It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 199
Episode Date: September 13, 2025All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. - It Was Never About Crime feat. Prop - Abundance, Or How To Sell Tech Fascism To Liberals - ICE Partners with... Israeli Phone Hacking Spyware - Recognizing Palestine as a State: Meaningful Farce feat. Dana El Kurd - Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #33 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: It Was Never About Crime feat. Prop https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10567-025-00534-6#Sec9 https://www.thebanner.com/community/criminal-justice/baltimore-homicides-drop-WTR3QQN7LRGFXOVCGAAMNYMUBE/ https://theconversation.com/data-driven-early-intervention-strategies-could-revolutionize-phillys-approach-to-crime-prevention-258756 https://genius.com/Freeway-what-we-do-lyrics https://www.baltimorepolice.org/about/baltimore-police-crime-plan https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/aug/16/baltimore-violent-crime-trump Abundance, Or How To Sell Tech Fascism To Liberals https://thebaffler.com/latest/whats-the-matter-with-abundance-harris?ref=newintermag.com https://newintermag.com/abundance-big-techs-bid-for-the-democratic-party/#fn16 https://archive.vn/zgPJ8 https://therevolvingdoorproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Abundance-Ecosystem-Report-Final.pdf https://www.semafor.com/article/08/17/2025/with-the-argument-the-left-gets-a-new-publication http://www.thinktankwatch.com/2022/01/washingtons-newest-think-tank-institute.html https://www.vcinfodocs.com/venture-capital-extremism https://therevolvingdoorproject.org/who-is-behind-the-growing-abundance-movement/ https://www.vcinfodocs.com/the-tech-fascist-axis https://www.abundancedc.org/speakers https://www.vcinfodocs.com/the-tech-fascist-axis https://archive.vn/GKRmw#selection-377.0-377.19 https://www.theargumentmag.com/about https://prospect.org/economy/2024-11-26-abundance-agenda-neoliberalisms-rebrand/ https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/dc-attorney-general-inks-first-settlement-realpage-price-fixing-lawsuit-2025-06-02/ https://www.economicliberties.us/press-release/economic-liberties-launches-2025-end-rental-price-fixing-campaign/ https://bidenwhitehouse.archives.gov/cea/written-materials/2024/12/17/the-cost-of-anticompetitive-pricing-algorithms-in-rental-housing/ https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/justice-department-sues-realpage-algorithmic-pricing-scheme-harms-millions-american-renters https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/justice-department-sues-realpage-algorithmic-pricing-scheme-harms-millions-american-renters https://techfascism.substack.com/p/the-network-state-and-infrastructure ICE Partners with Israeli Phone Hacking Spyware https://ssd.eff.org/ https://citizenlab.ca/2025/03/a-first-look-at-paragons-proliferating-spyware-operations/ https://citizenlab.ca/2025/06/first-forensic-confirmation-of-paragons-ios-mercenary-spyware-finds-journalists-targeted/ https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/02/trump-immigration-ice-israeli-spyware https://jackpoulson.substack.com/p/exclusive-ice-has-reactivated-its https://www.wired.com/story/ice-paragon-solutions-contract/ https://dfrlab.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2024/09/Mythical-Beasts.pdf https://finder.startupnationcentral.org/company_page/paragon https://red-dot.capital/portfolio https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2021/07/29/paragon-is-an-nso-competitor-and-an-american-funded-israeli-surveillance-startup-that-hacks-encrypted-apps-like-whatsapp-and-signal/ https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/executive-order-14093-prohibition-use-the-united-states-government-commercial-spyware-that https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/09/eff-statement-ice-use-paragon-solutions-malware Recognizing Palestine as a State: Meaningful Farce feat. Dana El Kurd Noura Erekat and Shahd Hammouri in Jadaliyya - https://www.jadaliyya.com/Details/46838 Paul Poast in World Politics Review - https://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/palestine-state-recognition-france/ NPR report - https://www.npr.org/2025/08/01/nx-s1-5485359/france-uk-palestine-state-explainer European Society of International Law on occupation - https://esil-sedi.eu/prolonged-occupation-or-illegal-occupant/#:~:text=The%20occupying%20power%2C%20throughout%20the,consistent%20with%20its%20trustee%20responsibilities. Daniel Kurtzer on the Oslo Accords - https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/11/20/magazine/israel-gaza-oslo-accords.html Hanan Ashrawi on the Oslo Accords - https://www.972mag.com/hanan-ashrawi-oslo-accords/ Polling of Palestinians May 2025 - https://www.pcpsr.org/sites/default/files/Poll%2095%20press%20release%206May2025%20ENGLISH.pdf Dana El Kurd and Pablo Abufom for The Guardian - https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/may/08/palestinians-leader-mahmoud-abbas-president Tanja Aalberts on sovereignty - Constructing Sovereignty between Politics and Law - 1st Edition - Tanj Jared Kushner “Peace to Prosperity” plan - trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Peace-to-Prosperity-0120.pdf Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #33 https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/422/873/ https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/customs-and-border-protection-settles-federal-lawsuit-american-citizens-racially https://www.lawfaremedia.org/article/l.g.m.l.-v.-noem--a-hearing-diary ttps://qz.com/higher-investment-means-hyundai-could-get-2-1-billion-1850832920 https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/10/hyundai-factory-ice-raid-legal-visa https://www.wired.com/story/far-right-reactions-charlie-kirk-shooting-civil-war/ https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/09/11/us/charlie-kirk-shooting-news https://x.com/mkraju/status/1965108206969241953 https://x.com/TheJusticeDept/status/1963635111112446449 https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-administration-considering-banning-trans-people-buying-guns-us-media-2025-09-04/ https://www.cnn.com/2025/09/04/politics/transgender-firearms-justice-department-second-amendment https://archive.ph/kI2Uo https://www.wsj.com/health/healthcare/rfk-jr-hhs-to-link-autism-to-tylenol-use-in-pregnancy-and-folate-deficiencies-e3acbb4c https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yok1fhPICAYSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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I just normally do straight stand-up, but this is a bit different.
What do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
Answer, a new podcast called Wisecrack,
where a comedian finds himself at the center of a chilling true crime story.
Does anyone know what show they've come to see?
It's a story. It's about the scariest night of my life.
This is Wisecrack. Available now.
Listen to Wisecrack on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
In the 1980s, modeling wasn't just a dream. It was a battlefield.
It's a freaking war zone. These people are animals.
The Model Wars podcast peels back the glossy cover and reveals a high-stakes game where survival meant more than beauty.
Hosted by me, Vanessa Groyaudits.
This is the untold story of an industry built a ruthless ambition.
Listen to Model Wars on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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,
We own you.
Listen to shock incarceration on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
CallZone Media.
Hey, everybody.
Robert Evans here, and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode.
So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat less ads package for you to listen to in a long.
stretch if you want. If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's
going to be nothing new here for you, but you can make your own decisions.
What's up, y'all? Your favorite cousin again. Prop is in the building, you know what I'm
saying? Well, in your earbuds or speakers, however the hell you listen to this, your favorite
cousin is here. I am going to assume that that is the truth, and since you can't answer me,
We just gonna go with that.
It's been a while since I tapped in with y'all.
I ruined your music festivals
and then told you about your municipalities
and your waters.
Somebody reached out to us who, you know,
gestures wildly.
We have not been able to give back to her,
but about how she was a part of an effort
to non-privatize the water inside of her neighborhood
and district.
And they won.
So shout out to you.
We apologize if you've, you know,
our job has not been.
boring since the start of 2025.
But today I'm going to bring you some blackness, some genuine blackness, and then some,
this has to be a black conversation because you motherfuckers are racist.
I have to approach it like this because crime has become a color mute term in the era of
Trump.
It kind of always has been, but it's really obvious.
obvious now. With the National Guard being unleashed onto the streets of Washington, D.C., there's
this some sort of clearly obvious conflation between the houseless population, poverty, crime,
black folks. Like, it's all kind of like one thing with this fool, which is not rocket science
for y'all. It's just, you know what he's talking about. You know how I know this how he thinks
is because whenever he talks about black people supporting him,
he talks about criminal reform.
Because apparently that's what all black people care about only.
Just like, you know, when he say immigration, he mean Latino.
And the whole not feeling safe is just because, you know,
the crime that the house's population of D.C. have is being ill.
That's the crime.
Because they, no one has ever given me a legitimate reason as to why
not having a place to stay as a crime.
Hell, you know, Marga Kiljoin and them have this whole joint about loitering and loitering laws like truancies.
I'm getting ahead of myself.
The point is, the crime is that you exist.
So today, I want to talk to y'all about something that y'all already know, which is it's never been about the crime.
All right.
Now, first of all, some stuff that don't matter.
Y'all still following Drake?
I don't know if y'all, like, okay, my crowd is.
following Drake. Let me stop making the difference between us. But listen, so you know Drake's suing
UMG and his label over, you know, not like us and just proving that he's not like us. Anyway,
the new thing in this man's lawsuit is he's demanding UMG bring evidence over the push the teeth thing.
What do I mean by the push the teeth thing? When push the tea came at him, which we can all agree
if you win the rap, he won. Also, shout out the clips. So when you go back to the push of teeth
time. This is the back to back and I'm charged up that time. He was like, yo, I'm going to show y'all
the emails and y'all bring in the emails from when you guys were suppressing push the T's stuff.
When you guys were like making sure that like it got copyright claimed and stuff getting off the
streamers and pulled down all to say, man, you helped me suppress this man's music when
Pusha T came after me. Why y'all don't do it? We're not like us.
Which means, your corny ass, you just told on yourself.
Oh, so push it was right.
So what you're saying is, and you trying to take down Kendrick,
you done snitched on 2018 you, right?
Okay, so because you had to label interfere with this battle, fam.
Now, if you want to hear some more, like, real, just rapping-ass rappers,
there's this great battle that was going on between Joey Badass and Ray Vaughn,
and then somehow it became a triple with this dude named Daylight and this other brother
named Reason, these were some really, really dope bars.
Now, Absol got into the middle of it, but now Absol, Rhapsody, and Joey are going on tour,
which sucks because I'm on the same management team as all of them, and I ain't on that tour.
I wish I was, though.
It'd be a rapping, rapping tour, but I definitely don't do the numbers they do.
Anyway, today, you know, in light of, like I said, the,
the feds in D.C. Trump keep claiming these emergency cases that gives him these powers to do
these different things. And as a side note, remember when J.6 happened and he was like, well,
Nancy Pelosi should have called in the National Guard. She ain't called in the National Guard.
What was President Trump supposed to do? Well, I would think what he's doing now, because they used to
say these same people that was arguing that Trump ain't had a power to stop it, meaning he
didn't have the power to call in the National Guard are also praising him right now for using
his presidential power to call in the National Guard. Boy, I tell you, racism make you dumb as
hell. But in light of this, despite all evidence showing that the crime rate has dropped 30% in
D.C., this man still keeps talking about the crime wave and the safety or the lack of safety
that people feel in D.C.
Now, I'm gonna let Bridget do
a full episode on really
what's going on in Chocolate City.
My mama from D.C.,
my whole mama side
of the family is still out there, so I should spend
every other summer in D.C. Now, don't get me wrong.
Being down 30%
is absolutely
a positive, but
D.C. ain't safe.
Now, it depends on what
part you in. See, that's the thing about
crime statistics. But before I
into crime statistics, I need to talk about the concept of crime, period. This will be no surprise to y'all
because you listen to Cool Zone Media. Crime is made up. Now, criminal crime, I think it's very important
to understand that it is a social construct. Now, what do I mean by that? What I mean is it's situational,
right how the same act can mean two different things now this is a conceptual thing that obviously
our felt experience is a little more real but let me give you an example let a disaster hit
a hurricane a earthquake a flood if i go into that grocery store and get some bread am i looting
or scavenging am i stealing or surviving and the answer is depends on what color you are
crimes is a social construct because if that's the case how is george zimmerman still walking having said
that one could take this argument and go super bonkers on it and say the same thing about pedophilia
like who's to say that what epstein did is a crime because like you said crime is a social construct
here's my answer to that it's social because we live in a social society fam although borders are made up
so is money and so are driver's licenses. Of course there's no force field at the 49th parallel
that separates Canada from America. However, we have decided that before you get behind the wheel
of a car, you better have passed some sort of examination for us to know that you're safe enough
to drive behind this. You could physically drive this car. But we live in a society that says,
hey, homie, I need you to make sure
we need to have some sort of due diligence.
We have decided as a species
that is self-aware
that our children matter,
their safety is important to us,
the person standing next to you
has the right to exist.
Whether you like that person or not,
they have the right to exist.
You cannot hold them against they will,
that's habeas corpus.
Apparently unbeknownst to Christy Gnome
who clearly don't know what habeas corpus means as a whole other topic.
What is criminal and what is lawful is something that we've agreed upon in our social contract.
Now, we, however, live in a modern secular democracy,
which says that we have a say in what becomes laws or not.
So, I ain't got to just lay down and let you just call stuff a crime that ain't a crime or that shouldn't be a crime.
Now, speaking of what is and isn't a crime, here's a thing.
Black people have been telling you the answer for a long time.
specifically rappers.
Okay, now, I saw a TikTok about this,
and it's very irresponsible of me
that I can't remember little homie's name.
And I can't, you know, you get the suggested, you know,
or yeah, just stuff pop in, like the for you,
I cannot find Brad Bras TikTok.
Black man, super brilliant,
but he reminded me of some lyrics that Freeway said
that captures the point of what we're trying to make.
I love his dude's TikTok, man.
God, I got to find it.
Hopefully I'll find it and put it in the show notes.
But Freeway's verse with a song with Jay-Z says,
We still hustle till the sun come up.
Crack of 40 when the sun go down.
It's a cold winter.
Y'all niggas better bundle up.
I bet it's a hot summer.
Grab an onion just to rock it down.
You hot now, listen up.
Follow me.
You don't know the cops.
sole purpose is to lock us down. Throw away the key. But without this drug shit, your kids ain't got
no way to eat, huh? We still trying to keep mom smiling, because when her teeth stop showing and
her stomach start growling, then the heat start flowing. If you from my hood, you know, you feel
me keep going. The sneaks start leaning, and the heat stopped working. Then my heat.
heat start working, I'm a rob me a person. Okay, now listen. These are the lyrics that Libra quoted in
his TikTok. And the point he's making, which is the same point I'm making, is that he's talking about
the solutions to crime. Like, he said it right there. Like, I just want my mom to smile. My kids
don't have any other way to eat. And then he says, when the heat stopped working, then my
start working, I'm going to rob me a person. It is resources. But again, follow what this
brother trying to tell you is that you putting law enforcement in our neighborhoods doesn't fix
anything. Does you, you follow, that's what we're saying. He's like, no, you just want to lock us up.
That is not solving the problem. The problem is, I'm hungry. My mama's hungry. My mom's hungry.
kids are hungry my sneaks start leaning what he's talking about is his tennis shoes his
sneakers they're leaning you know when you walk on your sneakers too much in the back your shoes in
the back house start running around the side then it start thinning out so it's like the back of
your shoe just looks uneven that's when your sneaks are leaning this is what he's trying to say
my stomach is rumbling had we had better funded schools had we had more opportunities he was like
I'm robbing this person because there is no other option now are there
other options? Maybe. But if you're going to do the math, listen, this is simple economics.
If you want to make $1,000 tonight, because the rents do tomorrow, you go over to Spanish Jose's house.
Spanish Jose say, hey, listen, you ain't got to do nothing. Just put this bag in your backseat
and drive to park slope. Drop it off and come back. Or you can go work $20 an hour at McDonald's.
ain't no uncles with endowments
and check this out
let me push you even further
even if you are smarty aunt
even if you're a smart one
the government just told Harvard
that they can't recruit in my neighborhood
even if I got the grades for it
because that's woke shit
so what you want what the fuck you want me to do
now here's the premise of what I'm talking about
which is we know the solutions
it's never been about crime
Okay, but let me talk about some folks, some black folks, who do care about the solution,
who do care about crime?
Because if we're talking about crime in our urban areas, who the fuck do you think the crimes are against?
And see, that's the part that make me so mad when I be talking to these people.
You think we don't care?
Because who are these crimes getting carried out against?
You think we're happy to see all them police?
One would think if it worked, we would be happy to see all these police.
in our streets. But you know what? The shit don't help. Okay. What I'm going to do in the rest of
this show is prove to y'all based on decades of research, what does reduce crime? We're going to link
all the things in the buyer. I knew I had to come on my A game if I'm going on to, uh, it can happen
here because these some of the smartest people, like, y'all, listen, did people on this show? Y'all
be, y'all is like real journalist. I'm just a rapper that knows how to explain shit. So I, I
needed to make sure that I had my ducks in a row. So I'm about to show y'all a trillion
examples of where if you really from these blocks, if you really do care about the welfare
of black people, then maybe you should listen to black people. See, and let me bring in my
trans community here because they problem with you, this, to be honest with y'all, I'm going to
be transparent with you. This is part of where radicalize me. Why I really started understanding
the trans experience is because the shit they say about us is the shit they say about you.
Your crime is, we just don't like you around.
At the end of the day, all these laws against trans people is really just because you just
think they gross.
And so with us, it was just like, what is redlining?
Discriminatory practices in jobs.
You just don't want us around.
What is white flight?
You just don't want us around.
and your justification of this is this made-up ass word named crime
and that you care that crime matter but nika you don't okay i'm getting getting ahead of
myself let's take a break
all right here we go i've calmed down so the first thing you want to think about is how crime
is reported right in the ways for which it's reported
and then the geographical locations that we're talking about.
So when you say the crime in Washington, D.C., it's not like the crime happens in an evenly distributed
thing.
Like, it's not all of D.C., if you will.
There's northeast, northeast, southeast, south-southeast, and southwest.
Now, due to gentrification, southeast, which is where Anacostia is, and was at one time the
sort of mecca of just like black D.C. of chocolate city.
The whole city was chocolate forever.
Like I said, I noticed because I spent every other summer there and my mama from there.
But like southeast D.C. is the last non-gentrified area.
Now, do you think it's thugs sitting on the national monument sipping 40 ounces?
No, you out there with the tourists sipping macha.
So in one sense is when you say crime is dropped,
30%. It's like 30% since when. Okay. And is it averaged across all of D.C.? Or are you talking about
in its areas where things like carjackings, homicides, and stuff like that happened, right?
Now, remember what I talked about a long time ago, at least on my show, hopefully y'all remember
this, that the crime rates in America is always a weird situation.
because we don't live in America.
You live in your city.
So maybe it's going crazy in your own local neighborhood,
so you feel like, damn, this place is wild.
Or maybe, like I said, maybe you're in, like, northwest Portland,
you know what I'm saying?
Like, you know, over there off Gleason, you feel me, and like, it's nice.
You know what I mean?
Like, you don't never see a single,
but if you live over there in Chinatown next to Voodoo Donuts, dog,
you seem like you're walking over zombies.
I don't know.
What I'm trying to say is sometimes the situation,
statistics can be deceiving. Now, Granny and them who, you know, bought their house a long time ago,
they see the graffiti on the wall and they think, you know, yada yada, the boys like,
loitering outside, how do you fix it? Well, allow me to introduce it to Philadelphia,
which coincidentally is where freeway is from. So the data is pretty clear. You know,
if you look at the violent crime reduction report, it's literally,
it's at the Department of Justice, you can read it yourself. It tells you exactly what has
worked to drop homicide, violent crime, carjacking, theft. It tells you what has worked,
what has not worked. A simple Google, right? And the intro of this is, this is a violent crime
reduction between 2021 and 2025. And it says for the past three years, the Justice Department
has been executing comprehensive strategies to reduce violent crime, rooted in local communities.
And we're seeing trends in the form of crimes being prevented and lives saved.
According to available data from 2023, murder, rape, robbery, and aggregated assault
is in a considerable decline.
In nearly 90 major cities across the country, violent crime has continued to drop during the last six
months of this year, compared to the same period last year, including a 17% decrease in
homicides. This is the Deputy Attorney General Monkayo on September 17, 2024.
Now, to keep it very real, again, violent crime rates being up and down are obviously relative.
Now, one thing was, well, we were in a pandemic, so there's that, right? Another thing is it's almost
like how everybody was complaining again that crime was up is like y'all forgot the 90s existed
like i'd lived it and baby this ain't nothing you know the actual fear of pain and suffering
this impales in comparison we live in a great place in relation to what we went through in the 80s and 90s
Now, again, we're talking national trends, right?
Again, in your local neighborhood, it may be a green light happening.
I don't know.
I'm just saying for you to say that our country's becoming a cesspool means you not reading the data.
According to the conversation, it's like an independent journalist.
This author, her name is Katarina G. Roman.
She's a professor of criminal justice at Temple University.
And as a side note at Temple University, my homie Timothy, he's teaching a class on Kendrick Lamar and his lyrics and hip hop and justice.
I actually spoke at his class a couple of times.
So that was pretty dope to hear what he's doing.
But now, check this out.
According to her writing, it says that the Pennsylvania spends roughly $200,000 a year for each juvenile it incarcerates.
According to the 2021 report from a bipartisan Pennsylvania juvenile justice track for it.
that's 50 times the cost to deliver evidence-based family therapy that would prevent kids
from going into the justice system in the first place. I'm going to tell you before I even read
the rest of this, because I lived it, we just be bored. It ain't nothing to do. There are no
opportunities. When the heat stopped working, then my heat start working. In Philadelphia,
juvenile incarceration involves the confinement in city-ran Philadelphia juvenile services
and other residential placements facilities.
Young people leave these facilities
with lower chances of graduating high school,
afraid mental health,
and the higher likelihood of re-arrest or being shot.
Can I again please speak from my own experience?
When you go into these juvenile cases,
you have to pick a location of people
that you would be your protection,
even if you don't run with them.
Even if you don't know them niggas outside of here.
When y'all get outside,
y'all may never talk again,
in here, even if you went in there over something stupid like shoplifting some damn spray paint,
whatever the case may be, you now got to run with the people that got your same skin tone
and are from your part of town. You have to. Kids don't go in being members of gangs. You have to
join one to stay alive. Now, check this out. When you get out, part of the terms of your probation
is you can't be around certain criminal festivities or activities or people with criminal records.
Where are you going to go?
If I just happen to live on 60th Street next to my uncle, I just live here.
You mess around, go visit your granny house, and then got a report to your PO.
You've been frattingized with no gang members.
You're probably going back.
This shit don't work, y'all.
But what does?
Now, again, back to this article, drawing from about 35 years of work in Philadelphia and other cities to understand what makes neighborhood safer, I believe the surest returns home from prevention strategies aimed at young people who are not yet immersed in robbery shootings and gun activities, right?
So they give some examples of the things that they've done.
First of it is a school-based case management in Barthrum High. Now, in Southwest Philly, John Bartham High School has a youth,
violence reduction initiative that launched in 2023. It was designed by former school safety chief
in Philadelphia, now Philadelphia Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel, School Safety Offer Programs
Manager Ken Rosa and Criminal Justice researcher, Brandy, Glasgow, and this person that wrote the
article. Students who have been involved in fights or show other risk factors of violence
and street gang involvements are referred to this program. The initiative
The initiative's core idea is simple. Earned students' trust through consistent, credible mentorship, and step in when needy.
Stepping in means teaching conflict resolution skills, running engaging workshops, buying a meal, intervening when a fight is brewing, or a student is on the verge of being expelled.
Each week, a team of administrators, counselors, school safety officers, and community outreach workers, most of whom are based in the school, reviewed the participants' progress.
The tracks follow through referrals and coordinate communication with family, school, and staff.
This is a tightly managed relationship-driven safety net that gives students quicker access to help make school climates calmer and safer.
This seems so obvious. You just need somebody you trust.
Listen, one of the things even in my own house, my own life, was I knew my neighbors and my neighbors knew me.
If they call me outside, standing with the wrong people,
I knew they was going to tell my mom.
Sometimes, since they're teenagers,
they don't have conflict resolution skills.
All they know is to pop off.
You ever been hangary?
You don't think kids be angry?
Your teacher in there asking you about your algebra homework,
your stomach rumbling, I ain't got shit to say to her because I'm hungry.
And sometimes it's just a meal.
Sometimes it's just knowing somebody cares.
Sometimes it's just, you feel like I know I've experienced this too.
I feel like it's not even, they ain't even no reason to explain my position to you
because you're not going to believe me or you're just going to call the police.
I taught a kid, I've said this story so many times who used to show up late in class when I used to teach.
He'd show up late in class maybe three to four times a week.
Always had his homework in his hand.
You tardy that many times we're supposed to call the truancy officer.
Ain't a way in the world I'm calling a truancy officer.
because that mean
they mama gonna have to pay a $2,500 fee, number one,
and number two, now he got a record.
All I did, guys, I just asked him,
why are you late every day?
He say, because he trusts me,
my daddy'd be drinking too much a night
so he can't get up and take us to school.
So I take my brother to school first
and then come here.
And this is just the time I get here.
I never marked him tardy sense.
All you have to do is ask, right?
Which leads me to the second thing,
the power of credible caring adults.
It's real simple.
You got people that care.
You got food programs.
All right, let me nerd it up again.
Now, according to the youth justice services,
relationships, rehabilitation,
and the reality of young people involved,
a metasynthesis of qualitative literature.
This is a scholarly,
literature reviewed results that says that just having an adult who you know cares, just having
one that cares changes significantly the chances of a student getting into a life of crime,
but just knowing somebody care. I'm going to link into again into these show notes,
all of the data, all the stuff I've been looking at, so you can,
check it out yourself.
I know it seems like a gross oversimplification,
by the way that I'm just saying it right now.
Usually, you know what I'm saying?
If we was doing the,
it can happen here thing,
I got to be able to read this stuff out to you.
But I can read a part of it.
It says that the themes that broke out
after interviewing 150 kids
is that young people reported first being pessimistic
about entering these services.
And their past experiences impacted their ability to trust
and were initially cautious of professionals.
But, watch this.
These were the themes and sub-themes.
They felt valued and finding worth within their system.
The reciprocal nature of understanding and respect.
These kids felt respected.
The importance of having one good person,
creating a secure base for exploration and development,
and then showing a genuine care by going above and beyond.
So basically just be kind
and it helps a student succeed.
Ain't that crazy?
But at the end of the day,
homicides in Philadelphia are at the lowest level
they've been in 25 years.
How?
It's long time and it takes effort.
But next I want to talk about,
whoo!
The city of Baltimore.
Boy, this new mayor up there cooking.
All right, next.
All right, we bike.
Now, Baltimore, I don't know if you notice, which I love about it.
And, of course, you probably don't know about it because a black man did this.
Baltimore's homicide rate has fallen 40%.
Now, Baltimore, you understand this is where the wire took place.
Don't get me wrong about Baltimore.
Baltimore active.
Murder capital of the doggone.
Listen, Baltimore was active.
Now, according to the Guardian, violent crime in America's big cities has been receding since the pandemic for about two years.
But even in comparisons, Baltimore improvement is breathtaking.
Fewer people have been killed in the city over the last seven months than any other particular period for 50 years.
Here's the funny part. Mississippi talking about sending a National Guard up to D.C. to help with the crime in D.C. Meanwhile, Jackson, Mississippi got a higher murder rate than D.C. right now. Y'all people is weird. It's never been about crime. Now, back to Guardian. As of 15 August, the running 365 day total for murders in Baltimore stood at 165 dead. Assuming the city remains at this pace, the murder rate will,
finished below 30 per 10,000 residents for the first time since 1986.
If it remains on pace since the 1st of January, it would have finished 2025 at 143 murders,
a rate of about 25 per 100,000, the last scene in Baltimore since 1978.
Now, check this out. Y'all may not remember this, but y'all remember Freddie Gray,
the boy that got killed in the back of the police holding tank.
See, that's what happens when you just bring cops into a place.
It ain't about the crime, though.
Back to the Guardian.
Since 2015, there has been here in Baltimore this acknowledgment that the equity needs to be the priority, right?
Mayor Brown said, the riots were as much about the conditions of poverty as it was about Gray's death.
I hope you're hearing that.
People losing their homes and foreclosures to water bills, for example, as they were about police brutality.
But the heavy-handed response to the cops to the protests failed to hold the police accountable for misconduct, right?
Eviscerating the relationship between the Baltimore police and the public.
Baltimore state attorney Marion Mosley laid murder charges on the officers involved,
and Baltimore's police union closed ranks in response.
eviscerating the relationship
between the police and politicians
and serious scandals
at the city hall and the state's attorney offers
and the failure of
Mosley's charges to result in
convictions.
Violence skyrocketed.
But here come this young brother,
Brandon Scott, young black man,
right? He's a former city council member, right?
He's been a long observer of the violence,
you know what I'm saying? And before he became the mayor
in 2020. Then he
implemented what he's calling a comprehensive three-pillar approach, right? The first pillar is called
public health approach to violence, right? The second pillar is community engagement and interagency
coordination, right? The third pillar is evaluation and accountability, right? So like I said,
in the beginning, it starts with the community. All right, so check this out. Again,
from the Guardian. Against Baltimore's police budget, topping a half a billion dollars, the largest
police budget per capita of any large city in the USA. The political establishment gave its new
millennial mayor room to experiment with $50 million of Washington's money. So they took that budget
that was a half a billion, gave him 50 million, right? And since trust was like so low, the first
step was to get everybody aboard. So he took that money. The cops, the hospitals, the jails, the school,
the social services, the state department, the feds, and he appointed this dude named Richard
Worley, who was the city police commissioner in June 2023. Wasley was a lifelong Baltimore officer
picked in part to bring the rank and file in line with Scott's anti-violence program. Scott
emphasizes partnerships as an important part of the process. Now, he took other federal
grants and he gave the money to the people that actually do the services. He ain't just
keep it for them. Now, here's the thing, cuts my mouth to say it, but if you are going to stop
violence in the situation that we live in, the cops got to be involved. Because most of the
time, the cops are the problem. It's always punishment in prison with them. They only come with
a stick when something already happened. So you got to get them on the table and you got to get them
at the table with somebody that's going to be willing to be held accountable. And remember,
that's pillar three. Now, far be it for me, because I don't live in Baltimore, would I ever
shield for no mayor like this? I'm just telling you what the data says, and I got family in
Baltimore. Now, what Scott said is, again, we focus on the individuals and groups that are most likely
to be the victim or perpetrator of violence. We go to them. Listen, they knock on doors.
there's a social worker that comes to the door
with a letter from the mayor
that says, yo, you're trying to be a part of this
and they're only targeting kids
or families that they know
got low poverty rates and high chances of crime.
You're looking for the people
who are most likely going to fall a victim
to perpetuating it or receiving it
because remember how we started this whole thing before.
You think we don't care about crime?
We don't want that it's happening too.
So he says, quote, Curtis Palomero, who runs the youth violence prevention nonprofit
Raqa in Baltimore.
It says, we're talking about young people with the elevated risk.
We're not talking about the young person that says F you to his teacher or tells his mom and dad
or grandpa, he don't want to do X, Y, Z.
We're talking about kids who have literally probably have two tracks, jail and death.
He knocks on the door while a cop is carrying met the mayor's letter.
And as often as not, he has to knock on a dozen doors before he's.
gets a chance. Why? Because niggas don't trust the cops, right? Why would they? But since there's no
single thing that is preventative, trust must be built, right? Moving on in this article,
there are two types of people that are most vulnerable, NASA, is the people in their early 20s who
are feuding over trivial matters. Someone looked at me wrong. Somebody bumped in to somebody, right?
Or other people who are in the drug game. More around the violence that has to do with other
criminal enterprises are so much more calculated. Critically, it's not every young person with
Instagram beef and not every stand-down neighborhood street dealer that rises to their attention.
The risk factors creates a reasonable, articulatable, legally defensible basis for contact,
which means you're not being hunted by the cops. Do you understand the piece I would have felt
had I known that since I wasn't involved in none of this shit, they may not be coming up to me?
you've already calmed my nervous system down, right?
There's another story about a young man
who was recovering after a gunshot
and in this life coach,
nigger from a youth advocate program approached him.
And Jalen said, this is his man, said,
he just had been in the wrong part of West Baltimore
at the wrong time.
Now, most of us who work like this, that's true.
He wasn't especially receptive to this first life coach at all.
He said, I thought there was a catch.
I thought I'd have to pay them back
in the future because when the police do it to you, that's exactly what it is. You got to pay them
back later. But this person is funded by the city to just be a life coach. I ain't asking you to
snitch on nobody. I ain't asking you to make yourself, put yourself in danger outside. It's
somebody who understands what it's like to live out here. This life coach says, it's about follow-up.
Today, they might say, get the fuck out of here. Tomorrow they might be wanting some services.
It might be something tragic that happens and they need change.
Like I said, my mother's not smiling no more.
I need a way to pay my mama's light bill.
Can you help me with that?
Here's what's crazy.
Yes, I can help you with that.
We have services.
Why?
Because I'm talking to the other departments, right?
On the law side, here's the prevention.
They dismissed 34% of nonviolent charges.
I was a non-violet offender.
It was graffiti.
Just make me pay the fine.
Like, it's fine.
Like, I'll pay the fine.
I don't care, right?
You have, like, a nickel bag of weed in your pocket.
You're looking at five years?
The shit is not working.
That's over policing.
But if the district attorney look at you and say,
nigger some weed, man, get the fuck out of here.
Go take care of your mama.
Matter of fact, I want you to talk to this brother over here.
He's going to help get your plumber's license.
Also, there's job placement, right?
there's all that and then finally evaluation listen you got a caring adult you got services available
to you and you know if somebody in this program if any of these law enforcement these city people
act to fuck up there are consequences that is pillar three i'm going to link all this stuff to you
there's a four year evaluation and you will get fucking fired if i know that if you treat me right
something going to happen to you i might think a little different
listen the heat stopped working so my heat start working but if my stomach is full and the bills are paid
and there's after school programs that go to and i know these old people around me are going to trust me
when i tell them stuff when i'm dealing with situations that may or may not be out of my control
when i got big homies pressing me to do this and there's somebody i could trust that i could talk to
that's not going to turn me into a snitch because you ain't telling the cops just to get them
to give me information about a crime that happened over there.
That's not what's happening right now.
You are trying to prevent the violence.
You're not trying to catch a criminal.
You're trying to prevent criminality.
And it's at a 50-year low.
But sure, go ahead and send a National Guard.
Now, listen, obviously, this ain't the system I won't,
but it's the system we got.
This is not ideal.
You would never see me shill for no police department.
or mayor. But
cities like Philly
in Baltimore are proven
niggie, if you just
care and you spend
money on trusted sources
and provide resources,
the crime
it drops itself.
Seems so simple.
But you know, what do we know?
We're just black people.
And all this tells me what
we already knew. It was never about
crime, ever, because there's
research that shows what actually works in reducing crime. What this about, you just think we're
you. And you're a white supremacist. You just want a white world and you think it's cool to have
military in our streets. Don't get me wrong. You didn't invent that. You was in Trump. You know
how I know you ain't invent that? Because there's an amendment in the Constitution that says that
We don't want to live in a world where the military is on every corner.
But apparently you do.
It's clearly not about crime.
My name is Ed.
Everyone say hello, Ed.
From a very rural background,
myself. My dad is a farmer and my mom is a cousin. So like, it's not like...
What do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club? I know it sounds like
the start of a bad joke, but that really was my reality nine years ago. I just normally do straight
stand-up, but this is a bit different. On stage stood a comedian with a story that no one expected to
hear. Well, 22nd of July 2015, a 23-year-old man had killed his family.
And then he came to my house.
So what do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
A new podcast called Wisecrack, where stand-up comedy and murder takes center stage.
Available now.
Listen to Wisecrack on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Power struggles, shady money, drugs, violence, and violence.
and broken promises.
It's a freaking war zone.
These people are animals.
There's no integrity.
There's no loyalty.
That's all gone.
In the 1980s, modeling wasn't just a dream.
It was a battlefield.
Book, book, book.
Like deals.
Let's get models in.
Let's get them out.
And the models themselves?
They carried scars that never fully healed.
Until this day, honestly, if I see a measuring tape, I freak out.
The Model Wars podcast peels back the glossy cover
and reveals a high-stakes game
where survival meant more than beauty.
Hosted by me, Vanessa Grigoriatis,
this is the untold story
of an industry built on ruthless ambition.
Listen to Model Wars
on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Do you want to hear the secrets of serial killers,
psychopaths, pedophiles, robbers?
They are sitting there waiting for the vulnerable thing.
They're waiting for the unprotected.
I'm Dr. Leslie, forensic psychologist.
I advocate for safety and awareness of predators while wearing pink.
When you were described to me as a forensic psychologist, I was like snooze.
We ended up talking for hours, and I was like, this girl is my best friend.
This is a podcast where I cut through the noise with sarcasm, satire, and hard truths.
I'm not going to fake it and force it for me.
But would you force an orgasm?
because that's like a different layer.
The car accident you didn't want to see but couldn't turn away from.
In this episode, I discussed personal safety and self-defense,
tools, instincts, and strategies to protect yourself and your loved ones
in everyday life and high-risk situations.
Listen to intentionally disturbing on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
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 IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Akadap here, a podcast about a world on fire and how to put it out.
I'm your host, Mia Wong.
The world is fucked.
It's the one thing everyone agrees on.
In the vacuum of a defeated Democratic Party and a hideously unpopular fascist takeover that is nevertheless on the march,
ideologies vie for the mantle of resistance to the fascist purge.
So on Mamdani's victory in New York
represents a resurgence social democracy
In the streets
Everyone from liberals to communists to anarchists
Are fighting against ICE
And the National Guard occupations
To get our bearings in the swirling vortex of ideology
Let us check in slightly further to the right
But still firmly in the grounds of liberalism
On a new movement called abundance
What is abundance?
Brust into prominent
by a book in March 2025
simply called
Abundance by liberal stalwart
Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson
who is slightly the most well known
and features people like Matthew and Glacius
they argue that growth is good
they argue we should make more things
they argue we should have bold visions of the future
with, to quote Malcolm Harris's description
in the baffler,
desalinated ocean water flowing from the taps,
skyscraper farms growing our food indoors
and quote star pills manufactured in space, clean air, and super-fast planes. Think big, think fast,
solve problems by building more. They even have a new magazine runoff of Substack called The Argument,
which is supposed to be about bringing these new ideas to the left. It includes Social Democratic stalwart
Matt Prunach. Isn't that nice? Semaphore, in the reporting on the launch of the argument,
wrote, quote, many of the argument's writers have supported, or in Thompson's case authored,
the ideas of abundance, a recent book advocating for reforms to improve government
deficiency, lower the cost of housing, and improve public transportation among other initiatives.
And those sound like good things, don't they? Let's take a look at who's funding the argument.
It's funded in part by Emergent Ventures, which was created by the Koch Brothers
were Cantis Center with seed money from Peter Thiel?
Wait, what?
They have a conference every year.
They had one in 2024.
The 2025 conference was last week.
Who was speaking?
The opponent's conference 2025 speakers include Charles Lehman
from the right-wing Manhattan Institute,
an organization founded by Ronald Reagan's director of the CIA.
Well, let's hear him out.
Let's see what he thinks.
Lehman advocates what he calls deportation abundance,
which is his plan to make a more efficient deportation machine
that could actually deport every undocumented person in the U.S.
Wait, what?
This conference is also sponsored by the Koch family's organizations stand together.
It includes speakers from the American Enterprise Institute.
One of the co-sponsors of the event did another conference
with special guest Kevin Roberts, the guy who wrote Project 2025.
Isn't this supposed to be a liberal movement?
Oh, no! What's going on here?
Could Abundance really be funded by all these right-wing billionaires and tech fascists?
Oh, no!
As you may have guessed from the title, most of today's episode is going to be about what the people behind abundance actually want.
And it's not what you or I want.
want. It is what Peter Thiel wants, what Mark Andreessen wants, what J.D. Vance wants. In a sense,
it is what Donald Trump wants. Because abundance as an ideology is an attempt by the tech
oligarchs to take over the left the same way they took over the right. And that makes the ideology
extremely dangerous. As we are going to unveil, this project is directly tied to many of
the worst people in this country right now. It is tied to Peter Thiel. It is funded by Peter Thiel. It is funded
by Marc Andreessen, who is another effectively Thielite who believes in most of the same, if not all of the
same things that Teal does. These ideas are normally unacceptable on the liberal left. But because
abundance is wrapped in the ideology of liberalism, because it wears the faces of liberal Star Wars,
like Ezra Klein, it can be smuggled in in a way that leaves the left and liberalism as a whole
susceptible to broad ideological capture by the very same tech fascists we are all trying to oppose.
Before we fully get into what the funders of abundance actually want, let's talk a little bit
about what the ideology of abundance is. The very, very basic ideology.
of abundance is that we need more things, we need to build more, and that government regulations
are standing in the way of building things. Now, if this sounds suspiciously Reaganite to you,
that's because, in a sense, it is. Asra Klein describes this as the progressive supply-side
economics. Now, supply-side economics famously is Reagan's thing. You will note that basically everyone
across the entire political spectrum, at least sort of when pressed, will agree that
supply-side economics simply does not work, but let's hear them out. I think another way to
understand what abundance is and why it works the way that it does is to look at it in the context
not of American political ideology and debates, but of Chinese political debates.
Now, Chinese political debates have, for much of the last decade, really a decade and a half,
taken the form of arguments about either increasing the size of the pie or splitting the pie more
evenly. On the left, you have a case for redistribution, right, for higher taxation, for higher
welfare benefits, for giving people things from the states, and redistributing it from rich people
to the poor. On the right, you have growing the pie, which argues that instead of redistributing
wealth, we should simply grow more wealth, and that wealth will trickle down to everyone else.
Wait, this is just Reaganism again. It's all Reaganism. This is the very frustrating thing about
abundance is that when you actually go past the language they're using and you look at what
they think will happen, it's just trickle-down economics again. It's just trickle-down economics,
and abundance is on the right-wing side of it. Now, you know, there are definitely arguments
for places where we do, in fact, need to build more things, right? And this argument has become
particularly prominent with the rise of yimbism. And like, yeah, I don't know, building more
houses is good. I mean, it was literally a demand of the Hungarian revolution, right? Like, yeah,
We need more of it.
But, comma, we need to be very, very careful here.
Because the way that abundance structures its arguments and the ways that, for example,
a really, really vulgar version of Yimbism has been deployed by these people in order
to just sort of wholesale oppose government regulations, and we're not just talking about
things here like eliminating zoning requirements, right?
we are talking about, as we'll get into later,
the people behind this movement wants to create their own city, states,
and special economic zones where no government regulations apply.
But the fundamental argument here is that lifting government restrictions on production
will, you know, increase the size of the market,
and because prices just supply and demand, prices will fall because there's more supply.
None of this is how markets actually work.
One of the crucial insights of anthropology is that,
markets are not simply neutral objective forces that function according to precise mathematical
laws. They are socially constructed. Even in neoclassical economics, by their own logic,
price is not just supply and demand. That's something that's only true in perfectly competitive
markets. And perfectly competitive markets do not exist. They probably cannot exist,
but they do not exist in the real world, and they do not represent something like the housing
market. In the real world, markets are defined by power. Neoclassical economists attempt to explain
the role of power in markets through monopoly, right? You know, you can look at monopoly and monopsony.
There are a bunch of very different things that they think are sort of deviations of this perfect
competitive market where people band together to build power and thus are able to distort what
the perfect free market should be doing. And this is a feature of basically every market.
that actually exists, right? There aren't perfectly competitive markets. They all have power
in them, and they all have degrees of monopoly, to use a sort of Marxian term, in them as well.
Now, do you know what else has a degree of monopoly? That's right. It is the products and services
that support this podcast.
So what does this actually have to do with abundance?
Long, long ago, in a galaxy far, far away, I explained rent on this show, and this is specifically
here, rent in the context of what you pay to your landlords, I promise this will circle back
to, this will circle back to sort of abundance, Yimbism in a second.
I attempted to explain rent by drawing on the work of the legendary Venezuelian anthropologist
Fernando Corrineal, to argue that the rent that we pay to our landlords functions similarly
to oil rent, where price is not set by supply and demand, but instead by the social power of oil
producers.
Now, people got very, very mad at me for this, but the long derrier of history has vindicated me.
In the real world, it turns out, I was right.
The most powerful example of this in the housing market is the case of Real Page, a service
that allowed landlords to get recommendations on their pricing based on information from all
the landlords who submitted their data, thus creating.
an algorithmic machine for price fixing.
This got bad enough that even the Biden Justice Department got involved.
Here's from the Department of Justice's lawsuit against Real Page.
Quote, Real Page acknowledged that its software is aimed at maximizing prices for landlords,
referring to its products as, quote,
driving every possible opportunity to increase price,
avoiding the race to the bottom in down markets,
and, quote, a rising tide raises all ships.
real page executive observed that its products help landlords avoid competing on the merits, noting,
quote, there is a greater good in everybody's succeeding versus essentially trying to compete
against one another in a way that actually keeps the entire industry down.
A Real Page executive explains to a landlord that using competitor data can help identify
situations where a landlord may have a $50 increase instead of $10 increase for the day.
Another landlord commented about Real Page's product,
I always like this product because your algorithm is used proprietary
data from other subscribers who suggest
rents and terms. That's classical
price fixing. Now
I was derided
for arguing that landlords would
ban together using their social power
to prevent rents from
falling even with units sit and empty.
And it turns out, I was right
the whole time. They were doing
exactly that. It turns
out in the actual real world of
the markets, all of these companies
on all of these landlords had found a way
to ban together in order to use their social
power and use the information in their possession to fix the price of rent.
Here is from Reuters, drawing from yet another lawsuit this time from the Attorney General
of D.C. A monthly report from W.C. Smith in 2022 showed the company had increased revenues per unit
by 4.6 to 4.7 percent, despite decreased occupancy levels according to the lawsuit. So what is that
saying. That is saying that the actual number of people in these apartments is decreasing. The number of
apartments staying open that have no one in them is increasing. But the price is not going down.
Even though there's more supply, the price is still going up. Why is the price still going up?
Well, well, well, the Justice Department calls this price fixing, large-scale collusion to disrupt the
functioning of the perfectly normal competitive market. The anthropologist Fernando Coroneal,
as I argued before, calls it absolute rent, rent extracted by virtue of the social power of the landowner.
As I wrote in that episode, quote, absolute rent does not obey the law of supply and demand.
It is the product of social power, of the power of landownership itself and the organization of
landowning class, and they're backing by the state and its militaries and police.
and this causes economists attempting to use supply and demand to explain rent to get very,
very important events, very wrong.
Morris Edelman, the famous oil economist, predicted in 1972 that the price of oil was going
to collapse based on oversupply and competition.
Instead, it increased 400% between 1973 and 1974 because oil producers banning together
to exercise their power and their organization, known as OPEC, became a genuine world power.
As Corrinell put it, quote,
the sharp increase of 1973 and 1974 in oil prices
did not result from a world shortage of oil.
It was, rather, the outcome of a long historical process
by which OPEC nations, acting as landowners,
developed a means to extract a rent
on the basis of their ownership of the oil fields,
an absolute rent,
in addition to the differential rents they had collected in the past.
In 1973, a set of converging political and economic conditions
helped establish their collective ability
to restrict the world supply of oil.
With this power, OPEC felt entitled
to set the market price of oil,
thus freeing the level of rent
from the previous constraints of market price.
Now rent itself,
absolute and differential,
would determine the market price of oil.
What does that sound like?
Oh, it sounds like Real Page's
price-fixing algorithm.
Why does it sound like Real Page's
price-fixing algorithm?
It's because, in the real world,
markets are not neutral institutions
that operate according to neutral laws,
their institutions created and enforced by the state.
Landlords can jack up your rent
because they wield collective power together
and have the ability to use the state
to drag you out of your home at gunpoint.
Abundance is, to a large extent,
an attempt to harness widespread discontent
over the price of goods,
the price of rent, the price of food,
and argue that you can simply produce more
and this will make all of the prices go down.
But as we've seen here,
as long as the social power is held by the rent extractors,
they can simply set their own price.
None of this is addressed in abundance,
and there's a simple reason for that.
The people funding the abundance agenda
are the very same people profiting from their social power.
So let's talk about the money.
I'm going to be quoting here from a report from prospect,
which is very good.
The Institute for Progress, IFP,
which co-hosted Abundance 2024
and is listed as a key institutional partner
by the Inclusive Abundance Initiative
has a bevy of corporate ties.
In 2022,
IFP received $110,000 from FAI
and has FAI's executive director
on its board. Now, FAI is the foundation
for American Innovation. I'm going to read,
this is also an abundance co-host,
which is very funny.
I am going to read a quote from Kate Willett,
who has also done some excellent reporting on this,
and she describes how the FAAI hosted
another conference in 2024 called Reboot.
The quote, surprise guest of the conference
was Kevin Roberts,
president of the Heritage Foundation
and chief architect of 2025.
Now, back to the Institute for Progress.
Part of what's going on here, right,
is that this is an incredible, you know,
and what I'm trying to emphasize
by how confusing this whole thing is,
is that abundance is composed
of a series of think tanks
and weird institutes
that are all tied into a bunch of tech money, right?
Keeping the acronym straight is very difficult.
You do not need to hold all of them in your head.
The other thing that you need to understand about this, right,
is if you look at who is co-hosting these conferences
and who is behind these books and who is behind these media outlets,
a very, very clear picture starts to emerge.
I'm going to go back to quoting from Prospect.
One of the funders of the Institute for Progress
was Emergent Ventures,
which is a product of the Cokeback Mercantus Institute
at George Mason University.
Emergent itself was launched by a grant from Peter Thiel.
Peter Thiel is a right-wing billionaire
with a vast influence network at the intersection of techno-futurism and anti-democratic thought,
who has called technology an alternative to democratic politics,
small D-democratic, by the way, he means the concept of democracy,
to, quote, unilaterally change the world.
Vice President-elect J.D. Vance is a known scion of Peter Thiel.
Let's look at the Chamber of Progress, another one of the groups that is heavily involved in abundance.
Chamber of Progress, which self-identifies its work as part of a growing abundance,
policy movement, is a trade group started with Google Seed Money by Google Alum, Adam Kovacovich.
Kovacovic proudly touts his college activism, leading an effort to cross a united farm workers
picket line. The Chamber of Progress's partners, reed funders include A16Z, Circle, Coinbase,
Google, Cracken, Ripple, Waymo, and Drison Horowitz, or A16Z is a venture capital firm
heavily invested in AI and crypto.
Co-founder Mark Andresen
believes the technology is a solution to every
problem. He's also on
Meda's board. He is also a
theolite tech fascist.
This is in some sense a very, very interesting
collusion of forces.
Right? We have the Koch brothers
who are, you know, sort of the ancient
libertarian right side
of Republican dark money.
They are, you know, the
people who have traditionally funded
right-wing movements in the
past, they are the Tea Party people, they are, you know, they are sort of the boogeyman
under the bed for anyone who has wanted to make the world a better place for a very, very
long time. And they, and their organizations are working with the emergent tech fascist
right, you know, people like, people like Mark Andreessen, people with Peter Thiel. And these are the
organizations that have gotten in bed together in order to do this. Now, these people have a bunch
of absolutely hideous beliefs.
We're not even going to get in
to the eugenics here,
but like these,
the people funding this thing
are huge eugenicists.
We literally do not have time
to do all of the eugenic shit
associated with this
because if I were to actually do the eugenic,
I mean, we talked about some of
like Maddie and Galacius' bullshit
on this podcast earlier,
but like, if I actually went through
and did this, this episode
would be like 12 hours long,
I am going to cover
this sort of network state
peer theolyte eugenics circle
at some point later. That is a forthcoming episode. But yeah, for now, here are these ads. Hopefully
are not eugenics. Woo!
So let's get back to who I think are really the two primary villains of this story. And that is Peter
Thiel and Mark Andresen, who are two of the most dangerous people in the entire world.
Teal and Andresen are fascists who believe the state should be a corporation run by the tech
elite.
They do not believe in democracy, and particularly Thiel has said that democracy is the enemy of freedom,
right?
When these people talk about running the state like a business, they mean that there should be
an unaccountable fucking philosopher's CEO king and that there shouldn't be democracy.
A common feature of this, and the physical manifestation of this thing, is an idea called
the network state.
And a very common theme of the founders of abundance is their support for the network state,
both as a concept and in terms of building them.
So what is the network state?
The network state is, to a large extent, the thing I've just been describing, right?
The version of it that they pitch is that these are like opportunity zones, right?
They're these like tech cities, you know, that will eventually be.
like real states that are based off of special economic zones where, you know, special
economic zones where like the normal regulations of the state do not apply. So you can, you know,
do whatever you want, right? You can, we can build prosperity by having no government regulations
and run everything through corporations. These network states would be, again, actual straight-up
corporations that own and control territory and run it as the state. These states are,
already coming into existence. Maybe the most important is Prospera, a corporate city for
profit in Honduras that is run by a corporation, again, in a special economic zone where the state
does not apply. It does not have a mayor. It has someone appointed by the corporation who
runs the city. This is happening all over the world, particularly in developing countries,
where it is being pushed by all of these just absolutely demonic tech schools. And they're
also being started and attempts are being started to run them in the United States.
I'm going to quote here from Shane Lee's Venture Capital, blog Venture Capital status,
which is a very, very good resource on the network state, which we'll be covering more fully
later because we don't have time to do much more than a brief introduction to their ideas
here.
In Salero County, California, a cartel of venture capitalists associated with Andresen Horowitz,
which is, again, Mark Andreessen's firm,
bought up over 65,000 acres of rich fertile farmland
and using secretive and threatening methodologies
including suing local farmers.
They plan to build a city
with weapons developments and manufacturing,
aerospace and robotics companies,
shipbuilding homes and schools.
This network state is called California forever.
Also in California,
there has been a discussion by network state operatives
of taking over Presidio in San Francisco.
and there is a network state planned in Simona County.
Its founder is a, quote, former promontist venture capitalists.
These are the same people funding abundance.
Here's from Kate Willett again.
One of the California Forever billionaires, California Forever is, again, the name of the network state they want to set up by buying a bunch of land in Salado County.
One of the California Forever billionaires, Patrick Coleson, the CEO of Stripe, looms large in abundance worlds.
Along with Open Philanthropy, he donated to fund a $120 million
abundance grant tied to Ezra Klein's book release.
Colson is a key backer and inspiration for the Institute
for Progress, a think tank, which works closely with others
in the Abundance Network, including the Abundance 2024 conference.
The goal of the network state movement is to accelerate
the destruction of the United States and create these corporate network
states in their wake.
They want the world to be composed of these networks of venture capital tech corporations
run and ruled by them by the tech elite for profit.
These are the people that are funding all of these fucking movements.
These are the people funding the argument.
These are the people funding the abundance conference.
These are the people that people like Ezra Klein have been brought in to run cover for.
these are Trump people.
They are the forces behind J.D. Vance.
They want to inflict their vision of tech fascism on the world.
But they are hideously popular in power.
In order to achieve their agenda,
they cannot simply rely on their incredible hegemony on the right.
They need you.
They need your buy-in.
They need the support of good and kind-hearted liberals
who they can radicalize into Trumpian tech fascists.
this is their opening gambit
and they've played it well
but there is still time for them to fail
there is still time for us to build a future
built by us and for us
by and for each other
based on mutual aid and the benefit
of all a world
without death squads and ice
a world ruled not by corporations
but by us
the fight for that world
begins here
and now
My name is Ed.
Everyone say hello Ed.
I'm from a very rural background myself.
My dad is a farmer and my mom is a cousin, so like it's not like...
What do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
I know it sounds like the start of a bad joke, but that really was my reality.
nine years ago.
I just normally do straight stand-up, but this is a bit different.
On stage stood a comedian with a story that no one expected to hear.
On 22nd of July 2015, a 23-year-old man had killed his family.
And then he came to my house.
So what do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
A new podcast called Wise Crime.
Where stand-up comedy and murder takes center stage.
Available now.
Listen to Wisecrack on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Power struggles, shady money, drugs, violence, and broken promises.
It's a freaking war zone.
These people are animals.
There's no integrity.
There's no loyalty.
That's all gone.
In the 1980s, modeling wasn't just a dream.
It was a battlefield.
Book, book, book, make deals.
Let's get models in. Let's get them out.
And the models themselves?
They carried scars that never fully healed.
Till this day, honestly, if I see a measuring tape, I freak out.
The Model Wars podcast peels back the glossy cover
and reveals a high-stakes game where survival meant more than beauty.
Hosted by me, Vanessa Grigoriatis,
this is the untold story of an industry built on ruthless, ambitious.
Listen to Model Wars on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Do you want to hear the secrets of serial killers, psychopaths, pedophiles, robbers?
They are sitting there waiting for the vulnerable thing.
They're waiting for the unprotected.
I'm Dr. Leslie, forensic psychologist.
I advocate for safety and awareness of predators.
While wearing pink.
When you were described to me as a forensic psychologist, I was like snooze.
We ended up talking for hours and I was like, this girl is my best friend.
This is a podcast where I cut through the noise with sarcasm, satire, and hard truths.
I'm not going to fake it and force it for me.
Would you force an orgasm because that's like a different layer?
The car accident you didn't want to see but couldn't turn away from.
In this episode, I discussed personal safety and self-defense tools, instincts, and strategies
to protect yourself and your loved ones
in everyday life and high-risk situations.
Listen to intentionally disturbing
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
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.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here, a show about things falling apart.
One such thing frequently falling apart is any notion of privacy or digital,
privacy. Ever encroaching surveillance is one of the biggest global issues affecting free
expression and a free press, both directly through surveillance technology, but also by
chilling speech. I'm Garrison Davis, and this past week, news has swept the internet that
ICE is using software from an Israeli company called Paragon, which allows ICE, or DHS, to
secretly hack into any smartphone, break encryption, access messages,
track real-time location, and turn your iPhone or Android into a walking listening device.
All of which sounds very scary, and some of which is true, though some of these claims are
exaggerated or even likely false based on what we can currently infer from published research.
Due to legitimate fears, we live in a world of surveillance paranoia, which can lead to surveillance
myths. This is a core function of the panopticon. People should take ICE's new enhanced
smartphone surveillance capacity seriously, but to adequately do so requires an accurate
understanding of the threat model, which we will get into later this episode with some help
from the Electronic Frontier Foundation. But first, let's address the newsworthy aspect of this
story, what has actually changed recently.
DHS first contracted with the U.S. branch of Paragon in September of 2024 for $2 million.
But later that October, the contract was put on hold, thanks to a Biden executive order
restricting in government use of foreign spyware. And ever since then, the contract has
been frozen pending a compliance review. But then, on September 1st, 2025, just last week,
investigative journalist Jack Paulson
reported that the stopwork order
affecting the Paragon contract
had quietly been lifted,
allowing ICE to follow through on the contract
and start using Paragon's spyware technology,
most likely, including their flagship product,
graphite.
What is graphite?
Great question.
One that I felt underqualified
to fully answer myself,
so I spoke with an expert,
Cooper Quentin of the Digital Rights Group,
the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
You'll hear from him throughout the episode.
My name is Cooper Quentin.
I am a senior staff technologist
at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
There, I do a lot of different things,
most specifically for the purposes of this talk.
I do malware research on malware
that targets activists, journalists, and civil society.
So graphite is a type of spyware
that is able to read your messages from your phone.
the same way that you or maybe a cop could if they had physical access to your unlocked phone, right?
That is the main capability that it has, according to the reporting published by Citizen Lab.
Its main job is to hook into WhatsApp and into other encrypted chat apps and just read the messages in those apps,
like in the messages you've already sent and any future messages that you send.
That's really it. That's the meat of graphite.
Something that sets Paragon apart from their fellow Israeli competitors is that Paragon has marketed itself as the ethical choice for spyware.
One of their early investors, an Israeli firm called Red Dot, wrote, quote,
Paragon builds best in-class cyber intelligence software to empower democratic countries providing cutting-edge capabilities that make the world safer, unquote.
On their U.S. website, Paragon says that they are quote-unquote, empowering ethical.
cyber defense. And that they provide customers with, quote, ethically based tools, teams, and
insights to disrupt intractable threats, unquote. Though they use the term cyber defense on their
U.S. site, Paragon's startup page reads, quote, Paragon is an offense-focused cyber company
using digital intelligence for smartphone and internet surveillance solutions. The company applies
strict moral restrictions on itself, limiting its extraction of information from targeted
devices to conversations on chat apps. Paragon works solely with police forces and
intelligence agencies that meet the standards of an enlightened democracy, which includes
only 39 countries. One of Paragon's senior executives told Forbes in 2021 that they would
only sell their technology to governments that, quote, unquote, abide by international norms and
respect fundamental rights and freedoms, and that, quote, authoritarian or non-democratic regimes
would never be customers.
Unfortunately, Paragon was not pressed on what their definition of authoritarian regimes
includes.
In recent reporting, there's been a lot of misconceptions about the capabilities of Paragon's
main product, Graphite.
The Guardian wrote, quote, by essentially taking control of the mobile phone, ICE can not only
track in individuals' whereabouts, read their messages, look at their photographs, but also open
and read information held on encrypted applications like WhatsApp or signal.
Spyware like Graphite can also be used as a listening device through manipulation of the
phone's recorder, unquote. But research into Graphite by the surveillance watchdog group Citizen
Lab has not indicated that Graphite has all these capabilities or tries to quote unquote
take control of the entire device. But other tech journalists have since
parroted, the Guardian's unfounded claims
that graphite fully
takes over a phone and can record
audio through the microphone.
This is actually less full featured
than other spyware
we've seen in the past, like
NSO Group's Pegasus spyware,
other types of spyware that I've seen
tend to have a lot more capabilities,
right? They have the capability
of like turning on GPS location tracking,
the capability to
turn on a hot mic, to
do all these other things. And this
seems as far as
as far as Citizen Lab has reported to not be
present within the graphite
malware. And I think this is because
Paragon has
presented themselves as kind of being the
quote-unquote responsible
malware manufacturer rate and they're
like trying to minimize the
amount of data they collect. It doesn't
mean they couldn't add this stuff in the future, but
that's the gist of it. It's actually
kind of a very stripped-down malware.
I don't want to minimize
how impactful it would be for
this malware to get all of your messages, right?
Like, that could have a huge impact for people.
But we don't need to make up capabilities that our adversary has,
especially under fascism, right?
Like, we can just work with the capabilities that we know they have.
A lot of reporting and discussion of graphite and Paragon
frame it as an equivalent to NSO's spyware, Pegasus,
which has been banned in the United States for four years.
Pegasus seeks to completely hijack the target of
more broadly, similar to Guardian's claims about graphite. But by forcing this comparison,
people might be inadvertently boosting Paragon's brand with free marketing by making their product
out to be something that I'm sure Paragon would like to have people think it is, but doesn't
actually equate their realistic threat model. Similar to how predictions of an evil, super-intelligent
AI actually currently serve to boost the stock price of AI companies.
a lot of people are doing the work for these companies that are
lining themselves with fascism, right?
And I don't think it's a great trend, actually, right?
Like people are assuming that, you know,
Palantir is sort of watching everything, right?
And it really, Palantir is just like fancy visual
graphing software, essentially, right?
Like the danger of Palantir is combining these two
government databases, right?
This malware, the graphite malware, right?
Like, yeah, it's not good, but, you know, it's not magical, right?
It's not omniscient.
It's not able to, you know, I don't know, go eat the fridge out of your food and, you know, beat up your dad or something.
Like, you know, I don't.
Well, now we're talking.
Now that's a good app.
If only tech bros could solve such social problems.
No, no, they would never.
No.
But, yeah, you know, it's not, it's not a magical, right?
And we don't need to do their work for them, right?
We don't need to do their myth-making for them, right?
A bigger threat to the majority of people in the U.S.
is getting your phone seized by the cops, right?
Totally.
There's nothing this Maurer can do, according to public reports, at least,
the cops can't do if they get all of your unlocked phone, right?
Having phased ID or a four-digit passcode is much more dangerous to your digital security.
Yes.
As an average person, even as an average person going to a protest?
Yes, yes, absolutely.
Absolutely. Absolutely. You know, celebrate, which is the machine that police plug your phone into you to make a copy of all the data on it, is much more dangerous to the average American than Paragon is. You're much more likely to encounter that.
This is more of a niche gripe, but one that's still important. There's been claims that, quote, ICE can now hack any phone and break encryption. But graphite doesn't actually, quote, unquote, break encryption. It's not going after the encryption on signal or,
WhatsApp. Instead, Paragon tries to circumvent end-to-end encryption by trying to gain access to content
on a targeted device once it's been unencrypted by an application like WhatsApp for the user to read.
Similar to how if you have push notifications on for an application like Signal, if the police
sees your phone and push notifications display messages from Signal, that doesn't mean the police
have quote-unquote broken signals encryption. Now, in order for
graphite to extract messages from your phone, it needs to get onto your phone in the first place.
Graphite is just the implanted code that can read and extract your messages.
First, it needs to get onto your phone via what's called an exploit, which is usually a message
sent to a phone number or a WhatsApp account that attacks a vulnerability in your phone's code
to gain permissions to load the graphite onto the messaging apps.
Graphite and the exploit are two separate programs that work together.
But exploits need to be frequently changed to keep up with software security updates.
And that's expensive.
You need different exploits for Android and iOS.
Paragon has been using zero-click exploits,
meaning the owner of the phone doesn't have to manually click a link or intentionally download a file
for the exploit to try to gain permissions on the device.
You don't have to click or do anything.
You just have to receive the message, and then the spyware gets to work.
which is very scary, but this technology cannot be deployed en masse
because of how expensive and specific it needs to be in order to work.
The other thing that I think is missing a lot from the conversation about graphite in particular
is that the malware is just the program that runs when it gets on your phone.
And first, before they can install graphite, they have to get onto your phone through some sort of exploit.
If your phone is up to date and fully patched, this will have to be a zero-date exploit,
which means it's an exploit that has had zero days for Apple or Google or whoever to fix it because it is unknown to them.
And these exploits cost millions of dollars, right?
Now, Paragon is not going to pay that millions of dollars for each person they're exploiting,
but there is a large per person cost to ICE for each person they're going to exploit because Paragon doesn't want to blow their zero day,
which costs them millions of dollars to either buy or develop themselves.
Welcome back.
I'd like to get into a little bit of Paragon's backstory and how they've grown as a company.
Paragon was founded in 2019 by former Israeli Prime Minister, Ahud Barack, and Ahud Shnorson,
a former commander of the IDF's cyber warfare unit, basically Israel's equivalent of the NSA, called
Unit 8200.
Three other Paragon co-founders are also ex-Israeli intelligence.
The startup got early financing from a Tel Aviv investment fund called Red.
Capital, though Paragon also received backing from American Venture Capital.
In 2021, Forbes reported that the Boston-based battery ventures had invested between 5 to 10 million
in Paragon.
Bloomberg Capital has also supported the company.
In 2022, Paragon launched a U.S.
subsidiary and started recruiting former U.S. feds to help break into the American market.
The New York Times reported that the DEA has used graphite as far back as 2022.
Former CIA assistant director John Finbar Fleming became the executive chairman of Paragon
U.S. in January of 2024, according to his LinkedIn.
In December of 2024, Paragon was acquired by AE industrial partners for 900,000.
million dollars. A.E. Industrial Partners is a Florida-based private equity fund with a specialized
security portfolio. Once they bought Paragon, it merged with another AE asset, the cybersecurity
company Red Ladis. Back in 2021, Paragon had about 50 employees. Now it has over 500. In June of
2025, they were hiring 150 more. Just a week ago, Executive Chairman John Finbar Fleming
shared a recruitment post that Red Ladis was hiring, quote, emerging and offensive cyber engineers, unquote.
Next, let's discuss the biggest case study of graphite being deployed that we know of.
On January 31st, 2025, Meta's encrypted messaging app WhatsApp sent a notification to 90 accounts
that their smartphones were suspected of being targeted by spyware, which has since been traced to the Paragon product,
graphite. People targeted were journalists, human rights activists, and members of civil society
across Europe and the Mediterranean, but primarily based out of Italy. This was a zero-day
and zero-click exploit, meaning both attacked a previously unknown vulnerability and required
zero user interaction to infect the device. At first, the Italian government denied knowledge,
but Paragon canceled two contracts with customers in Italy
and a parliamentary oversight committee later confirmed
the Italian government was using Paragon technology
for spyware attacks against sea migration activists.
One thing that's interesting to me is that we talk about this technology
as being very expensive, very like individual.
They have to individually target you.
But then you see, you know, 90 people on WhatsApp.
And you're like, that's a lot of people.
So can talk about how this attack was like structured
and what we've learned from it.
For sure.
90 people is a lot of people for such a targeted attack,
although it's, you know, in terms of most malware,
like most commercial malware, 90 people would be a very, very small attack, right?
Like, it wouldn't be worth your time.
So, you know, it depends on the scale of things.
I don't know what the scale of Italian civil society is, right?
But 90 people is likely, I think, a small fraction of the whole of Italian civil society, right?
But, yeah, so those people that were targeted by Paragon, the ones that we know about, you know, one was a Italian anti-fascist journalist, right? I think another, there were a couple of other journalists that were covering migration issues. And, you know, just sort of a large swath across Italian civil society. So the way they were targeted was on WhatsApp, they were added to a group. And then they were sent a malicious PDF.
which they didn't even have to open,
and they didn't have to approve being added to the group.
But as soon as that malicious PDF was received by their WhatsApp app,
the WhatsApp client, the WhatsApp client processed the PDF,
and it contained code, which exploited WhatsApp,
and allowed Graphite to start running.
So Graphite doesn't actually install anything to get a little bit technical.
Graphite only runs in memory of the phone, right?
It only runs in the, like, temporary RAM, so to speak.
Okay.
So rebooting the phone would have cleared out of the graphite infection and they would have had to re-infect the person.
Interesting.
Right.
In this case.
Yeah.
It's possible that in the future, Paragon will find a way to make graphite persistent, but it does make it more stealthy.
It makes it harder to detect.
It makes it harder to forensically analyze for people like Citizen Lab and like EFF if it just runs in memory.
Sure.
Right.
So it kind of makes sense that they would want to keep running it in memory, even though.
rebooting it would clear out the infection because you can just re-infect the person.
Even like developers like WhatsApp or like Apple might have a harder time, like
realizing that they've been attacked if it can get cleared out so quickly, I guess.
Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. And in this case, WhatsApp did realize they had been attacked.
They quickly figured out the pattern and, you know, to their credit, warned everybody immediately.
Often the only way I think people will find out they've been infected by this spimer is if
WhatsApp or, you know, somebody else maybe Apple warned you. That's not great. But it is, but it is
better than the alternative where they just don't warn you at all, right? After the targets were
notified of the spyware attack, some, including journalists and migrant refugee activists in Italy,
agreed to participate in a forensic analysis of graphite by Citizen Lab. They found that Paragon
spyware had spread from WhatsApp to at least two other apps on the device. In April of 2025,
we got forensic confirmation of graphite spyware on iPhone, with a zero-click exploit attacking
iMessage. Citizen Lab was able to analyze the devices of a prominent European journalist who
requested to remain anonymous, and an Italian journalist linked to the previous cluster of attacks
in Italy. iPhone is slightly harder to target than your average Android, but certainly not impervious
to this sort of attack, as we've seen from these examples in Europe. To date, Citizen Lab has also
identified suspected Paragon deployments in Australia, Canada, Cyprus, Denmark, Israel, and Singapore.
Though the encrypted messaging app signal is not mentioned in the citizen lab reporting,
their analysis did find that Graphite had the capability of going after several different
messaging apps, and it's probably safe to assume that Signal would be one of the apps that Paragon
would want to extract messages from. We don't have much information about this spyware targeting signal,
possibly because signal does not have as large of an international user base compared to other
apps like WhatsApp, IMessage, or Telegram, despite signal being much more secure.
So what can you do?
Though graphite might not be the total phone hijacking super spyware that the Guardian and
others claim it to be, it still poses a significant security threat.
Some basic digital security precautions apply here.
get into a habit of regular digital cleaning, remove unnecessary content from your device, save
space. Old photos can be uploaded to an external encrypted hard drive and question if you really
need years of messages stored on your phone. Use an encrypted chat app like Signal, which has
disappearing messages, so that there isn't a large backlog of communications that could be
suddenly accessed by a hostile actor.
Be very wary of cloud backups.
They are often one of the least secure aspects of your digital life, especially if they're
unencrypted.
And though it won't deter zero-click exploits, it's still best practice to avoid clicking
mysterious links or downloading files and photos is sent to your phone.
Another tip is to regularly reboot your phone, contrary to claims that once your phone
has been targeted by graphites now compromised forever, something called malware persistence,
to our current knowledge,
rebooting can wipe Paragon's exploits.
It does not appear that Paragon SpyWare is, at the moment, reboot persistent.
And it seems that rebooting would actually remove it from the phone.
My reading is that rebooting it would remove the malware from your phone
until you were re-exploited, which, so, you know,
if you just reboot and you don't update, or, you know,
the Zero Day isn't out yet, right?
They're just going to run the exploit again, right?
I think it's a fair bet that they're just going to run the exploit again.
but it would be enough to get it off for that time, right?
And, I mean, I think as far as a mitigation,
my friend recommends that people, like,
reboot their phone every morning when they're brushing their teeth, right?
And I don't think it's a bad bit of security hygiene.
If these guys are going to, in fact,
you might as well make it, you know, more of a headache for them, right?
You might as well make it more costly to them
because there is going to be a charge to them for each time they have to reinfect you, right?
But, yeah, it's certainly, I think, overblown to say that,
You know, once it's on your phone, it's on your phone forever.
You know, you just got to, you know, throw your $1,000 phone in the trash and go buy another one.
Like, no, you can, you know, if you don't feel safe just rebooting it, right, like a factory reset, that would be the next step, right?
I think that would, that would most likely get rid of any persistence mechanisms that were installed.
I'm not familiar with any iOS malware, certainly, that would survive a factory reset.
But probably the most important thing besides using signal is to keep your phone software updated.
it. That's the simplest and best way to make it harder for spyware like graphite to make it
onto your phone in the first place. Out-of-date software has many more known vulnerabilities to
attack. For extra protection, enable lockdown mode on iPhone or advanced protection on Android.
So the reason it's important to keep your phone up to date and always install the latest
security updates, even if it's a pain in the ass, and I know it's a pain in the ass, is because this
makes an attacker have to use zero-day exploits. So if you have an old version of the software
on your phone, there are known exploits. Known exploits are, you know, more or less free, right?
They are already out there. They are already burned. They do not matter, right? Like the company
already knows about them. An exploit loses basically all of its value as soon as, you know,
the company knows about it and it's patched, right? So if you have out-of-date software on your
phone, if you have added data software and a computer, it changes the entire economics of
attacking, right?
It's basically free for me to exploit your phone at this point.
And I, you know, I will exploit it as many times as I want, and I don't care if that exploit
is burned.
I don't care if you find it, because, again, it's free, right?
Zero-day exploits for, especially for Apple, for, like, you know, Android pixel phones,
for graphene, the alternative Android OS, not graphite.
This has been giving me real problems lately.
Um,
Zero-day exploits, meaning exploits that the manufacturer does not know about and has not had a chance to patch cost millions of dollars for these platforms.
And a zero-click exploit where the victim doesn't have to interact with it at all, right?
I don't have to click a link.
I don't have to do something.
You just send me, you know, a PDF, an infected PDF or a magic file, right, or something.
And my phone is infected.
Those are the most expensive of all, right?
Those are sort of the, those are the golden ticket for malware companies, right?
And these cost millions of dollars.
And if you burn it, right, if it gets caught, like, like, you know, what happened with WhatsApp and Citizen Lab in Italy, right?
That's millions of dollars down the drain for Paragon.
You know, they're going to pass that on to the Italian government, to ICE, to whoever their contractors are, right?
So keeping your fun up to date totally changes the economics of running a malware attack against you, right?
Like anybody can run out of their office, old, you know, end day, right, more than zero day malware attacks against enemy, right?
Like, those are cheap.
But if your stuff is patched, no, it's good.
It totally changes the entire game.
And you've got to be doing really good work for ICE to want to burn that much money on you.
All these tips can make it considerably harder and more importantly, extremely expensive.
for this spyware to get onto your device.
These exploits could only be deployed
against individual targets,
and that gets quite expensive.
Just because ICE could theoretically hack your phone,
that doesn't mean that your phone
is necessarily at a high risk
of being hacked by ICE.
Who are the possible targets for graphite spyware?
Who is at higher risk?
Journalists who report on ICE and immigration,
people who work for immigration advocacy organizations,
immigration lawyers,
as well as high-profile activists.
It goes without saying that
anything you do on your phone
or on the internet
carries a level of inherent risk.
We'll close this episode
with a longer segment
from my interview with Cooper
discussing who's at the most risk
of ICE using Paragon software
and more of Cooper's recommended surveillance mitigation practices.
This is not something that can be deployed at a protest and sweep up, you know,
thousands of people.
This does go after, like, individuals because of its cost and the way that it needs to be
deployed.
Yeah.
Who would be the people that you would say are most at risk of this?
Like, is this like your local, like, you know, food not bombs organizer or like an immigration
lawyer?
Like, right.
Who should be concerned, I guess, and take, take this threat?
more seriously. Definitely. I think people who should be concerned are, I mean, you hit the nail
on the head, right? The people that should be concerned about this are people who have, you know,
been a special pain in the ass for ICE in particular, right? You know, people who might be under
HSI investigation, right? People who, you know, have been threatened by the president or by
Pam Bondi, you know, specifically, right?
Like, had their name called out specifically, right?
People who are, you know, very loud, very active, right?
Like, the sort of leaders, what's the term tall poppies, right?
Like, the people that are really have their head sticking out, right?
In a way that's, like, very public and very well-known.
If you have risen to the level where, like, Tom Homan knows your name personally, right?
That makes it a pretty good chance that, you know, you might become a target.
of this, right? Like, that's who we're talking about. Well, and like, as we've seen in Italy,
like, that can, that can include, like, anti-fascist journalists. Yeah, definitely. People who
work for, like, migrant human rights organizations. Yes. The high-profile activists.
And I think, like, there's a real concern with, you know, trying to compromise the phone
of journalists because of how journalists, like, talk to sources, how journalists might have
information about, like, other people besides the journalist on their phone. Yeah.
They may be targeting through the journalist, but trying to get after other people who they're
talking to you. Same thing with like immigration lawyers. And like there is real concern about
harm spreading from those factors. And I think that's why if you are in those sorts of like
roles that like a human rights organization, a journalist or a lawyer, you need to be like
extra careful about keeping your like phone updated, regularly engaging in like digital hygiene,
having disappearing messages, maybe putting on lockdown mode onto your iPhone, be very wary of being
added to mysterious group chats. These are just general practices that are, I think,
worthwhile to, like, engage in whether or not you're actually going to get targeted by this.
Absolutely. And I want to especially single out lockdown mode there. Like, we are not aware
of any infections of any malware, right? Pegasus, graphite, right, any others, that have managed to
successfully infect an iPhone on lockdown mode. So if you are worried about this,
Lockdown mode is the single most effective thing you can do to protect yourself against this malware, right?
Is go turn on lockdown mode. If you're on Android, I think Google calls it advanced protection mode. Yeah, advanced protection mode.
So advanced protection mode used to be not very comprehensive. And I think like with the new Android update with Android 16 that came out, I think like last week or something, it's now much more comparable to lockdown mode.
So, you know, I highly recommend turning that on if you're on Android.
All my homies live lockdown mode.
Yes.
Yes.
That is the number one protection, right?
The other thing I strongly recommend always, and I be this drum, like, every day,
is turn on disappearing messages.
If you're on Signal or WhatsApp, go turn on disappearing messages, right?
Because this is good against, you know, a lot of different things, right?
Like, this is good against Celebrate as well as Pegasus as well as grabbing, right?
Like, if the messages are gone by the time you get infected, there's no way to recover those, right?
You're minimizing your footprint, right?
Yep.
Go delete old chats, right?
Like, if you get a second, right?
Like, we've all, Google has trained us to all be digital hoarders, right, and keep, depending
how will you are 20 years of email, 10 years of email, whatever, right?
Never delete anything, right?
And that's, don't, ignore them, ignore Google.
Google doesn't want you to delete things because they want to use all that data for selling
you ads, right?
Delete everything.
I want more underwater data centers.
Yes, yes, exactly.
Delete everything, delete your files.
You know, like, get rid of those old group chats, right?
Get rid of those old chats that you don't need anymore.
You need to be like that lawyer in Death Note.
Yeah.
Delete.
Yes.
Delete.
Oh, the Death Note reference, damn.
Do you want to plug Citizen Lab slash EFF and tell people where to find both your work
and then also other people who are doing research into graphite.
And, like, you know, if you've been suspected of being targeted by, you know,
maybe a notification, how you can participate in forensic analysis
to help everyone be more secure against this in the future.
Yeah, for sure.
So one of the best ways to find out you've been targeted by state-sponsored malware
is to get a notification from Apple or Google or WhatsApp or some of the large company
that you have been targeted by state-sponsored malware.
Typically, these notifications don't contain much more information than we believe you've been targeted by a nation state or by state sponsor malware.
But if you do get one of those notifications, take it very seriously.
You know, reach out to Access Now or to EFF or to Citizen Lab and let us know, right?
And we will help figure out what's going on, right?
Like, this is the number one indicator, right?
Because, like, this malware is usually fairly stealthy, right?
like it's not it's not actually like you know i don't know flashing you're infected on your screen
right um but yeah citizen lab is always doing amazing work uh i'm i'm a fellow there so i get to
work with them sometimes which is very exciting they are based out of the monk school of global
affairs at the university of toronto uh and her website is citizenlab.org where you can find
a lot of really excellent research on the types of threats that target civil society
Erm, I have citizenlap.ca.
But I'm Canadian.
You are probably correct.
I can never remember the correct.
As a Canadian, I was very put off by you erasing our nation's history of our coveted dotCA.
We love, we love our dot CA.
I am not trying to start a war with Canada.
Well, many people are.
Listen, I'm firmly on the side of Canada and the war against Canada, okay?
Please take me in.
Please.
Yeah.
Your solidarity is noted.
So citizenlap.org actually redirects to citizenlap.ca.
So we were both right.
There you go.
Or you were maybe more, right?
So yeah, citizenlub.com.
And yeah, they're really fantastic.
A lot of really good research going on there.
At EFF.org, the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
where a U.S.-based nonprofit, been around for 35 years,
defending civil liberties as they intersect with,
technology. So a lot of, a lot of free speech work, a lot of, you know, privacy and fourth
amendment work. And we also have a really excellent set of guides called the surveillance self-defense
guides, which are at sSD.eff.org, which I highly recommend people go and check out. It's the,
you know, most sort of evergreen guide for defending yourself online. A lot of the problem with
the online security guides that they get out of date right quickly. And we have a totally whole,
full-time person dedicated to making sure that our guides stay up to date. I'll put a link in the
description. Yeah, and we're a nonprofit,
member-supported nonprofit. So, you know,
if you like to work, throw us a few bucks. We work
for tips. And yeah, those are
the two places that I'm at that I want to plug.
Only other thing to plug, I guess you can follow
me on social media. I'm at
CooperCue.com on Blue Sky and
CooperCue at
masto.hackers.com
on Mastodon. Hell yeah.
Yeah. All right.
Well, thank you so much. Thank you
for the work you do at EFF and
Citizen Lab. Thank you.
Yeah, I guess we should almost throw away our phones, since there's no way to use our phone safely anymore.
I mean, throwing away our phones isn't a terrible idea.
That's why I'm at it. You know what? I could be on to something.
I think for our own sanity, just in general.
No, I think they're making us more connected, and I think they're making us more stable.
They are making us more connected, that's for sure, in that I get five billion notifications per day, if that's what connected means.
Yeah.
All right.
My name is Ed.
Everyone say hello Ed.
I'm from a very rural background myself.
My dad is a farmer and my mom is a cousin, so like it's not like...
What do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
I know it sounds like the start of a bad joke,
but that really was my reality nine years ago.
I just normally do straight stand-up, but this is a bit different.
On stage stood a comedian with a story that no one expected to hear.
Well, 22nd of July 2015, a 23-year-old man had killed his family.
And then he came to my house.
So what do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
A new podcast called Wisecrack,
where stand-up comedy and murder takes center stage.
Available now.
Listen to Wisecrack on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Power struggles, shady money, drugs, violence, and broken promises.
It's a freaking war zone.
These people are animals.
There's no integrity.
There's no loyalty.
That's all gone.
In the 1980s, modeling wasn't just a dream.
It was a battlefield.
Book, book, book, make deals.
Let's get models in.
Let's get them out.
And the models themselves?
They carried scars that never fully healed.
Till this day, honestly, if I see a measuring tape, I freak out.
The Model Wars podcast peels back the glossy cover
and reveals a high-stakes game where survival meant more than beauty.
Hosted by me, Vanessa Grigoriatis,
this is the untold story of an industry built on ruthless, ambitious.
Listen to Model Wars on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Do you want to hear the secrets of serial killers, psychopaths, pedophiles, robbers?
They are sitting there waiting for the vulnerable thing.
They're waiting for the unprotected.
I'm Dr. Leslie, forensic psychologist.
I advocate for safety and awareness of predators.
While wearing pink.
When you were described to me as a forensic psychologist, I was like snooze.
We ended up talking for hours and I was like, this girl is my best friend.
This is a podcast where I cut through the noise with sarcasm, satire, and hard truths.
I'm not going to fake it and force it for me.
Would you force an orgasm because that's like a different layer?
The car accident you didn't want to see but couldn't turn away from.
In this episode, I discussed personal safety and self-defense tools, instincts, and strategies
to protect yourself and your loved ones in everyday life and high-risk situations.
Listen to intentionally disturbing on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A foot washed up a shoe with some bones in it. They had no idea who it was.
Most everything was burned up pretty good from the fire that not a whole lot was salvageable.
These are the coldest of cold cases, but everything is about to change.
Every case that is a cold case that has DNA right now in a backlog will be identified in our lifetime.
A small lab in Texas is cracking the code on DNA.
Using new scientific tools, they're finding clues in evidence so tiny you might just miss it.
He never thought he was going to get caught.
And I just looked at my computer screen.
I was just like, ah, gotcha.
On America's Crime Lab, we'll learn about victims and survivors.
And you'll meet the team behind the scenes at Othrum.
the Houston lab that takes on the most hopeless cases to finally solve the unsolvable.
Listen to America's Crime Lab on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, everyone, and welcome to it could happen here.
My name is Dana Elkurd. I'm a writer, analyst, and researcher of Palestinian and Arab politics.
I'm an associate professor of political science
and a senior non-resident fellow at the Arab Center, Washington.
What a wild time in the Middle East, am I right?
I mean, not to be flippant, that's putting it mildly.
Today, before I recorded, Israel bombed the capital of Qatar, Doha,
in an assassination attempt against Hamas leadership.
They bombed in a residential area in the middle of the city,
surrounded by nurseries, schools, businesses, and, you know, people.
I have a lot to say about Arab-Israeli relations historically and what's happening on that front today
and the sometimes shared interests of Arab regimes with the Israeli state.
So stay tuned for a deep dive episode on that topic soon.
Today I want to talk about the issue of Palestinian statehood.
It's been in the news quite a bit these days.
A number of different countries have expressed a willingness to recognize Palestine as a state.
In July, for example, France announced it would recognize Palestinian statehood,
and it was soon joined by a number of other countries, Canada, Malta, Belgium, the UK.
Kirstarmer, the prime minister of the UK, actually made it into an explicit threat.
Basically, we will recognize the state of Palestine if the Israelis don't agree to a ceasefire.
I'd like to underscore the absurdity of that comment for a second, but we'll get back to that one.
For all these countries, they say that they are recognizing Palestine as a state because they desire a two-state solution.
their condition for recognizing Palestine as a state
also includes Hamas being completely out of the picture
quote demilitarized in the language of French President Macron
as NPR reported back in August 1st
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney also said
that the Palestinian Authority needs to hold elections in this scenario
but one that excludes Hamas
so all of these recent announcements
are coalescing around the same conditions
I guess the big deal here is that these are
major powers, France and the UK, who have veto power in the UN Security Council, for example.
So the plan to recognize Palestinian statehood has gotten a lot of press and attention.
But the thing is, 145 countries already recognize Palestine as a state. Palestine was given
observer status at the UN in 2012, and the Palestinian Authority has been working for quite some
time to get more recognition internationally and to be able to use the international legal
system to advocate for themselves. So what does this recognition actually mean? A state that is
occupied entirely by another and is currently undergoing ethnic cleansing at different levels of severity
in all parts of its territories. What state is actually being recognized here? What does statehood mean
in the context of occupation and ethnic cleansing? It might help to go back to the Oslo Accords that were
signed by the Palestine Liberation Organization, the PLO, and the state of Israel.
This was the first time that Israel and the Palestinians agreed to something directly.
A stipulation of the Oswalds was mutual recognition, meaning Israel would recognize that the PLO
was the representative of the Palestinian people, and the PLO would recognize Israel's right to
exist. This was later criticized as uneven by Palestinian negotiators such as Hanan Ashrawi,
because the PLO was already internationally recognized as the representative of
the Palestinian people. So her argument more recently has been they accepted Israel's
control for getting recognition in return. The U.S. ambassador to Israel at the time
Daniel Kurtzer concurred with that assessment, saying to the New York Times that the
Oslo Agreement was full of holes. The mutual recognition was asymmetrical, and that was to hurt
the Palestinian negotiating position for years to come, end quote. Nevertheless, the Oslo
Accords of 1993 are widely understood to be the attempt to bring about a two-state
solution of some kind. And it's been the framework that many international powers have paid
lip service to ever since. By the way, September 2023 marked the 30-year anniversary of the
Accords. We all know what happened October 7th, just a few days later. Thing is, the Oslo
framework didn't say two states. The Oslo Accords just said that they would continue negotiations
on some eventual final framework. Now, Palestinians wanted a state, of course.
And the Israelis were committing to negotiations.
So the Palestinians were told to start building up a sort of state, a quasi-state in parts of the occupied territories, to start governing themselves in particular ways.
And this was called the Palestinian National Authority.
I talked about this at more length in the episode four, it could happen here titled The Palestine's Stolen Future.
So if you're interested, you can listen to that one.
The Oslo Accords split the occupied territories into three parts, area A, B, and C.
All of which remained under the Israeli occupation's control, but still there were some differences
between them. In Area A, which is less than 20% of the land, that's where a lot of the urban
centers are, the Palestinian Authority was allowed to function, build and run institutions of
governance. So if you go to Ramallah, for example, you'll see big buildings with Palestinian Authority
insignia. In Area B, the Palestinian Authority had partial access. And in Area C, which is the
majority of the territories, the Palestinian Authority was and continues to not be allowed to
function. But the PA did use this as an opportunity to create the basis of a state, creating
ministries, beginning of parliament, writing laws, and importantly creating security forces.
Throughout all this, Israel maintained military control over the entire territory, and Israeli settlements
continued to expand. So what the Israelis got out of the Oslo Accords was they got out of providing
certain services and they let Palestinians do that for themselves, but they didn't actually seed meaningful
control over any part of the territory. Now it's important to pause here. An occupying force is
obligated under international law to provide services to the population it occupies and to return the
land to the sovereign, the occupied people, as soon as possible.
As the European Society of International Law notes, quote,
the 1907 Hague Regulations, the 1949 Fourth Geneva Convention,
and modern body of international human rights instruments,
contain a number of provisions which protect the lives, property, natural resources,
institutions, civil life, fundamental human rights,
and latent sovereignty of the people under occupation,
while curbing the security powers of the occupying power
to those genuinely required to safely administer the occupation.
End quote.
And if the occupier occupies indefinitely,
then it's not really an occupation anymore, is it?
Again, as the European Society of International Law notes,
the concept of prolonged occupation may well become a legal guise
that masks a de facto colonial exercise
and defeats the transient and exceptional nature,
which occupations are intended to be, end quote.
But that is exactly what has continued before and after the Oslo Accords.
The Oslo Accords never ended the occupation, never gave back land to Palestinians.
All it did is strip the occupier of its responsibility under the guise of working towards a two-state solution.
And really, anybody who has looked at what has transpired honestly
would say that there has always been a mismatch
between what the Israelis wanted and were willing to give
and what the Palestinians wanted,
even to the degree of what both sides meant when they said state
has always been mismatched.
So I'll explain what I mean.
Palestinians have always wanted a legitimate state.
What does that mean?
Well, a state has sovereignty.
It has control over its own territory.
It has the monopoly on the use of violence
within its boundaries. That's the most basic definition of state sovereignty. Israel never
intended for any of that. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who signed the Oslo Accords in his final
address to the Knesset before he was assassinated by a right-wing Israeli, clearly stated that what was
on offer for the Palestinians was something, quote, less than a state. Yitzhak Rabin was in the
Labor Party. But again, if people are being honest, this is a bipartisan position in Israel.
Israeli political leaders have, at best, offered something less than a state, and at worst, offered surrender or annihilation.
I'm not being hyperbolic here.
Bezalzmotrich of the Religious Zionist Party, who is now the finance minister, has for years actively promoted his, quote, decisive plan, which has become the policy of the state today.
The plan proposes that, one, any Palestinian who is willing and able to relinquish the fulfillment of his national,
aspirations would be able to stay and live as an individual in the Jewish state, not as a citizen.
And two, any Palestinian who is unwilling or unable to relinquish his national aspirations
will receive assistance from them to immigrate to one of the Arab countries.
So essentially, what he's saying is, Palestinians have to either give up and be a subject or leave,
surrender, or transfer.
The U.S. as a supposed mediator and third party has not really straight from that.
Sovereignty has always been approximated with self-governance from the United States perspective.
Jared Kushner, for example, in his Peace to Prosperity Plan, which was the linchpin of Donald Trump's Israel-Palestine proposal back in the first Trump administration, invokes the idea of sovereignty, only to insist that it should no longer be the crux of negotiations.
According to the Trump administration, quote,
the notion that sovereignty is a static and consistently defined term
has been an unnecessary stumbling block in past negotiations,
and this amorphous concept is best put aside
to focus on pragmatic and operational concerns.
Ironically, the liberal version of a two-state solution
espoused by every Democratic administration
essentially envisions the same endpoint.
a Palestinian entity demilitarized and subordinate to Israel's economic and security concerns.
But Palestinians want a state. They want a state in the full meaning of the term.
And that state has to be legitimate, not only internationally, but in the eyes of the Palestinian people.
Political scientist Tanya Alberts argues that sovereignty is an identity of states.
It's constituted by the norms of international society.
States are recognized as sovereign. If they achieve self-determination,
for a group of people.
The fact that on rare occasions, the international system has refused to recognize
certain political entities as states, specifically because they had violated the right
of self-determination, highlights how we now think of political authority.
So, for example, the international community did not recognize Rhodesia as a state because
it violated the self-determination of the black majority in that country, even though white
people in Rhodesia did exercise material control over that country.
In other words, the state's right to sovereignty must flow from some sort of legitimacy.
A state rules because society approves.
This doesn't mean that every sovereign state is democratic,
but simply that states derive their status from the citizens' buy-in.
And because the state claims to represent the will of maybe a certain ethnic or civic identity,
it's understood as an executor of the law enacted by the people who are sovereign.
So sovereignty then should also be understood as the ability of people who consider themselves
of that place to exercise control over territory and have a say in its future.
Populist movements, secessionist movements, and other movements that challenge a certain state
sometimes claim popular sovereignty, legitimizing their assertions with reference to their
historical legacy or continuity or indigenity, even in the absence of a representative state.
and Palestinians are one such group.
They've struggled not merely for the right to exist,
but also for political control
and state institutions that represent and uphold their national identity.
And the legitimacy of their sovereignty claim
stems not only from their long ties to the territory,
but also from the fact that they have long conceived themselves as a nation,
a nation that has never ceded its demand for a sovereign state
with the promise of subjugation, subsistence, or integration into another state.
So to make this very clear, Palestinians want a state that is sovereign.
They certainly don't mean self-governance.
And Palestinians, after 30 years of Oslo, that has only left them worse off,
certainly don't want to go back to trying the same process again.
So when these countries recognize Palestine as a state as a way of pretending to
pressure for the two-state solution.
They're not saying anything about what happens to the territories that are currently being
wiped out, like literally all of Gaza, and even parts of the West Bank.
They're not saying anything about Israeli settlements.
They're not saying anything about reparations.
And because of that, some Palestinians have argued that these statehood recognition things
are a cynical ploy to distract from the inaction of these countries on addressing the
genocide in Gaza, basically pretending to act.
act without actually doing anything.
Palestinian analyst Maureen Robani said this to NPR recently.
Quote, in the end, simply recognizing Palestinian statehood is a low-cost option.
It may placate a domestic audience demanding action while doing very little to actually
change the situation on the ground, end quote.
Others have argued even further that not only are these declarations of recognition a cynical
ploy to distract. But they may even be a sort of trap. Legal expert and Professor
Nura Ara'at and International Lawyer and Professor Shahad Hamuri wrote for Zadalia on this, which
I'll link in the show notes. They argue effectively that the best thing to come out of this
is a challenge maybe to the U.S. quote, the greatest promise of this renewed statehood bid,
the most recent push being in 2011-2012, is a united front to challenge U.S. intransigent support
for Israel, end quote.
However, they also point out that, quote,
states do not need to recognize Palestine
to end the occupation, to end the genocide,
and advance Palestinian self-determination.
They argue that states, quote,
need decisive will to impose arms and energy embargoes
and trade with an investment in Israel,
unseated from the UN, hold Israeli war criminals
and complicit corporations accountable
in their national courts,
and arrest Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
in compliance with the ICC's arrest warrant, end quote.
So the bit for statehood doesn't solve problems.
It only gives states the fig leaf to actually delay solving problems.
On top of that, it risks empowering illegitimate and corrupt Palestinian leadership in any future negotiations.
I'm talking a leadership that includes Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
who 80% of Palestinians polled said they want him to resign
and an institution like the Palestinian Authority
that only 15% of Palestinians are satisfied with
according to the latest polling.
As Ararat and Hamuri note, quote,
the terms of the high-level international conference
for the peaceful settlement of the question of Palestine convened in New York
led by France and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
confirm these risks.
the Palestinian authority is glorified in at least seven clauses entrusted with governing the state,
effectively paving the way for a police state alongside a settler colonial entity, end quote.
None of the talk of recognizing Palestine amid all of these conditions and stipulations,
ever say anything about the power imbalance between the two parties,
or address the root causes of conflict.
Now, on the other hand, political scientist Paul Post, writing for World Politics,
review says, quote, recognition isn't just theater. Recognition is a long-standing legal
institution that has the important function of identifying major actors in the international
system. And for policymakers, recognition is the looseness in the rules that allows them to use
recognition, not only to identify actors, but also to express opinions about them or to secure
concessions from them. So from his perspective, these declarations of recognition are meaningful
in some shape or form.
Here's my take.
Statehood recognition is not meaningless.
In fact, it's probably dangerous in this current moment
because what it's trying to do
is to cement the conflict in its place.
These countries recognizing Palestine
want to hurry the current Palestinian leadership
into accepting a state and name only
that is not sovereign.
They want to force the Israelis to the table to do that,
and they want these conditions
to become the precedent for future negotiations.
And we see signs of this in other ways.
For example, the international community and regional powers
pressured Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
into changing the rules of the PLO's internal governance
in order to appoint a successor
because they were afraid he was going to keel over.
And he appointed a very unpopular figure named Hesan al-Shikh.
As I wrote for the Guardian
alongside Palestinian Chilean activist Pablo of Abu Fum
in May of this year,
Abbas also expanded the central council of the PLO
and appointed friendly people to it.
All of this shows that the international community
in pressuring the Palestinian leadership in these directions
has no interest in democratic buy-in
and actually getting the buy-in of the Palestinian people,
really thinking that a legitimate negotiation
would ever be sustainable under these circumstances.
This state of affairs, these schemes,
where international powers try to ignore what the Palestinian people want yet again
is the reason Palestinians don't really have any hope in any solution.
In polling on one state, two states, etc., 47% prefer the two-state solution based on the 1967 borders,
15% prefer a confederation between the two states,
and 14% of Palestinians prefer the establishment of a single state with equality between the two sides.
24% of Palestinians polled said that they did not know.
or did not want to answer. Also, when asked about the public's support or opposition to
specific political measures to break the current political deadlock, 68% of Palestinians supported
joining more international organizations, but still 50% supported resorting to unarmed popular
resistance, 46% supported a return to armed intifada, and 42% supported the disillusion of
the Palestinian Authority, 26% supported abandoning the two-state solution and demanding one
state for Palestinians and Israelis. What this sort of polling shows is that Palestinians now understand
very clearly that the international system is screwing them over. International law hasn't been able
to help them, and that the solutions for a two-state solution being proposed, with all of these
conditions, won't ever actually get to two states and won't give them real sovereignty. The mass
protests and actions that took place in 2021, Palestinian activists called this the unity uprising
or Intifolda, show that this has always been about sovereignty.
In the Unity Intifolda of 2021,
Palestinian activists spoke of a shared struggle
against Israel's continued erasure of Palestinians.
Palestinians living under Israeli rule across the country,
whether they had citizenship or they didn't,
rejected the old style of politics,
they rejected what they saw as artificial fragmentation,
and they insisted instead on their national identity and shared struggle.
As a result, at that time,
witnessed an extraordinary amount of organizing across the green line, so in the territories
and in Israel with Palestinian citizens of Israel. And it was a way of reclaiming Palestinian sovereignty.
The same activists and groups involved in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Sharahe,
linked up with those organizing in Haifa, in Ummal Fahem. They built on these connections to launch
campaigns over and over in Masafriata, the Naqab, and much more.
Sovereignty has always been an animating demand for Palestinians.
since before October 7th, and that's surely on everyone's minds now that the war in Gaza has
extended this long. So the takeaway here is, recognition isn't the solution. Statehood may not
even be the solution, at least not in the terms they're offering. Sovereignty has always been
what the demand is, and these pushes for recognition miss that point yet again. That's it for me.
Thank you for listening to another Palestine episode, and I'll be back with more soon. Take care of.
My name is Ed.
Everyone say hello Ed.
I'm from a very rural background myself.
My dad is a farmer.
And my mom is a cousin.
So, like, it's not like...
What do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
I know it sounds like the start of a bad joke,
but that really was my reality nine years ago.
I just normally do straight stand-up,
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On stage stood a comedian with a story that no one expected to hear.
Well, 22nd of July 2015, a 23-year-old man had killed his family.
And then he came to my house.
So what do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
A new podcast called Wisecrack, where stand-up comedy and murder takes center stage.
Available now.
Listen to Wisecrack on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Power struggles, shady money, drugs, violence, and broken promises.
It's a freaking war zone.
These people are animals.
There's no integrity.
There's no loyalty.
That's all gone.
In the 1980s, modeling wasn't just a dream.
It was a battlefield.
Book, book, book.
Make deals.
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Get them out.
And the models themselves?
They carried scars that never fully healed.
Till this day, honestly, if I see a measuring tape, I freak out.
The Model Wars podcast peels back the glossy cover
and reveals a high-stakes game where survival meant more than beauty.
Hosted by me, Vanessa Grigoriatis,
this is the untold story of an industry built on ruthless ambition.
Listen to Model Wars on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
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Do you want to hear the secrets of serial killers,
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They are sitting there waiting for the vulnerable thing.
They're waiting for the unprotected.
I'm Dr. Leslie, forensic psychologist.
I advocate for safety and awareness of predators
while wearing pink.
When you were described to me as a forensic psychologist,
I was like snooze.
We ended up talking for hours, and I was like, this girl is my best friend.
This is a podcast where I cut through the noise with sarcasm, satire, and hard truths.
I'm not going to fake it and force it for me.
But would you force an orgasm?
Because that's like a different layer.
The car accident you didn't want to see, but couldn't turn away from.
In this episode, I discussed personal safety and self-defense tools, instincts, and strategies
to protect yourself and your loved ones in everyday life and high-risk situations.
Listen to Intentionally Disturbing on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A foot washed up a shoe with some bones in it.
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He never thought he was going to get caught, and I just looked at my computer screen.
I was just like, ah, gotcha.
On America's Crime Lab, we'll learn about victims and survivors, and you'll meet the team
behind the scenes at Othrum, the Houston Lab that takes on the most hopeless cases,
to finally solve the unsolvable.
Listen to America's Crime Lab on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is It Could Happen here, Executive Disorder, our weekly newscast covering what is happening in the White House, the crumbling world, and what it means for you, I'm Garrison Davis.
Today I'm joined by Sophie Lecterman, Robert Evans, and James Stout. This episode, we are covering the week of,
September 4th to September 11th.
Never for, wait, remember?
Wait, what?
Never forget, whichever one of those we're supposed to do.
So we had a very big news week already, and then a very big piece of news happened yesterday
when we usually record executive disorder, but this is Thursday.
We waited a little bit to get some more information before we talk about this story,
which will probably be the biggest story of the week,
the assassination of Charlie Kirk.
So on Wednesday, September 10th at Utah Valley University
at around 1223 p.m. Mountain Time.
Charlie Kirk was shot during a campus event.
It was a big outdoor event, the crowd.
I mean, there's some good footage of elevation
of the size of the crowd.
It looked like several thousand people
who had shown up to, I think it did all,
it seemed like largely supporters.
but there were certainly a mix of supporters and protesters around.
And, yeah, Kirk was shot once from a distance of, I think, right now, the best estimate is around 150 yards.
But, I mean, that's precise, not accurate, because people are kind of basing it on just sort of like looking at the images and doing like.
Google Maps, the satellite estimation.
Right, right.
But that does seem credible based on what I've seen, about 150 yards or so.
Yeah.
Which is not long range.
That's not like short range.
it's like low medium range for a rifle and they found, or at least the FBI is saying they found
the rifle and the pictures show it to be an extremely normal looking bolt action hunting rifle.
Kirk was shot once in the neck.
It hit his brainstem.
You can kind of tell by the way his arms moved after he was shot.
So he probably lost consciousness immediately.
And he was declared dead about two hours later at the hospital.
But that's largely because that tends to be how it's handled when somebody is shot like this.
they don't like to announce their death immediately,
even if they died immediately.
Like,
that's just kind of,
it's best prep.
You want to make sure you've contacted the family and everything like that.
So that's what happened.
Yeah.
In his case,
the family were present,
I think,
at the event.
I mean,
I'm sure some of them,
but there's,
like,
not ever,
like,
they would have probably wanted,
like,
I doubt his parents or whatever,
we're all there or whatever,
like,
even if his wife and kids were.
Sure.
Yeah.
Totally makes sense.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Those are the facts that we can verify.
There's actually fairly little besides this other than some time stuff that we can verify perfectly.
Like, they're currently saying that about 1152 a.m. mountain time, the shooter arrived near campus because they do have some videos of the person they think was the shooter.
There were at least two people who were taken into custody right after the shooting who proved not to be the guy.
I think they were just grabbing people.
Like, it did not, there did not seem to be any good reason.
One of them had a pellet rifle.
The first guy started shouting after the shooting and I'll do it again.
And this prompted him to be detained, but was later found to not be a legitimate suspect in the shooting.
No, because he was right next to the shooting.
Yeah.
Had no weapon, nothing.
So, I mean, those are the facts as they stand right now.
The photo that has been released of the guy they think did it looks like about 80% of the male population.
of Utah, clean-shaven, but otherwise he looked just as nondescripted.
Like, this dude takes his hat off, maybe shaves his head.
Like, it would not be wildly difficult for him to hide because he does not look like.
Pretty grainy pictures, not as clear as something like the United Healthcare CEO shooting.
And the FBI did offer a reward of up to $100,000 for information.
We do know that.
Yeah.
which points towards the
usefulness of the tips
they have been getting so far.
Exactly.
Yeah, yeah.
The rifle is for anyone who's interested.
They said it was a Mouser.
I guess it didn't look like one
from the photos that they released,
but maybe that was yet again, not the gun
because the FBI has said a lot of things
and then backtracked on them.
Yeah, the New York Post has a picture
of a sporterized Spanish Mouser
with a composite stock.
have you seen that one, Robert?
Yes, that's the one I saw that it looked like a savage to me,
but is that a sporterized 8mm that was re-barreled to 30 out 6?
That would be my guess.
The Spanish Mouser is the only one I'm aware of that has the bolt turned down in that way.
Good idea.
But it's not a great picture.
It could also do something else.
Because it just looked like any hunting rifle on a store rack, the photo that I saw.
Yeah, no, I think it's someone has done a sported job on it.
Yeah.
What's somewhat interesting about that, like other than just being a dweeb, is that potentially one could acquire a gun like that without having filled out a 4473 form, right?
Like an FBI background check.
I know if they have the weapon, they will certainly be pursuing trying to trace that as one of the ways they're trying to locate the shooter.
Yes.
So if this person's either a relative could have acquired it before it was necessary to do a 4473.
Or I think with curios and relics in some states or antique weapons, you don't have to do a background check.
No.
And you don't have to do a background check.
I mean, face-to-face sales are, I believe, legal in Utah.
Yes, private face-to-face sales are legal in Utah.
So if this guy bought, basically what that means is if this guy just bought a gun in cash from a dude, there's not a record of that, although said dude might come forward.
Sure.
That said, the fact that this is a sporterized old Mouser means this could be a gun that's been in the family a while that he's sporterized, in which case there's absolutely no record of it.
Yeah, yeah, definitely.
You know, I'm guessing, I've seen people call it a high-powered rifle and stuff.
Like, just be aware it's kind of an old gun, I think.
It's an old gun.
I mean, if it's 30 at 6, I would say that's a high-power cartridge.
Yeah, no, it is.
That's a big round, but yeah.
It's a full-sized rifle cartridge, for sure.
People hunt deer with 30 out six all the time.
It's an extremely normal hunting rifle.
Yeah, like probably top five most common kinds of rifle for someone to have in this country.
And that was bolt action hunting rifle was my assumption as soon as I saw the video because the guy fired one shot.
And it's relatively uncommon for people who are shooting in mass crowded public situations like this to limit themselves to a single round.
Which it just suggests, number one, like a bolt action, which I also thought was likely because they didn't leave any.
ammo behind. Yeah. And if he was firing something like an AR, those can fling brass so widely that
you can't easily catch it. Like if you're, especially if you're trying to escape immediately after
shooting. And yeah, I would guess I'm seeing a lot of people online. Obviously, conspiracy start.
I'm seeing so many people say, like, this had to have been a hit. This was a professional. Only a
professional could have done this. This was Trump distracting from Epstein. This was the Mossad. This was
any number of unhinged theories around this event. And I will say right.
now, as pertains the competence of the shooter, anyone who had picked up a gun for the first time
couldn't have easily done this. Like, I doubt this as someone who was new to firearms. But
anyone who, like, shot a deer once or twice a year could have made this happen. Anybody who
went to the range, you know, once or twice a month for a while could have gotten competent
enough to make a shot like this very easily. Very doable for, like, hobbyist shooters,
which there are many of in the United States and many of in Utah. I would,
be shocked if, like, less than about 80% of the adult male population of Utah could have made
this shot, right? You do not need, like, military training. You do not need to be a veteran to make
this shot. Absolutely not. And I think it's very irresponsible to see so many people, like,
including people who are journalists, speculating like that. Like, I know that generally firearms
are not covered well in the U.S. media, despite it being ubiquitous here. But, like, in cases like this,
it's okay not to know, but it's better to be quiet if you don't know. Yes. The other thing, I guess,
we should get into is in terms of the escape.
And what we know, this is also not something that necessitates
fucking Navy SEAL training, right?
Like, you're a white, clean-cut guy in fucking Salt Lake City.
If you have a bag that you can hide your gun in and you get down,
maybe throw on a different jacket or something like that over your shirt
or change shirts, walk away, get to your car, drive off,
very hard for them to track you.
Salt Lake City's not New York.
It's not blanket in the camera's not like New York.
There was not a massive police presence for this rally.
And there certainly wasn't a massive police presence doing concentric circles around the rally.
This was not like a fucking the presidents in town and the Secret Service is locking everything down for two miles.
And Charlie's own security tends to stay close to him at the event.
They're not set up with giant perimeters.
No, because none of them expected something like this.
Yeah.
I'm sure that Charlie Kirk has received threats before.
But, yes.
I mean, there's only so much a private individual can do right in these situations.
He often wears a bulletproof vest.
Yes.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's only so much a private individual can do,
and there's only so much you can do if you're holding an event outside.
Yeah.
Like, to stop somebody who's got a scoped rifle from getting on top of a roof, right?
Like, I'm sure his family is firing their current security right now, obviously.
But I really don't know what they could have done, like what his personal security could realistically have done.
Other than say, don't do a lot.
event outside, Charlie.
Yeah.
A few other notes that we should touch on, on Thursday morning,
some unverified information related to the ongoing investigation notes leaked online
through fellow campus debater Stephen Crowder.
Stephen Crowder shared an internal memo, which contained unverified information,
which reads, in part, quote,
ATF and other law enforcement located in older model.
imported Mouser 30-od-6 caliber bolt action rifle
wrapped in a towel in a wooded area near the campus.
The location of the firearm appears to match
the suspect's route of travel.
The spent cartridge was still chambered
in addition to three unspent rounds
in the Top Fed magazine.
All cartridges have engraved wording on them
expressing transgender and anti-fascist ideology, unquote.
So this claim linking the shooting
to transgender and quote-unquote anti-fascist ideology, whatever that means, spread around the
internet like wild as expected. Though a few hours later, the New York Times reported, quote,
according to a preliminary internal report circulated inside the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
firearms, and explosives, federal and local officials recovered ammunition with the shooter's
rifle that appeared to be engraved with statements expressing transgender and anti-fascist ideology.
But a senior law enforcement official with direct knowledge of the investigation, cautioned
that report had not been verified by ATF analysts,
did not match other summaries of the evidence,
and might turn out to have been misread or misinterpreted.
In fast-moving investigations,
such status reports are not made public
because they often contain a mixture of accurate
and inaccurate information, unquote.
Yes, and again, when that person with the pellet rifle was arrested,
Cash Patel, director of the FBI,
posted on Twitter, we have the man who killed Charlie Kirk.
and then had to post like an hour later,
nope, which is not a thing you saw
with previous directors of the FBI
for a good reason.
Yeah, like their handling of this
has been pretty unorthodox.
No, and I can see why a fucking Stephen Crowder fan
in the ATF would want to get that out immediately.
Totally.
Especially because he probably knew at some point
that's going to get corrected,
but what matters is it gets out for some degree of time.
Yeah, and then that bakes into the reality
of a certain number of people
forever.
Yeah, right.
And that's what matters, whether or not it's true.
We don't know yet, is it true or not, right?
We simply don't know.
Hey, this is Garrison.
This is just a short update.
On Thursday evening, law enforcement gave a press conference where Utah governor Spencer
Cox cautioned against, quote, unquote, a tremendous amount of disinformation circulating
online about the killing of Charlie Kirk and specifically cited bots from China and
Russia, which were encouraging violence and instilling disinformation into discourse around the
shooting. Now, while there certainly have been many on the left who have been joking or even
celebrating this shooting, oh yeah, lots of people. Rhetoric from the right has been similarly
violent with calls to do mass violence or purge the Democrats or people on the left. I'm going to play
video that the White House released late Wednesday night of Trump giving a statement on the shooting.
It's a long past time for all Americans and the media to confront the fact that violence and
murder are the tragic consequence of demonizing those with whom you disagree day after day,
year after year, in the most hateful and despicable way possible. For years, those on the radical
left have compared wonderful Americans like Charlie to Nazis and the world's worst mass
murderers and criminals. This kind of rhetoric is directly responsible for the terrorism that we're
seeing in our country today, and it must stop right now. My administration will find each and every
one of those who contributed to this atrocity and to other political violence, including the
organizations that fund it and support it, as well as those who go after our judges, law
enforcement officials, and everyone else who brings order to our country. From the attack on my life
in Butler, Pennsylvania last year, which killed a husband and father, to the attacks on
ice agents, to the vicious murder of a health care executive in the streets of New York,
to the shooting of House majority leaders, Steve Scalise, and three others.
Radical left political violence has hurt too many innocent people and taken too many lives.
The Trump assassin was not left-wing.
No. No. He was a registered Republican.
There is currently no indication of the political alignment of this shooter.
Just because they killed Charlie Kirk does not mean that this was a left-wing Antifa super-soldier.
Charlie Kirk has had a memified status on the internet for the past few years, which has encouraged vitriol and threats from those on the extreme right as well as the far left.
Yeah, he's particularly disliked by like the hardcore anti-Semites on the right.
And the Groypers have long had fun with making threats against Charlie Kirk in the quote unquote Groyper War, which we don't have time to get into.
But it's not just Trump's worrying statement there promising a degree of crackdown.
Jesse Waters on Fox has claimed, quote,
we're going to avenge Charlie's death.
Yep.
Here's a clip of Jesse Waters on Fox News last night.
Trump gets hit in the ear.
Charlie gets shot dead.
They came after Kavanaugh with a rifle to his neighborhood.
They went after Musk's cars.
They just shot two Jews outside the embassy.
Think about it.
Scalise got shot, barely survived.
It's happening.
We've got trans shooters, you got riots in L.A.
They are at war with us.
Whether we want to accept it or not, they are at war with us.
What are we going to do about it?
How much political violence are we going to tolerate?
And that's the question we're just going to have to ask ourselves.
Now, Charlie would want us to put as much pressure on these people as possible.
Dana nailed it.
This is unacceptable and has to stop.
And it has to start now, and everybody's accountable, and we're watching what they're saying
on television, and who's saying what?
The politicians, the media, and all these rats out there.
This can never happen again.
It ends now, Greg's right again.
This is a turning point, and we know which direction we're going.
He made a turning point joke, huh?
Yes.
That's Jesse Waters doing a turning point.
Fun.
Also, the use of rats to refer to other people is, I know, it's giving like radio
milcholine vibes.
It's also worth noting Republican Representative Clay Higgins from Louisiana is saying
that he's seeking to have social media companies place lifetime bans on users who
celebrated the assassination.
It's not just Jesse Waters calling for war.
Other commentators aren't blowing very similar rhetoric, including Alex Jones and Steve Bannam.
We're in a war.
The left has been saying put a bull's eye on Trump, a bull's eye on his supporters.
Charlie Kirk's a casualty of war.
We're in this country.
Chaya Ritchek tweeted on the lips of TikTok account, quote,
This is War.
The oathkeeper founder Stuart Rhodes announced on InfoWars that his militia would be reforming
to help with security at right-wing events.
Oh, gosh.
There was a good wired article Wednesday night,
which collected various calls to violence among the right in the aftermath of the shooting.
quote, Ed Martin, U.S. pardon attorney and former acting with attorney for D.C., wrote on Twitter,
quote, for it is written, vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord, citing Romans 1219.
Elon Musk posted, the left is the party of murder, then quoted a post blaming the left-wing
and mainstream media as well as figures like Gavin Newsom for radicalizing people against right-wing figures like Kirk.
Katie Miller, who works with Musk at Doge, and is the wife of Stephen Miller, wrote on X that even liberals
condemning violence, quote, have blood on their hands.
You could be next, influencer and unofficial Trump advisor, Laura Lumer, posted on Twitter.
The left are terrorists.
Christopher Rufo, a conservative activist who popularized the demonization of critical race theory,
suggested in a Twitter post that the radical left was responsible for the shooting
and urged the U.S. government to, quote, infiltrate, disrupt, arrest, and incarcerate all
those who are responsible for this chaos, unquote.
There's many, many more.
This is after the right has.
long celebrated certain types of political violence.
Oh, yes.
Constantly.
Yeah.
Like that old guy in Panama who shot a protester blocking the street.
Yeah.
The entire right rallied behind that man.
Kirk himself has embraced Kyle Rittenhouse,
who shot and killed two people after a plastic bag was thrown in the direction of Kyle Rittenhouse.
Kirk was vocally supportive of the man who tried to attack Nancy Pelosi in her home.
and did attack Paul Pelosi.
Yes, specifically, specifically urged his audience to bail him out.
It was like not even two months ago that a Minnesota state senator and her husband were killed.
Political violence exists across the spectrum.
This is not a left-wing problem.
This is an American problem.
Yeah.
I mean, the vast majority of political, of like terrorist attacks that are politically motivated in the U.S.
are right-wing, like, and have been for the last several decades, per the FBI.
In the 2012 to 2021, 55% of murders tied to political extremism came from white supremacy,
14% anti-government, 6% other right wing, 20% Islamist, 4% left wing.
And the white supremacy, 55% are far-right Nazis.
Yeah, in terms of who did this, yeah, I think we touched on Groyper's a little bit.
We should probably talk a bit more about the kind of online feud between the,
chunk of Nick Fuentes' his fan base and Charlie Kirk.
It was certainly more prominent a few years ago.
As Kirk himself has moved further to right, has adopted great replacement theory,
the feud kind of dissipated.
But it certainly was a legitimate thing in the right for, for like years.
Yes, to the extent that that's a number of folks who kind of have suspected that, like,
maybe that's who did it.
Again, we really have no idea.
I'm just bringing this up to make the point that, like, there's a variety of reasons
why this guy could have done this,
why this person could have done this,
including could be an Epstein-related thing, right?
There's a lot of anger at figures
who kind of bought into the Trump line
that we're done now with the Epstein stuff.
There's no way to know.
And I think that's kind of where we have to end
that part of our discussion here
is we don't know why this was done
to extent.
It doesn't matter.
If it comes out tomorrow
that this guy was like a White House staffer
working for Donald Trump
who did it because he thought
Charlie Kirk could disreel.
Like, if some crazy shit like that happened, it wouldn't change at all the way that they're talking about this shooting.
Like, it just doesn't matter.
Like, we are where we are with them.
And they're saying a lot of the same stuff.
Like, this is an escalation in rhetoric.
But it's not a massive escalation in rhetoric over the way they've been talking about fucking the people changing like the cracker barrel.
The cracker barrel logo.
We have to go to war.
We have to go to war.
We're at war.
Right.
I was thinking about that when you said that, like, uh, the lips of TikTok are tweeted that
we're at war. Like, you could probably go back and see dozens of other instances of almost
exactly the same statement. Right. And is this something that could lead to mass? Could this
be? Because I've seen people comparing this guy, like Charlie Kirk, to Horst Wessel, who was a
Nazi, literally a Pemm, that was a member of the Nazi brown shirts who was murdered, and it
became a huge rallying cry for the Nazi party, right? They made a song about it. It was a big deal.
I think that's kind of a very silly comparison for one thing. Horst Wessel is meaningful because he was
killed before the Nazis came to power
and they used his death
in order to get to power and
Trump is in power if you're not aware
they don't need to invent
excuses either to like crack down
on the left or
carry out their policies. They're already
doing that. I've seen
people go into complete panic
mode because they're going to be like they're going to use
this this shooting
to now do terrible things
as if they're not already
doing terrible things. They don't
need to wait for events to happen. They are more than willing just to do whatever they want
when they want to. Yes. That is exactly like the, that's exactly what I would tell you.
And in terms of like comparisons, I don't even think it's super useful to try to compare this to
specific figures from fucking German history. Because there's really nothing. No, because it's America
in 2025. It's America in 2020. There's a viral TikTok of a man talking about the book
Mormon, like seconds after the shooting.
Standing next to where Kirk died, and we now know that he stole a bunch of shit
from the booth that was covered in blood to sell it online.
Like, go go read all of the books about Wymar, Germany.
You won't find anything like that in it.
Yeah, like a better historical comparison, we will see, right?
Might be Jose Calvo Sotelo, like who's death did immediately sort of was one of the things
that accelerated the start of the Spanish Civil War, I guess.
But even then, like, no one was tick-talking and grabbing merch that was stained by his blood.
No, and there's no, you can, like, say, like, oh, well, this figure's assassination preceded this kind of violence.
But, like, okay, was that figure a guy who did what Charlie Kirk did and was connected the way?
No, like, this is an American thing.
This is new.
This is a novel moment in history.
And we don't know what's going to happen.
I'm not saying, don't, you know, if you were the kind of person who is.
has been worried about right-wing violence accelerating, you shouldn't be less worried right
now. And I think that's a good thing to be worried about. There's been a spree of bomb threats
called into like historically black colleges today. And D&C headquarters last I checked,
I don't think anything actually has been done. But it makes sense. It's an anger reaction
from the right. You know, you've got some people who woke up pissed off this morning and
decided to call in some bomb threats, apparently. We'll see, you know, who the culprits were there.
I didn't want to touch on something else that I've seen in the wake of all this that is pretty novel, but we should do an ad break first.
using AI to enhance the images that the FBI released of the maybe shooter.
Again, we don't even know that that guy's the shooter because they fucked up very badly on
this initially.
But people have been using to like clarify.
And we know that the AI is doing a bad job because, again, he's wearing a distinctive shirt.
People found the shirt online.
And when the AI was like solidifying the image on the shirt, it did it wrong.
Like it put like a silhouette of a man on there that wasn't on there.
You can also submit the same image to like five different AI imaging programs and get five wildly different results for what the face, quote, looks like.
And I just brought that up because I haven't seen that happen before with one of these things.
And it was like, oh, okay, cool.
That's a fun new.
This is going to be something we're going to have to deal with now for every single preceding event.
Absolutely.
Yes.
Whatever this hellscape of the American century of humiliation looks like.
Yes.
the other thing I wanted to bring up
is within about like
two to three hours after Kirk was killed
and after again it had been announced that he was dead
people were asking Grock
is this video because the video was spreading
wildly of him dying
on everywhere really but people asked
on Twitter they asked Grock
Elon Musk's AI is this real
and the response that was posted initially
was Charlie Kirk takes the roast
in stride with a laugh he's faced
tougher crowds yes he survives this one easily
and then someone responded Grock he got
shot through the neck. What are you talking about? And Grock responded, it's a meme video with
edited effects to look like a dramatic shot. Not a real event. Charlie Kirk is fine. He handles
roasts like a pro. So again, I bring this up just because this is going to only become more
of a factor in the immediate wake of shootings and terrorist attacks and disasters is people
going to AIs for information about the validity of videos, about the validity of threats. And what scares me
He's not, this didn't do any damage, right?
Like, this doesn't, didn't hurt the manhunt for the killer.
It didn't, like, do anything.
It was, it's just ridiculous.
But let's say you've got videos of a disaster ongoing.
Like, a fucking natural disaster coming or whatever.
And people are being told to leave their homes.
And somebody asks a fucking grok, hey, do I need to, I'll plug this video one.
It'll tell me if the storm's going to hit my house or if I can stay here.
People are going to do shit like that.
Like, that's going to happen.
Yeah, you're right.
Anyway, just his heads up.
Oh, that's bleak.
Yeah.
This is pretty terrible.
All right.
Well, that's, I think, all we got to say on this.
Yeah.
And we'll keep updating you as we learn more.
I'm sure this will keep developing over the weekend.
Yeah, this is going to keep being a major story.
I'm sure we'll do a dedicated episode on it next week.
Yeah.
Something else that happened on Wednesday, the same day as the Charlie Kirk assassination,
was a school shooting in Colorado.
Two students were shot before the shooter killed himself.
Police have said, quote,
we are looking at a motive.
We don't have one yet.
He was radicalized by some extremist network
and the details of that will be down the road
and we wanted to give you that much
about maybe a mindset for him, unquote.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I guess it's just a marking
of what kind of shootings Americans
are in year to and not school.
shootings, that's business as usual.
Especially if it's just a regular white male teenager.
Yeah, yeah.
We'll be kind of following that one as well as to see what its online radicalization was.
So they, they've already found so early.
But yeah, it's pretty tragic that two school shootings happened in a day.
It was reported in multiple outlets last week that the Department of Justice was considering
restricting gun ownership rights for transgender Americans in the wake of the Minneapolis.
Catholic school shooting last month. This was first reported by the Diggly Wire, who quoted
the source inside the Justice Department, saying, quote, individuals within the DOJ are reviewing
ways to ensure that mentally ill individuals suffering from gender dysphoria are unable to obtain
firearms while they are unstable and unwell, unquote. CNN said that their sources described the
proposal for a trans gun ban as, quote, preliminary in nature. And since then, the DOJ and the Trump
administration have not made any clear statements confirming or denying this reporting. A DOJ
spokesperson acknowledged these reports with the statement reading, quote, the DOJ is actively
evaluating options to prevent the pattern of violence we have seen from individuals with specific
mental health challenges and substance abuse disorders. No specific criminal justice proposals
have been advanced at this time, unquote. Trump declined to answer a question about a possible
transgun ban last Friday. This is something right-wing influencers have been advocating for years,
now. On September 5th, the NRA made a statement reading,
The Second Amendment isn't up for debate. The NRA supports the Second Amendment rights
for all law-abiding Americans to purchase, possess, and use firearms. The energy does not
and will not support any policy proposals that implement sweeping gun bans that
arbitrarily strip law-abiding citizens of their Second Amendment rights without due process.
Yep. Which, you know, is consistent with the NRA's messaging for years, because the
The recent messaging, yeah, definitely.
Well, I mean, the line has been for as long as I have been a gun owner, which is 20 years now, from the NRA.
Yeah, after the civil rights movement.
Yeah, yeah.
Registration and, like, laws forcing people to register their guns.
And, like, gun control laws in general are that restrict at all access to firearms are a prelude inevitably to mass confiscation, right?
Like, that has been the, that has been the line for a long time.
This does not surprise me.
Yeah. No, the stance doesn't. The fact that they said something publicly during this does, because the NRA has been quiet a lot when there's an issue. Like, for example, the shooting of Philando Castile, right, who was legally carrying a concealed firearm when the police murdered him in his car. They kept pretty fucking quiet about that. So I am a little surprised that they said something, but what they're saying is very consistent with other shit they've been saying.
Yeah.
There's no current legal mechanism that exists for them to do this.
They would have to invent or heavily alter the current way that gun rights can't be taken away,
which is right now through individual court cases where a judge finds an individual person,
quote unquote, mentally deficient.
Yeah.
And it's highly unlikely that the gun lobby will support any policy proposals that start
adding certain diagnoses to a list that excludes you from gun ownership.
because, sure, if you add gender dysphoria now,
that might not be a huge problem to many on the right,
but let's say a Democrat administration
and Democrat House and Senate come into power.
Now there's this precedent
that you can add diagnoses to take away gun rights,
which would enable adding things like depression or PTSD,
which a lot of veterans have.
And this is like the slippery slope
that the NRA warns about.
So it makes sense that they would be taking this stance,
Similarly, I don't necessarily see a very clear path for them to, like, restrict H.R.T. through this mechanism, cis people, including a lot of men who own guns, take testosterone and cis women take estrogen.
So that would be a very tricky way to handle this, I think.
The only way they could, again, would be if they try to restrict in mass, like the prescription of hormones, specifically to people with gender dysphoria or trans people.
people, which is difficult for a lot of reasons, but would provide it like a pretext for,
okay, these people are now taking stuff, an illegal substance, and you can go after people
with guns for that.
But I feel like, I don't know how you would judicate that, how you, like, force, like,
the federal government does not theoretically have the ability to force the medical community
to say nobody who's got gender dysphoria gets hormones ever again.
Yeah, I mean, you could maybe do something through the FDA, but I don't see how you could do it
just to trans people and not cis people.
Right.
Like, how would you keep it legal for all of Joe Rogan's friends?
Yeah, that's just like through the FDA, right?
I don't, I literally just don't know.
Yeah, I'm not super familiar with that.
But this is obviously something that we will keep an eye on.
This is like a possibility that we've discussed the right wanting to enact for years now.
And the fact that the DOJ might even have some people in there who are doing preliminary considerations.
it obviously is a worrying sign of the general position on trans rights and trans gun rights.
Yeah.
For our immigration update this week, I want to start by talking about the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court confirmed in its case that CBP and more pertinently ICE can continue their policy of racial profiling.
This overturned a lower court judge's order that prohibits them from stopping someone in Los Angeles based on ethnicity alone.
It didn't just look at ethnicity.
it said that it prohibits them from using either one or a combination of four factors,
which were apparent race, their accent or their use for non-English language, their job.
There are jobs that tend to have a higher proportion of undocumented people, right?
They get construction and some agricultural jobs and their presence at a certain place,
again, right, places like a home depot or a farm.
Garrison smiling at how I correctly pronounce the word depot there.
CBP has always been able to profile you at the border, right?
It's kind of what they do.
There was a 1975 Supreme Court decision.
That one was called USA versus Brignon.
I think it's Brignoni, like Italian, Brignoni Ponce.
That decision looked at a roving traffic stop up here, I believe it was in San Clemente.
And in that case, the CBP had stopped someone, not at a checkpoint, but while sitting by the side of the highway in their vehicle.
And they had done so solely based on the apparent ethnicity of the driver.
That was ruled unconstitutional, and the standard that officers needed to have was, quote, reasonable suspicion that pertained to roving stocks, which is kind of what ICE is doing in L.A., right?
CBP officers have also previously been sued more recently for using language as a sole basis for detention.
Like if you're speaking Spanish.
Yeah, exactly.
That was the case, right?
It's Suda and Hernandez versus U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
That one was in Montana, the ACLU of Montana sued them to Spanish-speaking ladies.
were speaking Spanish in a store, they actually said hello to a board of trial agent in the English
who proceeded to detain them on the basis that not many people speak Spanish in Montana.
I think the name is from Spanish, like Montania, but maybe I'm wrong.
The State Department has also issued guidance that non-immigrant visa applicants can now
only schedule interviews in their own country.
So this is a further burden for people seeking visas to come to the United States, right?
previously you could do it at another U.S. embassy or consulate, for instance, you know,
if you were, let's say, French but resident in Spain, you could apply at the consulate
or embassy there, right? Now you have to go to your country's embassy. In some cases,
there are designated embassies or consular places for national states where the U.S. has no
embassy or a similar presence. Like, U.S. hasn't got an embassy in Afghanistan right now for
pretty obvious reasons, right? So I believe it's Salaamabad for those people, for example.
Finally, I want to get on to this case of the dozens of Guatemalan children who came to the US
and accompanied by adults they're related to and who the Trump admin attempted to deport over the
Labor Day weekend. Sometimes I don't like the phrase unaccompanied minors because maybe they are
accompanied by someone who's just not in their family, right? Like people have taken care of them
on the journey, almost certainly. And I've seen this myself. And so I don't know the idea that they're not
just walking alone, but they're not with their relatives, right,
if undertaken this journey themselves.
So Judge Sparkle Sukhnananan temporarily halted their removal in the early hours of Sunday
morning of Labor Day weekend.
This is an extremely unusual decision, right?
But the judge decided it was warranted because not doing so would put the children
in potential extreme danger.
The government categorically attempted to remove these children like very quickly and
and literally got them out of bed, right?
Like, we got these little children out of beds in their foster homes
and attempted to shove them on a plane to Guatemala.
Their attorney literally ran onto the tarmac at the airport
to tell flight control personnel that they were likely in violation of a court order
if they allowed the plane to take off.
Like, it couldn't be more last minute than this, right?
They were literally working all night.
Oof.
Judge Tim Kelly now has to rule on the legitimacy of the government's claims.
The claim the government makes here is that it was,
was, quote, reuniting children with parents abroad, not deporting them. And that would mean
the children don't have the statutory protections that they do if they were being deported
as quote-unquote unaccompanied minors, right? Previously, the government had made the claim
that the children's parents wanted them to be returned. It's dropped that claim after
Reuters published a Guatemalan government document, which completely refutes that. None of the
children's parents seem to want them to come home. So what the government is claiming here was that
The Office of Refugee Resettlement, which is under HHS, is moving the children, not the Department of Homeland Security.
So they're not being deported.
They're being reunified with their families.
Yeah.
That's a pretty sketchy claim.
Meanwhile, the kids are in shelters.
Many of them were in long-term foster care and have been now removed from that environment and they're in shelters.
Lawfare, which is an online publication, has a pretty good account of the court.
room exchange that I've linked in the notes.
I also, several people have asked about this, so I should talk about it.
I wanted to talk about the Hyundai plant.
In Georgia?
I don't know what to call this raid.
Yeah, in Georgia.
I guess raid is the right word.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, like more than 300 South Korean workers were detained at the plant.
They should be going home today.
They were supposed to go home yesterday, but there were some delays.
So far, ISIS claimed that these people were working without.
proper authorization and slash or we're not in the US with proper authorization. Their lawyers have
claimed and the Guardian has found Lee documents that confirm that many of them had B1 visa status.
B1 is like you can do some work on a B1. It also can be just an extended term tourist visa.
And you can do certain jobs but not other jobs and you still get paid at home where you want
a B1, which seems to be what these people were doing, right? Like, they can supervise construction
on a B1, but you can't do construction. And it would make sense for people who are very expert in
the construction of these highly technical buildings to supervise that construction.
It seems that they were in the country to supervise the setting up of this car plant.
Correct. Yeah. Most South Koreans can also get Esther visa waivers, which, like, it's not exactly
the same, but it's kind of a 90-day B-1 visa. So there are some people who cannot.
right? Like if they have been committed of crimes and such, they'd have to go through a B1 process.
But it seems very unlikely at least that they were not in the country without any documentation
because that would just be a strange thing to do when they can get a best of visa waiver.
What's really weird about this is the state of Georgia has invested millions, if not billions,
in bringing this plant to Georgia, right? It has created a significant economic boost,
something like 90% of the products that go into the car come from there. So there are lots of
small businesses and local businesses that have started up to provide this factory with the goods
it needs. There are all the other services that come with that, right? Like it's bought
economic benefit to the region. I know the state has spent more than 300 million on improving
the roads. Apparently they've deepened ports in some regions to allow larger ships to arrive.
It's bought in over 12 billion investment, more than 8,000 jobs.
It's received massive tax breaks as going to total over $2 billion, according to reporting that I'll link to in the notes.
Yet Georgia state police blocked off roads as part of the raid, and it was Georgia Department of Corrections buses that took people away.
This seems an odd choice for Kemp.
Brian Kemp, right, Georgia governor.
He's not Trump's favorite.
favorite. Maybe he's trying to become Trump's favorite. But previously, even Republicans in Georgia
have been very behind this. I mean, Garrison, you lived in Georgia for a bit, right? Like,
this was a thing that the Republicans have supported is a way to revitalize a place where there
wasn't much economic opportunity before. Well, and this follows the whole point of Trump's
tariffs. We're trying to bring manufacturing to the United States. You have these specialized workers
to help supervise the, like, construction and managing of equipment. They get this plant up
on running. And even if you're, even if you're doing that, even if you're bringing manufacturing
back to the States, somehow you still get bitten. Yeah, big time bitten by the Trump horse,
I guess. Yeah. I mean, it does sort of line up with this working closer to the furor hypothesis,
right, that you have these countervalent impulses and everyone's just trying to do things that
they think Trump will like. And kind of sometimes those can directly contradict each other as
is happening here. There's not really a coherent policy platform. No, there's, there's
just so focused on trying to get like the base numbers up, like trying to get the number of
deportations higher than it's ever been. Yeah. And therefore, and you have this sort of series of
impulses which motivate Trumpism, one of which is deport as many people as possible.
Yeah. Another is broadly writ, bring manufacturing jobs back to America, but not if foreign
people are helping supervise the construction, I guess. Understandably, South Korea is very upset,
more so, I think, because these are like middle class professionals who have been detained.
right? They appear to have negotiated a voluntary departure for these people, which it's not like
a voluntary departure, like you came on holiday Disney landed, you're going home on the plane.
It can still have long-term consequences, but the hope there is that it won't make it
harder for these people to get US visas in the future if they have to come back, because obviously
it's going to be very hard for this company to build a plant in Georgia if they can't bring
any of their staff to Georgia. Yeah, that is about all I have. I'm going to keep looking
especially this Georgia story, see if it develops any further, and if it's worthy of a whole
episode, we'll do a whole episode on that.
Speaking of Georgia, the long-delayed Cop City RICO case has finally made some progress
in the courts. I have been working on the final, like, scripted piece of my Cop City coverage
for basically this whole summer, I've been slowly chipping away at it. Part of the reason why I have
not finished that yet is because essentially the whole court case, like the 61 defendant Rico case,
got reset in May. They changed judges. And that has delayed an already long delayed case even further.
So I was waiting to see a little bit of the results of the court case or at least get a better
indication where the court case is going to go before I finish that final piece. And we're going to
get that final piece out probably in the next like month or two here. But I will give this small update.
because it's pretty substantial this past Tuesday, September 9th,
the defense successfully argued that the state attorney general's office
did not have the jurisdictional authority to prosecute the 61 defendants
under the state's RICO statute.
This was due to simple procedural error in neglecting to first ask Governor Brian Kemp
if the AG's office could prosecute the case.
Judge Farmer found that the AG does not have the authority to prosecute count one of
the RICO indictment, which is the racketeering and conspiracy charges,
affecting 61 people. So without the sweeping RICO charges engulfing the 61 defendants,
just five defendants would be left with count two of the indictment, the domestic terrorism
charges, which the AG does have the authority to prosecute, and count three, which is the arson
charge, which Judge Farmer indicated could be thrown out on a similar technicality as the
racketeering and conspiracy charges. This is still heavily in flux,
the prosecution is going to appeal this decision.
And it's unclear how this ruling will affect how the rest of the cop city case will
unfold as removal of the RICO charges kind of undermines the rest of the indictment.
On Wednesday, they were arguing about the constitutionality of Georgia's domestic terrorism
statute, which has never been tested in courts before.
So a lot of this case is currently up in the air, but this is a positive sign for the defendants
at this point.
one brief RFK Jr. update, I guess.
RFK Jr.'s soon to be released Autism Report from HHS
is reportedly going to include the claim that use of Tylenol during pregnancy
could cause autism in children.
Jesus Christ.
This is not believed to be true by reputable medical authorities.
But the report is set to release sometime in September.
It was announced like months ago when RFK Jr. said that by September, we will finally know the cause of autism, quote, and quote. And it seems the report is still churning away, but set to be released this month. And it will include a few other claims, which we will report on in more detail once the report is actually out. But the Wall Street Journal got this little heads up about the Tylenol inclusion in the report.
fantastic. So I heard from somebody who is waiting on their work permit, a Kurdish woman who came to the United States to claim asylum from Turkey, from northern Kurdistan. And because she doesn't have a work permit yet, and she's going to be waiting for her work permit sometime, she's asking for help to cover her basic sort of day-to-day expenses. And this is a thing that people often find themselves in a situation, right? They have come here, done all the documentation, but it can take a lot of,
long time to get their work permit. Without friends or family, it can be very hard for them.
The website is gofund. me slash DA39F7D0B. We'll have that link in the show notes as well.
If you'd like to email us, you can do so. The way to do it is to reach out to cool zone tips at
proton.com. That is an encrypted email address. All that means is that you will have to also use
an encrypted email address if you'd like it to be end-to-end encrypted.
All right.
And here's some ads.
We're back.
Somehow, Epstein has returned.
Yeah, that joke.
It always gets old.
So one of the big pieces of news this week before the thing that we started the episode with, I mean, this was the story before that happened, is that as a result of the ongoing investigation into Epstein and whether or not, you know, how involved was Trump, how involved were Democrats, what's, do we care?
That the book, the first 50 years birthday book, that that drawing that Trump is accused of having done, where he signed his name as the pubic hair.
of a very obviously young girl
with a poem that seemed to hint at child molestation.
That, the whole book that Epstein had
has been released to Congress
and is now public, right?
Yeah, the Democrats on the House Oversight Committee
subpoenaed the Epstein book
from Jeffrey Epstein's estate
once the estate made a statement
saying that they have the book
and would cooperate with a subpoena.
And there's a bunch of news articles
summarizing it.
If you want to read the thing for yourself,
just Google Document Cloud,
Jeffrey Epstein 50th birthday book,
and the whole thing is in there, right?
I would say, like,
just to have a slight diversion, I guess,
between this and the Charlie Kirk shooting,
maybe...
You don't need to.
Give yourself a break.
You don't need...
I'm not saying you should.
I'm saying I just wanted to let people know
where they can get to the original source
if they don't want to have it mediated by a media, right?
It's always good to do that.
We're going to mediate it for you now.
Yeah.
So it opens, as far as I can tell the first, well, I mean, there's a list of contents.
The prologue is written by Gulen Maxwell.
Then there's letters from the family, Paula Seymour and Mark, or I guess your relatives.
Then it's split into Brooklyn.
So there's friends of his from Brooklyn, who are Warren Eisenstein, neutral.
I don't know who that is.
Terry Kafka, very funny that there's a Kafka involved.
Dr. Stephen Levy and Michael Bullcoles.
The next section is all girlfriend.
their letters from girlfriends, all of those names have been blacked out for reasons that should be obvious.
The section after that is children.
God Almighty, I don't know who's kids, because this is blacked out too.
But who boy.
Oof, yeah.
And then we get to the section that is friends, that is all the letters from friends.
And the friends are Leon Black is on there, Bill Clinton is on there, Alan Dershowitz is on there.
The Dershowitz is in this.
The letter is really unsettling.
Yeah, Donald Trump is.
is in there.
We'll get to that in a second yet.
Donald Trump is in there, obviously.
These are not, Mort Zuckerman is on there.
Leslie Wexner is on there.
So a number of, like, very prominent people unknown is at the very end.
I don't know.
Like, that's like literally how the book listed it.
So they just have a letter from someone who's presumably his friend, but didn't put a name.
I mean, it's a smart move if you're doing things, which are federal crimes.
And then after that, you've got the letters from scientists, friends of his, which include people we brought up on my
episode about the bioscience company who pretends that they're cloning dire wolves,
Marie Gelman and Martin Nowak are both on here.
So that's great.
Oh, good.
And then after that, I just noted girlfriends is like the third group of people who had
letters and all those names were blacked out.
But then under science, there's another section that's girl dash friends that's longer
and all of those names are blacked out.
No fucking idea what that is supposed to mean.
Yeah.
But upsetting.
It's not good.
Whatever it is.
Yeah. Anyway, there's some more names on there, but they're not super relevant.
Gillen Maxwell's prologue is handwritten, or at least the note in front of it, is handwritten.
I know you will enjoy looking through the book, and I hope you will derive as much pleasure looking through it as I did, putting it together for you.
Happy Birthday, love Gillen Maxwell.
So that's the prologue.
One of the first pictures, I mean, the first picture in the book is Jeffrey Epstein standing around,
with a bunch of soldiers.
They look like, I mean, I would guess from some African country.
They're all in a camo pattern that's not immediately familiar to me.
And, yeah, I can't fully read what it says down here.
Some of the lines say something about a president and the Secret Service to greet you.
I don't know who these soldiers were that Jeffrey's standing around.
I kind of want to know, but it's a weird photo to start.
And then immediately after that is Jeffrey Epstein's Cub Scout graduation photo.
They've got that in there.
And it's just a bunch of, like, pictures of Epstein throughout his life.
Like, that's kind of how this thing opens before we get down to the letters.
Yeah, one thing I wanted to get at that, so there's on page 57, there's a photo of Jeffrey Epstein wearing a weird shirt with a bunch of handprints on it when he was younger.
That's just titled, Girls on My Boat.
We picked up Girls on Beach, went out on boat.
I tell them with knife in my hand to take suits off.
But Warren tells me, don't worry.
His name is J.N.
He's just joking.
He lives at so-and-so.
I tell Mark to throw him into water.
He did.
No idea what the fuck that's about.
But a lot of it's like that.
It's like very upsetting stories that are handwritten crudely, I think, and often by Gillen.
But yeah, it's like pretty deeply upsetting stuff.
Okay.
I do kind of want to read this Bill Elkis letter.
It just starts with, it's no secret that Jeffrey appreciates beautiful women that not many people know he can create them at a thin air as he did in Iowa.
1988.
Good to give a place in time when discussing things that are illegal.
Yeah.
This guy says that he was managing the money of a family who lived in Fairfield, Iowa.
Hog farming is a serious industry there, and many people feel there is more than a little
truth in the saying that it's hard to tell the difference between the girls and the
hogs in Southeast Iowa.
Jeffery came to Fairfield to check in on their investment opportunities.
He asked about the nightlife, and we could only laugh as we dropped him off at the local
motel. The next morning group of four of us picked up Jeffrey to give him a tour of the
area. At our first stop, we parked in front of a bookstore. As we were getting out of the car,
a spectacular tall blonde woman suddenly came out of the store, walked directly up to Jeffrey
and announced, I am new to this area. What's going on? It turns out she was a sales representative
for a firm selling academic branded athletic clothing. She was literally driving through Iowa
visiting local campuses. Jeffrey invited her to join us and did his magic. Within a few hours,
he had invited her to return to New York with him for the weekend. Yeah, a lot of stuff like that.
we should probably read Dershowitz's letter yeah yeah one sec yeah you can do that okay uh here's
Dershowitz's who was that man with Epstein is the title of the letter inquiring minds are
asking who is that man with Epstein Jeffrey Epstein is of course one of the world's most
famous men a household name throughout the planet his picture has appeared on the cover of every
magazine in the world everyone knows his story from his humble roots on Coney Island to his rise
to one of the most envied public figures in the western world but what is he doing
flying to Africa with an obscure former politician from Hawke, Arkansas.
Who is that politician, and why would Epstein have picked him for the coveted seat on his private jet?
Vanity unfair was determined to get to the bottom of this mystery man and to reveal the story
behind the story. Normally, we would not pry into the private life of an obscure Arkansas
politician, particularly when he was tried so hard, up to now so successfully, to keep his
private life to himself. But the moment this obscure man stepped under the Epstein jet, he became
fair game for probing inquiry. Why would a man like Epstein, who can pick and choose his
companions from princes to professors, select a flying companion from the Ozark Mountains.
To be sure he was a Rhodes Scholar, but we all know how easy it is to get a Rhodes if you're from
Arkansas. There must be something else. Vanity Unfair decided to snoop around. As obscure politician
reluctantly agreed to be to an interview on the express condition that it was completely
off the record. This is what he told us. And then it's blank. The letter ends.
It comes with a note. Yes. Reading, Dear Jeffrey, as a birthday gift to you,
I managed to obtain an early version of the Vanity Unfair article.
I talk them into changing the focus from you to Bill Clinton,
as you will see from the enclosed excerpt.
Happy birthday, and best regards.
And then there's a fake vanity unfair article.
Yeah.
Or cover.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That, who is Jack the Ripper?
Was it Jeffrey Epstein?
Al-Qaeda in South America, financed by Epstein.
Jeffrey Epstein stole my heart in another courtroom dispatches.
It's like really crudely animated.
But, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it's, it's, what do you even say?
Oh, there is a quote on the fact.
on the Vanity Fair cover attributed to Epstein
that says life is a pure flame
and we live by an invisible sun within us.
So I guess that's a Jeffrey Epstein original.
Wow, how profound.
Before we talk about the Trump letter,
there's this one other image
I'd like to discuss,
this, what I can only describe
as a grooming-themed drawing.
Oh, God, yeah.
...to him as part of his birthday card,
depicting Jeffrey Epstein in 1983,
giving balloons in a lollipop
to three young children.
girls like children children and importantly his pockets are turned out out and the pants he's
wearing are like patched and old he's clearly poor in this in 1983 by the way he was working as a
tutor and a teacher like he was teaching kids at private schools like so that's what's represented here
yeah the other section of the drawing is in 2003 and has geoffrey epstein sitting on the beach
with four women touching his body.
One woman is very clearly touching his genitals
and has J.E. tattooed on her ass.
Jeffrey Epstein's jet is flying above.
You know it's his jet because the actual
in number of his real jet is written
on the side of the jet.
Yeah. And on the beach,
he is on a lawn chair outside of
what sort of resembles
Trump's Marlago Resort
in terms of the architectural style,
the arched doorways,
the tiered structure and layout of the palm trees and the beach. This building does not match
his house in Florida or his house in the southwest or his house on the island, which appears
very different with blue roofing. I'm not saying this necessarily is Mar-a-Lago, but if I were to
try to draw Mar-a-Lago from memory, it might look something like this. There's certainly a resemblance,
which is notable. Yeah, we should talk about.
literally the next photo from this is a picture of Jeffrey Epstein holding a check for $22,000 to him from Donald Trump.
There's three people posing next to him.
One of them is a woman whose face is blacked out.
There's also another woman with her face blacked out behind them.
But the man who's sitting next to the woman at what looks like a dinner table does not have his face blacked out.
I don't know why.
And it says on this, Jeffrey is showing early talents with money.
women, sells fully depreciated, and then the name of the woman who is being sold is blacked out
to Donald Trump for $22,500.
Shoot, early people skills, too.
Even though I handled the deal, I didn't get any of the money for the girl.
So.
Pretty sickening joke.
Yeah.
Genuinely, like, nauseating.
Literally, yeah, like him holding up a check Donald Trump gave him for a girl.
Like a fake novelty check signed by someone who's not Trump, just someone signing Donald Trump,
not Donald Trump's signature.
but people joking it's a bit about Jeffrey selling a woman to Trump for 22,500 dollars
was it say fully depreciated was that the phrasing used that's fully depreciated yes yes yeah it's
fucking disgusting like and then we get down to the original trump letter which we've talked about
on the show we've read it to you this is the one where he's Donald says it's framed as a
conversation between them and Donald says enigma's never age have you noticed that anyway I
The only thing noteworthy about this is now we have the drawing of the woman.
It's drawn around the script.
And it's, I would say, pretty clearly a pubescent girl.
Like, there's breasts drawn on there.
The breasts do not look fully developed.
And they do not look.
They're not large.
Like, no, and the position of them is higher.
They look like underdeveloped breasts.
Yes.
It looks like a drawing of a young girl, like of a child.
It's so much more creepy than anyone who, like,
tried to draw what this might have looked like
as like previously imagined.
Like they were all drawing,
you know,
like conventionally attractive,
like adult female bodies.
This is much more creepy.
Now,
I will say it doesn't look like
his signature is meant to be pubic hair here.
It's in a similar position,
but no,
this is a very abstract drawing.
Yes.
His signature is just his first name,
Donald,
which he signs a lot of personal notes with,
not his full Donald Trump's signature.
Trump is maintaining that he did not sign this,
that this is a for.
he is unaware of this letter, even though the signature matches other signatures from him
around this time. And this just feels like a very Donald Trump thing to do. And is worded similarly
to how he talked about women in this era. He now makes statements being like, I don't talk this
way. Everyone who knows me knows I don't talk this way. And if you watch like clips from Donald
Trump in the early 2000s talking about women, it is this type of language. It is very gross.
yeah like everyone remembers the howard stern clip like come on right oh yeah no i it's also worth
noting one of the last things in the book is recipe for like chocolate chip cookies i try to figure
out who put the recipe in there but their name is blacked out they're right under henry rossofsky
and right above les wexner i don't know who put that chocolate chip cookie recipe in here but
i might try to make those cookies the epstein biscuit
I wouldn't eat those.
Yeah.
A few other things before we close this episode related to Epstein.
On September 5th, House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters that Trump was actually a secret FBI informant tasked with taking down Jeffrey Epstein.
I hadn't heard this.
He did a great job.
Yeah, I will.
I'm saying that what Epstein did as a hoax, it's a terrible, unspeakable evil.
He believes that himself.
When he first heard the rumor, he kicked him out of Marilago.
He was an FBI informant.
try to take this stuff down.
The president knows and has great sympathy
for the women who have suffered these unspeakable harms.
It's detestable to him. He and I have spoken about this
as recently as 24 hours ago.
There should be documents that could corroborate
that one would imagine. Yeah, one would think.
On September 8th, Mike Johnson
walked back his FBI
informant comments. Of shocking.
Telling reporters, he was referring to what
Epstein victims' attorneys has said
that Trump was, quote, willing to help
law enforcement to go after the guy
who was a disgusting child abuser, sex trafficker,
all the allegations. That's what they heard. I don't know if I use the right terminology,
but that's common knowledge. And everybody knows that. I was repeating what has been
common knowledge for a long time. The president was helpful in trying to get Epstein for the law
enforcement to go after Epstein, unquote. Great stuff from Mike Johnson. Sure. A day later,
White House press secretary Carolyn Levitt confirmed that Trump was not, in fact, an FBI informant.
one other weird Epstein story from this week is how the DOJ has been beefing with
James O'Keefe's Project Veritas
Yeah
Project Veritas did a operation against a DOJ employee
In which they recorded him saying this
Oh those files do exist
Yeah thousands and thousands of page of five
They'll redact that every Republican or conservative person in those files
leave all the liberal, democratic people in those vows.
I think they visited that maskful person.
Yeah.
And also involved?
Got transferred to a minimum security person too recently, which is against BOPP
policy because she's a convicted sex owner.
They're offering or something to keep about it.
That was the acting deputy chief of the Office of Enforcement Operations, Joseph Schnitt,
telling a stranger about the FBI and DOJ's handling.
of the Epstein files.
The DOJ responded to O'Keefe
saying, quote, Joseph Schnett had
no role in the department's internal review
of Epstein materials. He has confirmed as much to
leadership, and we plan on publishing his written statement
to that effect when we have it. In his words,
the comments he made were based on
quote, what he learned in the media.
And he has, quote, no
knowledge of the circumstances surrounding
Ms. Maxwell other than
what was reported in the news, unquote.
And then,
Schnett used the Department of Justice
X account to post a
what it could be described as like an Apple
notes apology statement with a 30%
battery displayed on his phone
where he talks about meeting
a quote woman named Skyler on hinge a dating app
in July 2025 her profiles no longer findable
we had two dates she gave no clues
that she was a reporter or recording her dates
Had I a clue, the first date would have ended immediately and there would have never been a second one.
My profile indicated I did quote-unquote government work, but did not specify for which agency.
I never discussed what I do at DOJ.
The comments I made were my own personal comments on what I've learned in the media and not from anything I've done or learned via work.
Incredible.
The United States government, everybody.
Yeah, and James O'Keefe out there with the journalism thirst trap, I guess.
I wonder if it's, is it a one-party consent?
This is in D.C., right?
I don't believe D.C. is one-party consent?
Yeah, I would be shocked.
I'm not sure how O'Keefe pulls all this stuff off legally.
He could get in trouble for this one.
Yeah, my understanding would be just to be clear for people who aren't in on the jargon,
like in most states of the union, I think you need both people's consent to record a conversation.
You could argue, I guess he didn't have a reasonable expectation of privacy sitting out there,
but I think this is very clearly a clandestine recording.
Oh, wait, no, no, no.
Sorry, DC is a one-party consent area.
Damn.
Okay.
Oh, there you go.
Wow.
Okay.
Yeah, did not know that.
Yep.
So, well, he's safe.
Yeah.
I guess if that date was in D.C., you got a lot of...
If the date was in D.C.
A lot of jurisdictions around there bumping up.
But yeah, that's surprising.
No, he's good.
All right.
Well, I think that's all we have for this week, which is a lot.
This was a massive news week.
This is an extra long episode.
but sometimes that happens.
Congratulations on making it this far.
Yeah.
And may every day be a new wonderful secret as
Donald Trump told Jeffrey Epstein.
Stop him, just turn it off.
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 Coolzone Media, visit our website,
coolzonemedia.com, or check us out on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
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