internet connection to allow them to do that.
We tried to do a live panel and it was very hard for, you know,
these guys were running around Cox's Bazaar where tens of thousands of Rohingya people
live in refugee camps, trying to find connectivity.
And like, just another example of how they continue to be marginalized by the systems
that first allowed them to be genocided.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Because the private corporations alone are not responsible for this, is the government
too.
You know, when the corporations tell the government to do something, the Goffmans comply,
and then when the government tell the corporations to do stuff, a lot of the time it's also like
they comply.
It's collaboration, you know, especially since the government has the power in a lot of cases
to shut down the internet when things are not going their way.
Yeah.
You know, they've used, I'm all over, I mean, recently, you know, the suppression of dissent during protests,
you know, to influence elections or to restrict information.
substruct journalism and communication during crises
when you look at all over the world, Iran, India,
Sudan, Myanmar, Uganda,
even in Gaza,
in all these cases,
these governments step in
and they limit or they shut down the internet entirely
to prevent the news from getting out.
You know,
they could target either the entire internet
or they target certain platforms,
they target WhatsApp, they target Twitter.
They justify by saying,
oh, they're going after fake news
or there's a security threat.
Yeah, it's bullshit.
But, you know, we could see through that.
Yeah.
And it's tough because, I mean,
these are the places where people have gathered.
These are the online town squares, you know.
And these, this infrastructure is very much centralized.
Google controls most of the search on the internet.
Amazon dominates e-commerce and cloud computer and logistics.
and meta controls a lot of people's social interactions.
And I could brag and say,
oh, well, I'm not on Facebook,
but, you know, I still use WhatsApp
because everybody else uses WhatsApp.
Yeah.
And it's, it's so easy for them,
because we're so concentrated on these platforms,
it's so easy for them to pop it to us,
to flex their muscles and control the direction of public discourse.
And, I mean, it's amplifying things,
suppressing other things,
maximizing our
engagements, exploiting our
cognitive vulnerabilities,
you know, polarizing discourse,
distorting reality.
It's like, what the hell do we do?
Yeah.
And so for the
Hopium segment
of the podcast,
I just want to point out that
you know, infrastructure
can be used to consolidate power
and control people,
but it can also be used
to resist and to reclaim a collective agency.
You know, even infrastructure that was originally designed to control
can be taken under our control.
You know, around the world,
communities have been able to challenge these extractive logics
to build their own infrastructures on their own tubes.
You know, in digital spaces,
this might take the form of community-build mesh networks,
or alternative internet's local servers.
You have projects like gwiFi.net in Catalonia
or you have the NYC mesh in New York.
And these are efforts to engage in, you know,
pay-to-pay and decentralized communications
without the reliance on the telecom giants.
And then you also, of course,
physically have examples of infrastructure-resisting central control,
participatory urban planning movements, you have guerrilla urbanism, you have, you know, of course, the long and storied history of squatting, otherwise known as informal settlement. And these informal settlements are hubs of innovation, in a lot of cases, in place like Nairobi or in Rio de Janeiro, you know, these slums and favelas, they're hooking up their own electricity, hooking up their own internet, hooking up their own water supply.
because they recognize that this is within their hands.
This is within their capacity.
You know, we don't have to have everything, you know, passed on to us from one high.
You know, we can, you know, sort of reclaim our own voices and design our own spaces.
If you're really interested in how infrastructure has the capacity,
to control and truly just how states sort of see things.
I have to of course recommend the classic James C. Scott seeing like a state.
Yeah.
I mean, it's just a foundational framework, but understand how infrastructure is used for social
engineering. It's really readable as well. So definitely give that a read.
And you know, think about ways that you can contribute to shaping the infrastructure
around you. And I don't know, James, if you have any stories along this vail,
and she could leave us off with.
Yeah, I think of a ton, right?
Like, even, I think about, like, when I was a lot younger, I lived in a, I guess what
you could call a slum of Valela, like, a pretty economically disadvantaged to part of Caracas
for a little while.
And, like, at the time, and I've seen this when I lived in Barcelona too, like, I guess
the English word would be InfoShop.
They normally call them social centres would be the Spanish word or social spaces.
And, like, it was cool to see it.
This is a city which is established through colonialism, right?
And there was a brief time before things were terrible in Venezuela where people were trying to make –
and largely it was people trying to make things better.
And like the state for a time allowed a space for that to exist before it stopped allowing a space for that to exist, which is where I're at right now, right?
And very clearly, the state right now is very repressive in Venezuela, to be clear.
Like I don't want to put fuel on the tanky fire or whatever.
But it was actually a really beautiful thing.
And it facilitated, right?
I was like 19.
My Spanish was dog shit.
I was hungry all the time.
It didn't have any food, you know.
But it facilitated that community taking care of me because the spaces were public and
people could see if people were falling through the cracks, right?
And like, I think a lot about refugee camps.
Obviously, that's somewhere I've spent a decent amount of time, right?
Both within the U.S. and outside of the U.S.
And something I've been thinking about a lot recently is how so many of the people I met on the way to the United States in the Dalian had horrific experiences in the Dalian and afterwards.
But they also miss the community that they had.
Like they also miss the profound solidarity.
I was just talking to people the other day who were telling me, like when they were hungry in the jungle, strangers who didn't speak their language would try.
try and give them food.
Yeah, you see that in a lot of disasters, too.
They're sort of explosion and mutual aid.
Yeah, and like a refugee camp is a place where you do not have privacy for the most part,
and that's not always great.
But it facilitates caring for one another.
And like, I don't know, I have this recollection from seven or eight years ago now
and while I'm walking through a refugee camp in Mexico,
and just a very little girl, family, six, seven, something like that.
and I have long hair, people can't see me,
but she liked to mess with my hair and braid it and shit.
And I'm carrying this little girl,
and, like, I've been coming for some time.
And, like, the sense of community that you felt there
amongst, like, a really terrible situation.
But, like, because everyone can see you walking down
this little walkway, everyone's like, oh, hi, how are you?
Like, you know, I'm trying to first work out what they need
and how we can best help.
Like, I just remember thinking, like,
what the fuck is wrong with?
And then going back to the,
United States, right, sitting in my little house and, like, you know, like, I'm fortunate
to know my neighbors and to be close to them, but not many people are. And, like, for most
people, you know, they get out of their house, they go to their car, they drive to their work,
they don't say hi to anyone. Like, it's so strange that, like, in a sense, in, in those refugee
camps, we were closer to the beautiful life that we want than we are in these million-dollar homes
in America. My house does not cost a million dollars. I don't own a house. But this is the
profound alienation that we feel in part because of the physical infrastructure. The ability
of humanity to fall back into caring for one another. That's what we we do when we are not like
physically and like intellectually restrained from doing it by structures, both physical and
digital and even emotional that divide us from one another.
And I've kind of thought about that ever since.
Like, how do I build a place where people have more stability,
people have privacy, people have their material needs, man?
Yeah.
Does you want to strike a balance infrastructure?
Yeah, I don't want, there's some co-housing sort of plans that I've seen,
for example, but don't even really factor in much privacy,
which I'm not for at all.
You know, people don't have to recreate their dorm room experience, or in my case, they're sharing a bedroom, their entire childhood experience.
Yeah, no, this says we need to have space for people to have privacy, but at the same time, space for people to have community.
And, like, cities can exist like that. Communities can exist like that.
The theory of the Mediterranean public sphere that sometimes comes up where, like, again, in working class Barcelona, right, people don't generally have air conditioning and it can get very hot.
just spend a lot of time outside, balcony, whatever, you know, front port if you've got one,
that creates community, right? That creates a public sphere, like a place that is, it's not quite
a home, but it's not controlled by someone else either. It's like a community space.
Yeah. And that doesn't exist in, like, I don't live in the suburbs, but like suburban America,
you know, where everyone has these, like, literal fences around all the shit that they own.
Yeah.
that exists to very an extent
in Trinidad
you know some areas are very much communal
and other areas like I try and desperately
to be America
yeah yeah
so yeah it's kind of a mix of both worlds there
at the very least from what I'm aware of
what I can tell people at least say hi to their neighbours
though yeah
that's still like a horrifying
you know
nightmareish sort of
the specter of not knowing your neighbours
thing that I've heard of America in life that you don't even say hi.
Yeah.
You know, you don't even wave at people like that.
Yeah, no, I'm always in my neighbor's houses and they're always at my house.
And, like, I'm a person who owns a lot of tools, you know, like different spanners and stuff.
So, like, I'm like, I will go out of my way to make sure that my neighbors know they can borrow my shit.
And, and like, that does seem to be quite a new experience for people who,
who are like new in the neighborhood or whatever.
But yeah, we should all do that.
It's such an easy way to fight that alienation and that infrastructure that, you know, like, yeah,
there's a wall between where I live and where the person next door lives.
But, you know, I can knock on the door and say, hey, it looks like you're having some trouble
with your truck.
Do you need a hand or what have you?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
So, I mean, what you're saying is it could happen here.
Yeah.
Yeah, you've got to make the good things happen here, too, because enough of the fucking bad she is.
Indeed.
Bless it for me, guys.
All power to all the people.
Peace.
In 1920, a magazine, a magazine article announced something incredible.
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You may know me as a gold medalist.
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Listen to finding sexy sweat on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
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This is It Could Happen Here, the show about things falling apart.
One thing falling apart last year, I guess the president's mental health, seemingly so.
And we're going to talk about that today and some possible ramifications that the current president may be trying to exploit to help him out.
Robert Evans, hello, how are you?
I'm fine.
Something wrong with the president?
The current one or the old one?
Any president ever.
Has the president ever done wrong?
I heard some nasty things about Mr. Clinton.
Interesting.
I woke up today for the first time.
So this is all new to me.
Yeah, just don't look on like the news or the internet or anything and it should be okay.
That's good.
I'm just going to start reading Wikipedia at the A section and see if I get to anything bad about a president.
So since taking office, Trump has actually sort of been going soft on old sleepy Joe, not out
of the goodness of his own heart, right? But to possibly explore legal options to get around
some of the roadblocks Trump's been facing in the judicial branch. Yeah, that makes sense.
Trump's been arguing that Biden himself was mostly absent, especially during the later
half of his presidency. And a sort of like secret cabal of cabinet members, DNC consultants,
White House staff and aides were running a shadow presidency. Yeah. And one of my constant takes is
there are no secret cabals. There's a lot of cabals. They're all very obvious. Very public
cabals. Very public cabals. But this, this secret cabal of like DNC interns were using Biden's
signature via auto pen to set policy, make judicial appointments, and sign orders, all with
little to zero awareness from poor old sick, sleepy Joe. In fact, people around Biden intentionally
covered up his declining health to continue using his presidential power for their own progressive
agenda. If only they'd used it for that and not just to keep getting paychecks. Or sending bombs to
Israel or sending bombs to Israel.
Many of the other things that Biden seemed preoccupied with.
I'm going to play a clip from a month and a half ago, Donald Trump, current president,
explaining this conspiracy of the secret Joe Biden cabal.
I'm sure that he didn't know many of the things.
Look, he was never for open borders.
He was never for transgender for everybody.
He was never for men playing in women's sports.
I mean, he changed.
I mean, all of these things that.
that changed so radically. I don't think he had any idea that what was, frankly, I said it during the
debate, and I say it now, he didn't have much of an idea what was going on.
Mr. President, he shouldn't be, I mean, essentially, whoever used the auto pen was the president.
And that is wrong, it's illegal, it's so bad, and it's so disrespectful to our country.
Transgender for everybody. The defining legacy of the Biden era.
sure it's his core policy platform yeah okay i don't know like what do you even say at this point right
like honestly he's sending troops into the second major city this one the capital and taking over
control of the police force how much is it worth just being like oh and he said another thing
that's not true like i know it's important to cover all this but also like man i'm tired oh yeah
no it's it's it's incredibly frustrating because they get to deploy these these absurd little
lines every once in a while and it captures media attention and the physical things that
they're doing do not get as much like awareness. And there's this constant, I think, misinterpretation
as to like, this is all a distraction from this and this and this. And it does sometimes function
that way, but this isn't, they're not doing this because it's a distraction. They're doing this
because they also hate this group of people. They also want to hurt this group of people. There's a lot of
people they want to hurt and they want to do it in different ways. And they're kind of playing a longer
game with the focus on this quote unquote auto pen and it remains to be seen if it's going to be
successful or you know pay off for them but i i do want to talk about it now since this is on like
you know a month like four of them slowly seeding this into popular discourse it's like a new thing
because every once in a while they have to decide what the new thing is right a few years ago
they decided it was trans people they decided it was DEI they decided it was how the 2020 election
was stolen. They just decide that there's like some major problem and then they repeat it often
enough that it becomes like something that seemingly a share of voters actually care about. And they're
trying to make Autopen be a thing. And there is actual like possible results of them focusing on this,
as we as we will see. But the Autopin fixation started this past March when Trump posted a truth on
truth social, claiming that Biden's preemptive pardons of members of the January 6th Investigation House
committee are, quote, hereby declared void, vacant and of no further force of effect because of the
fact that they were done by Autopan, unquote. Great. This is not real. This is not like a real
thing that he can just claim on truth social. But what's real, you know? There is no requirement
that pardons even be signed, only that they're accepted by a subject. In 1929, the U.S.
Solicitor General concluded in a memo that, quote, neither of the Constitution nor any
statute prescribes the method by which executive clemency shall be exercised or evidenced.
So he can't just do this here, but this was kind of the opening of the door for the rest of
what we're going to talk about this episode. And I guess before we get into that,
I should talk about what an autopen is. An auto pen is a tool to automate the signing of documents
by replicating a signature. And this is a machine or a type of machine that's long been used
in the White House. Thomas Jefferson bought and used an early iteration of such a device
shortly after was patented in 1803. Lindenby Johnson's Autopen was photographed in the White House
for a National Enquirer recover story titled The Robot That Sits in for the President.
And it's funny that now you get Fox News headlines that are basically written very similarly
talking about how actually a robot or the Autopin itself was acting as president. And that's like
a controversy.
Okay.
Versus it was just like a fun news story back in the first.
50s. How many of the guys angry about this literally want an LLM to be the president?
Yes, exactly. That's my question. No, at least, at least half, at least half. The other half don't
know what an LLM is. No. Now, Obama was the first president to openly sign legislation with
an autopan, including the extension of the Patriot Act in 2011 while at the G8 summit in France.
And though the constitutionality of the autopan has never been tested or explicitly determined in court,
In 2005, President George W. Bush asked the Justice Department for its opinion on the validity of the auto pen for signing legislation and other official policy documents.
The Office of Legal Counsel found that, quote,
The President need not personally perform the physical act of affixing his signature to a bill he approves and decides to sign in order for the bill to become law.
Rather, the President may sign a bill by directing a subordinate to affix the President's signature to such a bill, for example, by Autopen, unquote.
Though there still is debate whether the President needs to be.
be physically present during this process or simply authorize the signing. And, you know,
you have people like Stephen Miller in this administration who try to find niche little laws or
statutes to then apply in a way that was probably never designed or we have, since these
laws inception, have decided not to use the laws in that way because that doesn't make sense
of our current context. But someone like Miller, very willing to do such a thing. And there could
be, for instance, some obscure aspect or interpretation of, like, proxy signature laws that they could
try to, like, force through into their interpretation of, like, Article 1, Section 7 of the
Constitution, which might make some auto-pen signatures invalid, but this is something that's, like,
kind of dismissed in a lot of legal circles, because as, like, a practical matter, it would be
disastrous to start rescinding executive actions based on this interpretation. Because, like, decades and
decades of laws and regulations would then fall into question and possibly become void.
So lots of people just, like, kind of don't think this is like a real question or a real
concern.
And part of me thinks that as well.
But as someone like Miller has demonstrated, they're absolutely willing to use like niche
arguments or precedents to do some pretty like crazy stuff.
Do you know what is not very crazy, Robert?
Paying money to the sponsors of this show?
It's an extremely reasonable act.
It's the only same thing you can do.
If you do anything else, you are being 5150ed, and you'll be on an involuntary 72-hour hold.
That's the way the law works.
All right, we are back.
So, with this Biden autopen thing, it's not really about the autopen.
The auto pen actually is not the problem here, kind of at all.
That's not what they're really focusing on.
In early June, the Justice Department launched an investigation into Biden's alleged use of the
auto pen with the DOJ pardon attorney Ed Martin writing in an email that this investigation is to determine
whether Joe Biden was, quote, competent and whether others were taking advantage of him
through use of the auto pen or other means, unquote.
With a specific focus on the preemptive pardons for members of Biden's family and clemency for
37 death row inmates whose sentences were converted to, like,
in prison. So this is the real crux, whether Biden was competent and whether people were using
the auto pen without his knowledge. And I think the reason why they're starting by focusing on these
pardons, whether for January 6th investigation committee members or for those close to Biden,
like this all relates to Trump's campaign promise of like retribution, right? You can think of
Cash Patel's list of deep state actors that he wants to investigate. That was such a core part of
what Trump campaigned on, and he does still seem keen on fulfilling, like, parts of that promise.
Now, Ed Martin, the DOJ pardon attorney investigating this auto pen debacle, himself has said that
the president's pardon power is absolute and that using the auto pen is, quote, not necessarily
a problem. But I think the core part here is that it's not about the auto pen itself. It's about
this secret cabal who are using the auto pen without Biden's knowledge. So a few days after,
after this investigation was announced.
The White House released a public memo from Trump entitled
Reviewing Certain Presidential Actions,
which ordered the Attorney General and the White House Council
to investigate, quote,
whether certain individuals conspired to deceive the public
about Biden's mental state and unconstitutionally exercise
to the authorities and responsibilities of the president.
And this document reads like something I would read on
like a conspiracy theory website five years ago.
It's written in a very similar style.
Quote, President Biden's aides abused the power of presidential signatures through the use of an
autopent to conceal Biden's cognitive decline and assert Article 2 authority.
This conspiracy marks one of the most dangerous and concerning scandals in American history.
The American public was purposely shielded from discovering who wielded the executive power.
All while Biden's signature was deployed across thousands of documents to affect radical policy shifts, unquote.
The memo states that Biden's advisors, quote, quote, tried to hide the true extent of his mental decline to, quote, cover up his inability to discharge his duties, unquote.
The investigation specifically wants to look into which policy documents were signed via Autopen and who ordered the president's signature to be affixed to said documents.
One other quote from the memo, quote, the White House issued over 1,200 presidential documents, appointed 200.
35 judges to the federal bench and issued more pardons and commutations than any administration
in United States history. Although the authority to take these executive actions, along with many
others, is constitutionally committed to the president. There are serious doubts as to the
decision-making process and even the degree of Biden's awareness of these actions being taken
in his name. Given clear indications that President Biden lacked the capacity to exercise
its presidential authority, if his advisors secretly used the mechanical signature pen to conceal
this incapacity while taking radical executive actions all in his name, that would constitute
an unconstitutional wielding of the power of the presidency, a circumstance that would have
implications for the legality and validity of numerous executive actions undertaken in Biden's
name. Unquote. So, though the 2005 Bush DOJ memo does support the use of the autopent to have
fix the president's signature. Obviously, it still must be the president who decides to sign a document.
Right. With the Office of Legal Counsel memo stating, quote, we do not question the substantial
authority supporting the view that the president must personally decide whether to approve and sign
bills. This is pretty obvious. And that's why so much of the autopen investigations are around
Biden's deteriorating mental state and not the autopen itself. It's about trying to prove whether
Biden was either not mentally capable of sufficiently authorizing a signature to be affixed
to certain documents, or was just completely unaware that the Autopin was signing certain documents,
with White House advisors specifically covering up Biden's mental decline to take advantage of
his compromised state to personally direct policy. And that's what the investigations are going to
try to prove. The White House is already making repeated assertions that this was the case,
and this question may be finally settled in a Trump sympathetic court.
And Republicans are currently trying every angle of attack on this.
Wisconsin Senator Ron Johnson has started a Senate investigation, and a House Oversight
Committee investigation is already up and running.
The past month, Kentucky Republican James Comer has been subpoenaing Biden admin officials
to testify on the use of the autopen and Biden's mental faculties while in office.
Comer's own letters and subpoenas for this investigation have,
been signed with a digital signature, because this is such a common practice in Washington,
and like all over the country now.
Right.
Try to think of all the official documents you sign on your computer, right?
Yeah.
Now, metadata from a subpoena cover letter sent to former senior advisor to the first lady,
Anthony Bernal, showed the document was authored and signed by someone named Benzine,
an oversight committee staffer, not James Comer.
Because, again, this is pretty regular.
So even the investigators are doing this process themselves while doing the investment.
investigation. Part of the reason why the Republicans are trying to make this a continuing story and not
just about, you know, the pardons is because as like Biden appointee judges began blocking Trump's
executive orders, the focus on the auto pen turned from just pardons towards use of the auto pen
to nominate federal judges. And this is where things get a lot more slippery. Last month, Fox News
asked House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, if not just pardons, may be found to be
null and void because of the results of this investigation, but possibly also judicial appointments.
Biden made 228 judicial appointments, including 45 appeals court and 187 district court judges.
And most importantly, Biden appointed Justice Kachanji Brown Jackson, the court's most long-winded
justice who couldn't even define what a woman is.
Mr. Chairman, you mentioned that you're looking at some of the pardons that were done under President Biden and the use of the Autopin, Dr. Fauci being one of them, talking about whether they were legitimate or not.
Are you also looking into Biden's judicial appointments as well?
Absolutely. Everything that was signed with the Autopin, especially in the last year of the Biden presidency, this is when all the books that are being written, all the tell-all interviews that are being recorded from his former.
disgruntled staffers and staffers who are trying to preserve the reputation for future employment,
they're all saying that Joe Biden was in a deep mental decline and that he was protected by a very
small inner circle. We brought a few of those people in the inner circle and asked them simple
questions like, were you ever told to lie about the president's health? And they couldn't answer that
question. They had to plead the fifth to avoid self-incrimination. This raises an issue whether these
pardons, whether these judicial appointments, and whether these executive orders are legal.
I believe that if this investigation keeps going in the way that it's going, that's going to raise
serious concerns about whether or not Joe Biden, even knew what was going on around him, much
less whether he authorized the use of his signature on all of this stuff. I think all of these
are in jeopardy of being declared null and void in a court of law. And that's a big deal for the
Trump administration because so much of what Trump is up against in court now,
with these liberal, biased Biden-appointed judges is the fact that they're using and citing some of these executive orders as reason to throw out President Trump's agenda and President Trump's executive orders.
So they tried to trump-proof the administration on the way out the door, and the problem they've got now is the American people realize that Joe Biden wasn't the one calling the shots,
and he may very well have not even been mentally fit to make decisions to authorize the use of his auto pen if he even authorized it.
So this is going to play out in a court of law.
I think our investigation is going to be a substantial part of evidence in it, and that's why we're doing the investigation.
Yeah, that's the rub right there.
That's exactly what they want, right, is to completely peel back the last administration or two of judges
and make it just be all their people,
a whole justice system
that they completely control.
If they could recall
like 230 federal judges
and fill in
230 more
like Trump-appointed judges,
that would clear out
so much of the like legal roadblocks
that they're currently facing.
Yep.
And that is the real like crux
of their focus on this issue.
That's why they're trying to like
insert this into reality.
And they're throwing this
auto pen story like everywhere
Even the Epstein files, which don't exist, were concocted by the ever-suspicious autopen.
It's a hoax that's been built up way beyond proportion.
I can say this.
Those files were run by the worst scum on earth.
They were run by Comey.
They were run by Garland.
They were run by Biden and all of the people that actually ran the government,
including the autopen.
Whatever the current big news story is,
They're going to try to shove the auto pen in there, because that's how they operate.
That's how they craft reality.
Okay, we are back.
So, needless to say, Biden and his advisors have denied all of this.
And it's a little tricky because part of what makes this story slightly compelling for
Trump's team is that obviously Biden's mental health was in decline for the past few years
of his presidency. We all saw that happen. That is like a accepted part of our country's history
now. We all saw the debate. And so much of their argument for this is resting on how much
everyone understands that. You have a whole bunch of former White House staff writing books on
this topic now. So with that aspect in mind, they still have to defend the use of the
auto pen and Biden's competency and awareness of all of the decisions being made. To do this, last month
had his first interview with The New York Times since, like, 2021, where he discussed how he gave
oral authorization for all of the pardons, with the autopen operation specifically being managed
by the staff secretary, Stephene Feldman. He said, quote, I made every decision. Biden said that
the White House used the auto pen specifically for the last batch of pardons. Biden said that they used the
auto pen because of the high number of pardon warrants issued, totaling around 4,000,
which affected three categories of federal convicts, people surfing home confinement,
nonviolent drug offenders, and people on death row. He did not choose or approve like every
single name on that list, but claims to have determined the criteria and categories, saying,
quote, I was deeply involved. I laid out a strategy how I want to go about these, dealing with
pardons and commutations. I pulled the team in to say, this is how I want to get it done
generically and then specifically, unquote. In preparation for the final months of the Biden
presidency, his White House counsel wrote an email to staff in November of 2024, laying out
the process for reviewing pardons, the last step being, quote, the president makes the final
decision on the final pardon and or the commutation slate, unquote. At this point, around a dozen
people have been subpoenaed and are giving testimony and the investigation is looking through
emails from the time. Specifically starting with these pardons because I think that's the only
way they have to like investigate this right now. It's easier to investigate the pardons from the last
three months of the presidency than just all of the documents assigned over the course of like four
years or even just two years if you look at like the past two years of his presidency. So specifically
they're focusing on the final pardons as like a way in to figure out the process of the
process for how the auto pen was functioning and who was using it. And they may try to extend that
process out to things like judicial appointments over time. I think trying to rescind the appointment
of someone like a Supreme Court justice, very unlikely, because obviously Biden had awareness
that that was going on. But they might try to pull more fucky shit with the circuit court appointments
or that kind of stuff. I don't think this is like the most important story facing the country right
now. Obviously, the stuff going on in Washington, D.C., and many other aspects of how the Trump
administration is operating with ICE and with trans people affects people more immediately.
But I've been specifically trying to pull information on how they're crafting this narrative around
the Autopan ever since he made that first truth back in March, because I saw this as a
ongoing reality crafting project, which might accumulate in something actually meaningful over time.
And none of these investigations have released their findings yet, and they're not expected to
for at least a few more weeks to months. But it's something that I think is worth keeping an eye on
right now, especially considering, you know, Miller and others, like the Heritage Foundation's
focus on trying to find niche loopholes in which executive power can be really exercised.
And if one of the ways to remove some of the roadblocks towards this president's executive power
is to undermine the executive power of a previous administration, it would be the first time
we see that strategy actually enacted. And it sounds like kind of cartoonish, but that's so much
of what they're currently doing is pushing everything to that extreme, trying to test all of these
more niche theories that you see people talking about in the past, like around 2011 when Obama
first signed legislation with the autopen. You had a whole bunch of libertarians complaining that
this is unconstitutional because he wasn't physically present when the document was being signed.
And so you have think pieces on that at the time that then kind of get memory hold.
And now you're going to see some of those justifications back again and actually try to test them out in court, especially if you have a Justice Department investigation, you have an attorney general investigation, you have a Senate investigation, and a House investigation.
If one of those can stumble onto or develop or invent some compelling argument,
we will actually see versions of this complaint be tested in a way that we never have before
because it would be like disastrous to the functional aspect of the state if you determine
that all presidential documents signed via Autopin are not ballot unless presidents in the room.
That would be a massive domino tipping over, which, you know, most reasonable people who
working government, like elder statesmen, aren't not going to want to do that because that sounds
like a fucking nightmare, like legally speaking. And it would be like disastrous. It would destroy
some fundamental aspects of the government. But right now, destroying aspects of government is
kind of the point. That's what we saw with Doge. That's what we saw during the first few months
of the presidency using this kind of tech startup thought process behind running a government. You have
to break things first so that you can rebuild it in a way that suits you better.
And if that means stripping away 200 federal judges to put in 200 of your own, that would have
massive benefits for them.
And I think that's part of why they're having this focus right now.
Oh, yeah.
That's kind of all I have on that.
So once you have some closing thoughts.
No, I mean, of course this is the game as laid out in not just Project 2025, but what the right
has been talking about my entire life.
Like, none of this should be surprising if you've been paying attention.
The only reason why some people are surprised is that there's folks in the Democratic hierarchy
who have been saying for years, this isn't really what conservatives want.
This is just a fringe, right?
There is no fringe anymore.
They'll never actually do this.
They can't do this.
The system doesn't work that way.
There's just been this belief that this can't happen, right?
It can't happen.
Or that, like, if it did, obviously, you know, the cops will stop them.
The FBI will stop them.
the army will stop them
and there's a reason why they've went out of their way
to gain control of all of those organizations
before doing this
so yeah I mean
you cannot we can either pretend that someone's going to stop them
and you don't have to worry about it or
just accept that we are where we are
and there may be some unprecedented things that need to be done
yep that's all I'll say
legally that's all I should say
That's the episode.
Bye, bye, everyone.
Okay, cool.
Have you ever looked at a piece of abstract art or music or poetry and thought,
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Hey guys, it's AZ Fudd.
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A foot washed up a shoe with some bones in it.
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Sometimes it's hard to remember, but...
Going through something like that is a traumatic experience
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We're going to talk about the adultification of black girls, mothering as resistance, and the tools we use for healing.
The unwanted sorority is a safe space, not a quiet space.
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Hello and welcome to the show.
it's me, James today, and I'm very fortunate to be joined by Friend of the Show, Carl Casada.
How you doing, Carl?
Oh, I'm doing great.
And when I hear a friend of the show with any of you all, are you, James, it's a real honor to me.
So I'm honored to be your friend and a friend of the show, so I'm glad to be here.
Yeah, thank you.
We always appreciate you being here and everything you do within range.
Carl, we're not here to talk about with Gunstaff today, actually, which is nice in a way,
because we're here to talk about something, which is also very important, right, in terms of keeping people safe.
and that is activism against corporate destruction of our environment.
We're here to talk about something called Project Blue, specifically.
Can you explain to listeners who are not familiar,
folks who maybe haven't heard about it,
what Project Blue was proposed to be?
Yeah, and it's not dead either.
We'll talk about that more.
But Project Blue was a, we'll see, a 290-acre data center project.
Put that in scope, 290 acres.
Whoa.
Data Center, south of Tucson, through a company called Beal Infrastructure that through
people's hard work came to find out it was for Amazon, but a 290-acre AI data center south
of Tucson.
Yeah, that is vast.
I'm trying to think of a, like, I can't think of a comparison for 290 acres,
but that is a huge amount of, like, computing power, right, I guess.
It's hard to fathom that kind of space when you think about it.
Yeah.
There are maps of what this proposed data center's footprint is, and if you take the
rough rectangle of it and place it over Tucson proper, the city of Tucson, that they propose
it to be just south of, it pretty much envelops and it consumes the entire downtown of Tucson
in multiple neighborhoods.
That's how big this is.
And it's one data center.
Yeah.
What was the data center supposed to do?
If people aren't familiar, right, what does the data center do?
What do they do with the big computer?
Well, okay, so for people that aren't really into the tech sector of things, a data center is essentially, think of something the size of a bigger than a mall that has nothing but giant computer data banks in it.
So it's a giant place where you would think of your old mainframes in the old days.
It's not mainframes anymore, but like it's racks and racks and racks of computing power and connectivity to the internet for the purposes of whatever Amazon would want to do with this.
So if you go to use Amazon's infrastructure or use their AI, that buzzphrase that now is everywhere,
the computers that do those things or those requests or decide what products they want to market to through their algorithm,
that's what these data centers do.
So it's essentially an entire city of just machines.
Yeah.
A techropolis is an interesting way to put it.
Like not a necropolis, a techropolis.
Yeah.
So imagine a few people maintaining an entire city of machines.
machines. Right. And actively participating and like undermining the value of labor for everyone else
with this AI shit. Well, that's part of this project we're going to get into a bit. It is one of the
things they like to propose is that it's going to bring jobs, but only at the beginning. And we'll
talk about that more. Yeah. Yeah. Well, let's talk about like people in Tucson did not want
this data center, right? Like there was a broad based and well-organized opposition to it. So perhaps
we should explain like why. Why? I mean, I guess people listen to this podcast are inclined to think
data center bad. But can you explain?
explain the impact that this would have had on the city and the surrounding area?
Oh, yeah, absolutely. So it's very interesting to me to think about, so these data centers of
this accord are, if you're interested in this topic and start Googling, you're going to find
that this is, of course, not the first large or mega data center that's been implemented across
this country. There's a number that are in Texas, and they are belching large amounts of pollution
into the environment. Cities nearby get absolutely destroyed by it. Typically, they're brought in
through some sort of tax incentives by the local city council or local county.
And so that's exactly what was happening here with Tucson.
So the local city council was pretty friendly to the idea.
They were talking to this Beal infrastructure to bring in Project Blue.
They were giving tax cuts.
They were giving all these incentives to bring this gigantic, megalithic thing into just south of town.
And part of the insidiousness of this is that this was going to go forward until someone noticed it.
Yeah. It was just going to happen. All of a sudden, one day this thing is there, right? But it was noticed. And I don't honestly know exactly how it got noticed, but it got noticed. And one of the things I really find interesting, historically speaking, is how certain places and cultures resonate over time with historical events from the past. Tucson historically is an interesting place in terms of its environmental activism. There's a number of things that happened in Tucson. In the 1960s, there were groups that were actively fighting the spread of high school.
highways, a highway infrastructure. So they were anti-freeway. And their reasoning and rationale was it,
that freeways were the arterial infrastructure that allowed for the destructive spread of tract
home developments. So the way to help one way is to prevent the destruction of the local
environment and the spread of a city was to diminish its freeway footprint. And I think you can
see this is true. If you look at any big city now, like Phoenix is essentially a hive city. And all of
the growth comes because of freeways. Right, because people can get to work or whatever
quickly, and so you get commuter suburbs. One thing that's always, was interesting when I was
doing more work in Infosec, when people talk, this does make sense, by the way, this is going to
sound off topic. I was talking to the information security architect for McDonald's. Wow.
And we were working with them on putting together a, this is why this is interesting me as a
data center thing. I used to do a lot of this work. They were talking about putting in a very
secure and encrypted data center for the purposes of protecting their intellectual property.
And I was talking to this guy.
I was like, what?
Is this like your recipes or what is it?
It's a McDonald's perit protects.
And this was wild.
No, they don't care about the recipes.
They were protecting their software that determines where they should buy the next
piece of real estate to put a McDonald's.
McDonald's is actually a real estate company.
And I have seen this in real time with my life because I've lived in a very remote part
of the Arizona desert, the frontier for lack of a better term of Arizona for a long time.
And the first thing that popped up in this one little area in the middle of
nowhere was a McDonald's. And now, everywhere you see a McDonald's show up someplace that seems
a little weird, give it a few years, and it's suddenly the epicenter of a new tractum
development. Oh, so they're like, they have some unique algorithm to determine.
They figure that out. And the McDonald's is the first thing that comes, usually a gas station
and the McDonald's, and it ostensibly just looks like, oh, this is the place to stop,
take a leak, and buy a burger. But no, they buy all the land around it. And then they start
selling or leasing that to other businesses as the growth happens. That's a big part of how the
McDonald's Corporation makes its main money. Fascinating, yeah. And so aligned with, you put a freeway,
when you see a freeway suddenly show up in the middle of nowhere, someone has a goal to put a
giant tract home development out there and sprawl that city a little more. Right. So anyways,
going back to the original topic, these people in Tucson in the 60s were anti-freeway, and they
actively changed the way Tucson grew. And I think it's one of the major reason, Tucson,
if you've ever been to Tucson versus Phoenix, is a very different, culturally different vibe
of Phoenix. One, it doesn't sprawl the same. Yeah. And it still has stuff that isn't strip malls.
It actually has locally owned businesses. It actually has some community resources. Not all of
its tract home in strip malls. And I think a lot of that is because of that freeway activism.
Yeah. Also, you look back in Tucson's past.
love him or hate him or somewhere in between
the somewhat infamous author
Edward Abbey lived in Tucson
and wrote the monkey wrench gang and wrote
a lot of environmental activism.
He had a lot of views that were kind of deplorable,
but when it came to climate
and when it came to the environment,
he was pretty on point,
and his work spawned an organization
called Earth First, which was
one of the, not the first, but one of the most
famous direct, we're talking direct action,
climate activity, or climate, you know,
they were the ones that were
Yeah, destroying bulldozers, driving them off cliffs,
there's some burning down ski chelets, like pretty wild stuff,
because they believed there was no retreat in defense of Mother Earth, he's a quote.
But anyways, he was Tucson, Earth First, birthed in Tucson.
And then Earth First was a victim of the Green Scare,
and many of them are still in prison for their work.
But they did have an effect.
Whether you agree with that sort of direct activism or not, they had an effect.
Yeah, but here we are.
It's been many years after those,
big main activities. And all that stuff sort of became quiet. You don't really think of like direct
action activism when it comes to the environment like you did back in the 80s and 90s. But when this
data center popped up, groups started showing up in Tucson that really felt very Earth First E. I'm not
talking direct action like fire bombs, but their speech, the way they were organizing, coming to
city council meetings, and not just showing up to speak, but disrupting the meetings, like causing a scene.
Yeah. And their work so far, and I will mention some of them later in this topic,
have actually sort of forced the hand of the city council to deny the project.
And so looking back, you're like, it's interesting to see the residents of things like those old freeway activists and Edward Abbey and Earth First.
It's still there. Tucson still has that. And you see that coming up now in regards to this data center project and other things that are starting to happen.
Yeah. I love Tucson. I've spent a lot of time in Tucson for years and years and years. And there is a feeling of like, it's got this like DIY community feeling that you do not experience. People think Tucson and Phoenix are just a smaller version of the same, but they're incredibly different. Oh, no. Yeah. It's hard to describe the difference. You have to go to both.
Yeah. Or you can just not go to Phoenix. You can go almost anywhere else in the U.S. and experience the same thing as Phoenix. It's incredibly generic as the city.
Yeah, you know, Phoenix is an old place, too, not as old as Tucson, but the very core, the downtown of Phoenix still has something. However, Phoenix was never good about preserving any of its historicity or historical content. And so they never saw building old enough or cool enough that they didn't care about bulldozing it and putting up a Walgreens. And so Phoenix is, as, I forgot what documentary it was, but it was like what you just described, so many American cities, you drive to it and it's just like this like constantly looping, revolving piece of film of,
of Walgreens, McDonald's, nail salon, super cuts, chilies, rinse and repeat.
Yeah.
And it just, every 10 miles, it's the same thing.
Dutch Brothers coffee.
It just never ends.
And Tucson is not yet like that.
It still has a soul.
Yeah.
There are special places in Phoenix who say, like Guadalupe is cool where my yagi friends live.
It's a nice area.
I like going there.
Let's take a little break and talk about how Tucson opposed its data center.
So there are a number of groups that came together.
If you can't track everything all at once, because it's not possible as a human being.
The one I've been keeping eye on and communicating with is called No Desert Data Center.
They have a presence on the web.
They're all over social media, Facebook, Instagram, and for me, at least, and this is not to exclude anyone.
If you're one of the primary people or groups that were working against us,
and you heard this, please do not feel like I'm excluding you.
This is just the group that I landed up connecting with and following.
But they are also doing a good job of aggregating others too.
So almost all of their posts have like a bunch of other groups tagged in it.
So if you were to look up the No Desert Data Center folks, you're going to find a lot of them.
But they had some amazing artwork.
You know, one of the things that I think is really important in activism is getting the attention of the local community.
Artwork will do that.
So they're this incredible poster that says no drop for data.
and it's a water drop with a rattlesnake and a havelina and a soarro and they had a rattlesnake wrapped
around a raindrop like really good stuff that catches your eye yeah yeah so they were doing that
but they were also getting people together they were having meetings planning sessions before
city council meetings getting people together doing the artwork there rallying the troops for lack of
better term building morale you don't have activism without morale yeah and then they were showing up
and showing up in numbers. There's videos on Instagram, on their feet alone, where one of these
city council meetings had over a thousand Tussonians in it with signs and posters, and they
weren't just sitting there quietly waiting for their 30 seconds to speak. They were disruptive.
They were loud, and they were not going to not be heard. So that type of activism in this instance,
very clearly is the reason that this happened, because if you read the writings of a number of the
city council members. They were very sympathetic to the data center. One of them was talking about,
like, this is the wrong thing to do. If we block the data center, they're just going to build it
anyway, and it's better for us to be involved, because then we can help tune it to be better for the
community. No, no, no, no, no. You're just whitewashing a horrible thing. And so this group and other
groups call them out on that immediately. Nice. They're like, no, that's not it. So I think I'm answering
your question, but it's groups like this,
throwing up in large numbers,
being loud, not only online, but in person,
that force their hand.
That's crucial, yeah.
Yeah.
It's people actually being willing to, like,
get out the tweets and into the streets, so to speak,
to, like, actually show up, in this case,
at these meetings, but it doesn't have to just be meetings, right?
It could be anywhere.
I guess, we should just talk about, like,
Tucson is from an odd-time word.
It means dark corner, but it is not a cool place.
It is cooler than Phoenix, actually.
that, like, this data center would have consumed a massive amount of energy, I presume,
like, just keeping the computers cooled, right, and a massive amount of water to do that.
Absolutely. So when you start talking about heat, for example, I think it's worth,
I know we don't have infinite time here on this podcast, but it's worth noting for people that
are not familiar with the concept of heat islands.
Yeah.
Heat islands are where you build so much metropolitan infrastructure, including asphalt and
concrete with no thought towards heat or cooling.
you really don't. Like Phoenix was built without thinking about that. They're thinking about it now, but it wasn't built thinking about it when it sprawled and it was continuing to sprawl. Yeah. Phoenix was always a little hotter than Tucson just because of like, you know, geographical reasons. But now Phoenix is measurably and demonstrably hotter. Yeah. Because it never cools off. And that's a heat island. So what happens is during the day, all of that concrete, all that asphalt, all those things heat up. And it'll get to at moments like just this last week,
118, 120 degree in the middle of the day.
But because the heat island hasn't been architected well and has no green space to deal with this, at night, it's still 105.
It never gets below 100.
And so the problem with heat, like obviously 120 degrees can kill you, but the problem with the heat is that as you never get a chance to cool off, heat over time is more dangerous to human to all living organisms.
If you get a break, that's what keeps you alive.
So it can be 120 during the day, but if it's 75 at night, that gives you a moment to heal
and recuperate for the next day's heat.
Phoenix is one of a, not the worst, believe it or not, but one of the worst versions of a heat
island, and they are actively working to make that better, but it's kind of hard to undo
what's been done.
Tucson, once again, because the sprawl was diminished by activism of the past, did not
become the Heat Island Phoenix does. So while it might be 113 during the day, it might get down to 80
at night. Yeah. And that really is a big difference for not only sustainability, but for the health
and safety of everyone that lives there. One of the things that I find is interesting is the justification
for these data centers is because Arizona is seen as a place that doesn't have significant natural
disaster risk. But one of the things that's being left out of the conversation, I don't know why this is the
case is that heat and heat islands are a natural disaster. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, they kill people.
If the power were to go out in Phoenix at the wrong time of year, the death toll is hard to fathom.
Yeah, yeah, people, yeah, without air conditioning, it's unsurvivable in those temperatures,
especially for older people, people medically conditioned or what have you.
Anyone at risk, the unhoused is one example, of course, which they don't even do proper metrics
and measuring of, because our society doesn't care like it should.
However, outside of that, you said people that are at risk.
Anyone that has any sort of illness, the young, the elderly, anyone like that, they have to live in their air-conditioned spaceship to survive.
Yeah, yeah.
And it would have taken, like you say, a huge amount of cooling just to keep this data center.
Well, that's where this gets so fascinating when they start proposing these because, like, oh, let's be realistic.
Right.
Arizona is probably low risk for a dramatic earthquake or a hurricane.
That's fair.
Yeah.
However, it is not a low risk for a heat casualty event, which is going to be.
on every year and getting worse with climate change. And so these data centers, the one in
Tucson that was proposed, would have consumed, and the numbers fluctuate. And of course, the numbers
you get from the Amazon crew versus others will be a little different. But as best as I can tell,
the power consumption of this one data center was essentially the equivalent of that of Metropolitan
Tucson. Jesus. Yeah. So you doubled the power load of the entire city.
Yeah, for this data center. And the cooling system, there's two different ways to cool.
There's quote-unquote air-cooled and water-cooled. They can tell you whatever they want.
The reality is they're probably not going to be affected with air-cooled in this environment,
so it's going to be water-cooled. And the data on that also seems to be the water consumption
of this was not only equal, maybe worse than that of Tucson itself.
Looking at this site right now, water positivity claimed for the initial two years, but the initial
estimate was 622 million gallons. Whoa. Yeah. Yeah. With a 700 millawatt expected demand,
it's crazy. And so what happens is not only does the city council just see dollar sign is in
their eyes, local electrical infrastructure like TEP, the Tucson electrical, or other
data center places where data centers are located, suddenly do things like stop worrying about
any form of carbon positivity or they get rid of all their carbon goals so that they can build
and work with people like this. Because if you double the power consumption of a region
overnight for a data center, think of the waste that you're going to produce to do that.
Right. Yeah. And suddenly, how do you produce that power? You're not going to have a nuclear plant
pop up tomorrow. So you're going to do other things like burn more coal. Yeah. And so your carbon
and carbon positivity
or an attempt to move away from carbon waste,
they just throw that out the door
so they can have these lucrative, juicy contracts
with these data centers.
Yeah, yeah, that is...
I mean, just on the face of it, when I heard of it,
I was just like, why are they doing this
in one of the hottest places in the region?
But I guess, yeah, they just don't see heat as a threat.
Having spent a lot of time in the desert there,
I can tell you it is a threat to human life.
So, as of last week, right, the council has refused it permission to be built in Tucson.
Due to intense external pressure, they were, they did vote against it, yes.
Yeah.
So that's like, it's a victory.
I guess it's a victory and a battle, but it's not the end of the war.
Oh, no, no, that's the problem with all this is that these companies and these folks will never stop.
So I just saw an article, in fact, that two days ago, yes.
this project was voted down. However, they're coming back with just another proposal
to do it a slightly different way. And so each time they just reiterate and change it,
it's just a new battle. Right. So they will change the words, however they want to make it
sound, until these people will vote yes for it. So, like, Nikki Lee, which is the ward for
a councilwoman, was the one that was arguing against essentially saying that we should approve
this project so we can have better control of it. Right. And the activists said,
against that, but it's just, they're just going to keep changing the tune until the activists
get essentially worn out. On top of that, this is not the only data center being proposed
in Arizona. There are currently three of them under proposal. There's this one in Tucson, and two of them
in Penal County. The one in Penal County starts off at the small size of 300 acres, but it's
proposed to go to 3,000 acres.
Jesus. They want to build, ultimately, a 3,000-acre data center that sprawls, essentially from
Southern Phoenix across the entire north-south breadth of Penal County on the west side of the I-10,
southwest of Eloy extending through significant what are indigenous or what were indigenous lands,
destroying whatever cultural remains are there. But imagine if this 290,
the acre data center was going to equal the power consumption and water consumption of Tucson,
what is a 3,000 acre data center going to do?
Yeah, yeah, that's insane.
That's this vast.
And that one is currently still in its early phases.
That one is called the Laosa Project.
The CEO of this company is named Koldeep Verma.
Okay.
Verma, V-E-R-M-A.
I'm not if that's sure that's the right pronunciation.
But in another example of tech bro narcissism, he's calling this
Vermiland, and his company is called Verma Land. It's like the most awful version of Disneyland.
We're not even bringing you rides. We're just going to drink your water,
belt heat into the sky, destroy your desert so you can have a disturbing
psychological, parisocial relationship with an AI avatar, and we're going to do it at your
expense. Verma Land, isn't that lovely? Yeah. Man, I've seen, that's weird. They already own
a lot of land off the I-10, I think. Yeah, no, they've been purchasing land throughout Arizona.
and sitting on it. But this is where the 3,000 acres come from is Verma land.
Jesus. Yeah, that is, that's a mind-bogglingly vast data center.
So I guess, like, this is one, you know, as you say, this will either move someone else,
so there will be other struggles, right? Like, for instance, the United States is waving many of
the waivers, including ones that protect indigenous human remains to build its border infrastructure
right now. Actually, a lot of the border infrastructure is coming out of the U of A Tech Park in Tucson,
right? That's where a lot of these companies have their headquarters, right, of people who make
the border surveillance infrastructure. What can we learn from this struggle in Tucson if we're not
in Tucson? We might not even be in the U.S. because there are some unique things about Tucson,
It has this history of activism, and it's always been, I don't want to use weird in a derogatory way, but it hasn't conformed to the neoliberal capital model of a city.
But I don't think it's unique.
There are things I think that anyone can take from this victory and the continued opposition, right?
So what can we learn from it?
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, no, I think that that's a fair way to put it.
And I think that, like, speaking of like the reverberance of the history of the area and the types of movements that came out of there, as we mentioned already earlier, make two.
Unique in regards to it being at least culturally more ready than some place to have this struggle.
However, if they do succeed and completely stop Project Blue and the 290-acre data center near Tucson is stopped,
it's not going to stop there.
We see three more data centers being proposed in Arizona proper,
this 3,000-acre dream site that I've mentioned already,
is they're just going to keep changing and moving and trying to do it somewhere else?
The reality of this is that when we look back at the workers' rights movement, there was the IWW, the industrial workers of the world.
The thing is, Tucson winning one fight against this data center only is a microcosm of the greater macrocosm of the consumption of these tech bros and tech industry people who do not care about the climate, do not care about you, do not care about the community, do not care about the water they consume,
and they will destroy everything in their past for profit.
We know that.
That is what this form of data capitalism is.
And so Tucson's lesson is everyone has to be this.
And I agree with you that Tucson isn't unique in that there are other places that will have the fight.
But this is truthfully everyone's fight because the amount of pollution that would be belched out of this data center or the ones being proposed in Arizona affects everyone.
The reality of climate change is, in my opinion, indisputable.
We're seeing it every year.
It's worse.
And it is human-induced, at least to a large degree, unlike some people want to deny.
Yeah.
And having your AI avatar on the internet is not in the interest of humanity as a whole.
So we have to work on this on a much larger.
It's a global issue.
Yeah, yeah.
It is not a local issue.
That's what I'm trying to say.
And these data companies like Amazon, like Google,
like Apple, although this isn't Apple in this instance, but all of them.
They have the power, if not more, power than that of a nation state.
Oh, yeah.
Like, I think of my friends in the Marshall Islands, right,
the small nation state, but one nonetheless, right?
They will have maybe 30 or 40 years before the islands are unhabitability to the rise of the sea level.
And, like, their response has been, A, to double down on community and supporting each other, right?
They also did things.
Like, if you go in between the islands on an atoll and the Marshall Islands,
generally are used like a Higgins boat,
like a landing craft from World War II, right?
But they also have these solar power canoes now
to reduce their footprint.
They are a tiny, tiny fraction of a single percent
of the world's CO2 footprint.
And so what happens in Tucson will affect them, right?
And what they do cannot alone help them survive, right?
And they've appealed to the world's solidarity,
I made a whole podcast about this,
and the world has not shown up for them, right?
So, like, I think people, you're right, like, this is a global struggle.
It's one that, you know, it doesn't stop in Tucson, doesn't stop in Eloy, doesn't stop in Phoenix.
Like, it stops when these data centers, which are antithetical to our survival of a species, stop being built for shit that we don't need.
This is touching on a point that always, that frustrates me frequently when we talk to people who are, at least on the right side minded in terms of being concerned about our future.
And they do the thing, right?
they'll do their recycling or they'll put up a solar panel, all those things, sure.
Yeah, but, and this isn't to say that the individual shouldn't do the ethical and moral thing
that they can do when they can do it. Absolutely. Can you recycle? Sure, do it. Can you put
up a solar panel? Absolutely. Do that. But the real truth and reality of climate change and the
destruction of our environment and this planet that we all inhabit, it's not the individual. It's
corporations. Yeah. It is at a nation state level and a corporate level that is going to destroy our
small biosphere one.
Ironically, biosphere is
we'll talk about them. The experiment
is near Tucson, actually. Biosphere
2 was a little experiment that was a self-contained
1980s thing where these
scientists essentially encapsulated
themselves in airtight
bubbles to see if they could live
with the CO2 production that they were
creating within it. The truth was they couldn't.
The ocean turned to algae and they would have died.
So they learned biosphere 2
wasn't going to work. But we have Biosphere 1
and the individual doing the
solar panels or recycling. That's a good thing and that's moral, but that's great. It's something
we should do if we can. But it's us. We have to act against the truly destructive forces.
And it's the corporations and the nation states that are belching destruction into our planet,
not the individual recycling or not recycling a soda can. Yeah, exactly. And I think it's one
of the greatest, like, frauds or I don't know, canards, these corporations have managed to pull off,
is to have people attribute blame for climate change to the person not recycling
their can, not the corporation.
Yeah, you know, the political spectrum is always challenging,
and I'm not trying to, like, point at any one thing.
But this is where I think we all have our failings, right?
And I think this is where, like, progressive space fails often,
which is you'll see tone policing and you'll see recycling and you'll see solar panels,
but the reality is that isn't really doing shit.
It just isn't.
In the grand scheme of the numbers, it isn't it.
That data center, stopping that data center is an actual victory.
That's something that needs to happen.
And those things need to stop.
That kind of stuff across the board, not just in Tucson, not just in Arizona, but everywhere
needs to be a thing where everyone comes together and realizes that these people are consuming
the very planet that we need to live on.
You see, Elon Musk talking about going to Mars.
The human race has to go to Mars because a meteor might hit the Earth.
No, your company is what hit the earth, my friend.
You're the one destroying the earth, not that meteor.
Yeah, yeah, it's not external.
It's like the, you know, it's coming from within.
Right.
And it is, as you say, like it's the species level threat to us.
The call is literally coming from inside the house.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
But we should also celebrate these victories and learn from them, right?
So if people are interested in learning more about the struggle in Tucson,
perhaps they're living in Phoenix,
and they're just now learning about Verma Land, right,
or these other AI projects.
Like, where can they find out more about this?
How can they involve themselves?
Yeah, so I want to, first of all,
I hope that I didn't come across as saying, like, this is hopeless.
I don't think it is.
Like, when we see the actions of, like,
what made Tucson unique now,
and we saw the actions of what Earth's first was able to achieve
through their decades of work,
which they did achieve a lot,
it resonates still to this day.
The planet is a better place
because those people paid a price to do what they did.
And that's just something that never stops is what it boils down to.
Yeah.
These companies, these people will never stop trying to destroy our home for their profit.
So that's the point I was trying to make.
And so this was a success, and we should celebrate that, like you said.
But one I want to reference is no desert data center.com.
Again, I want to very much point out, they are not the only ones.
Many people came together.
They're the one I have really been paying attention to.
If you go to no desert data center.com, they have links to all their socials, Instagram,
Blue Sky, Facebook. And if you go to any of those, their Instagram's particularly active and has
some great motivational art on it. I will tell you that. They will also link you to a number of
other organizations at the same time. So if you're interested in this particular issue of these
data centers in Arizona, I would reference you to that. You can go to their link tree, which is also
linked from their Instagram, and that'll connect you to a number of other organizations.
organizations that are working on this right now. And to their merit, the Project Blue,
they succeeded at least delaying Project Blue, hopefully stopping it. And the next post they put up
was about the Data Center and Eloy. So they understand that this is broader in scope than just
one desert data center. That's good. Yeah. It's like it was in this movie,
there will be blood if you ever saw that. There's an amazing line. Of course, I drink your milkshake.
If you drink the water south of Tucson or don't, but then put it
data center just north of Tucson. It doesn't matter. It's the same watershed. Yeah, yeah.
Right? It's the same. Same problem. So no desert data center.com. And that'll get you to a bunch of
different links and a bunch of updates about what's going on with this. Perfect. And, Carla,
if people want to follow your work, I mean, you have a presence on the internet, where can people
find you? Yeah, yeah, yeah. My project is not necessarily about the desert data center,
but I'm definitely obviously very sympathetic and part of that, too, just not on my project. I'm
in range TV. So if you want to find all my work, you can find
it by just easily going to inrange.tv. And there's a link on there called watch. And that'll
get you to all my socials. I distribute my video content. Decentralized. YouTube is the line in the
room. Let's be realistic. But I have my content in multiple different places. Easiest way to find
all them is in range.tv. And you'll find my socials there too, which is Facebook and blue sky and
all that. And of course, my topic is more about firearms, history, and civil rights and how they
intersect. But if our ability to breathe and drink water isn't human rights, I don't know what
is. Yeah. I think that's how we should see these things. Thank you so much for your time, Carl.
That was great. James, thank you for having me. I appreciate it. It's always a real treat to be
on any of the shows here. And I love all the work you all are doing. And together, hopefully we can
I don't know how to put it, stop these corporate maggots from eating our not yet corpse of an
earth. Yeah, man. I think it's like, I guess I'll finish you up by saying, like, it doesn't matter
if we're confronting fascism. It doesn't matter if we're confronting this destruction of our planet,
right? The only way through this is together. And the only way that we defeat this is through
building stronger communities to show up for one another. And that's something that you have
documented extensively in the historical parts of your channel. So I think there is a connection
that I hope people can see there. Yeah, community defense is also protecting our planet so we can
live on it. Yeah. I agree with that. And we have to do that together.
thousands of people showing up to city council meeting at Tucson
is a glimmer of light in this moment
and hopefully we can see more of them.
Yeah.
All right, thanks, Kyle.
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your podcast.
Welcome to It Could Happen here, a podcast about things falling apart this week featuring an
entire three sentences about putting it back together again.
I am your host, Bia Wong, and today we are gathered here to talk about tariffs.
Oh boy, it has been a massive two weeks of tariff.
news, the most important aspect of which has been finally getting a resolution to what was going on
with the Liberation Day turf tariffs that Trump tried to impose at the beginning of his time in
office. On July 31st, we finally actually found out to what those tariffs were going to look like
and what those tariffs are going to look like is per CNN. Effectively what happened is
that roughly if the U.S. runs a trade deficit with you,
you get a 15% tariff, and you get a 10% tariff if we run a trade surplus with you.
Now, there's a bunch of other individual rates.
We'll get to some of them in a second.
But it's worth emphasizing that this doesn't make any sense.
So, okay, before we get into the structural effects of this,
I want to sort of look at what the nominal stated justification for imposing these tariffs are
and how they're at odds with each other.
And this is a point where we'll turn to later.
Part of the justification for the tariffs is that, okay, they're trying to use tariffs to replace
the income tax.
That's nonsense.
It's gibberish.
You literally cannot raise enough money through tariffs to replace the income tax.
But, okay, that's the thing that they want to do.
The other nominal justification, and this is what's being used in negotiations and is the thing
that is causing individual tariff rates to randomly sort of be jacked up, is that
Trump is pissed off that the U.S. runs trade deficits with countries, and again, like, this is
basically nonsense. The U.S. pays for things in its own currency. We don't actually need other
places currency. It doesn't matter if we run trade deficits. I really hate that Rand Paul
is right when he said, I run a trade deficit with my grocery store. But, like, that's how the
American Empire is supposed to work. These people do not care that this is how the American
Empire is supposed to work. They have been handed the most sophisticated
imperial machinery that has ever existed in the entirety of human history
and they see numbers on a chart which says we pay them more money than we're getting
and they're pissed about it. But again, okay, if that's a stated justification, right,
then why are you imposing a tariff on countries we have a trade surplus to?
That doesn't make any sense. And the difference between them is only 5%.
So what are we doing here? It's nonsense. Like our trade policy is being run by people
who don't understand how any of this works and are operating off of, you know, effectively just
pure anger and rage. So I'm going to talk about a few of the really, really high rates.
We're not going to focus on 30% South Africa, for example, but oh boy. So Syria is at 41%, which is
absolutely fucking hideous. Syria is a country that, I don't know, anyone who listens to this show is
aware of the extent to which Syria has been devastated by the Civil War, and this is an incredible
blow to their economy. Laos and Myanmar are also being tariffed at 40%. And we promised in the
executive disorder to explain how Trump recognizing the Junta. So Joe Biden had refused to
recognize Myanmar's military coup government. As long-time listeners of this show are aware,
there is a military coup in
in Myanmar. There is a large-scale
revolutionary process attempting to overthrow this government.
My co-host, James Stout,
Robert Evans, have
done a lot of very good reporting on this
that you can go find. You should find it
is some of the best journalism that I've ever
encountered. But the US's
official position has been that we don't recognize
the coup government because it is, and this is
true, a coup government.
But Trump
just sent the Junta a letter
that says your tariff to 40%. And the thing about this
the junta was like oh shit hell yeah like that means you recognize us right because you're sending
us official fucking notices of shit so you're recognizing us as a legitimate government of Myanmar
and so the junta is like thrilled by this there's some evidence of like the u.s lifting sanctions
on them after it's kind of messy but yeah great somehow in in the attempts to sort of just like
squeeze every last drop out of all of these countries we have recognized an incredibly
brutal military dictatorship.
Hate that, hate that.
Back to the more direct tariff stuff,
the tariffs on Laos is also going to be devastating
for Laoshen economy,
which is a lot of the economies
in Southeast Asia are
pretty heavily export-driven,
and it's one of the places
where a lot of textiles manufacturing
takes place after the sort of
increase in labor prices and
increase in resistance from the labor movement
in China kind of pushed
all of that capital down the
Macong River Delta. This is going to absolutely fucking suck for everyone in Laos.
And, you know, this is something I want to keep emphasizing over and over again that these
turf tariffs, the people they hurt the most, are workers in places like Laos and places like
Syria, right, who are going to just be absolutely fucking devastated by it.
Now, let's also talk Switzerland, which was the other country that had a tariff at like 40%.
This one is genuinely really funny, which is that it seems to largely be driven by Trump being pissed off of the trade deficit, which is like, compared to like the scale of the U.S. economy, the trade deficit is like $0, but the funniest part of this is that the trade deficit is largely driven by gold imports.
Now, this is extremely funny because if you know anything about the American right, you know that a lot of the ways that they did their funding, especially when they were sort of building their operations, a huge source of their funding is getting their followers.
to buy gold. This was the original
Alex Jones grift, right? I think he still
does it a little bit now. Before he sort of pivoted
in supplements, he would partner with
like gold salesmen and like silver salesmen.
And this has always been a huge
source of these people's money. Now,
there's been a little bit of decrease in
the prominence of
gold as a thing. There's
a very good folding
ideas video about this incredibly
bizarre Idris Elba,
weird gold promotion documentary
which talks about the ways in which gold has been
sort of threatened by Bitcoin and, well, mostly Bitcoin, but it's like cryptocurrency in
general as like the scam you're trying to sell all of these sort of weird prepper and like
hardline, quote unquote, sound money libertariany types. But it is very funny that this is in
effect a self-reinforcing cycle because the thing about the price of gold is that it is
largely determined by how fuck the rest of the economy is. Gold people who are trying to sell
gold are trying to sell you on the fact that the economy is about to fucking explode.
but this is a cyclical effect
where these tariff rates go up
and the economy explodes
and so people buy more gold from Switzerland
at which point our trade balance
from Switzerland gets worse and worse and worse
so
any of like Swiss watches
are another sort of major source of export currency stuff
which are again all worn by
all these fucking Maga grifters
with their like fucking $10,000
watches or whatever
so that one is just funny
Trump has also announced
and this has not gone into effect yet
who fucking knows
when if it goes
into effect, but I think it's worth
talking about, which is that Trump has been talking about
putting a
100% tariff on semiconductors
unless you invest in the
U.S. So
Apple, sort of in response to this,
pledged $100 million in investment
in the U.S. to build chips, and I think
it's also worth looking at the ideological underpinnings
of this, because a huge
part of this thing is something
that you've been seeing increasingly on
the right is this dream
of making domestic iPhones.
And if you look at the people in the tech sector, right,
the sort of tech billionaires,
you run all the stuff,
they're openly fantasizing about like,
oh, these like soft weak liberals
are going to be forced to like work in the factories
and put iPhones together or whatever.
And it's worth emphasizing
that this is just not possible, right?
And this is true of a significant number of the things
that they want these tariffs to do.
They're just not possible results
of the policy levers they're pulling.
A couple of months ago, I described a sort of
similar policy thing to this as like
they're attempting to scream at the moon
in order to control the tides
and it's like it doesn't work
it's not the right lever it literally can't
do what you think it's going to do
and it's worth going into why which is that
we can't make iPhones here
because we don't have
the migrant labor force to do it
and a lot of you may be thinking
oh well the US has a lot of migrant workers
no you don't understand
China which is where most of these things are built
even with the tariffs like a lot of you know
that there were some downcycling of plants,
that stuff has mostly been upcycled again.
China has 300 million migrant workers.
That is almost the entire population of the United States, right?
We are talking about individual plants
with 200,000 workers.
That is the low-end estimate, by the way, of those numbers.
We don't actually have very good numbers
on how big some of these Foxconn facilities are.
The low-end estimate is 200,000, right?
And again, this is just in time.
production. So, okay, what does it actually mean, right? This means that the production cycles work
a lot of, for example, the way that UPS works, right? We're like, you have a bunch of people who are
effectively seasonal or part-time workers who only come in when demand increases. So for UPS, right,
and it's actually a relatively similar schedule to the way it works in China, but it's like there's
these massive surges around the holidays. With Apple, it's more like September, November,
roughly, but it's in order to
massively be able
to ramp up production in time
for the sort of
massive holiday increase of
orders, right? But in order to do this,
you need to have a production apparatus
where you have 200,000 workers
there, but you can also get
rid of most of them, and they
can support themselves doing other stuff for the rest
of the year, and then you have to be able
to bring them back in during
peak season? We just do not
have the populations to
to replicate this, right?
Even if you're trying to replace it with prison labor,
the thing about the American prison system is that it's decentralized, right?
This is actually a key element of how the U.S. economy is structured.
Prisons are one of the sort of three major sources of jobs in rural areas.
The other two are like Walmart-style service jobs,
which replaced anything else that was in the economy and the military bases,
which is part of why, you know, like, this is part of why rural politics have gone so reactionary,
because, like, okay, so if your options in the economy are,
soldier, prison guard, service labor,
you're going to generate a bunch of unhinged reactionary bullshit.
But again, even though the American prison system
has a really high population,
these people are really spread out.
And iPhone production requires sort of like mass centralization.
Right?
That's the only way to get these things to work.
Plus, the workers that you're bringing in
have to be skilled enough to be able to do this shit.
And this is a capacity that's built up in China
over the course of like decades, right?
And we don't really have this.
Now, people have tried moving this production
to other places like Vietnam.
For example, the tariff rates there
are also making this extremely difficult,
but it's been really, really hard to replace.
And the other issue,
and this is a technological issue,
not just a sort of issue of
the systemic elements of the population of China,
the infrastructure to build microchips
in the U.S. doesn't exist.
And it's not just,
that the infrastructure
to build the chips doesn't exist. It's actually
way worse than that. And this is why
all of the attempts in the Biden administration has put an
enormous amount of money into this. The Chinese government
also has put an enormous amount of money specifically into the
microchip angle, and none of them have been able to do it.
And part of it's a technological problem.
But part of it is that the machines
that you need to make the chips
don't exist, right? But the machines
you need to make the machines that make
the chips also don't exist.
And the machines you need to make the machines
that make the machines that make the chips
also don't exist.
We are so far up the supply chain, right?
And this is one of the, you know,
one of the thing that they're trying to do
through sort of like
pure politics, right?
Through like, just like the pure exertion
of state power is to reshape
the fundamental structural way
that the supply chain has worked.
And the way the supply chain has worked
is by intense specialization
in very, very, very small areas, right?
So Taiwan, for example,
becomes the only place, basically,
that can manufacture these chips.
And that intense specification means that, like, the machines that make the machines that
are used to build this thing are only made by, like, one company in Switzerland.
And, like, machines that make those machines, like, who the fuck knows where they're built?
And this is the thing where the technology involves has become so complicated, and the laborers
become so specialized that you're dealing with machines that, like, just straight up,
not many people in the world know how to use, and not many people in the world know how to create.
And so we're so far up the supply chain, right?
And this is also, if you want to look at, like, what the impact of these tariffs are going to
be, right? Because your supply chains are so specialized, you know, you can think of these supply chains
as like incredibly complicated machines, right? And any sort of like little rock that you throw into
the machine, or you know, you throw sand into the machine and suddenly the ball bearing doesn't
work at quite the right efficiency. And so, and things just start breaking down across the entire
supply chain. And they think that they can just replicate all of this with just like pure tariffs
and like throwing money at it. And no, you can't. These are, these are actual structural things.
of how the economy works. Now, do you know what else is a structural element of how the economy works?
It is these products and services and the fact that they fund this podcast. Woo!
We are so back. Now, one of the other kind of tariffs, I've been calling, I guess, like defiance tariffs.
One of the things the Trump administration has been doing
is threatening to impose a 50% tariff on anyone who buys oil from Russia.
India has been threatened with this.
India's current tariff rate is 25%.
They're right now threatening with another 25% to get them the 50%.
It's sort of unclear exactly who's going to back down here.
More interestingly, and we've talked a little bit about this, Brazil.
There is a 50% turf tariff on Brazil, again, for refusing to release Bolsonaro, which is very funny.
because this has managed to piss off the entire sort of political sphere in Brazil
to the extent that like Bolsonaro has had to come out and denounce this
because Bolsonaro was getting fucking torn to shreds by the Brazilian right
for being basically a traitor sort of lapdog of the U.S.
as they're sort of, you know, imposing this direct attack on Brazil through this 50% tariff, right?
It's backfired so spectacularly that like Lula, who was floundering,
is now riding this incredible wave
of sort of anti-American Brazilian nationalism
from both the left and the right.
So Lula, who is again in a pretty strong political position
because of this, has refused to do direct talk to the U.S.
because he was like, absolutely not.
Fuck this.
Here's a quote from Reuters.
We had already pardoned the U.S. intervention
in the 1964 coup, said Lula,
who got his political start as a union leader
protesting against the military government
that followed a U.S.-backed ouster of a democratically elected president.
Quote, but this is now not a small intervention.
It's the President of the United States thinking he can dictate rules for a sovereign country like Brazil.
It's unacceptable.
Now, again, as I said in the ED, there's a lot of things that are worth looking at here, right?
We have, on the one hand, this direct connection from Lula from, you know, the sort of subtle CIA backing the military coup stuff, which happens under the table, to, you know, this just like the President of the United States is telling you how to run your country.
And that is a substantive shift.
Even if, like, the CIA overthrowing your government, like, has more of a direct political impact on it, right?
The thing about the thing about the way American power worked was that it was mostly supposed to be under the table, and it's not now.
It is just, it's just out there in the open, right?
The premise that the U.S. governments, like the president of the United States should just be able to tell another country what to do is the fucking premise of American imperialism, and now they're just saying it out loud.
And it's also worth noting that it's not like Lula is some kind of, like, anti-American radical, right?
like, Lula worked really well during his first term in office, which was W. Bush.
But again, because of the way that the political winds have shifted here, right, to the
extent that, like, Bolsonaro has had to condemn an attempt to get him released from prison,
which is so funny because he's doing this, he is, he is pushing very hard.
Now, there hasn't really been a response yet for Lula's, like, call for organized terror
resistance from China and India and Bricks.
I don't know if there's going to be
it's worth talking a little bit
about what Bricks actually is here
So Bricks stands for Brazil,
Russia, India, China, South Africa
It was originally like an asset class
designed by some guys at Goldman Sachs
Who were, you know, trying to like classify the assets
Of this kind of like developing economy
Thing, it was like, you know,
you can buy bonds and these things
And maybe you can classify their asset rates together
And it has kind of become a political alliance
but, you know, there's a lot of people who will attempt to sell you on bricks being the sort of, like, leftist anti-imperial alliance, you know, and as a sort of socialist thing, and like, I will simply ask, right, who is doing the socialism here, right? Is it a butcher of Gujarat? Is it she, quote, we must oppose welfareism, Jim Ping? Is it Vladimir, we will show Ukraine true decommunization Putin? Is it the African National Congress of selling your country to Bank of America? Is it the butcher of
Haiti? Like, what are we doing here? Right? Like, this is not actually a substantively anti-American
political alliance. India is a close American ally. South Africa is a close American ally. None of this
really makes any sense. It's not a substantive political alliance, really. People periodically make
noise about it trying to be a substantive political alliance. But, like, I mean, like, India and China
are periodically, like, at war or, like, almost at war with each other over the border, right? These are a
bunch of countries that absolutely fucking hate each other.
It's never been a coherent political
project. Lula is trying to turn it into one,
but like I...
Fuckin, I don't think that's going to work.
So, you know, that's sort of
what's been going on on the front of sort of
national resistance, but Lula does have
a kind of very, very large
and powerful political
force behind him domestically
to resist this. We'll see what
happens going forward. It's also worth noting that China
has been negotiating with the U.S. and their
tariff increases, which are supposed to go into a
effect have been delayed for another 90 days, so we're stuck in this holding pattern again.
But let's talk about what this means for the economy, right? And I think the very short-term answer
is that I don't think anyone really knows, right? Like, the actual macro effects of this
are things that we've only just started to see. No one's ever really tried to model this out
because there's no reason why it would ever happen. You know, and you're starting to see things
behind the scenes
like medical supplies
being incredibly difficult to acquire
you're starting to see a bunch
of very very weird
items and supply chains
become increasingly difficult
to find
but again the supply chains
are going to break down
in ways that we just don't really understand
what is going to happen
and what has started to happen
is inflation is increasing
I want to sort of again
review our kind of inflation theory
right which is
largely derived from
our friends
is a strange matter, sort of supply chain theory of inflation.
Their thesis of inflation is that, like, it's not set by just supply and demand.
It's set by cost plus markup, because, you know, price is not set by, like, an autonomous
thing called the market.
Price is set by, like, a guy with, like, a price gun, right?
It's directly set by people.
And the way that those people set the price is, you know, the cost of acquiring the item
plus and markup for their profit.
now one of the sort of fundamental
like insights here is that
price is sort of sticky until it isn't
right which is that like
okay so the actual thing
that controls price is sort of like how pissed
off consumers
get at price increases
but also comma
that is also very very much tied
to brand right and if you raise your
prices and consumers get piss at you even if you drop
them again that doesn't necessarily mean those people
will come back right
so you know a lot of times
when there's price increases, companies try to eat it.
And that's been what's happening with a lot of these things, right, where at each point
in the supply chain, people are, you know, people are having to sort of pay for the tariff
parts, right?
And when someone has to pay for the tariff, they increase their prices, that they sell
it to the next person in the supply chain, the next person in the supply chain increases
their prices, right?
Now, so the way that these tariffs play out, right, is that each person in the supply chain
is doing cost plus markoff, but their costs are going up.
So your options are either, you sell it at the same price.
price and you reduce the amount of markup you're getting, which is reducing the raw profit
you're taking in, or you raise your prices. And these things are trying to not raise their
prices. And part of this is from direct political pressure, right? Like Trump has been threatening
companies to not raise their prices from the tariffs, but, comma, prices are starting to increase.
And as this goes on, and as more and more tariffs come into effect, and this becomes more and
more difficult to evade the tariffs, the prices are going to keep increasing because they're driven
by the supply chain price increases. So, you know, cost is going to go up. It is going to have
absolutely devastating impacts on workers across the world, primarily not in the U.S., but the workers
who are in these expert-oriented economies are going to have to deal with just the absolute
horror of large-scale economic collapse. You know what? Who else? Hopefully it doesn't have to deal with
the absolute horror of larger-scale economic collapse. It is a lot of the absolute horror of large-scale economic collapse.
the products and services to support this podcast.
We are back.
Now, the thing I want to close this episode on
is not actually a look at the economy,
because I think, you know,
we kind of don't know exactly what's going to happen
with the economy other than bad.
But there is something that I think we can look at
that's been broadly ignored or miscovered, which is what these tariffs say about the
nature of the state. And I think what's happening is that we're seeing a fundamental change
in the way that the state functions from the previous sort of neoliberal regime to this
like just really openly fascist one. And I think the most clear example of this isn't
necessarily the tariffs, as they are a pretty clear example. It's this extremely
weird, like, extortion agreement reached between Trump, AMD, and NVIDIA.
I'm going to read this from CBS.
Quote, U.S. chipmakers, Nvidia, and AMD will pay the U.S. government 15% of revenue
generated by sales of their AI chips in China, a White House official confirmed to CBS News.
This is just a shakedown, right?
You know, this is part of a negotiating process by which originally AMD and Vivida we're going
you ban from selling the AI ships to China. And in order to be allowed to sell these ships to
China, Trump was like, okay, if you want to do that, give us like 30% of your revenue. And they were
like, okay, what if we did 15%, right? This is just a shakedown. And, you know, it's been described
as such all over the press, but they're missing something fundamental here, which is that the state
fundamentally is just a shakedown, right? The analysis of Trumpism from the sort of critical
press has been to view it as corruption
and it is absolutely corrupt, right?
Like, no question about this. It is unbelievably
corrupt. Like, we have people just giving the president
blocks of fucking gold with an iPhone
embedded into them, right? It's
hideous, open corruption.
But analysis
that looks at the Trump administration
as corruption of an
ideal type, right?
That looks at it as
the transformation of the state into something that it
fundamentally isn't.
That kind of analysis is just wrong.
The state has always, and has always only been, the localized monopoly on the legitimate use of force, right?
That's all it is.
That's all it's ever been.
Everything we know about the state today, right?
From the legal system, to education, to roads, to environmental regulation, to the welfare state,
are all just functions that were tacked on to the core monopoly on violence, either as part of a carrot and stick gambit to maintain control of the population,
or simply as a concession to popular force.
you can just have a state
that is a bunch of guys with guns
who rule purely by fiat
and have control over an area
that is a state
everything else that we think of
as being part of a state
is tacked on
and Trumpism as a political force
has simply reverted the state
back to a pure mode of extraction
right?
The state is men with guns
who take shit from you
to pay for those guns
and it becomes breathtakingly clear
that this is
you know how the state is functioning
and Trina Trump
administration, because the Trump administration has been slashing benefits while handing tax breaks
and giant government contracts worth billions of dollars to the tech elite, and they've been spending
tens of billions of dollars, you know, to hand to the men's with guns and to recruit new men
with guns for the mass deportation regime, right? This is just a pure version of the state as an
extraction regime, as a regime that fucking takes money for you at gunpoint to buy more men with guns
so it can take more money from you. Trumpism imagines that you can collect this money to pay
for the apparatus of violence and terror
from just pure extortion of foreigners
in the working class.
You know, and we talked about this a bit
at the beginning, right?
This is part of why they want to do tariffs
is they think you can replace the income tax.
You know, the income tax is just like absolutely despised
by the extra state elements of the ruling class
because rich people hate paying taxes.
But there just isn't enough capital
to run a state like that
without employing some kind of like MMT-esque money printing,
which has alienated a huge part of Trump's estate,
coalition because his like quote unquote deficit reduction stuff hasn't actually
reduced the deficit so the people who like really really care about that shit ideologically
are pissed but also on a fundamental level this is already how most city governments operate right
they are enormous police budgets extracted at gunpoint either from the city council
directly or directly from the working class from fees and fines and tickets like just
leveled at working class people directly and this is something that is a little
different from how previous regimes of neoliberalism has functions, because those previous
regimes of neoliberalism did a lot of these same things, but they were run through regimes
of debt extraction, right? It was, you know, it was the IMF, right, coming into your country
and being like, okay, if you want to pay back these loans or this dictator took out, right,
you're going to have to, like, sell your entire fucking working class into peonage so that your
entire economy is going to be reoriented towards paying this debt back. But again,
that was debt extraction base
and finance base. Trumpism wants to
take out the middleman and just straight up
say, give me all your money if you want to live.
But this is not a
particularly smart strategy.
There's a reason that the state takes on
other guises than just a man with a gun
asking for your wallet, right?
A more literal regime,
a more direct regime,
a regime where the violence is out in the open,
invites more literal
resistance than a sort of symbolic regime
or a regime that operates the moral principles.
All regimes of accumulation, of dispossession, of resources taken by violence to produce more violence come to an end.
Brick by brick by brick and stone by stone, Trumpism too, will be torn to the ground by the hands of the people who had thought it could exploit forever.
This has been Nickadap here.
Have you ever looked at a piece of abstract art or music or poetry and thought,
that's just a bunch of pretentious nonsense?
Well, that's exactly what two bored Australian soldiers set out to prove during World War II.
When they pulled off what was either a bold literary hoax or a grand poetic experiment,
publishing over a dozen intentionally bad but highly acclaimed works of expressionist poetry
under the name Earn Malley in an incident that caused a media firestorm and even a criminal
trial. The Earned Malley episode made fools of believers and critics alike and still fascinates
poetry lovers to this day. We break down the truth, the lies, and the poetry in between on hoax,
a new podcast hosted by me, Lizzie Logan, and me, Dana Schwartz. Every episode, hoax explores
an audacious fraud or ruse from history from forged artworks to the original fake news to try and
answer why we believe. Listen to hoax on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast. Hey guys, it's AZ Fudd. You may know me as a gold medalist. You may know me as an
NCAA national champion and recent most outstanding player. You may even know me as a
people's princess, but now you're also going to know me as your favorite host. Every week on my new
podcast, Fud around and find out, I'll give you an inside look at everything happening in my
crazy light as I try to balance it all. From my travels across the globe to preparing for another
run at the Natty with my Yukon Huskies to just try to make it.
to my midterms on time. You'll get the inside scoop on everything. I'll be talking to some special
guests about pop culture, basketball, and what it's like to be a professional athlete on and off the
court. You'll even get to have some fun with the fud family. So if you follow me on social media
or watch me on TV, you may think you know me. But this show is the only place where you can
really fud around and find out. Listen to fud around and find out. A production of IHeart
Women's Sports and partnership with unanimous media on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you
get your podcast.
What would you do if one bad decision forced you to choose between a maximum security
prison or the most brutal boot camp designed to be hell on earth?
Unfortunately for Mark Lombardo, this was the choice he faced.
He said, you are a number, a New York state number, and we own you.
Shock incarceration, also known as boot camps, are short-term, highly regimented correctional
programs that mimic military basic training.
These programs aim to provide a shock of prison life,
emphasizing strict discipline, physical training, hard labor, and rehabilitation programs.
Mark had one chance to complete this program and had no idea of the hell awaiting him
the next six months.
The first night was so overwhelming, and you don't know who's next to you.
And we didn't know what to expect in the morning.
Nobody tells you anything.
Listen to shock incarceration on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The summer of 1993 was one of the best of my life.
I'm journalist Jeff Perlman, and this is Rick Jervis.
We were interns at the Nashville Tennessean, but the most unforgettable part are roommate, Reggie Payne, from Oakland, sports editor and aspiring rapper.
And his state's name, sexy sweat.
In 2020, I had a simple idea.
Let's find Reggie.
We searched everywhere, but Reggie was gone.
In February 2020, Reggie was having a diabetic episode.
His mom called 911.
Police cuffed him face down.
He slipped into a coma and died.
I'm like thanking you, but then I see, my son's not moving.
No headlines, no outrage, just silence.
So we started digging and uncovered city officials bent on protecting their own.
Listen to Finding Sexy Sweat on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome back, everyone, to Electile dysfunction.
Electile, that's a new one.
Yes, yes, yes.
The podcast about why President Bad, also Why World Bad, also Why America Bad.
I'm Robert Evans
Introducer extraordinaire
with me today
Garrison Davis
Mia Wong
James Stout
Eventually
Special segment from James Stout
Later in the episode
Yes later
He is being held in custody
By the FTC
That's not true
You cannot say that
Because that is something
That is something that actually
could happen over time
So unfortunately
But he is not
That's why I made it be the FTC
Garrison
People will believe us
I don't know
People will believe us
get arrested by the FTC any day now.
We could get arrested for the FTC any day now, thanks to the ads that I've been reading
for British Petroleum, even though I exclusively use American Petroleum.
This episode, we're covering the week of August 7 to August 13.
Yep.
For no.
It's just so we wear.
I think it's important to keep up because if people refer back to these episodes,
it's good to know what week we're talking about.
I don't usually remember what day it is, so, you know, good to do that.
Good to remember what day it is.
Mia, you want to start us off?
Yeah, I need to issue a correction about Sesame Street.
I was wrong about Sesame Seat structure.
We got a very sweet message from someone who works on the show
about the way I talked about it being stripped for parts.
Sesame Street was never actually, like, ran by PBS.
It was ran by its own independent nonprofit entity.
Sesame Workshop, I believe.
Yeah, yeah.
It's not, yeah, it's not, yeah, it's not called Sesame Workshop.
And so the episodes that were being streamed on HBO Max,
and I think they're now, they've now moved to, like, Netflix.
Those episodes all did still air on PBS, however, comma, they only aired nine months later.
But, yeah, I want to be clear about that.
And then, Garrison, do you want to talk about PBS kind of not existing anymore?
Well, PBS may still find a way to exist, but specifically, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting,
which helps facilitate the, you know, the funding and the structure and the operation of things like PBS and your local MPR.
after being defunded by the Trump administration
is now going to shut down completely.
Yeah, and that's a lot of how a lot of the funding
for rural networks particularly was able to function.
If your PBS network is like mostly not funded by that
or they can find other funding sources, it can survive,
but real bad.
It's pretty disastrous for public media.
Yep.
And like NPR specifically and all of its local affiliates
are some of the best, like, local news journalism across the country,
and this is going to be a big hurdle to get over with the loss of a, of, like, a giant
in the, not just, like, the, like, national media space, but, like, for journalism.
And as well as children's educational content.
And it's, you know, and it's worth mentioning to you, like, this is one of the last,
as sort of local media and local radio and local newspapers have been carved out and got out
of business and destroyed to venture capital firms. NPR was like one of the last local
journalism outlets left in a lot of places, especially in rural areas. And that's just getting
worse. So we hate that. Yeah, this has been the Sesame Street correction. I deeply apologize
to the cast and crew and production staff of Sesame Street. Yes. Sorry, particularly to Grover,
not sorry to Elmo. No apologies to Elmo. No, but we saw what
was tweeting, I'm on Larry David's side of that beep.
For our first main story this week, let's talk DC.
On Monday, Trump declared it was a liberation day for the District of Columbia to, quote, unquote, take our capital back and officially invoked section 740 of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act to place the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department under direct federal control and order, the Secretary,
of defense to mobilize the D.C. National Guard to, quote, address the epidemic of crime in our
nation's capital. Along with this announcement, Trump released a presidential memorandum reading in part,
quote, the local government of the District of Columbia has lost control of public order and
safety in the city. The mobilization and duration of duty shall remain in effect until I
determine that conditions of law and order have been restored in the District of Columbia.
Robert, who in the past have you heard
talk about federalizing the police?
Oh, gosh.
I mean, just a couple of guys.
There's this dude Hitler
who worked with a guy
named Herman Gehring and Heinrich Himmler
to do that back in the past.
But that was in Germany, you know,
a country totally different
from the United States,
almost three, four countries away from us.
So not really relevant at all
to anything happening here.
and we can all rest assured it can't happen here.
Yeah, we're not Germans.
We have a lot of Germans, but we're not Germans.
This is part of Yarvin's writing on how to take over the government,
centralizing the police is one of the key steps,
nationalizing local law enforcement, putting them under federal control.
And here is another version of enacting such a policy,
mainly citing this crime epidemic in D.C., though,
according to DC Metropolitan Police and their own crime figures, violent offenses, which
peaked in 2023, fell to their lowest in 2024, lowest time in over 30 years, and now in
2025 continue to fall even lower than that, though Trump claims that these stats, just like
the Bureau of Labor stats, are all made up, we're all fake. We'll get to that. These aren't,
these aren't real stats, and they're assuming that there's been fake statisticians who have been
covering up the real crime wave happening across D.C. and even across the country.
Trump cited three incidents leading to the federalization of D.C. police. One, the assassination of two
Israeli embassy staffers in May, a fatal shooting of a congressional intern in June, and most recently,
an alleged violent carjacking of the Doge staffer known as Big Balls, and a possible future
recipient of the Presidential Medal of Honor or Freedom?
One of the medals.
The Medal of honors only for military, yeah.
Well, you know, Big Balls, frankly, might have some military credentials based on how he
survived this latest, uh, this latest violent encounter.
Who's to say?
This assault from a platoon of Romanians?
Yeah.
Yikes.
Quite frankly, I feel like we're only about six to eight months out from him getting like
commissioned as a lieutenant and then them giving him the actual Medal of Honor.
I'm saying.
There you go for his courageous service getting beaten up by two 15-year-olds.
So this latest incident with Mr. Balls, I think is his official title at Doge.
Or now the Social Security Administration.
Not related to Ed Bowles.
No.
Different balls.
Or Balls Mahoney.
Very different guy.
This latest incident with Mr. Balls seemed to tip Trump over, though this is something
that he has lofted for months and months.
He's been wanting to do this.
On Tuesday night, 43 arrests were made in D.C. in relation to the federal seizure of police.
1,450 officers were part of this operation, half from D.C. Metro Police, which are now federalized.
So far, only 30 National Guard troops have been deployed, but around 800 are on the way.
On Wednesday, Trump discussed extending his control of D.C. police passed the 30-day limit.
Thank you, Mr. President. Your federalization of the police has a 30-day limit unless Congress
acts to extend it. Are you talking to Congress about extending it, or do you believe 30 days is
sufficient? Well, if it's a national emergency, we can do it without Congress, but we expect to
be to Congress before Congress very quickly. And again, we think the Democrats will not do
anything to stop crime, but we think the Republicans will do it almost unanimously. So we're going
need a crime bill that we're going to be putting in, and it's going to pertain initially to
D.C. It's almost, we're going to use it as a very positive example, and we're going to be asking
for extensions on that, long-term extensions, because you can't have 30 days. 30 days is that's
by the time you do it. We're going to have this in good shape, and don't forget, in the border,
everyone said it would take years and you'd have to go back to Congress. I never went to
Congress for anything. I just said, close the border. And they closed the border. And that was the end of it.
I didn't go back to Congress. We're going to do this very quickly. But we're going to want extensions.
I don't want to call national emergency. If I have to, I will. But I think the Republicans in Congress
will approve this pretty much unanimously. Don't like that. No, it's pretty dictatorial on like a
space level. If it's a national emergency, we can do it without Congress.
it's very palpatine emergency powers coded
and I'm not sure if Lucas was pulling on any real world examples
for Star Wars, the prequels
or if he was just pulling all that shit out of his ass
who knows, it seemed pretty fanciful
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
told his former co-workers on Fox News
that it's unknown
how long DC will be under this
militarized occupation
He's got the guts to say
I'm going to federalize the police
that don't work. I'm going to bring in the National Guard. I'm going to bring in
federal marshals. I'm going to bring in the park police. How long will that be? Who knows?
How long? What is the... Well, it costs money, right? It costs money. And the question is,
are you there for a year? Are you there for six months? And when the troops pull out,
what happens on? I would call this conditions-based. I would say it's a situation where we're
here to support law enforcement. And the more we can free them up to do their job, the more effective
they can be, the more we can work in, I mean, this isn't my realm, but the justice system to make
sure people who are arrested are actually locked up. That's why the president's talking about
cashless bear on bail and sanctuary cities. If you're illegal here in D.C., that's going to be a
problem. So all of these things that apply to law and order are front and center for us.
And I don't know, weeks, months, what will it take? That's the president's call. But we're going to be
there for him to execute as swiftly as possible. Conditions based. It's real like war in Iraq vibes.
Yeah. A lot of those.
days.
Yeah.
A lot of mission accomplished coming out of the Trump administration, too.
Because they've learned that, like, there's no consequence in just saying, like, yeah,
we close the border and we won.
The borders won, you know, it's done.
No one, no one's going to get to their base with a counter opinion that matters.
As bad as things are in D.C. right now, this is just the start of what they want to do.
Trump seeks to make a quote-unquote example of D.C., but soon wants to go further.
and attempt this in other cities, first naming places like Chicago and Los Angeles,
and then later New York, Baltimore, and Oakland.
We have other cities that are very bad. New York has a problem.
And then you have, of course, Baltimore and Oakland.
We don't even mention that anymore.
They're so far gone.
We're not going to let it happen.
We're not going to lose our cities over this.
And this will go further.
We're starting very strongly with D.C.,
and we're going to clean it up real quick.
very quickly as they say
we're not going to lose our cities
over this that gets into like the core part of their framing
this this idea that homeless people
and criminals cough cough black people
are making us lose
like lose our cities they're so far gone
and this is necessary for such reasons
and like you could look at that pretty clearly
and he's naming like Oakland Baltimore
Chicago New York
like it's it's not
it's not very masked here
Yeah. I talked with D.C. resident Bridget Todd this morning. We should have an episode with her perspective coming out early next week, I think Sunday night.
I wrote an episode early this year laying out, you know, some of my predictions for the year. And this along with weird terrorism were two of like my big ones, right? That D.C. in particular, he would be attempting to fill with soldiers and probably invoke the Insurrection Act. Now, one thing,
that I have been surprised on is that they really do seem kind of hesitant to go full in on the
Insurrection Act.
And obviously, I didn't expect L.A. to get troops deployed in it before D.C., but just based on
what they were saying, like, after the election, kind of as he was preparing to take office,
it was very clear that they were looking at D.C. as a focus, in part because they had, you know,
during his last term as well, right? This is not entirely unprecedented. But his desire to
specifically not just take away any sort of autonomy that the city has and put it under direct
federal control, but to see troops in the streets and federal agents in the streets is not
surprising. It's something that like, it's not even, should be, I honestly shouldn't even call it
a prediction. It's just something he's been repeatedly saying he's going to do. So the fact that
it's happening now, you know, the only thing that's surprising to me is that it happened in L.A. first,
right? And that they really do seem to have, and who knows, you know, this could change by the time
the episode airs, but they do seem to have something of, I don't know if a block is the right
way to phrase it, but they don't seem yet willing to go for the insurrection act. That still
seems to be a bridge too far for some reason. I'm not 100% sure why. I think they're worried
about, like, massive backlash to it. Like, they're really unpopular. And they also just don't
need to. Yeah, that's a fair point, Gare. They have this, like, Section 740 to call on. And if
Trump's going to try to get Congress to pass a new crime bill.
That can allow them to do this kind of stuff without having to use the
Insurrection Act. So I think it's more of like a matter of necessity.
Yeah.
Just maybe just a risk they don't think they need to take. Yeah.
And like who knows what type of weird shit they would try to push into a crime bill,
including like exceptions for almost any city to have their police force be federalized.
I think the interesting part of this to me is also though that like it feels like a lot of
what their politics is is like the spectacle of making it look.
look like there's power there versus like actually doing the thing because like you can't actually
hold DC with 800 National Guardsmen and like you know if you if you look at what happens in
LA they kind of like declared victory but then the actual thing they came there to do which was
like do this like unprecedented mass deportation wave they did some of it and then they got
ran out of the city and so I think I don't know I think I think there's a kind of apocalyptic
framing of this where it's like okay well it's over they can just do this but also
It has not been going well for them.
And, like, was it from D.C.?
The video of the guy just, like, throwing a sandwich at the National Guard?
Throwing a Subway sandwich, yes.
Yeah, right.
Like, actual regular people really don't like them.
And I think we're just going to see escalating resistance as more than, like,
fucking 80 guys get deployed there.
And I don't know, it's unclear to me whether they can actually just, like, maintain this.
Or if they're just going to say, like, we did it, Joe, in, like, 30 days.
and pull out, right?
That's kind of what some of the rhetoric looks like
is that they're going to try to arrest
as many homeless people as they can,
put them in jails, lock them up into hospitals,
like the executive order that we mentioned a few weeks ago.
Yeah.
And, like, scare teenagers.
And that's most of what they want out of this,
and they're going to make a big show of it,
and then they'll, yeah, declare that the city is now safe.
And then they'll use the legitimate crime stats
showing crime falling and be like,
look, we proved it.
so that I think that is probably what it will turn out to be
but if they try to push forward a new crime bill like Trump is mentioning
or call it a national emergency to help strengthen his own powers
I think that's indications that this could have some longer lasting results
let's go on an ad break and return to talk terror I suppose
yeah yeah yeah we'll get to that
And we're back.
And obviously the big tariff news this week, as we'll get to, well, one of the pieces of big tariff news is that Trump has ordered another extension of the kind of delay before enacting tariffs against China.
You might say Trump looked at his tariffs against China and decided tariff.
He don't like it.
Okay, that was my intro.
Talk tariffs.
Honestly, okay, so this is kind of a light tariff news week.
There isn't that much also because if you want to hear me talking about tariffs for like 45
five fucking minutes. Go listen to the episode on Wednesday.
You just did a tariff episode. I just really wanted to lead into the tariff thing that way.
Yeah. No, there is actually a very important piece of tariff news today.
Arizona Ice-T is considering raising prices for the first time in over 30 years due to Trump's 50% aluminum tariffs.
All right. Everyone, get off the call right now. It is time to riot. Find the building. Burn it down.
No, this is, this is not a drill.
Not acceptable.
Arizona Ice-D has been the shining beacon resisting inflation for decades.
The proof, proof that inflation is fake is on every Arizona iced tea can.
And if Trump's going to take that away from us, burn the whole system down.
Yeah, yeah.
I want the Arizona Ice-T CEO handing out cans to throw.
at your local government building of choice to defend the 99 cent can.
It's one of the most important aspects of American culture.
It's the only thing left of the American dream.
It's the one last piece of the American dream is a 99 cent can of Arizona iced tea.
That's all we have left.
50% aluminum tariffs will not take this away from us.
Aluminium.
Yeah, no, just move past it.
May I forget?
it, it's Canadian.
Okay, where we're going on?
Okay, this is actually a good way to pivot into the just complete mess at the Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
So one of the things that Trump has been really harping on is so the Bureau of Labor Statistics
published a jobs report and it was bad.
Jobs no good.
And Trump has been absolutely furious about this ever since.
And we will actually come back to, I think, like we will literally come back to the Arizona
cans after this.
Thank God.
But, comma, however.
good lord the people they are trying to put in office right now i so long ago in the galaxy far far away i made an
argument that the trump regime is built on pure stupidity that there is no plan at all there is only
you know a ravening mall of the oblivion of reason that obliterates all attempts to comprehend it
and leaves only the words yes they really are that stupid and this argument was about a guy named
stephen mirren who was trump's chair of the council of economic advisors and his plan to like make
other countries pay taxes on holding U.S. bonds, a thing that is just unequivocally good for the United
States. And, you know, this is a plan. You can go back and listen to that episode from a few months
ago. This is a plan so monumentally stupid that the only way I could think of describing it was
like yelling at the moon to stop the tides. Anyways, Trump is trying to get that guy appointed to
be one of the board members of the Federal Reserve. And the staggering thing about that isn't just that
he's doing this. It's that like, this is not the guy who's in the news right now for being
unbelievably stupid and getting appointed to an extremely important structural agency of the
American economy because they are trying to appoint senior economists at the Heritage Foundation
E.J. and Tony as the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics after they fired the last head for
releasing the jobs report. Right. This guy, okay, I make fun of economists for being dumb
shit all the time. He might legitimately be the stupidest economist I have ever seen. Just on
blue sky, like the day this was announced, right? I saw someone dunking on him for drawing a chart
where he doesn't seem to understand that people retire and that when they retire, they're not
in the labor force anymore, where he was doing this trend line that was based on the assumption that
like people wouldn't retire. There are so many just incredibly basic economics and he doesn't
understand. There's a post that I saw. That was the second one that I saw. The first one that I saw.
And it's really funny because this is like in the New York Times now, but I just like saw this on
blue sky was this post by this economist named Joey Politano, who said, quote, an economist
so dumb, I had to explain to him how the price index works will now lead the BLS kill me.
Great. So he was doing his thing where he was like posting the price index and being like,
prices aren't going up. But the thing about the import price index is that it calculates prices pre-tariffs.
Okay.
So, of course, they wouldn't go up because they're not calculating the tariffs.
And he was posting this as like, no, see, the tariffs don't do inflation.
He is, he's being chosen for this position because he is just like a rigid ideologue of the Trump administration, right?
But he's also, he's so fucking stupid that things are happening I have never seen with right wing economies before where other right wing economists are going like this guy can't be allowed to take office.
He's going to fuck everything up because he's too dumb.
Like, I am watching economists at the Manhattan Institute, which is an organization that was literally founded by Reagan's director of the CIA, William Casey, right? Like, the Manhattan Institute is a right wing institute, right? Like, again, this is, this is an organization founded by Ronald fucking Reagan's CIA director. And I am watching those people go, this guy is too stupid to be put in office. Please don't put him there. This is unprecedented.
I've never seen right-wing economists break rank on the sort of like affirmative action program they all have for like really, really underachieving right-wing shithead economists.
It's astonishing.
And so, and the reason he's being brought in, this is also the reason he was like the chief economist, the Heritage Foundation, is that he has been calling for getting rid of the Bureau of Labor Statistics and also thinks that again, like Trump does it.
They've been like cooking the books to make Democrats look good and Republicans look bad.
And so if he gets appointed, this also, like, goes to the Senate, but him being appointed here effectively signals the end of independent economic data from the federal government.
Hooray.
Which is a just catastrophic, like every single part of the government, every policy organization, every, like, every single elements, every corporation, every elements of the entire U.S. economic system relies on this data being nonpartisan and accurate.
And it's obviously, like, yeah, all data is political, but, like, it being, like, reasonably accurate is, like, the defining thing about the U.S. economy is that this data is there and functions. This is what everyone bases their decisions off of. And he very much looks like he wants to just end that. And I want to close by noting that, like, one of, you know, at the very end of the Soviet Union, right, one of the things that was taken as, like, the giant signal that things were going to shit there was that, like, their leadership by, like, the, like, the, like, the, like, the, like, the,
the mid-late 80s, was deploying satellites
specifically so they could use
satellite imagery to check the output of their
own factories? Because
their control of the economic statistics
had become so, like, just
annihilated, right? By just like mass
falsification, their loss of
control over the standards of their measuring regime
was seen as like, this is the regime falling apart.
And we are like eight months out from Google
doing that shit, right? Like, we are
not very far out from companies
doing a thing you have to do with, like,
remote provinces in China where their fault,
like there's data falsification of like, okay, we're like using satellite data to like measure
freight loads and like measure electrical consumption and like figuring out what factories
are open at night to figure out how much shit. That's, you know, that that is something that is
very much in our future. I'm only kind of joking about the satellite shit. I think we probably
will live to see that assuming this thing goes through. Assuming they remember how to launch satellites.
Well, it won't be them. It'll be, it'll be like corporations.
doing this. Oh, sure, sure, yeah.
Like, using their own satellite grids.
I mean, I can see the, yeah,
the blue origin satellites launching
to keep track of Amazon, to keep track
of Amazon's efficiency.
Yep, yep, yeah.
Oh, good Lord.
Yeah, I want to close on like one final
brief note, which I've said this before, but I want to
say it again. This is the exact thing
that, like, one of the big things that brought
down the military dictatorship in Brazil
was that they were lying about inflation data.
You know, the thing about inflation
is that you can just see the price of the Arizona can go up.
Just like you can see Huey-Dooey and Ui expand
in our favorite inflation fetish pornography.
They don't give me hazard pay for this.
They really should.
Hazard.
I feel like this is a bonus.
Oh, I guess this is also mentioned part of the reason
they're trying to put this like absolute clown
on the board of the Federal Reserve
is that they want to replace the chairman of the Federal Reserve
so that Trump can just direct.
directly set interest rates. That's a looming crisis that is coming. Trump is threatening to
sue the head of the Federal Reserve right now. Oh yeah. Yep, yep, yep, yep. He is. He sure is.
Which is a fast, going to be amazing precedent. I am excited. Oh, it's, it's astonishing. I don't
know. It's been very funny because a lot of the kind of internal publications from like the
banks about this have been like, ah, if you're abused Jerome Powell, it's not that big.
give a deal like the banks can like autonomously set interest race technically without the chairman
of the federal reserve and it's like okay i don't think you understand how bad this is going to get
so we're still we're still in cope i don't know but we'll report to you back on this show when
all of that enormous cluster fuck blows up and yay before we go on break again i'd like to have
an update for one of the stories we talked about last week the texas democrats fleeing to illinois
and then later to California
to brickworm to stop or delay
a redistricting vote in
Texas. And now
Texas Democrats are set to come back
home possibly as soon as this weekend
after Governor Greg
Abbott ended the special session
to redraw the congressional map, which
would add five new Republican
House seats. With some
Democrats expected to return very soon,
nothing stops Abbott
from just calling another special session
once the Democrats return. In fact,
he has said that that's exactly what he's going to do.
He's definitely going to do that, yes.
And add in new legislation to convince some of them to stay.
So we will see that they can just leave the state again if they want to.
Unclear if they will.
I mean, other states are threatening retaliatory redistricting,
specifically the governors of New York and California.
This is going to be a really annoying mess with different states all redrawing their maps,
us to create some kind of congressional balance, Florida also threatening to do the same. So we will see
how this develops over time. But yeah, Texas Dems may be home sooner than expected. It's so cool that on
the one hand, you have the Republicans creating the image of tyranny and then expanding their actual
power, and then you have the Democrats doing the image of resistance and then giving in.
I mean, they're not really giving in yet. Yeah, we'll see, we'll see.
They are going home because this session is ended. Yeah.
What still remains to be seen is if they will flee the state a second time, like a week later.
Yeah, which, who knows, I have little faith in that, but we'll see.
Yeah, I'm not sure at this point.
Yeah.
But I thought we should include that small update there.
And now we should include a secondary ad break.
Okay, we are back.
In other news, last week on Friday, a mass shooting was targeted against the CDC headquarters
in Atlanta, Georgia. The 30-year-old shooter broke into his father's safe to retrieve five
firearms were then used in the attack. The shooting started at a CVS across from the CDC
main entrance. The shooter then fired upon six buildings on the CDC campus with a total
of 500 rounds being fired during the incident with 200 shots hitting CDC buildings.
One DeKalb County police officer was killed. The shooter later shot and killed himself.
Police were contacted several weeks before the shooting by unknown individuals due to, quote,
recently verbalized thoughts of suicide, according to the GBI director Chris Hosey.
This was about the soon-to-become shooter.
Police found written documents from the shooter expressing distrust in the COVID-19 vaccine.
Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Hosey said the shooter, quote,
wanted to make the public aware of his discontent with and distrust of the vaccine, unquote.
With sources who knew him telling ABC News, he blamed the vaccine for making him sick and depressed.
The CDC director sent a letter to its 10,000 employees earlier this.
week, saying, quote, the dangers of misinformation and its promulgation has now led to deadly
consequences, unquote. The Monday after shooting, RFK Jr., who recently defunded MRNA vaccines,
visited the CDC campus to express condolences for the family of the officer killed, as well as to,
quote, offer support to all of the CDC employees who are a part of a shining star health agency
around the world, unquote, to quote, from an interview he gave with Scripps News.
When Kennedy was asked, what would be done to stop the spread of vaccine misinformation
to prevent future incidents like this shooting? Kennedy said, quote, people can ask questions
without being penalized. And, quote, we don't know enough about what the motive was of this
individual, unquote. Hate that. So that's all pretty, pretty disgusting.
Yeah. Seeing narratives that RFK Jr. has promoted for his own
profit for years.
Yep.
Being used to justify a shooting targeting the CDC headquarters.
Yeah.
And it's, you know, it's kind of unclear exactly what, because it seems like he was
shooting at the buildings.
He fired at least 200 rounds, roughly 200 rounds into the buildings.
About 500 rounds fired total, but I've seen people say that means he was like shot 500.
He did not.
A lot of those rounds are the police.
No, that's the total incident.
Probably most of them are the police, you know, two or 300 rounds would not at all.
be odd for how many police would fire in response to a guy like this who is just bag dumping,
you know, into a building. It's unclear to me, did he see people through the windows and was
he trying to hit them or was he just shooting at the buildings to make a statement? The fact that
he did shoot and kill a police officer, presumably with intent, makes it more likely that maybe
he was trying to hit people inside the building. I don't know how much it's worth splitting
hairs here, but I am, like, it is kind of unclear to me. Was his goal more to
make a statement, or was he hoping to, like, rack up a body count of CDC employees?
And this was just as close as he could get. I don't think we really know. Maybe we probably
never will. It seems he had trouble accessing or getting close to some buildings on the CDC
campus. This was mostly done from the CVS, which he, at a certain point, according to
police reports, he could not get out of. He was locked inside the CVS and tried to exit by
shooting like the windows and doors
and was unable to
and then killed himself inside.
Huh. Jeez.
So it is a kind of odd situation.
We don't have a clear idea yet
because this just happened a few days ago.
We don't have a clear idea yet of like the exact
on the ground situation.
Just these kind of general
facts about which buildings were hit
and how many shots were fired. And then the
anti-vax like opinions and writing
found allegedly
in his help. Yeah. So we'll see. More will come out about this in time. But, I mean, the basics
are pretty clear, which is that this is the natural extension of decades of anti-vaccine rhetoric,
and specifically the last several years of RFK, relentlessly attacking the CDC.
Another piece of news this week that I should mention, though, frankly, we don't have much to stay on
this because it's unclear this will actually turn into anything real or not. But later this fall,
the Supreme Court will consider whether to take a case that could overturn the national ruling on
gay marriage. The specific case that they would be considering has not done very well in all
lower federal courts, which is why it's been appealed to this level. The legal justifications used
for the first amendment have not made much progress in federal appeals courts so far. If the case
does get chosen, it would be primarily for like ideological reasons based on specific new
Supreme Court justices. But it is still unclear if this will get accepted. And I'm thinking
not super likely. I don't think this is something that we need to have tons of panic about at the
moment. So something that, I mean, I don't know if panic's the right word, but did actually happen
and is very bad, is that so Trump issued an executive order a while back about like getting rid of
collective bargaining rights for a bunch of different kinds of government employees, like nominally
under the auspices of national security.
There had been a whole bunch of court cases
kind of winding the way through the courts.
But last week, the VA
became the first government agency
to actually do it.
They just straight up got rid of the union contracts
for 377,000 workers.
Like, 377,000 workers
is an astonishing number of workers
who just straight up,
their union doesn't exist the next day.
Yeah.
Right, because their contracts
aren't being recognized.
This in and of itself is really stunning.
and also the lack of response by the union movement,
especially considering the number of people involved.
It's just been like strongly worded statements
and encouragements for the Democrats to pass a bill through Congress
to like recognize collective bargaining rights,
which speaks really, really ill of the broader labor movement
that like, again, they just took away the unions of almost 400,000 people
and organized labor's collective response was just to kind of shrug.
So that's really fucking bleak.
probably going to be spreading to more agencies as this plays out. Yeah, it's really, I don't know,
even the language unions abusing it talk about it. They're like, oh, this is union busting for speaking
out against anti-worker policies. It's like, no, it's union busting because they literally
got rid of the unions of 377,000 people. What are we doing here? I don't know. I'm going to
have more on this as I get more word from union sources. There's a staggering lack of information
about this and people are being slow to respond, but I want to mention it here because it's
devastating and hideous and yeah, it's real fucking bad. Before we close this episode, James Stout
has a special report on immigration and information about a fundraiser. James?
All right, so immigration report. With the change of the month, children across the country
are returning to schools. This means that ICE agents are also returning.
to enforcement at schools. Not just ICE agents, as we know, other federal agents, board patrol,
ATF, DEA, et cetera, are all taking part in immigration enforcement now. They're no longer
restrained by the sensitive places doctrine, which previously stopped them from doing enforcement
at schools and churches and other places where it's generally considered not worth it because doing
so obviously provides a massive disincentive for families to take their children to school in this
instance. In Chula Vista, a second largest city in the county of San Diego, ICE agents detained a
parent a block away from a school, leaving two young children in the car. Like most schools in the
area, Tula Vista Elementary School District, will not allow ICE on campus without a warrant
unless there's an active emergency. Just to explain that active emergency thing a bit, I guess,
for instance, in Uvalde, because all the local cops were cowards and stood outside, it was actually
border patrol team, Bortak specifically, who killed the shooter there. So that would be an example
of when immigration agents might enter a campus during an active emergency. In Los Angeles,
a 15-year-old boy with disabilities was pulled from a car, handcuffed and detained by federal agents
at gunpoint. He was accompanying a relative who was registering at a school and he was in the car
with his grandmother. The agents who appeared to be border patrol from videos I've seen
released the boy after intervention by school staff and left
live ammunition on the sidewalk for some reason. These looked like five, five, six rounds from the
pictures I've seen. I'm guessing it's just terrible weapons handling procedures here. It appears
that this boy was not the person they were looking for, but nonetheless, they've obviously
horrifically traumatized this young man for no good reason. In response, LA Unified School District
is ramping up safety patrols. These include volunteers, teachers and school cops, apparently. Obviously
school cops cannot directly prevent immigration enforcement officers from doing immigration
enforcement, but they can notify people of their presence. And they're trying to have safe
zones around schools so that people can either safely walk to school or safe to drop their kids
off. They're also changing their bus programs. Buses are part of the school district's property,
right? So just as ICE could not enter a school without a warrant, nor could they enter that bus
without a warrant, and it would be within the training of the bus driver to deny them access
if they did not have a warrant. So the bus would potentially be a much safer way for people
to get to school than having their parents drive them. And so what LAUSD is doing is expanding
their bus programs. In LA, I've seen a lot of information on this in the resource guide
that was published by the LA Office of Immigration Affairs. So now is a good time to remind
everyone that San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria defunded the San Diego Office of Immigrant Affairs
because he refuses to stop giving the cops a fire hose of our money. This has left
migrants in one of America's largest border cities even more vulnerable. We're also doing
a fundraiser this week. We're going to fundraise for Bouquet again. I'm going to go see her
later this week. I know she has hearings coming up.
For those who do not remember, is an Alevi Kurdish woman. Because of her ethnicity and religion,
she wasn't safe in Turkey. And she came to the USA to ask for refuge. She's been in San Diego
for six months right now, and she is trying to raise money for her asylum case. She can't work
because she doesn't have a work permit. And she has cancer, which is obviously something which is
very difficult for her to manage alongside the massive stress of immigration enforcement right now.
she needs to raise $7,000 to pay her lawyer.
I'm looking at the GoFundMe as I record this and is at $1,941.
If you would like to help, you can go to www.gofundMe.com
slash F-Urgent, hyphen help, hyphen 4,
b-u-k-et-b-K-E-T-S, hyphen asylum, hyphen case,
or you can just go down to the show notes and click the link.
We really appreciate all the support you guys have given.
Thank you to James for that.
Well, I guess that's our week.
We reported the news.
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.
For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com,
or check us out on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
You can now find sources for it could happen here listed directly in episode descriptions.
Thanks for listening.
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In 1920, a magazine
article announced something incredible. Two young girls had photographed real fairies. But even more
incredible, that article was written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the man who invented Sherlock Holmes.
How did he fall for that? Hoax is a new podcast for me, Dana Schwartz, the host of Noble Blood.
And me, Lizzie Logan. Every episode, we'll explore one of the most audacious and ambitious tricks in
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to hoax on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey guys, it's AZ Fudd.
You may know me as a gold medalist.
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You may even know me as the People's Princess.
Every week on my new podcast, Fud Around and Find Out, I'll be talking to some special guests
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Listen to Fud Around and Find Out, a production of IHart Women's Sports and partnership with
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What would you do if one bad decision forced you to choose between a maximum security prison
or the most brutal boot camp designed to be hell on earth? Unfortunately for Mark Lombardo,
this was the choice he faced. He said, you are a number, a New York State number,
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This is an IHeart podcast.