It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 209
Episode Date: November 22, 2025All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. - The Challenges Facing the Mamdani Administration - Nick Fuentes Explains Pornography to Tucker Carlson - The... Conde Nast Union Busting Purge - Producing Knowledge on Palestine feat. Dana El Kurd - Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #42 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: The Challenges Facing the Mamdani Administration https://ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/news/2025/11/08/hochul-a--no--on-mamdani-s-free-bus-plan---yes--on-statewide-universal-childcare https://thebaffler.com/latest/paying-for-it-backer https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/11/13/zohran-mamdani-free-bus-plan-governor-hochul/87258107007/ https://www.businessinsider.com/aoc-attacks-nypd-for-threatening-bill-de-blasios-daughter-after-arrest-2020-6 https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/zohran-mamdani-new-york-city-free-buses-kathy-hochul/ Nick Fuentes Explains Pornography to Tucker Carlson https://ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/news/2025/11/08/hochul-a--no--on-mamdani-s-free-bus-plan---yes--on-statewide-universal-childcare https://thebaffler.com/latest/paying-for-it-backer https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/11/13/zohran-mamdani-free-bus-plan-governor-hochul/87258107007/ https://www.businessinsider.com/aoc-attacks-nypd-for-threatening-bill-de-blasios-daughter-after-arrest-2020-6 https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/zohran-mamdani-new-york-city-free-buses-kathy-hochul/ The Conde Nast Union Busting Purge https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/tell-conde-bosses-to-reinstate-the-fired-four-reverse-the-suspensions-and-end-the-union-busting @goodbyealma @picnic_mag Producing Knowledge on Palestine feat. Dana El Kurd Journal of Palestine Studies – https://www.palestine-studies.org/en/journals/jps/about Donate to the Journal of Palestine Studies – https://palestine-studies.networkforgood.com/projects/18346-donate-to-support-palestinian-knowledge-production Mahmoud Darwish interview - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hrvzKOYeQZY&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Feliaayoub.com%2F&source_ve_path=MjM4NTE AAUP & MESA report on Title 6 investigations - https://www.aaup.org/news/new-aaup-report-analyzes-weaponization-title-vi-doe-investigations Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #42 https://x.com/micah_erfan/status/1991117893912977891?s=20 https://x.com/TheTNHoller/status/1991186996421640702?s=20 https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/115562626931599548 https://nypost.com/2025/11/17/opinion/fbi-secret-service-butchered-the-thomas-crooks-case-and-invited-conspiracies-we-deserve-the-truth/ https://nypost.com/2025/11/17/us-news/thomas-crooks-used-they-them-pronouns-had-obsession-with-violence-and-muscle-mommies-sources/ https://x.com/bennyjohnson/status/1990444544584819185?s=20 https://x.com/DC_Draino/status/1990439113997078866?s=20 https://independentnewsroom.com/p/intel-report-thomas-crooks-alleged-social-media-dump-2bda https://www.state.gov/releases/2025/11/designations-of-antifa-ost-and-three-other-violent-antifa-groups/ https://x.com/StateDept/status/1989034285819740531?s=20 https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.txwd.1150387/gov.uscourts.txwd.1150387.1437.0.pdf https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/18/us/jd-vance-threats-michigan.html https://apnews.com/article/poland-sabotage-explosion-rail-track-warsaw-97dae3045d4e1ff329780526c6279c0f https://apnews.com/article/latvia-belarus-border-migrants-hybrid-warfare-c75de2cd135dd24d4865ec40a3dea698 https://apnews.com/article/finland-russia-border-frontex-guards-2fc202b3a900d6887e0152b235a0a00d https://bsky.app/profile/peark.es/post/3m5plwjfzgs2t https://www.ice.gov/news/releases/ice-launches-billboards-charlotte-featuring-large-public-safety-threats https://www.wunc.org/race-class-communities/2024-11-25/immigration-enforcement-house-bill-10-north-carolina https://ktla.com/news/local-news/ice-agent-arrested-for-pulling-gun-on-southern-california-teen-lawyer-says/ https://www.riversidesheriff.org/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=6777 https://lataco.com/ice-gun-aimed-santa-ana https://apnews.com/article/charlotte-north-carolina-immigration-arrests-trump-989b5f9428a65b9cd669244f79723edf https://www.wfae.org/race-equity/2025-03-27/sheriff-mcfadden-ice-at-odds-over-immigration-enforcement https://cis.org/Map-Sanctuary-Cities-Counties-and-States https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/german-court-admits-charges-against-201638141.html https://www.bnaibrith.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/AnnualMarchesGlorifyingNazism_Z105c.pdf https://gov.texas.gov/uploads/files/press/PROC_declaring_Muslim_Brotherhood_and_CAIR_Transnational_Criminal_Organizations_IMAGE_11-18-2025.pdf https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-sends-formal-response-letter-to-texas-governor-abbott-condemning-defamatory-and-lawless-proclamation/ https://capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/89R/billtext/pdf/SB00017F.pdf#navpanes=0 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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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
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If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's got to be nothing new here.
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Welcome to Aikadap and Hear a podcast about things falling apart and how to put them back
together again.
I am your host, Mia Wong.
So a week ago, we did some episodes about the election of Zoran Mamdani and a lot of the
very funny reactions to it.
And, you know, on executive disorder, we've talked about what this sort of means for politics.
But now I want to do a slightly different kind of episode, which is looking at the challenges that Mondeumny is going to face, attempting to implement his agenda, attempting to stay mayor, just taking him very seriously at his word in his attempt to, you know, make the cost of living lower and make people's lives better.
And there are unfortunately very significant challenges to this agenda.
And those challenges are a mix of structural problems and, I don't know, the president of the United States, right?
We're going to focus on a few of them today.
And before we really start this, I think I want to start this to some extent with the conclusion.
And the conclusion of this episode is not to say that these things are impossible, right?
And to not say they can't be done.
But it's to remind people that the way that actual politics works, electing one person does not immediately make everything better, right?
You can't stop organizing because someone has been elected.
And in fact, if you actually want to see the things that you organize to, you know, happen by electing this person, do you have to organize even harder once they are in power and mobilize even more to allow the things that you fought for to actually happen?
because there are significant opposition to anything, you know, getting better for anyone in this country,
and that opposition is powerful, well-funded, well-organized, and structural.
And also, as we saw with the election of Aldani in the first place, it can be defeated.
So we're going to start with the bond market.
Now, many of you may be asking, Bia, what does the bond market have to do with make buses
free. And to do that, we need to talk about funding mechanisms. So most plans in the U.S.
for sort of social democratic policy for how you implement welfare state policies, how you
implement policies that make people's lives better, tend to start from the federal government
and the national level, right? And there are very obvious reasons for this. Unlike the federal
government, city governments don't issue their own currency, which means the modern
monetary theory things that you would normally use to fund welfare programs with at a national
level don't work. The federal government, again, has control of its own debt and money supply.
City governments don't. That means the city governments, if you want to find money to do something,
you have to find that from somewhere. And as wonderful as it would be, if you could simply do that
by just, okay, we raise taxes and the taxes go to the policy that we want to implement.
That's not how the system actually works.
The way the system works, if you want to pay for things at a city level, is the bond market.
David I. Backer has a very good piece about this at the baffler that I deeply recommend
people read. The main thing that's important here for our purposes is that for funding
significant portions of anything that you want to do as mayor, you are legally required to go through
the bond market. And this means that the city is forced to beg for money from Wall Street Investment
banks and then also pay those same banks exorbitant fees and interest. And a significant amount of
money has to go to, as Backer points out, a whole bunch of lawyers and finance people and consultants
and all of these sort of mafia of finance schools
who are standing in between the normal mechanism
of you have money and you pay for things.
And that's assuming, again, that you even have the money
in the first place, which you quite often don't
because cities are very, very often cash-strapped.
As Backer points out, using these bond mechanisms
to pay for programs is legally required.
Now, Backer is mostly focused on the structural constraints
created by servicing debt, which can consume increasing portions of a city's budget
until, you know, there's nothing left. This is sort of what's happened to Detroit to a large
extent. And also, the bank's direct control over the payment mechanism even when the city
government brings in tax money, right? So even if you raise taxes and you bring in money,
because you have to go through the bond market, it means that a bunch of that money is going
to be funneled into servicing debt and paying interest on debt.
But there's also a secondary problem here, which is that in very extreme cases, and I'm
not saying we are immediately facing this, but I want to put this on the table as something
that if you were attempting to run a social democratic program in a city, you do need to be
significantly worried about.
The bank's direct control over payment mechanisms means that the banks, you know, the
people who buy the bonds that you need to use to fund these things. So let's actually take a step
back here and explain what a bond is, right? A bond is basically you selling a piece of paper that is
debt. So you go into the market and you sell a bank a bond and they give you a bunch of money right
now. And at the exploration of the bond, you pay that money back plus interest. This is how you have
to fund things because that is what's legally required and also because cities need a way to get
extremely large amounts of money, but this also means that cities that, you know, banks and
investors can simply not buy your bonds if they don't like what you're trying to do. And at that
point, very little can be done to oppose them. The most dramatic version of this problem came
through the New York City bond crisis in 1975, where New York City had to sell a bunch of bonds.
It was significantly in debt. And there's a very famous scene in, I think it's,
I think it's in hyper-normalization.
You know, there's film of, like, these city government officials
who are sitting in this room waiting for the banks,
like people for the banks to show up to buy the bonds,
and no one shows up.
So suddenly, they don't have any money.
And then President Ford at the time
tells the city to eat shit and die
and refuses to buy any of New York City's bonds,
or refuses to give them any money.
And this leaves the city bankrupt, right?
It gets to a point where they have fired the teachers.
There's no one to collect garbage
because they literally don't have money to pay anyone because no one will buy their bonds.
And eventually this crisis is sort of mitigated, but the problem is that, you know, the task force that was set up to mitigate this, right, to like, you know, get there to be people buying New York City bonds again.
Those people were able to come in and New York City had a functional welfare state, right?
Had a sort of mini social democratic welfare state.
And in order to reopen the government and have schools and garbage collection again in order to get that money,
the city was required to dismantle it.
And, you know, the financial situation of New York is obviously significantly better than it was then, right?
And the odds of having this kind of just full-on macro-scale crisis is not as high as it was then.
But because of the fact that this is the legally mandated way that you have to do these payments
and because, unlike the federal government,
there are constraints on spending that in some ways function
like needing for an exchange currency,
you know, you can't just issue this money.
You have to get it from somewhere.
And because of somewhere, it's usually the banks.
It means that you have to constantly negotiate with the banks
and with capital in order to keep the city's lights on.
And this is a constant threat that they have
sort of, you know, hanging over the head of anyone.
who wants to be governor.
And as Backer points out, you can't even just tax your way out of the problem because
payment structures for government projects work out of the bond system.
So that money just goes to debt payments.
And, you know, one of the other things that Backer points out.
And obviously, the situation in Chicago is different than the situation in New York.
But the Chicago Teachers Union did elect a mayor who was, you know, their guy, right?
The Chicago Teachers Union spent a significant amount of money and resources and effort
getting their guy elected.
And once he came into office, he basically ended up doing the same thing in their negotiations with the teachers union that the previous administrations had done.
And the reason that happened, you know, and the reason that you started to see cuts to school services that were not supposed to happen but did anyways was because the bond market stepped in and said, this is what's necessary in order to do this.
And they have that kind of power.
Now, obviously, Chicago was in a worse financial situation than New York is.
Mom Domney is significantly further left than Brandon Johnson is, but these are real constraints.
And the social democratic solution to this has always been to get money from the federal governments,
but the federal government won't give money out to the things that is legally required to give money out to right now,
because obviously it is run by one Donald Trump.
and obviously Trump in and of himself is a significant problem to doing this, right?
There's always a chance that Trump will see something like me and about Mondani on Fox News
and decide to send the National Guard to New York or something.
And, you know, he will probably continue immigration raids.
He can, you know, just fuck with people's ability to get Medicaid payments,
which is a really significant issue.
there will continue to be lots of creative and terrible things
that the federal government can and will do to this administration
that will have to be fought and can be defeated,
but we'll have to be organized and fought against.
But for our purposes right now,
the big issue here is that you can't get money out of the federal government.
So, okay, where are you getting money out of then?
And the answer is the state government.
Now, do you know what else gets money?
money out of state governments.
Probably not these products and services?
I don't know.
Who knows?
Who knows?
Now, again, we are back.
significant negotiations in order to do things in the city that require the aid of the state-level
government. And part of the problem here is that the New York State Democratic Party is significantly
responsible for the Republicans' control of the House, particularly in the 2022 cycle.
There's a whole long story here about how a bunch of the Democrats wanted to form this sort of
moderate caucus thing where the sort of independent caucus that would caucus with the Republicans
in order to give the Republicans the ability to stop any sort of liberal or left-wing thing
from happening in the state governments and handed a whole bunch of seats over to the Republicans
because of it. But just, you know, setting all of that aside,
the place that you can get money from would be from the governor's office.
Unfortunately, that's a significant problem.
So here's Holtrell's response to Mamdami's plan to make buses free.
Quote, I cannot set forth a plan right now that takes money out of a system that
relies on fares of the buses and the subways, but can we find a path to make it more affordable
for people who need help? Yes, of course we can. So Holtz does not want to raise taxes,
and any proposal that would involve raising taxes probably has to run through New York City Council
and thus through her. I'm going to quote this from Spectrum News about Mondami's proposal to
expand universal child care. Hocel said she's also looking at expanding a universal child care
program statewide. But the total price tag is $15 billion. Child care I already committed to,
she said. I'm committed to this as a mom governor. I get it, but also to do it statewide. It's about
$15 billion, the entire amount of my reserves. Holtrell says she prefers to phase an expansion
first within certain AIDS groups and geographically underserved communities. So, okay, what is
happening here in a macro sense is that Hulchel is trying to slow roll both of these things. She is
outright opposed to making buses
free. She wants to do weird means testing
stuff to it that will make it
very difficult to do. An extremely annoying
bureaucratic layer meant to deny people's services
that you have to do instead of just having
them be free.
The child care thing, she probably
does want to do, but again, because
she is not
a Democratic socialist, because she
is a regular Democrat,
she wants to do it slowly expanded
through a whole bunch of phases
and taking a whole bunch of time,
And this is a pretty significant problem because, you know, at every step of this, not only are you going to have to be negotiating with the banking system, you're going to have to be negotiating with the statewide Democratic Party.
And the statewide Democratic Party is fairly conservative. Hocel's not as conservative, and she can be sort of dragged kicking and screaming into good policies like what happened with congestion pricing.
and if something works and is really popular after you do it,
you will sign on to it,
but it's a significant hurdle that you have to deal with.
I want to move from this into a kind of related problem
that's a more structural constraint on Domi's time in office,
which is that he is now in charge of running a capitalist economy.
When you take a position in a capitalist government,
it is now your job to make the economy run, and that means maintaining economic growth.
But, okay, what does economic growth actually mean in a capitalist economy?
It means that corporations make more money than they did the year before.
And this is a structural problem for all of us,
because we all have interests that are diametrically opposed to corporations
making more money every year,
because their profit comes directly from our exploitation, right?
We have fundamentally opposed interests from the corporations,
from the corporations and the capitalists and the billionaires,
but in order for there to be capitalist economic growth,
those people have to keep making more money every year.
And obviously, you can make arguments
about how redistribution enhances economic growth
by creating a larger consumer base.
And that's obviously true.
We're in an extremely deformed economy right now
where, as I keep saying on this show,
50% of all consumer spending is happening from 5% of the population,
which is just a completely unsustainable way
to run an economy and is also absolutely miserable for every single other person who's in that
bottom 95%. And, you know, there are things that you can do to some extent, right? But at some point,
you are going to have to choose between workers and capital. And if you're the mayor of New York City,
your job is to make capital more money. And this is a structural constraint that every social democratic
government has faced. And it's worth noting that we are not in a world that is surrounded by
social democratic governments. And part of the reason why, again, is that they need the economy
to keep growing and that they're reliance on finance institutions to make money. And the most
grim versions of this tend to happen at a sort of national scale. But if you look at morally in
Jamaica in the 70s, where you have a democratic socialist who gets elected and is running Jamaica,
and then has to implement austerity
because the country runs out of money
and the IMF comes in, right?
These things can get really bleak.
Now, they don't have to, right?
Like, sufficiently well-organized populations
can force the hand of capital
to do things that they don't want to do,
significantly well-organized populations
can, you know, start trying to fundamentally
redistribute economic power,
but it's difficult.
And the difficulty is,
magnified by the third really massive constraint.
And that constraint is the police.
One of the other big structural problems
that comes with running a state
is that it relies on armed men
to enforce the laws.
And those men, especially in the United States,
are at best.
One step removed from straight up neo-Nazis,
a lot of them straight-up are neo-Nazis.
The cops are the most consistently right-wing
group in the entire country.
They are a bunch of racist shitheads
who exist to perpetuate right supremacy and protect capital,
and they're also, again, a fundamental organizational unit of the state, right?
Without the violence of the police, laws are just suggestions.
And if you're going to run a capitalist government,
if you're going to run one in the U.S.,
you have to deal with the fact that your power depends on the loyalty of a bunch of Nazis.
And these people will riot if you attempt to do oversight of them.
They very famously did this in 1992.
They had this whole giant riot, right?
They had the thing that was supposed to be a protest rally where they all went on strike,
and then the cops who were supposed to be policing the protest obviously didn't do anything
because, again, they're also cops.
And in 1992, I did this for a really, really, really minor oversight, attempted oversight, right?
And obviously, they actually didn't win that direct fight,
but they were able to cause enough of a political shitstorm
that they were able to force the last sort of like
vaguely social democratic mayor out of power
and install like Rudy Giuliani,
who is a weird face-meltie dip shit, right?
Who's an incredible tough on crime right-winger.
And obviously, Mamdani has been trying to kind of
trying to do his best to negotiate with the police
and not to overtly threaten them,
but that kind of doesn't matter
because they just hate him.
Like they think that a Muslim socialist is just,
inherently an illegitimate person, and they think that anyone who's even vaguely liberal
is someone who is their enemy and who is their target. And we have seen them take actions
to just directly threaten mayors fairly recently. Right? In 2020, they kidnapped Bill de Blasio's
daughter at a protest and then sort of like paraded her mugshot around and posted it everywhere
and did this whole big show of how they were holding her. To say it was a thinly
veiled threat is a dramatic understatement of how incredibly, incredibly blatant this threat was, right?
They kidnapped the mayor's daughter, Doreen a protest movement, and that was Bill de Blasio, who was not some kind of, like, wild anti-polize radical, right?
And especially now, as sort of fascismism is on the march and with the backing of the U.S. federal government, right, the police form a very significant threat to Mondami's ability to do anything, both on a sort of political level.
They are going to be constantly, you know, putting out giant press releases about how Mamdami is like trying the city into a unlivable hellhole and how they can't do their jobs, etc., etc., and also just in terms.
terms of just directly threatening him and trying to influence his policy, they're going to be
a real problem. And his ability to prevent them from, for example, smashing in the skulls
of pro-Palestine protesters, even if he wants to, was going to be very limited because
the police have become a kind of semi-autonomous fascist force in this country. They have always
been a ticking time bomb on status democracy, and that clock is closing in on
in this sort of moment of ascended fascism.
Now, again, I want to close this by saying
these are not all the challenges that he's going to face,
but, comma, none of this also means
that the things that he wants to do
to make people's lives better are impossible.
Every single one of these problems
are problems that you can defeat by organizing, right?
You can put enough pressure on capital
to prevent them from doing a kind of like capital strike
or a bond strike, right,
to force them to continue.
to fund things, right? With enough public pressure, you can make a whole lot of things happen.
You can make the police, you know, at the very least be acting on a kind of defensive front
to where they're not, you know, rioting and trying to run city politics, but are kind of
forced by mass popular mobilization and pressure to, at the very least, not be openly attacking
the mayor. You can put massive political pressure.
on Kathy Holtrell to do things that are good, which is how we got, how New York got congestion
pricing in the first place, right?
Like that was a result of a massive organizational campaign that went extremely well, and Huchel
tried to sabotage it because she thought it would be unpopular, and eventually it got implemented,
and it's really popular now, and now she's really in favor of it.
So these people can be pushed around, right?
They are not invincible, their victory is not inevitable, they can be defeated, and they can be
forced to accept that, oh, wait, hold on, the extremely sensible policies that we want that
make our lives better are good. And that requires mobilization. But, you know, that's not impossible.
We know how to organize. We've been doing it for ages. And it was, you know, what had to happen to make
all of this possible in the first place. And so instead of demobilizing now and going, oh, our jobs are
done, no, no, no, no, no, our jobs have just begun. But, you know, the better organized we are
and the more we're able to push this,
and the more we're able to push all of these people,
the better our lives will get.
And this election to begin with is a reminder
that another world is possible,
and it could be better than this one.
We just have to build it together.
A decade ago, I was on the trail,
of one of the country's most elusive serial killers,
but it wasn't until 2023 when he was finally caught.
The answers were there, hidden in plain sight.
So why did it take so long to catch him?
I'm Josh Zeman, and this is Monster,
hunting the Long Island serial killer,
the investigation into the most notorious killer in New York
since the son of Sam, available now.
Listen for free on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
wherever you get your podcasts.
What up, y'all?
your boy, Kevin on stage. I want to tell you about my new podcast called Not My Best
Moment, where I talk to artists, athletes, entertainers, creators, friends, people I admire
who had massive success about their massive failures. What did they mess up on? What is their
heartbreak? And what did they learn from it? I got judged horribly. The judges were like,
you're trash. I don't know how you got on the show. Boo. Somebody had tomatoes. I'm kidding.
But if they had tomatoes, they would have thrown the tomatoes. Let's be honest. We've all
had those moments we'd rather forget.
We bumped our head. We made a mistake.
The deal fell through. We're embarrassed.
We failed.
But this podcast is about that and how we made it through.
So when they sat me down, they were kind of like, we got into the small talk and they were
just like, so what do you got? What? What ideas? And I was like, oh, no.
What?
Check out Not My Best Moment with me, Kevin on stage on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
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On an all new episode of iHeartRadios Las Culturistas, Emmy, Golden Globe and Tony Award winner Sarah Paulson spills on red carpet hacks.
We saw these pictures and you're like, what is the story with this?
She gets real about the inspiration behind her roles.
Oh, no, there is no end to how people will behave.
And she puts host Matt Rogers and Bowen-Yag on notice.
I don't think so, honey.
I feel very, very triggered by this.
Open your free IHeart Radio app.
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On this week's episode of the next chapter, I, D.D. Jakes, get to sit down with Oprah Winfrey,
a media mogul philanthropist, and global trailblazer.
My life, although it may look like an anomaly, it has only been possible because I was obedient to the calls.
This episode dies deep into how Oprah turned pain into purpose and what it really means to evolve with everybody.
watching. Every decision I have ever made has come from sitting with the spirit and asking God,
what would you have me do first? Whether you're rebuilding, reimagining, or just trying to hold it
together, this one will speak directly to you. Listen to the next chapter on the I Heart Radio
Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcast episodes drop weekly.
This is It Could Happen here.
I'm Garrison Davis, joined by Robert Evans.
Last week, I released an episode on the ascent of white nationalist live streamer
and Nick Fuentes and his Groyper fans among particularly young Gen Z Republicans.
The episode also tracked the conservative infighting at Heritage Foundation
and Ben Shapiro's Daily Wire in the aftermath of Tucker Carlson's
friendly sit-down interview with Nick Fuentes.
In the episode, I mentioned that I had an extra segment covering the final section of the
interview.
Now, most coverage of this interview, including my episode last week, focused on, like,
the first two-thirds, which ranged from, like, Nick Fuentes' political background, early
beef with Ben Shapiro, and his, like, Nazi-esque anti-Semitic theories of a quote-unquote
organized world jury corrupting America, which he now lightly couches in anti-Israel framing
to profit off of the genocide in Palestine. But the last third of the interview changes course
to discuss the mechanisms of quote-unquote reality distortion, which are ruining young man,
drugs, alcohol, the internet, and most importantly, pornography. After receiving a universal response
demanding the release of the porn cut. I have sat down with Robert here to finally,
finally air what no other news platform is brave enough, brave enough to cover.
Yeah. What new other news platform can legally cover because they have a duty to their
employees to not make them research this stuff. Yeah, or like an actual healthy HR department.
Yeah, we have not finished our classes on what we're not allowed to make people do.
so.
So, that said, to be fair, Garrison couldn't be stopped from researching this.
There was no way of stopping you from doing this.
I have a sick drive.
You would have quit and started working for someone else if we hadn't let you do this.
No, if Sophie told me I wasn't allowed to cover this, I would have quit immediately.
Yeah, you'd be putting this out for wired or somewhat.
So now I am very pleased to present to you probably three.
30 minutes of Nick Fuentes explaining to a performatively confused Tucker Carlson, the concept
of pornography. And I guess if we're going to view, you know, Fuentes and the Groypers as like
a serious legitimate threat that's able to sway the national political discourse, I think
it's also important to cover his weird sexual politics, just as explaining the weird
sexual practices of like, you know, the proud boys is important for understanding their whole deal
as like a neo-fascist street gang.
The kind of closeted gay in-cell
women issues of the Groypers
is actually really important,
especially for Nick.
And let's discuss that.
But thankfully, we get to start off
with the majority of the section,
which is on pornography.
Let's start one of the first clips.
What is porn exactly?
Like, describe how available is porn?
what is it
oh my god
oh man
because he does ask that
like a man
who's legitimately
never heard of pornography
he does
he later says
like obviously
he is familiar
with the rough
concept of porn
uh huh
but maybe not
this sort of
but maybe not
this sort of
internet porn obsession
to which Nick refers
let's let's skip ahead
about a minute
where Nick
closes on his explanation of internet porn specifically.
So something that has almost never talked about is that this is a generation that's totally
sexually dysfunctional, I think, because of pornography.
And some people are able to cope with it.
Some people don't have a problem.
But I think a lot of people, and maybe even a small minority, have a serious problem with
it.
How does it make people sexually dysfunctional?
I think that it's impossible for,
a real woman to compete with the availability and the novelty of pornography.
So that is Nick's kind of ending argument at the tail end of his, like, definition of porn
and how porn is affecting specifically American men. A little bit of his in-cell status is
obviously seeping through there. More of it will become increasingly evident throughout
this interview. But this idea of sexual dysfunction, how porn is ruining men's
ability to get into relationships, is ruining the ability to get into marriages,
lasting marriages.
And he frames this kind of slightly as the fault of men, but also really as the fault of
women, women aren't able to compete with how much porn there is, the different categories
of porn.
How can one woman please a man when a man can go on to the internet and look up, you know,
50 different niche fetishes that not one woman could bring up.
provide. Yeah. And that's, that's part of his argument at this point. Yeah. And that's always like
been the, okay, so you've just, you've never had a relationship. Which Nick is open about.
Yeah. At least Nick claims that, right? Yeah. It's unclear how true a lot of Nick's claims are
about his like, in-cell, volsell, you know, voluntary celibate. Yeah. A type deal. But no,
Nick, Nick does claim that. And the, the sort of pushback Nick will receive later on in the
interview on some of these aspects is actually way stronger than any of the
world jury anti-Semitic stuff from earlier in the interview yeah which Carlson
was make actually kind of like trying to shape Nick Quentes's rhetoric to make him like
appeal to a bigger audience but did not really push back on to the same extent he does
on Nick's like relationship with women but the the sexual dysfunction aspect I
think is is the is the ending argument for for Nick here in terms of what
actually makes porn bad.
He extrapolates on this point
in this next section,
which I'll play now.
Porn is,
you could have a hundred different women
in one sitting,
doing anything,
that whatever niche
or idiosyncratic thing
a person might be into,
it's there.
And so I think that novelty
combined with that availability,
it makes it so that,
you know,
when you think about courting a woman,
juice isn't worth to squeeze.
And so there's also a problem of like erectile dysfunction,
people that can't enjoy regular sex because it does not compare to the intensity,
the novelty, and the availability of porn.
It's hyper-stimulation.
And so I think that's sabotaging a lot of normal sexual relationships.
It seems like it's making a lot of people gay, too.
Yeah, and trans.
You think that's true?
100%.
What is that?
oh my god
what is that
i don't even know where to start there
i mean like it's it's what these people have always believed right that like
that's the that there's got to be an explanation
some kind of causal relation for why people like things that
that they're not allowed to admit to liking in public
and it's got to be the fault of pornography right
or libraries whatever
every time Tucker interjects
the beauty of his of his little like befuddled interjections what is that is that real is that true
it's it's fantastic but but yeah no i mean nick kind of blames the rise in homosexuality and
trans sexuality on this like novelty of pornography and this sexual desensitization
like once regular porn it doesn't do it for people they get pushed to more and more extreme
categories of which trans porn is somehow particularly effective at like influencing and uh you know
manipulating human behavior right this is like the sissy hypno theory that porn can like make
somebody trans yeah very goofy stuff uh specifically for nick considering his curious catboy
background and his alleged leak viewership of trans porn which we might we might discuss later
I'm going to play another clip
kind of on this note, a shorter one.
I think that if you are somebody
that uses pornography multiple times
per day, which many people do.
Actually? Oh, absolutely.
That's a lot of jerking off.
That's a huge problem.
Yeah.
That's a lot of jerking off.
Former Fox News anchor, Tucker Carlson.
That's a lot of jerking off. Yeah.
That's a lot of jerking off. I so badly,
I just wanted to cut some of these clips
out of like out of context and just put
them in my other episode. Tucker only comes once a year, and he can only come by wrapping his
dick inside of two frozen Swanson's meals. He's got to kind of use, like, you know how it's got
like there's little divvets on the back end? He's got to use that to cushion his penis. It's the
only way he can come. It's very like edible thing with his, you know, family business, this,
this sort of like psychosexual drive. Wow. The Swanson of it all? Sure, of course. That makes sense for
Yeah.
That makes sense for Tucker.
Mm-hmm.
But no, Indic says that porn, like, operates kind of, like, drug tolerance levels,
which, like, over time after repetitive use, in order to get high,
the user must seek out stronger drugs or dangerously intense doses,
of which he views trans porn as this, like, dangerous dose.
Yeah, yeah, because I do love, like, the throughline with these people that, like,
both this is like a sickening degeneracy and also is so appealing that people absolutely cannot
help themselves to it like it affects them like heroin it's it's it's it's so inherently
attractive i mean some of that might be their actual proclivities kind of yes i think so
peeking out from under the surface there yeah all of these guys love watching transport all of
these like anti-trans people whether that's alex jones or like nick fuentes like obviously they have
they have an interest in that
and that's what kind of drives them
with their obsession
yeah which is
it's just weird
like I don't know anyone
who talks about any pornography
that way
like you know
everyone's got
whatever it is they're into
like something that they'll be
particularly interested in
but no one describes as like
it's just this kind of thing
no one can resist it
obviously
this sort of like powerful
obsessive nature
in which these types
of right wing freaks
like refer to it as
like actual pervert
will say stuff like, no, no, no, I've been shoving things inside my p-hole for the last 27 years,
and now I can get up to something the width of a mag light. And I know that's crazy. Like, I know
no one else does that. That's just a me thing. Oh, oh, poor Nick. Someone needs to explain
sounding to Tucker Carlson is what I'm, what I'm saying. Like, I, if I, if he interviews me,
I'm going to walk him through sounding. I'm going to, I'm going to put together a PowerPoint with
photos. He's obviously, he's obviously, uh, open, open to this line of discussion.
Are we allowed to have ads on this episode?
Yeah, probably not, but let's throw to him anyway.
All right, we are back.
Nick Fuentes is going to continue, continue to describe pornography towards a slightly confused Tucker Carlson now.
now Nick is able to really speak from a sense of authority.
As someone who claims to have never had sex,
he's able to really speak with authority on this topic,
which I will play this next clip.
And there's something, too, about what it does when you look at it,
when you, because people don't realize
that it is a fundamentally different experience.
People don't realize.
Being involved in intercourse
versus watching other people have intercourse.
And I think that actually does something.
something to you. Tell me, what do you mean?
Sorry, I'm just off there for a second.
People don't realize this.
Amazing observation from alleged virgin in cell, Nick Fuentes.
He's trying to make this point about like body depersonalization or like disassociation
when watching porn. It's like this like out of body experience because you start associating
yourself with people on screen. That's eventually what he starts talking about.
Right.
And but he couches this in saying that like people don't realize that this is what this is, you know, different from actual sex, which is really funny because Nick is proudly proclaims that he's never had sex before. So he is in no possession to argue this point. No. Yeah, that's the other thing. How would you know that it's inherently better than sex? Like, because he's never had. I think he has to assume that because that's the only information he has. But I love his framing of this as like new novel information that no one else has access to. That no one realized.
that watching porn is different from having sex.
Yeah. Tucker's response
is just phenomenal at the end of this.
Because Tucker's like trying
to coax more and more shit out of him.
It's really the only time where he's kind of being a sly
interviewer is at this ending porn section.
It's not the, it's not the
RUFED section. It's not the Daily Wire stuff.
It's not the anti-Semitism stuff.
It's specifically the porn section.
But to explain this like out of body,
theory that Nick that Nick has here. Unfortunately, Nick gets into trying to explain
the Blanchardian theory of trans sexuality towards Tucker Carlson, of which I will only play
a certain segment of, because we don't need to hear that whole thing. But there is a section
of this next clip, which will get into that, as well as take you on kind of a beautiful
journey showcasing Tucker's objection to pornography. I think,
think that, you know, for example, I think Steve Saylor has written about this, that there's
multiple kinds of transsexuals. And he says, a one kind of transsexual is somebody that likes
the idea of seeing themselves as a woman, it's auto gynephilia. Yes. And I think that, you know,
one of the theories for that is you, you watch a man having sex with a woman that isn't you so much,
you kind of achieve an identity with the woman in like a weird sick way. You almost identify
with the woman. And so there's weird things that happen when you're,
watching that and having such strong emotional and sexual experiences.
Interesting, Nick.
That's fascinating.
I've always been, I've sensed for a long time, having had a lot of young male employees
mentioned porn as a problem.
I mean, the big porn companies give visibility to foreign intel services on the back end.
So that means people know what you're looking at.
There's likely video and audio of you watching.
Okay.
All right.
There's so much. I love that Tucker's made objection to pornography. Isn't the stuff that
Nick's talking about at all, but the idea that it poses a security risk because of foreign
Intel services? Yeah, that they're recording everyone masturbating. To blackmail every single
person on the planet. And he couches this and saying that he's, quote, not a huge expert on
the topic. Yeah. Which is really good. But to go back a little bit, the level of projection,
Nick is doing here with this identifying as a woman in the in the porn thing is simply
phenomenal. I mean, especially considering the whole, you know, cat boy scandal, which I
covered on the show like years ago as when I was like a baby, as well as Nick's like alleged
trans porn league, which I guess I'll explain here briefly. This was in 2022. Nick allegedly
was operating a sock puppet Twitter account when he was banned on Twitter. This
this account, shared a clip, scrolling through Nick Fuentes, like, analytics, like video
analytics, like search analytics showing his popularity. And when scrolling through these various
tabs, a little section of a tab that did not get into full view, but you saw the bottom of it,
which looked a lot like a very specific trans femmeboy porn video on porn hub. People found the
video. And after they found the video, you know, this post with these analytics was like taken down.
This account was believed to be operated by Nick Fuentes.
Now, Nick claims that he obviously was not behind this account,
that this was some, like, Groyper fan who was trying to set him up for scandal
by operating an account that appeared to be Nick's account on Twitter,
but actually wasn't.
Robert, I will show you a little bit of this analytics video.
We don't need to see the whole thing, but it's like this.
Okay.
So, various, various tabs.
Look at all these tabs.
This various...
Like...
Quintes, Jake Lloyd, Explore?
What?
Comparing his popularity
towards other,
other, like, commentators.
Oh, I thought he was comparing his popularity
to fucking Jake Lloyd
from the Phantom Menace.
From the Phantom Menace.
You should be beating him, Nick.
But, like, web traffic,
analytics, uh,
Joe Kent, Google Trends.
And then...
Let's see if I can find it.
Right.
Oh, oh, uh, right here at the top.
right here at the top while scrolling through the tabs on the iPhone Safari
there's a little a little porn tab right
so this this turned into a little mini thing with people thinking
that they secretly stumbled across the Knicks porn
porn watching habits of which it would be no surprise
that he'd be watching trans femme boy porn especially again
considering that he operated a catboy Discord channel
on his server but he has staunchly denied this as you know
as a based Catholic cell, obviously.
So both Tucker and Nick
believe that porn is a big factor
affecting the decline of actual sex
and marriage among Gen C.
And it's not just a male problem.
Nick argues that it has become, quote-unquote,
so destigmatized for women to participate in porn as well,
of which she's mostly referring to only fans.
Here's a clip of them discussing only fans.
and it is completely casual, you know, because you could say that maybe 10 years ago,
even at the heyday of internet porn, to be in porn, you've got to be a porn star.
Like, that's your life and that's your career and that's who you are and it's very shameful.
With OnlyFans, it's like having a TikTok.
It's like, here's my link tree, here's my Instagram account, here's my Facebook account,
here's my YouTube, and here's my OnlyFans.
why would any of this be legal?
I think that, well, there's, like you indicated,
maybe there's an intelligence benefit to that.
Maybe there's a political benefit to that.
I think that...
Well, why wouldn't you arrest the people
who run something like that?
They should be.
If you had a Christian government.
Or how about just a government
who cares about its people?
I mean, is Iran a bigger threat or is only fans?
Iran's not turning my daughter to prostitution
that I'm aware of.
Right.
Oh my God. Is Iran a bigger threat or is Onlyfans?
Yes, yes. That's the real geopolitical question.
The wisest minds. No, what a, what a beautiful mind that is.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, even be able to think of the sentence, is Iran a bigger threat than Only fans?
Yeah.
Like, I could never even get myself to a point where I conjured that thought in my own head.
We have to ban pornography because it's the Iran.
of masturbation. It's frankly beautiful. In order to get their minds so, so degraded to even have
this thought, it's so alien. Man, like later Tucker pushes kind of on this point about the need
to arrest people who run Onlyfans, while Nick kind of quietly remarks that it's really the
women or the quote unquote body assets who should be arrested. But Tucker is pretty firm on,
no, it's really like the facilitators, people hosting the website who are enabling this.
But, you know, Nick, Nick would be totally fine if women on the platform also get arrested.
Man, ah, again, the insistence that the, a primary objection, or like a causal, a causal aspect of why is this allowed, it's for, like, intelligence gathering services is simply beautiful.
Do you know what else is beautiful, Robert?
The sponsors of this podcast.
They, they are for putting up with this, yeah.
All right, we're back.
Before this final segment,
we will transcend the discussion of porn
and just talk more about some of Nick's opinions on women.
Oh, good.
And other factors beyond porn for why, you know, marriage isn't happening.
Why aren't people getting married as much any war, of which both Tucker and Nick think porn is a factor, but there's other factors contributing to this crisis, which Nick and Tucker will elucidate.
Let's hear him out.
So what are the other factors that prevent, I'm sorry I called you gay, by the way, but I'm always, I think I'm just too old or something.
I'm like, why is anyone married?
You tell me, why aren't people married?
well i mean honestly it's the women all right okay we solved that problem uh yeah that's it
i think that does it for us that it could happen here they got to the bottom of that pretty quickly
sorry i called you gay by the way so no now it's time for the wise insalcagenic fuentes to
bestow his wisdom pertaining to relationships and marriage and in his eyes the main problem seems
to be that not just women, but specifically, that women are too liberal.
Yeah.
Really breaking new ground there.
Yeah, sure.
That's it.
That's the problem.
Because then they don't like all of the Nick Fuentes fans.
The men are extremely conservative, increasingly.
The women are extremely liberal.
What are they liberal?
On what issues?
Like, what does that mean liberal?
Oh, on, they're very feminist.
Like, actually?
Extremely feminist, yes.
I don't believe that, do they?
I think they do.
Really?
Absolutely.
How could you believe that?
Gender roles are a construct that none of this is inborn?
Like, you'd have to be an idiot to think that.
They like the idea of it.
Tucker's delivery.
I want to study it more.
I feel like they sketched some of this out before they did this, because I feel like they're
both leading each other to get out statements that they want to say.
No, yeah, it's so crafted here.
Like, their back and forth exchange is so, oh, it's so craft.
And every inflection they have, they're, like, giving each other these key points to then extrapolate on.
Yeah.
There's the stuff that's willful, like, the claims that, well, young men are conservative, which is based on, like, a shift towards Trump that's partly reversed over the last year or so.
But that was not the vast majority of Gen Z people, right?
Like, it's, it's young people are willing to, like, try out different things and swing back and forth.
but like it's not it's not the way he's framing it right because that's that's the most convenient
narrative for the right that like all of the young men are pulling towards the right and so the
problem is that women are more progressive right yeah therefore it has to be liberal women yeah right
no it's it's a very it's a very convenient excuse uh to explain actually a complex set of
economic problems which are preventing people from feeling comfortable enough to actually
start a family and you know safe enough economically speaking nick goes on to
complain about, you know, women lying about wanting equality, wanting to work, when really all
they want is a, quote, unquote, tough chad. Quote, the whole political system is based around women,
never being accountable for any of their choices, unquote. This is namely abortion and no false
divorce, which Nick spends a while talking about how that has been a significant contributing factor
towards ruining this country, how women can enter marriages and leave for whatever reason they want,
taking half the money, taking half the stuff,
et cetera, et cetera.
There's another factor that Nick claims
is contributing to this problem.
They have a very high estimation of themselves.
I think people call it hoflation.
Ophlation?
Yes, their sense of their own looks
and sexual value is very inflated.
I just had to put the hoflation clip in there.
The hoflation, yes. Tucker Carlson's saying
hoflation is truly a moment for us.
all. Yeah. Again, I really want to just splice some of these sound bits into my other episode
at random points. Now, again, Tucker actually pushes back in some of like the in-between sections
here, and I'll play some of that pushback later, but, you know, way more than the rest of the
interview. So specifically here, Tucker is actually pushing back on Nick's kind of resigned
blame directed towards women and the quote-unquote legal incentive structures that he says are
contributing to this. And Tucker responds by saying, even if some of these complaints are true,
as believers in the natural patriarchy, isn't it men's role to take responsibility, lead by
example, and to fix this behavior in women through marriage? But I would say that, because I hear
this all the time, people say, well, the men need to step up and be better and lead the women.
Easier said than done. I go, I guess I agree with that. They're at war with the system. And not even just
the system, but also society.
So this is the full, like,
Joker-pilled-in-sale stuff,
is that in order to have an actual
relationship with women, men have to
enter into combat against, quote-unquote,
society. Right.
Like this, this larger,
this larger thing that's influencing women
and is, and is making them, you know,
depraved and liberal. And Nick argues
that even if you find, like, a nice
trad, a Christian girl,
they're going to be on TikTok, they're going to be on
Instagram, and they're going to be, quote-unquote,
talking to other women
and through osmosis they're going to get
influenced by this liberal culture
and say 10, 15, 20 years down the line
people will change and they may not be so Christian
and trad 20 years
into your marriage
because of society.
Huh. Yeah.
I mean, I guess that's the argument
I expected from him.
He'll extrapolate some of his reasoning here.
And I think that women as kind of
the ultimate conformists, the ultimate enforcers
of like social norms,
I think eventually
the pressure from society
kind of gets to them
and a lot of them
will go in a different direction.
Depends what kind of husbands they have.
I mean, if there's real leadership
at home, I don't know a single
happily married woman
who's liberal, not one.
I know a lot of married women.
Here's some of the pushback
that Tucker is doing now.
But yeah, man, this idea of, you know,
women as the ultimate conformists
is the enforcers of social norms,
right? This is like kind of like
the longhouse type stuff.
And Tucker's rebuke of that is that in an actual, you know, marriage with a conservative man, a strong conservative man, all that behavior will get changed because people will fall into like their natural, biological, patriarchal roles. But Nick still doesn't buy it. Like he is, he is, he is an insult at heart. He is no way that Tucker's kind of push back. It's going to, it's going to turn him on this. Like Nick just hates women entirely.
that's his whole motivation is that's due to some sort of like fascist homo erotic like aspect maybe but it's it's
probably even more complicated than that i mean part of the fascist femme boy thing is people who actually
aren't even gay but just hate women so much that they end up being gay because that's like the only
mode of connection they can even or like physical connection they can even like muster themselves to
to like do which i explained in that episode from you know a few years ago when i was a baby but yeah this is
definitely some stuff at play here. And I mean, Nick will always just find new things to complain about
in regards to this sort of stuff, like the quote unquote epidemic of simps. So like maybe the job
is to, you know, make a girl happy and like all this nonsense ends. Yeah, I don't know. I think
that that could be a bottomless pit too because one critique I have of the men is, and you're right about
this, they enable this behavior. Well, that's for sure. It's epidemic of simps who, and especially
Especially with Christians, I've noticed this.
Epidemic of Sips.
Yeah, that's something else.
Marriage has this bottomless pit.
Well, I also love the idea that Tucker's like, well, why aren't men just making women happy?
And, you know, the answer there for Tucker is that people like you are not capable of making other people happy.
But Nick can't even consider that because the idea of women being happy is deeply offensive to him.
Yeah.
No, I mean, Nick says that simp culture, or more specifically,
A backlash to Simp culture is why people like Andrew Tate have gotten so popular,
despite being a quote-unquote Muslim polychemist.
Because Tate is, quote, putting women in their place, unquote.
As opposed to Christian men who are tone policing each other
and are worshipping women and worshipping their wives,
which Tucker pushes back on a bit by saying that the New Testament commands men
to love their wives and that wives respect their husbands.
We got only two more clips left,
but I think they are very revealing.
All right.
As much else needs to be revealed here.
I do think,
I've just noticed this,
that men who stay unmarried for too long
become, like, kind of fragile.
There's something about the give and take.
There's something about living with,
in fact, I think it's the key to life,
someone you don't fully understand,
that broadens you,
that keeps you always thinking
that,
makes you wiser, more patient, more thoughtful, more self-aware, and more flexible.
And those are all good qualities. And the absence of that, like in homosexuality or like men who are
single too long, they get very rigid. Have you ever noticed this? Do you ever notice this?
I like things the way I like them and they just get like, no. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I certainly get what you
mean by that. Yeah, you don't want that. Really? Because that's who you are, Nick. I would say that when you say
you don't fully understand women
to me, I feel like women are very simple
in terms of... Have you ever lived with one?
No, I haven't lived with them, but, I mean...
All right, let's cut it down.
Oh, man. Women are really simple.
Have you ever lived with one? No.
It's really funny. Up until
the assuming all gay people
are the same bit, Tucker's making a good point,
which is that, like, part of what's healthy
about relationships is, like, living
with someone who's not like you, right?
Like that makes us better people
And he's very clearly
Trying to like push Nick's buttons here
Yeah, because he knows
He knows
Because Nick's getting called out
Because yeah, he's this angry
Unmarried guy
He's this like a little
Unhinged freak
Yeah
Oh
And yeah he's like getting
He's absolutely getting called out here
And it's funny that this is the thing
Out of the entire interview
That Tucker really tries to harp on
It's this married
thing. Like, he really wants Nick to get married. That's the kind of the main thing he's really
pushing for by the end of this interview. Yeah, bro, that's going to happen. Have you ever lived
with one? Well, no. No, of course not. It's wild. I mean, later Nick tries to argue that,
you know, it's really the men who are complicated because men have a, quote, deep connection to
math and space, unquote. Sure. Yeah, man. I love my deep connection to math and space. Yeah.
Robert's so good at math and space.
Yeah, it's really my strong suits.
Math and space.
Anyone that knows you.
I would say every man I know is good at math and space.
Versus, you know, women just operate on primal base instinct.
Of course, yes.
Nick says, quote, men are masters of the universe.
Women are the universe, which I think is a quote from someone else.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
God.
Yeah, you're a real master of the universe, Nick.
this will be the final clip
where Tucker will offer
a little bit more pushback towards Nick
on some of his views
about women in marriage
you got a pretty clear look
into Nick's interiority here as well
but anyway but whatever the point
men and women talk past each other
constantly
they don't always know what the other one is saying
and that
frustration actually gives way
to like great beauty over time
I would say
I don't know
I personally find women very frustrated when they are not expressing.
And I just view that as like,
I see the way I look at is like when you look at your favorite TV shows,
Sopranos Breaking Bad,
it's like the wife is the villain.
Because it's like the main character,
if the wife could just get out of the way,
would be running the show.
And that's kind of how I feel like,
I'm Rand,
I agree with her about this.
she said that the wife's role is like hero worship the guy is the hero the guy is supposed to be
the entrepreneur the conquer or whatever and the woman is really supposed to support the man's
goals and be in his world and i've felt that way successful men need is more power worship more
or hero worship more you're so great when you get that at work you don't want that at home you become
an unbearable asshole and you fall prayed to where destroys every successful man which is hubris
like you must take yourself for God.
You need someone who's not interested in what you do at all,
only interested in you.
And that's how you become balanced and wise.
That's how you know your own limits.
That's shockingly good advice from Tucker Carlson.
Like that.
This is so beautiful.
This is so beautiful as me.
When Tucker Carlson is the voice of recent,
it's really, really scary.
It's bleak.
Yeah.
But now, so clearly is next, like,
closet and gay in-cell showing you here.
where, like, while Tucker pains, pains to explain to Nick why people actually get into relationships.
Yeah.
And Nick just can't do it.
He starts talking about the Sopranos and fucking Breaking Bad.
That's like the only framework in which you can understand this, because he's never had a real relationship.
The wife is the villain.
I agree with Ein Rand.
Yeah.
Famously well adjusted in the relationship department.
Ayn Rand, the wife's role is hero worship.
And Tucker's like, oh my God, no, that's horrible.
No, no, that's what ruins people.
That destroys people.
It's fascinating.
No, yeah, this is a truly fascinating exchange.
And it's really telling that this is the thing that Tucker pushes back on, not the
anti-Semitism.
But she, like, kind of tepidly offered Nick advice on how to change his rhetoric to be
more appealing, but did not push back on the substance of it because Tucker is actually
just as anti-Semitic as Nick is.
Yeah.
But no, this is the thing that he decided to do.
And, yeah, like, my initial feeling after watching this whole two-hour and 18-minute
stream is, like, this whole stream or this whole episode felt like Tucker was kind of
trying to be some sort of mentor figured in Nick or saw that Nick might be the future
in some way, like, might be the, whether that's the future of the party or future
of, like, you know, this sort of like commentating class or style, and kind of wanted to offer
a little bit of a guiding light towards someone who I think,
Tucker does see as, you know, having some obvious issues and saying some nasty things,
and wanting to kind of write that course in a way or provide Nick a bit of a fresh start
to restate some of his views on the biggest right-wing platform online, which is Tucker's show
right now. I guess that's kind of all I have on this women in porn section. I guess the last
thing before we close, there is this question, right, with people in the GOP who are scared about
Nick's influence, at least in the commentating classroom, among, like, interns, but specifically
scared of it, one, because of the, you know, anti-Israel stuff, but also if that's going to hurt them
electorally, right? A lot of people couch this and saying, well, you know, these views aren't
popular with the electorate of Republicans are never going to win elections if this
griper thing takes over. And that leaves us, you know, people who are against, against, you know,
the rise of fascism and authoritarianism in kind of a weird spot. Because,
I don't think we can really do anything to encourage, like, the great purification of the GOP
in accelerationist fashion. But we can kind of let it happen. Yeah. We can choose to just let it
happen. Or we can choose to kind of stop it in like the 2017 Antifa, you know, framework of like trying
to prevent this stuff from spreading because it will always lead to bad things. And yeah,
after doing all this research last week and really continuing to this week, too, I mean,
Trump just gave a statement in support of Tucker and saying that he should get the word out about
Nick Fuentes. I've continued to be looking at this stuff and can we even stop it though at this
point, right? Like how much of the Antifa project like even succeeded considering where we are now
politically, right? But no, there certainly is this like internal debate in terms of letting this stuff
happen versus trying to actively oppose this like Groyper takeover of the GOP. Yeah. I mean, I
I don't think there's realistically anything that we can do to influence how popular Nick Fuentes is on the right.
Like, if you just start screaming about how bad and dangerous he is, that's going to convince a lot of people, oh, well, the left hates him.
That must mean, you know, he's our guy.
Yeah.
Likewise, I don't know.
I don't think it's our place.
I think it's our place to make sure people know what Nick actually stands for, that if there's some sort of, like, white,
of his character that they attempt to do
in order to make this more electorally viable
that people are aware of like how
unhinged this guy is.
I don't think the kind of shit Nick is saying here
will do well when exposed
to the body politic as a whole
because it's nuts.
But that said, like, I don't think you can,
you're going to scold your way out of this.
No, no. And I guess part of the education
is making sure people have
a more full understanding of Nick Fuentes's
views on women and his,
and his little conversation on pornography,
I think that actually is important
because all of these guys are weird
little insult freaks.
Yes, and people don't like how weird they are
when they're confronted with it.
No.
Right? Mostly what they're concerned about
is whether or not there are jobs
and shit is more or less expensive.
They don't want some weirdo
telling them that living with women
will make them weaker.
No, even Tucker doesn't like that.
Yeah.
Well, I think that doesn't.
For us today, at It Could Happen Here,
Great.
I hope this episode is something.
Yeah.
I hope it's something, too.
Good night.
Goodbye.
A decade ago.
A decade ago, I was on the trail of one of the country's most elusive serial killers.
But it wasn't until.
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It's your boy, Kevin on stage.
I want to tell you about my new podcast called.
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What did they mess up on?
What is their heartbreak?
And what did they learn from it?
I got judged horribly.
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Boo, somebody had tomatoes.
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Let's be honest.
We've all had those moments we'd rather forget.
We bumped our head.
we made a mistake, the deal fell through,
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But this podcast is about that and how we made it through.
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What ideas?
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What?
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welcome to nakedappen here a podcast telling you to rage against the dying of the light
I am your host bea Wong and many episodes ago significantly more tearfully I talked about how
you know watching the trans voices in media get fired and disappear felt like watching the stars
disappear in the sky and today I am here to say do not go gently into that good night
fuck them rage against the dying of the light and with me to
raging us to die of the light and talk about some absolute bullshit is Alma Ovae
who is a former staffer at Bon Appetit, and we will be getting into why that's now technically
former and the VP of the News Guild of New York.
Alma, welcome to the show.
Hey, Mia, lovely to be here.
I wish it was under better circumstances.
I feel like everyone I talk to, I go, I wish you was under better circumstances, but, you know.
Yeah, circumstances across the board are kind of trash right now.
Yeah, they're really bad.
the circumstances, they do be, they do, they do be shit.
So these specifically bad circumstances are, one, Condé Nass has just obliterated Teen Vogue,
which had been one of the few actually very good progressive outlets, also one of the few
outlets that would publish trans people regularly, and it's just gone now.
And Alma and three of her colleagues were fired for very productive union activity being like,
hey, what the fuck?
And we kind of terms of that.
I can say this, because it's not much.
ass in the line, but...
Yeah, do you want to talk a bit about
what happened? Yeah, totally.
I mean, to
give the company its caveat,
technically Teen Vogue still exists.
It has just been moved under
the broader organization of Vogue.
They've now said that its
coverage areas will include
professional development, as well
as... Well, there were a couple
of other things that they highlighted, but certainly the things
that they did not highlight include,
say, you know, scathing coverage
of the Trump administration or coverage of trans youth and trans health care bans for teenagers,
coverage of like young celebrities of color and so on.
But yeah, anyway, I guess to just go back to the start of the timeline, last Monday, we at the
News Guild and, you know, at the Condé Nast Union, which is the union that represents basically
every worker or every journalist and video maker at Condé Nast, except for those in the New Yorker,
they are in like a separate bargaining unit that we see as like, you know, linked sibling
units, our linked sibling unions. We do most of our organizing together and our contracts are
nearly identical. But anyway, we received, yeah, I know, right? Union siblings. It's adorable.
Yeah. We try to stay close. But anyway, we got word last Monday that about two-thirds of the staff
of Teen Vogue were being laid off, including a friend of mine. And I think former guest on your show,
actually, Lex McManumanneman, who was the politics editor at Teen Vogue, as well as if you have their
culture editors, basically, like, if they were covering, I mean, being a little glib here,
but, like, if they were covering, say, like, trans rights, trans youth, like progressive
culture in nearly any way, shape, or form, they were either laid off or the remaining
workers were folded into the larger organization of Vogue, and I think they're still figuring
out exactly where they fit into that organization and what, like, youth coverage looks like
going forward. So that happened last Monday, which was obviously a massive loss. I sat in on a lot
of the wine garden meetings going over the exit packages for those employees. A lot of like
really sad and tearful meetings that day. We should point out, this is being recorded on Monday
the 10th. Last Monday is Monday, November 3rd. Not sure when this is going to come out, but yeah,
just to make the timeline clear here. Yes, absolutely. November 3rd. Yeah, that was Monday,
November 3rd. Yeah, thank you for the correction. And then two days later at the company,
we got a notification that there was another round of layoffs. This one hitting, I'll leave folks
on the video teams, and then people on the, like, copy and fact-checking section of the company as
well. This was super disruptive. Usually, you know, at a company like Condon asked, while the union
doesn't have, like, explicit protections for this, and in fact, like, the company has the right to
perform layoffs if they need to for business reasons. Usually, when a round of layoffs goes through,
there's, like, a period of peace that comes after that, you know? Like, there will be, you know, a reduction in
force, we'll figure out, okay, how are we going to keep doing our jobs now that we have fewer
staffers? And then if the company needs to, like, reduce the staff again, that will happen
like a few months, maybe a year in the future. Two rounds of layoffs in the same week had
people really, really scared and really stressed out. Because, I mean, for one, there's like just
the sense of like, oh, God, a lot of my coworkers are gone. How am I going to be able to keep doing my
job? We lost at my magazine, Bon Appetit, we lost our social media director, the person who
was basically running our social accounts. We'd gotten notification from the company that
editors were going to be doing their own posting from then on, which is just not how things,
not how things I've ever worked before, not really a thing that they're like, you know, my colleagues
are brilliant. And many of them are brilliant, like, users of social media, but like not really
a part of our jobs historically. So we're all pretty confused how we were supposed to, you know,
actually keep running our magazine. Most of our magazines are already running on pretty reduced
staffs in the first place. Yeah. Yeah. So anyway,
between that and the kind of obvious political connection that one could draw, or at least
like that a lot of our members were afraid of, you know, Dean Vogue being this like pretty
famously radical, or at the very least like pretty famously progressive publication, doing
some like really, really hard-hitting journalism.
Yeah. There's a really clear line you can draw between like all of the Colbert and Jimmy
Kibble, but also like the CBS stuff with Barry Weiss. Like this kind of broader right wing shift
in media, you can draw, I think, a direct line between all of that and like the shutter
or near shuddering of Teen Vogue.
So we did a thing that we basically always do when we're facing an issue like this,
whether it's a big reduction in force or just some decision from the upper levels of the
management that have all of the workers being like, wait, what the fuck did you just do?
We had a rally in the cafeteria to go over some of the questions that we all have for management.
We created a list of questions that we wanted to ask.
And I cannot stress how routine this is for us as a union.
We went from the cafeteria, which is on the 35th floor of the World Trade Center, down to the executive floor, which is directly below it on the 34th floor of the World Trade Center.
And we walked over to the executive offices and said, we have some questions for Stan Duncan, who is the head of the people team at Condonast, basically one of the people in charge of either making these decisions of staffing and reduction and then of enforcing those decisions as well.
We went down to speak with Stan Duncan, ask him some of our questions.
Two other HR employees came out in medicine in the hallway.
We said we'd like to speak to Stan.
We were happy to ask them our questions, but they said they wouldn't be particularly good at answering them or they might not have good answers for us.
But Stan, they said there was in a meeting at the time.
It just so happened that either Stan's meeting ended right then or maybe he heard people talking in the hallway and decided to come check it out.
Or maybe there wasn't a meeting.
But for whatever reason, Stan happened to come out into the hallway at that time.
And so we started trying to ask him our questions.
Some of those questions included, like, was the closing of Teen Vogue inherently political, but also, how are we going to be able to do our jobs going forward?
How are we supposed to keep running these magazines if you're going to keep cutting our jobs?
And then also, how are we supposed to keep doing our jobs if we are constantly living in fear of losing them, you know?
Stan does not answer any of these questions.
Of course.
Yeah, no, naturally.
He tells us we're not allowed to congregate in the hallway.
this is not true. Of course, we...
What? Well, yeah. We, I mean, one, this is our workplace. We, I think, are allowed to have
conversations in the hallway of our workplace. Two, I mean, if he was saying that we weren't
allowed to, say, take part in union activities in the workplace, we have a right under Section
7 of the NLRA that says we can do that. We also have, like, contract provisions that say the
company will not infringe upon our right to organize and demonstrate in the workplace. So that just
wasn't true. And in fact, the union, before everything else happened, already filed a grievance
about denying our Section 7 rights to organize in the workplace. God. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yep, yep.
So anyway, Stan tries to get us to go back to our desks. He walks across the floor, tells us to follow
him. We follow him and keep asking questions. He says that we have to go back and do our jobs.
We say, we will happily do our jobs if you could just answer our questions. He tells us that we
have to go back to our workplaces. We remind him, this is our workplace. And,
And anyway, we end up asking him those questions.
We follow him back and forth along the hallway.
He goes back into his office, closes the door.
We all go back to our desks for the rest of the day.
I finished up my work and I go home.
And then I get notification from the News Guild at 7 that the company has notified them that they are terminating me and three of my colleagues.
Jesus Christ.
No severance.
No ongoing insurance coverage.
My insurance expires at the end of the month.
Oh, my God.
No notice.
investigation effective immediately. So as of last Wednesday, I am no longer an employee of Condé Nast. I'd been
working there for five years. I helped start the Condonast Union in the time since I joined there.
I was one of the most tenured members of my magazine, actually. People don't generally stick around
there for a long time. But at 27 years old, I was a long hauler, Mia. And yeah, in the time since then,
our union has filed a second grievance. There was the first one.
over telling us we couldn't congregate.
There's now a second one over the retaliatory firings of me and my three colleagues.
The company has since put five other people, I believe, on an unpaid leave
in like an attempt to discipline more people who took part in the demonstration.
Yeah.
It's kind of hard to see rhyme or reason in the people that they decided to discipline.
So I was speaking quite a bit during the demonstration,
as was one of the other people who was terminated.
one person asked one question
that was at Jake LaHood at Wired
he asked a question towards the beginning
which was what is your definition of congregate
when they told us we can't congregate in the hallway
which I think is a perfectly valid question
and then one person who was terminated actually
as far as I know didn't speak at all during the demonstration
he was however the vice president of the New Yorker Union
or the vice chair of the New Yorker Union
and you know an organizer that the company was like very well aware of
and then as for the people
who were placed on disciplinary leaves.
I mean, I believe some of them actually spoke significantly more
than some of the people who were terminated during the demonstration.
Yeah.
But we're certainly, like, historically, at the very least,
less visible and less vocal union organizers.
So the trend that we're seeing is that the people who spoke up
were either people who had been historically very active in the union
or in Jake's case, somebody who was doing really, really impressive coverage of the Trump administration
and, like, really, really hard-hitting journalism against, like,
Doge and, like, the general, like, efforts of the right right now to, you know,
I mean, listeners of the first.
this podcast, know everything that's going on there.
Mm-hmm. Yep.
I'm going to say this, and I'm going to adopt preferred language of these professionals,
which is to say that, and this is the preferred language of management,
is that some people are calling this both a return of resegregation
and an obvious anti-union political purge, because it is a budget,
trans people and a bunch of non-white people who have been eliminated from Teen Vogue.
You know,
it's something that you were talking about earlier about drawing the connection between this and
CBS.
And like, yeah, what did Barry Weiss do when she got into CBS?
She fired like every non-white person who worked there, right?
Because their overt political plan is resegregation.
And, you know, in order to do resegregation, you fire all of the people who are non-white.
You get rid of any trans people and you get, I mean, admittedly it's CBS.
It's not like they had like a giant, like, like,
Like, you know, it wasn't like a haven of trans politics in the first place.
I mean, they had some, like, you know, there's some people there who are really cool.
But, like, it wasn't like, you know, it's not, it wasn't like Teen Vogue, which genuinely had
way more trans coverage than like any other outlet.
No, totally.
Like, and I can I emphasize enough, like, the extent to which this is the most normal union
activity in the entire world and to which this is the most protected category in the entire world.
And, you know, obviously a bunch of the bosses and a bunch of like the corporations that are doing
this shit, like, don't think the NLRA should exist and, like, is like a legally valid thing,
but it's still in force right now. And so, well, mostly, but like, like, for, for this,
yeah, still enforce. So there's just unbelievably hideously illegal retaliatory firings that
are illegal in, like, so many different ways. It's baffling. Like, it's like, you need, like,
a second law degree to find every single law that just broke. Totally. I mean, the thing that I
I would point out, too, is like, like you said, this is an extremely common type of union action, like, across the entire labor movement.
Everyone does this.
Everyone marches on the boss.
We also specifically, like, as a union, we've marched on the boss, like, tons of different times.
Yeah.
We've marched on Stan multiple times in the past.
Uh-huh.
There was one demonstration where we all marched on Stan during contract bargaining, actually, last year, where we had significantly more people, and I will say, being much more confrontational.
I remember, like, a large crowd booing him in front of, like, the entire executive floor.
And I would say, and I would say, like, two to three times as many people present watching in a much more, like, loud and activated and energetic forum.
But we've had marches on other executives.
We've had marches on editors in chief in the past.
And, I mean, one of the reasons that, like, when I got the news that I was being terminated, I, like, basically went into shock.
This felt extremely tame compared to past union actions that we've done.
Yeah. And also, no one has ever been disciplined for taking part in any action like this in the past, like, let alone terminated. Like, as far as I know, no one's ever been called into a meeting and said, like, you shouldn't have done that and we're keeping an eye on you. So this is like a massive escalation on the company side in terms of retaliation. And I mean, that's also what we've heard kind of across the board at the News Guild. You know, I've been in close conversations with our president and with other like organizers at the Guild who have said, and this is, you know, our local union that organizes a bunch of different.
publications in New York City and kind of in the surrounding area. This is one of the most egregious
examples of retaliation that just about anybody I've talked to has seen in our union's history.
And there's like pretty, I think valid concern that like if a company like Condane asked is able to
get away with this, like other companies within our union are going to like follow suit and like
take this as their cue, which is both scary but also has been energizing for a lot of people.
We've seen like a lot of folks really excited to like show up and join our fight and get involved
in any way that they can.
Hell yeah.
The other thing
that I would point out
based on what you were saying
is,
so Codinast has a queer
publication,
Them.us,
which I think is
one of the all-time
URLs for a queer
publication
you possibly have.
Very funny.
So between them and Teen Vogue,
you had a lot of the
companies like trans staffers.
They kind of function
as like sister publications.
They like sit next to each other.
They work closely together.
Outside of them,
as far as I know,
I was the only trans,
trans woman implied on editorial
Aconda Nest. And I am certainly
the only trans woman
in our union, including at them,
actually, all of the
trans woman employees there, to my understanding,
are not part of the unit. They are
in management positions, which
yay representation, but
also means that I was
obviously in this very lonely position, but also
this very, like, visible and, like,
clearly very vulnerable position, where
it's, like, incredibly easy to single
somebody like me out. I would also say,
during our contract fight, we had a lot of back and forth between, like, me and company management
about their coverage under the health care plan, namely, they excluded facial feminization
surgery, which meant that, like, if you were an employee of Condi Nast and you wanted facial
feminization surgery, you were either out of luck or had to find a way to raise about $50,000,
based on a lot of estimates that I've seen.
If you're really lucky and good and you're going to go to Thailand, you can maybe get it for $30,000.
Yeah, right.
No, exactly.
which admittedly the Thailand stuff is cool
but like...
No totally, I mean
It's like
All power to you
That's a lot of fucking money
Like
Totally
So much shit
It sucks so badly
Even more if you want to recover
In your own home
And your own bed
Yeah actually
And we weren't able to resolve that
In the contract
I got FFS this year
And to do it
I had to go on like
A New York State Marketplace plan
Oh no
Jesus Christ
I had both plans
Active at the same time
But I had to get like
secondary insurance
that cost $700 a month
in order to get FFS covered.
Yeah, and that still ended up being
significantly cheaper.
Yep, yep, yep, yep.
I mean, and frankly, like,
Kande Nast never covered it.
Yeah.
Who did cover it was, like,
lots of my union colleagues who jumped in
and, like, created a go fund me for me
and, like, helped him raise, like,
all of the money that I needed to get surgery
and very, very thankful for that.
But anyway, point being, like,
the company does not exactly have the best track record
when it comes to, and, like, I feel very qualified
to say this as, like,
the trans woman in the Condé Nast Union.
Yeah.
The company does not exactly have the best track record in terms of, like, how they have treated
us and me specifically around trans issues.
Yeah.
So being like, again, kind of singled out in this way, and then being hit with like
this significant piece of retaliation, it just feels really telling.
And also, I mean, really disappointing, frankly.
Like, I've, I've been at Condé for, or I keep using the present tense.
I'd been at Condé for five years.
And, you know, I liked my job.
I was really good at my job.
I hope that they will reverse course and turn this around.
But anyway, it's disappointing.
It's disappointing that, like, that doesn't really seem to mean anything when the rubber
hits the road.
Yeah, I think there's two ways you can look at it.
One is it's like, oh, yeah, of course the one trans woman in this bargaining unit was
like the VP of the union because, like, yeah, transfims do be organizing.
We do, we do, we do this.
Ain't that the truth?
But then the second thing, and you were talking about this, like, yeah, the magazines
are already understaffed, and they're just destroying them.
You know, and this is something that I can say, which is like,
it's something we saw from Jeff Bezos, right?
When Jeff Bezos sort of, like, took control of the Washington Post and then gradually
sort of purged their staff and, like, you know, has this whole thing now about how, oh,
we're supposed to be pro-free market and pro-individual liberties, which does not include
trans rights, you know, if you look at what happened to the Washington Post's subscriber account,
it's like nothing.
It's like, the paper is dying.
It's effectively just, like, it's not, it's not like an.
actual functional like profit making thing anymore like it's just it's just the sort of propaganda
vanity outlet of a billionaire and that's you know that's probably what's going to happen to CBS
is that it's going to just get sort of annihilized stripped down because these people don't
want a functioning media they don't give a shit if these things actually work because what
what they're trying to do right now is it is accumulate raw accumulate just raw power and
attempt to do raw sort of narrative and media control in order to stay in power and it's not
working because everyone still hates them even though they bought all the newspapers everyone is like
these people suck like but this is something we run into with union stuff all the time which is like yeah
there are a lot of bosses who would rather their own company be non-functional you know their workers
have any voice in it and especially now in this political moment in which oh hey look the fascists
are trying to seize control of the media that becomes increasingly more and more an option of just
fuck it, we'll just, like, get handouts from, like, the tech fascists forever.
And in exchange for that, we'll publish whatever propaganda garbage they want to spit out.
Yeah, I mean, I would also say, like, I'm not sure I get about across the entire company,
although I believe it was one of the better traffic stories that Condon asked all year.
But one of the most, certainly one of the most, like, trafficked teen vogue stories in this past year,
was, like, out of their politics section.
It was the Vivian Wilson, Elon Musk's trans daughter cover story.
really, really good. An amazing piece of journalism and also a piece that went like super viral and I'm sure made a ton of money for the company.
Yeah. And so one would think, you know, looking at like the trends of the past that if that was going to inform anything, like the company would actually say like more politics coverage. Like more progressive coverage out of Teen Vogue.
And like I remember I don't have the exact numbers on me because I'm a hack and a fraud. But if it wasn't a hack and a fraud, I would have the exact numbers from the coverage of like the.
the increase in both revenue generation and in like readership that teen vogue underwent once they
started doing politics stuff onto their first Trump administration. And now you're getting rid of
that for what are clearly business reasons and are clearly very, very clearly not related to the
fact that there is a bunch of a bunch of political pressure from a bunch of fascists to run the government
now. Yeah. I mean, obviously we don't have like perfect insight into like what's going on behind
closed doors at Conday Nast. But I can't say that we had a diversity committee meeting.
with our joint union management diversity committee
a week before all of this went down
and they told us that they were paraphrasing here
but management said that they are actively trying to avoid
the attention and the ire of the Trump administration
which at the time definitely raised some eyebrows
and I think led to the big response last week of like
oh, by actively avoid the attention of the Trump administration
you meant just like get rid of the parts of the company
that are like hostile towards it
and I mean kind of too like
the good business of progressive coverage. I've covered a lot of beats in my time of Bon Appetit,
but there was a period where I was covering, like, the Starbucks worker's United Fight pretty
closely. A lot of articles about that in my back pocket. Those generally did really well.
Actually, one of the first times I faced, like, big right-wing backlash online was covering the,
like, Dylan Mulvaney Bud Light protest, which I'd used as an opportunity to write about the, like,
the Korslight boycotts of, like, the West Coast queer worker movement and, like, kind of the birth of
the like gay labor movement. One of my best trafficked of all time stories. I wrote about the,
like, why the watermelon symbol became like such a big kind of like rally and cry and
like Palestine organizing over the past few years. Again, massive traffic winner for the
company. But every time, you know, we get into these meetings with management or every time we
like hear about the direction that the company is shifting or like coverage is shifting,
it always seems away from those kind of hot button issues that like there's clearly an appetite
for stories about. And instead towards, well, whatever it's towards.
words, you know? Yeah, and you know, and you can look at this, like, there's been a whole bunch
of, there was a story recently about Dr. Oz, like, pivoting his whole thing into doing, like,
a right-wing, like, media grift, and nobody's watching it. Like, the, the average episode of
it could happen here absolutely annihilates, like, just like, like, orders of magnitude better than, like,
no, I think it was Dr. Phil. Yeah, it was Dr. Phil, who just, like, look, they're, like,
the same guy. Like, wow, that's, okay, that's slightly unfair to Dr. Oz. Well, yeah, Dr.
Phil did this, like, did the right wing pivot and, like, nobody's listening to the show.
It's like, no one.
This is, like, one of the most famous people in the United States getting annihilated by, like,
Mia and the tready crew.
Like, it could happen here.
Like, oh, wow.
You know, and, yeah, like, there, there is this, like, massive demand for this stuff
as, like, people increasingly realize that, oh, yeah, wait, hold on.
We're getting every single person, like, in the country is, like,
almost individually getting screwed over by the Trump administration.
he's like individually microtargeting every single part of his base and
pissing them off like there was the whole farmer's soy thing right um and like he's like
he's like he hasn't negotiated soybean sales now but like you know you can look at like
so he was fighting this whole war with his entire farming base and then he immediately turned
around from there and went to fight the cattle ranchers it's like there's so much
appetite for any critique of this because it's so obviously just like malignant and
narcissistically violent and all of these companies that are like you know like
And this has always been the problem with the free press is that like the U.S. does not have a free press.
The U.S. is a capitalist press.
And so, you know, you can just buy them or apply enough political pressure and they will fall in line.
And that's like what they're doing here.
So what you're saying is we need a left-wing Joe Rogan.
I'm going to become the Joker.
No, of course.
I mean, I'll also say like I became an organizer in the News Guild for a lot of reasons, right?
Like, Bon Appetitia was my first job out of college, and I was really involved covering the dining workers organizing at my undergrad school.
So that was, like, definitely my introduction there.
But at the same time, like, when I got into the workplace, I kind of realized that media unions are maybe one of the only things that will keep the media, at least as currently exists alive, until we can come up with, like, some other model that is, like, more sustainable.
because, I mean, like, I look at a company like Conday Nast, and you have this, like, very well-compensated, very, like, large cast of managers and middle managers.
Yep.
And then you have this, like, massive body of people actually producing the magazines, actually making, like, doing the work of the journalism and the culture reporting and the video making and so on and so on.
And, you know, one of those groups is constantly subject to layoffs.
One of those groups is constantly being made to, say, work overtime and maybe being told not to bill for as much overtime as they're being needed to work.
And one of those groups is being extremely well compensated and has seemingly incredible job security.
Yeah.
Like all of the resources are being sucked out by a combination of like these venture capitalists dips shit at the top and then all of these fucking like middle management bureaucrats like who do nothing.
Right.
And the thing that slows that down is like workers having a say in the media, you know, like the people who actually can produce the work like being.
able to say, and these are the circumstances under which the work is going to be produced,
I mean, I think it's no surprise that, like, if you look at a publication, like, Hellgate
or, like, Defector or, like, aftermath in 404 and all of these, like, worker co-ups that are popping
up kind of across the media ecosystem, like, their worker owns, and they have this, like, very
kind of flat, like, payment structure where everybody is making around the same amount, like,
everybody has a say in the way that the workplace functions. And, like, these appear, at least
to me to be some of the most like stable media like organizations that are out there right now
and all that tells me is that like workplace democracy i mean in like the truest sense of the word
you know like workplace democracy as it is earned by like worker organizations unions worker co-ops
whatever they might be is the thing that's going to keep the media afloat like that is the model
that is like sustainable in the long run so i think that's one of the reasons that having like
a strong and active condi-nast union though management probably wouldn't agree um at least
explicitly is like one of the things
that can keep Condi Nast alive for as long as
possible. Like
you know, again, they would probably
loathe to admit this, but like an organization
like the Condi Nast Union can only exist
as long as an organization like Condi Nast
exists. Their fates are kind of tied
to one another. Well,
okay, this is, we're doing the
incredibly esoteric via
Union 3. There's two versions of looking
at this. One, okay, this is the version
where, yeah, the Condi Nast union is structurally
dependent on the existence of Condi Nast, and
And this means that the power of the union is based on its ability to bring people back to work.
However, there is the second one.
You could theoretically have, you could theoretically have the Condé Nast Union without Condé Nast.
Where we have C&Ted it, we've taken it over, we're running it now.
We are just now the union.
And, you know, and the thing I will say about that, and this is always, this has always been the advantage of co-ops is that, like, you are immediately from the ground up, you're going to have a kind of efficiency.
advantage because there is not an entire middle layer.
Like, because obviously, like, there were, like, producers who do a bunch of work like
my boss, Sophie.
Like, if we didn't have Sophie, none of this would work, right?
Yeah.
There's also a bunch of other people who have the same title who do nothing.
And that's not even true.
If they did nothing, it would be better.
They interfere with everything constantly and get paid an extraordinary, large amount of
money to make everything work worse.
And you don't have to have that entire, like, bureaucratic layer, like, layer of middle
management.
And this has always been the massive, just efficient.
advantage that you have when workers running their own shit is that you don't have to have
those people and the coordination that needs to be done okay you have people doing the coordination
you don't have 15 layers of dipshits whose job it is to run around making your job harder
this is this this has been me talking about the organizational advantages of anarchy
it's great no you're fine um I mean what I will say is like it's an interesting thing about
Condé Nast, and, like, a lot of, I think, these media conglomerates is, like, you know,
other than, like, when I am a member of the Condi Nast union, like, I don't really interact
with people who work elsewhere at Condi Nast. Like, yeah. I interact with the people at my
magazine. And, like, the people at Bon Appetit and I, like, generally get along great. I have a
really, really awesome relationship with my manager. I have a lot of admiration for him and what he does.
I think he's, like, the same way that you talk about Sophie. I think he's, like, really great at his job.
I, like, have a good relationship with our editor-in-chief. I have a lot of respect for her as well.
we have a really, really solid system going where we are able to make this food magazine every month
and able to keep this website online and able to make content that we're all like, you know, recipes and stories that we're all really, really proud of.
And then at the same time, we were kind of subject to this like kind of bigger whatever media machine that's like kind of moving around ahead or above us.
And also moving around like, again, just like so little transparency.
Like going back to the action on Wednesday the 5th, we have tried to have meetings with Stan, like the executive.
that we talked to in the hallway, the executive that we marched on, we have tried to have
meetings with him so many times in so many different ways. We have emailed him questions,
not gotten responses. We have invited him to, like, town halls, not gotten responses. We invited him
to meet with our diversity committee, and labor relations got mad at us for C-Cing him on the
email. God. Historically, like, that kind of level of the company has been extremely averse
to interacting with its workers, like answering basic questions. Which is why, like, when you look at,
you know there's a video out there of the interaction like this is why we have to march on our
bosses like this because there's literally no other way to get a single answer out of them because
they kind of i mean they exist on this other floor of the company altogether like so i don't know
it's it's very frustrating it's frustrating to like kind of exist in this like dual system of like
well we have a magazine that we are operating like very effectively on our own yeah and yet there's
this entire thing above it that is making these decisions about how it ought to function and like what
it ought to be doing.
Yeah, and you don't know what it does because they're not there.
Like, they have absolutely no idea how your production actually functions.
I would be surprised if the man who fired me knew what my job was.
Yeah, no, absolutely not.
All the old critiques of, like, the Soviet system were like, oh, there's just this out-of-touch
bureaucrat 300 miles away making production.
decisions blah blah blah blah it's like oh yeah no that's actually just like how your job works
is some suit in like another building is like oh your jobs are all replaceable oh you can you can do
this with like 20% less staff oh i don't even know what you do but we're firing you because
we hate you specifically like it's just oh terrible way for the world to run yeah totally and i mean
we have like these models of like what successful workplaces can look like you know like
places with militant unions that, like, actually
work, like, actually give workers a say
and what their conditions should be and what their conditions are.
Places that have, like, gotten rid of the boss altogether.
And, like, you know, again, those worker co-ops that I listed,
like, there are these functional models
of what the future of media can look like.
And this is the thing that I say all the time is, like,
the reason that I'm excited about being a member of the News Guild,
the reason I got involved in organizing in the first place
is, like, I think there is a future of media.
Like, I think there is a way that, like, you know,
people like you and people like me,
like people who write and tell stories
and, like, are interested in, like,
talking to people and getting their stories out there, I think there are sustainable ways that
we can do that. And I think the people who know how to do the sustainable future of this thing
are the people who are making the product in the first place. Yeah. We are the ones with vision.
Like we are the ones who know how to make something that can continue to exist sustainably,
something that can, like, even under the capitalist framework, like something that can make money,
something that can be profitable. A lot of the great journalists I know are like actually very
interested in and very, very good at making work that like generates quite a bit of revenue.
And I don't think that's a particularly bad thing.
Like, they know how to do this in a way that is sustainable,
in a way that, like, keeps readers excited and engaged and, like,
willing to, like, pitch in their own ways.
The problem is that the people who seem to have that know-how,
the people who make the thing and the people who know how to keep making the thing,
and the people who are making the decisions, like, aren't the same people.
Yeah.
And the way that you fix that divide, like, is by demanding a seat at the table,
is by demanding the people who, like, are making those decisions actually do listen to you,
and then demanding that they actually follow through on the obligation
or the things that they say they're going to do.
One of the really frustrating things about my termination is, like,
they're saying that I was, like, too aggressive
and was harassing the chief people officer.
Again, there's a video, I think, is extremely exonerating.
Also, oh, wow, the trans women's being too aggressive.
Wow.
Wow, never seen that one before.
One day, they're going to develop a second joke.
Wow, any day now.
No, I know.
Actually, one thing,
at some, like, Judd on the internet who was, like, trying to make fun of me, said I was wearing a wig.
I would like to state for the record, I don't wear a wig. This is my hair. I grew it myself.
It took a while. Thank you. I agree. Although, one of my friends told me that I had to have turf fangs the other day, which I really, actually, it was the day that I got fired, come to think of it.
It was before they knew, to be fair, but.
No, I know.
Sorry, what was I saying before that?
The last time I got owned that hard was my mom called me a talking head.
So, you know, it happens.
Sometimes you get absolutely obliterated.
Hey, I love that band.
But if the company actually believed that I was, you know, being too aggressive or, like, committing,
I think the words that they used are, like, gross misconduct.
Like, I know.
We have just caused protections in our contract that includes.
like an explicit procedure that you're supposed to go through for gross misconduct.
Like if the company was following the contract, if they felt the obligation to do so,
what should have happened is they shouldn't have let me finish the rest of my workday.
Instead, I should have been escorted out of the building by security.
I should have been placed on a leave.
There should have been an investigation with like time for me and the union to comment.
And then a decision should have came out.
And the entire time that that should have been happening, I should have been paid.
And like, if that sounds greedy, okay, the company agreed to it.
Like, they didn't have to sign the contract, but they did.
But this is another, like, concerning trend that we're seeing right now with, like, you know, the gutted NLRB and, like, the kind of, you know, shirking of NLRA, like, responsibilities from companies.
It's, like, companies are, like, straight up gaslighting workers about things that are in the contracts that they agreed to.
They are, like, pointing to the contract and saying that it says things that it doesn't say, or that it doesn't say things that are, like, right there for you and clear English right before your eyes.
actually another time that we tried to talk to Stan this year was, so we are based out of New York
predominantly. We have remote workers across the country, although we were told just about
everybody at the company to start coming into the New York offices four days a week. There's a
section of our contract that says that under a declared state of emergency, workers can stay
home. Well, this summer in New York, listeners may remember, we had a really massive, like,
terrible heat wave, like temperatures up in the hundreds every day, like going into the subway
stations. And that week, I remember feeling like I was baking. During the declared state of emergency,
which, again, the contract says workers do not have to come into the office. The company said,
we don't care, you have to come into the office. Paraphrasing, those aren't their exact words,
but they're not too far off. And again, we said, okay, but the contract says under a declared
state of emergency, we don't have to come into the office. And they said, you have to come into the office,
four days a week, no exceptions. And it is maddening. I mean, you know, that's life-threatening. Like,
Oh, I mean, absolutely. And I will say, like, you know, I've been at the company five years. That makes me a bit of a long hauler. Like, we have people who have been at the company for like 15, 20 years. Like there are people who are like near retirement age who standing on a subway platform, again, it's New York City. People aren't really in air-conditioned cars driving to work. Like, there are people for whom, like, at all ages, standing on a subway platform in that kind of heat is like a really life-threatening and like really dangerous thing to demand people do.
Yeah. Which is like one of the things that we were thinking about when we like fought for that content.
contract language. And, like, one of the things that we were thinking about when we were, like, nearly ready, like, in fact, that we were ready to go on strike and, like, disrupt the Met Gala in May of 2024, like, that is one of the things that we were thinking about when we drafted that. And one of the things we were really excited that the company agreed to give us when we won our contract. And so for them to immediately just say, oh, just kidding. Well, oh, well, now if we file a grievance and might take, like, months to rectify. Well, just kidding. Those rights that we gave you, they don't exist anymore. Sorry. And again, it is like clear.
easy to understand language, that they are somehow willing to just say, like, the contract doesn't
say what it says. It's interesting because, I mean, you know, there's, like, on the one hand,
like, companies have always, like, not followed contracts. It's always been like, okay, if you want
your contract to do what it says it does, you have to force them to do it. But on the other hand,
like, the thing that it reminds me of is, like, one of the things happened with the Trump
administration when I've been talking about them pissing off their base is there's been
a bunch of unions that they've just unilaterally been, this has said, this is national security.
We don't recognize your contract anymore. So, for example, like, the, the funny version,
of is they did this to the prison guard union,
which is hilarious.
It's like, yeah, I don't know.
You guys shat in your own bed,
and now you have to lie in it.
Like, I don't know what to tell you.
But like, yeah, but like, you know,
the national government has been doing this
to a bunch of unions as they've just been going.
Totally.
Oh, yeah, no, we don't have to follow this contract anymore
because it's national security.
And that's the future that all of these people want
and that they're like, you know,
this is part of what they're fighting for.
This is part of that fight
is that they want to fight where union contracts don't exist
and they can just do whatever they want to anyone.
I mean, there's also, like, a clear line you can draw from, say, like, the Reagan era and the, like, air traffic controller union strike break. And then, like, the way that from, like, the federal government unions and, like, the way that the federal government treats its unions, that, like, basically the rest of the American labor movement and rather the management side responses to the American labor movement generally flow.
Yeah. Yeah. Is there anything else that you want to make sure that people know?
Well, I mean, in the coming days and weeks, the union is planning a lot to fight.
back against the company.
That said, one of the things that we know most about media organizations generally
is that they are very concerned about public pressure and they are very concerned about public
image.
This is like a PR-obsessed industry for better and for worse.
So we are hoping that, like, readers and, you know, fans and followers will keep the pressure
up against Conday Nest to show, like, employers like them that, like, we will not stand for
this.
we have an action network petition up right now that we're going to keep collecting signatures for
that we hope to deliver to management soon depending on when this comes out i mean we'll be collecting
signatures regardless um and that is also one of the best ways signing on to that we'll get you
updates for other ways that you can you know support us from the outside but otherwise i mean we've got
a lot of fighting to do we've got a lot of organizing to do i certainly don't think my days at condaynaster
are over. I expect that, like, however long it takes for the lot of shakeout, like,
I hope to be reinstated, as do the other, like, three terminated employees. I also am certain
that, like, we will be able to win justice for ourselves and the other people who were, like,
illegally retaliatorily disciplined following the action. And I also think that this is nowhere
near the last action that Condi Nast Upper Management should expect. If anything, like,
this is just showing us that if we want our contract to be enforced, if we want,
the rights that they said that they would give us,
we are going to have to keep holding them to account,
and we are going to have to keep fighting for them.
Trying to figure out whether or not I can get away with saying,
you have sewn the wind,
and now you'll reap the whirlwind.
Oh,
you have sewn the bon appetit, and now you'll get the bon appetit,
now you'll get teen votes, too.
you have
sewn the bond
and now you'll get
the appetite
that doesn't mean
anything
that's not anything
you know
look
it's a struggling
time for the
whole industry
yeah
and if people
want to find you
do you want to be found
A
and B
if people want to find
you where can they find
your work
yeah totally
I plan to
keep writing
and doing journalism
for
however long
I can
allow to keep
doing that
So I'm on basically every website as at Goodbye Alma, including the evil ones, sadly.
I also, I co-edit a literary magazine with my friend Joyce.
That's called Picnic Magazine.
It's very cool.
It's all work by trans contributors.
We are predominantly a print-first publication.
You can find us at PicnicMag on Instagram.
We're also on Blue Sky.
I should have prepared our at, but I'm sure I can send that to you afterwards.
Yeah, we'll put it in that.
put it in the description.
And yeah, we are available in a few bookstores in big cities across the country.
We also have a you can download our PDF and a pay what you want kind of way.
We have a second issue coming soon, although it turns out making a magazine with just two trans women and it's really difficult.
So, yeah, check that out.
It's all fiction, criticism, and poetry by trans contributors.
And yeah, follow me at Goodbye Alma online.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And if you want actual news that's fit to print, you're going to have to fight for it.
Amen to that, sister.
A decade ago, I was on the trail of one of the country's most elusive serial killers.
But it wasn't until 2023 when he was finally caught.
The answers were there, hidden in plain sight.
So why did it take so long to catch him?
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On an all-new episode of IHeart Radio's Las Culturistas,
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We saw these pictures and you're like, what is the story with this?
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What up, y'all?
It's your boy, Kevin on stage.
I want to tell you about my new podcast called Not My Best Moment,
where I talk to artists, athletes, entertainers, creators, friends,
people I admire who had massive success about their music.
massive failures. What did they mess up on? What is their heartbreak? And what did they learn from
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So when they sat me down, they were kind of like, we got into the small talk, and they were
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What? What ideas?
And I was like, oh, no.
What?
Check out Not My Best Moment with me, Kevin on stage, on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcast,
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On this week's episode of the next chapter, I, D.D. Jakes get to sit down with Oprah
Winfrey, a media mogul, philanthropist, and global.
trailblazer. My life, although it may look like an anomaly, it has only been possible because I was
obedient to the calls. This episode dies deep into how Oprah turned pain into purpose and what it
really means to evolve with everybody watching. Every decision I have ever made has come
from sitting with the spirit and asking God, what would you have me do first?
Whether you're rebuilding, reimagining, or just trying to hold it together, this one will speak
directly to you. Listen to the next chapter on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcast, episodes drop weekly.
Hello, everyone. My name is Donna El-Kurd, and this is It Could Happen Here. I'm a professor and researcher
of Arab and Palestinian politics
and a senior non-resident fellow
at the Arab Center, Washington.
Today we're joined by Shedin Seikadi,
a professor of history
at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Her book, Men of Capital,
scarcity, and economy in Mandate Palestine,
explores economy, territory,
the home, the body,
and she's also editor-in-chief
of the Journal of Palestine Studies.
Today, I wanted to invite Shadine on
to discuss the importance of
Palestinian knowledge production and Palestinian spaces for writing, researching, analyzing, et
cetera. So yeah, Shadin, thank you so much for coming on. Thank you for having me.
So let's maybe start with a very basic question. What is the Journal of Palestine Studies?
Could you give us kind of an overview? Sure. So the Journal of Palestine Studies is the flagship
Journal of
Palestinian Studies in the English
language. It was
established in 1971.
So that makes it
54 years old.
First, it was part of
the then-Berut-based
and still Beirut-based Institute
for Palestine Studies.
And Kuwait University, which
sponsored what was
understood at the time as an
international forum to
discuss all aspects of the
Palestine question and the Arab Zionist conflict. And really, the people who established it were
looking for shaping a space that could discuss these matters freely. And the story of the founders
is a really interesting one because they were people like Hisham Sharabi, Walid Khalidi,
Burhan Dushani, Fuad Zarouf, and Konstantin Zerak, who actually was the person who coined,
the way that we name the Nekba in his book, Manana Nekba that he wrote in 1948, in which he
coined this term, the catastrophe, to think about 1948, which would, you know, be our ongoing
condition. And I think the way to think about these people in their, in the way that they
began the journal, is to think about them as really confronting a landscape of erasure,
denial and urgency and occupying this kind of steady incessant pain of the original
inception of the Nekba. You know, if you think about it in 1971, it was not that long before
a decade and a half. Yeah, right. And I think what's important about, you know, in the last
couple of years, people have been kind of making demands about Palestinian studies as part of, you know,
some of the student movements and the staff and faculty movements.
And I think it's really important for people to know that this comes from a much longer
tradition of the production of knowledge as a real insistence on existence.
Absolutely.
Palestinians have been producing knowledge about their state of affairs, you know,
just like today academics in Gaza are producing knowledge, right?
And I'm always, like, struck by how just ahead of its time, you know, the Journal of Palestine
studies is like a lot of our understanding of the conflict that are now finally starting to
seep into the mainstream were first discussed in these pages. Some of the research findings about
the history were first articulated in these pages. And so that kind of knowledge production is just,
it is a form of resistance to erasure. Absolutely. And just, you know,
some of those would be, for example,
Plendalit, which was the, you know,
the plan, which would lead to the destruction of 450 to 537 Palestinian villages.
And this plan would come to be recognized through the work of Benny Morris as an Israeli historian who had access to Israeli documents.
But it's actually was Walid Khalidi, who had been.
been evidencing and showing the empirical foundations of Plan Dalit, and it was in the Journal of
Palestine studies that he published those findings. Right. In that case, I think that, again,
for people who are really engaging the movement for Free Palestine and Free Palestinians,
we really have to be approaching the political economy of who gets to speak. Right. And whose knowledge
production is uplifted as legitimate and worthy. And I think you see a lot of this kind of centering
of Israeli voices. And I think we really have to, in this moment, it's urgent to center Palestinian
knowledge production. Yeah, there's just so many ways that we witness this all the time,
that it's not something worthy of discussion unless an Israeli voice says it. And there's an
inherent suspicion about the Palestinian scholar, the Palestinian analyst, the Palestinian
knowledge producer of some kind. Now, of course, the last two years have been a true
upheaval, the genocide in Gaza, a tragedy that we, honestly, we haven't really absorbed
and possibly can't. And we've seen in the last two years a concerted effort to erase Palestinians
further from the American Academy, but from also like scholarship, generally speaking. But before I get
into that, I wonder if you could kind of give your impression of what did doing Palestinian studies
look like before October 7th? How was it easy? Was it acceptable? I mean, I know the answers,
but I'd like you to say them. Though I think one of the things that's been interesting to observe,
And I would date this as happening around COVID when our colleagues in various disciplines
started confronting the reality of their archives closing.
So I'm a historian.
So I speak from that place.
You know, people who study Europe, people who study the United States, kind of confronting
the reality that they might not access archives that they're accustomed to accessing.
And in a similar way,
facing the kind of targeting and surveillance,
the bipartisan targeting and surveillance of academic knowledge production
and trying to explain to people,
this is what we've existed under all along.
Now, I think there are similarities across communities of knowledge production.
So I think people who work in black studies,
who work in indigenous studies, who work in queer studies,
gender and sexuality, have also been under the duress of surveillance and targeting.
I think for those of us who have been doing Palestinian studies, what does it mean?
Especially if you're a Palestinian doing it, but whoever you are, it means you have to show up
10 times more ready than anybody else. It means you have to conduct yourself as if you are
always being recorded. Right. It means that every single word that you,
you say you should be able to stand up for in a court of law. And all of those kinds of restrictions
actually, you know, you give us lemons, we're going to make lemonade because those restrictions
have imposed on us a kind of rigor that is the least that we can do.
It also means, I mean, I think for a lot of us, yourself included, right?
I was just, somebody was interviewing me yesterday about, oh, have you faced harassment or
censorship or something? And I think, at least in my case, I'm constantly, you know,
experiencing these things and just kind of swallowing it. Right. Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah. Just getting along with the business of the every day. So, you know, there was this
moment back in 2015, 2016, where for whatever reason, every couple of months, one of the bots of one of
these surveillance websites would start highlighting me and insulting me on Twitter, you know,
liable calling me names, going after how I look, like really vulgar, misgendering me, that kind of thing.
And I'd come out of my lecture, you know, and, you know, I teach big classes.
And I'd come out of a big, you know, 250-person lecture, which requires so much focus and
energy and being present and, you know, that adrenaline rush.
And I'd look at my phone and I'd have 50 notifications and it would just be one insult after
another.
And that's just part of the job.
Yeah.
And that's just how it's been, right?
Like, you know, from the beginning at least of my graduate career, and I started grad school, you know, September 11 happened when I was in grad school and I was in New York when it happened. And, you know, we've been under surveillance. We've been named. We've been watched as part of what we do, as you said. And in fact, I got my master's at the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies. And they wrote a book back in the 80s.
about the surveillance, and I think it's called They Dare to Speak.
Oh, right, right, yeah.
These early accounts of the concerted attempt to silence us.
And so what I like to remind people is at this moment, you know, you said, oh, they're trying to erase Palestinian scholars.
I mean, at least they're trying to erase the voices who are putting forward a critical take on Israeli settler colonialism and genocide.
And I think what I like to remind people is that there is way more of us now than there's ever been before.
Yeah, good point.
Ten years ago, people like you and me wouldn't have jobs in the academy.
It may be in a couple of years we won't have jobs, but I don't know.
Like, I'm not, I don't want to sit on our laurels and think, oh, okay, we arrived.
In any case, the whole concept of arrival and career arrival at this moment,
has completely changed for me.
I don't know how it is for you,
but the effect of the genocide
has made it so that
the bankruptcy of the institutions
we work for,
the rapid ways
in which they are engaging with obedience.
And authoritarianism, yep.
Yeah.
It's like what we've worked for
our whole careers.
It's like,
I don't think this makes sense,
actually, do you know?
Right.
So I would say it's been like that all along.
People even saying to you things like, oh, what do you mean you study Palestine?
You know, like, what is that?
Yeah.
So, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, I'm in a different discipline.
But certainly it was, I remember as a student, hungry for information.
I mean, it was rare to find something about the Middle East to be taught, let alone Palestine.
The level to which they delegitimized Arab and Palestinian sources are.
or questions of importance to Palestinians and Arabs,
normatively speaking, politically speaking,
also theoretically speaking.
I mean, I can tell you so many stories.
Like, every person who has ever wanted to study Palestine,
especially, as you said, if you are Palestinian,
is discouraged from it.
And it's told not to.
It's told this doesn't fit.
It's told, you know, I'm in political science.
The theories don't account for Palestine.
It's just outside of space and time and theory.
And you can't account for it.
You can't discuss it.
and the harassment, the harassment campaigns all of us have been facing.
I mean, it takes such a mental and emotional toll.
And yet we produce, and yet we get tenure, and yet we teach our classes, and we're excellent
in our teaching, and our students love us and want to learn.
But, you know, as you said, like, it really has exposed the degree to which these universities
because they have been, well, one, like, we are in America, but also because they have been
so divorced from their actual missions, like how meaningless the space this has now become.
But that's like on the harassment and like kind of these kinds of obstacle side.
I also think like people don't recognize like the resources that are needed to teach and
study and research Palestine that other people in the academy, other knowledge producers get
very easily.
And it's, there is so little for people who study Palestine.
And of course, that impacts what kind of academics are able to do this and how many people
were even missing from this discussion, right?
I agree with you.
That has been the condition before October 7th.
I think now after October 7th, that after they have attempted to use Palestine as kind of a
cudgel to attack the higher, you know, higher education generally.
Like now people are recognizing it maybe more, but that has always definitely been the case.
Oh, also, I just wanted to remind listeners and, and, and, and, and.
bring it up. Like, I remember Barry Weiss, who is now the head of CBS. I mean, she made her
claim to fame attacking Arab and Palestinian professors in Colombia as an undergrad.
Yeah. And that's seen as totally valid. Yeah. No, I mean, I think, you know, Palestine is cultural
and also, you know, I've been saying this for a while, Palestine is paradigm, right? You know,
if you look at the Memdanian, I think it reveals also kind of what Palestine also stands for,
which is the way that both the Democratic and the Republican Party have really no link to the popular
realities on the ground. Right. And that in effect, you know, part of the Trump base was really
responding to this disparity, right?
This lack of investment in the political system.
And I think, you know, that for me was the, I don't have hope in electoral politics
and, you know, I don't want to be cynical or anything.
But I think what the Mimdenny win shows us is that people are disgruntled.
And they're sick of the kind of extractive, billionaire.
class doing what they want to do at the expense of the rest of us. And I think the media is
really complicit in all of this. Absolutely complicit in the genocide. It's been absolutely
complicit since the war on Iraq, since the second war on Iraq, in rendering news as
entertainment. You know? And it's like you could see the freak out that people
had, the media had about Memdenny.
Right.
Across the board.
It wasn't just the Fox News.
No, New York Times, everybody.
Yeah.
And all of the, you know, television media too.
So it's just, I think it's, I think there's also a link to higher education in that way,
because I think there has been an investment in making people stupid.
Right.
Yes.
That's what I was going to say.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
I mean, that's exactly what I was going to say is,
the Palestinian issue and Palestine studies and research and knowledge production,
the fact that there exists the few Palestinians in higher education has been used to attack higher
education, but it's not really about Palestine.
I mean, it is a little bit about Palestine.
Of course, these people are anti-Palestinian, but it's about preventing social mobility.
So you're saying, like, there's all this disgruntlement in the public space.
Our students are disgruntled.
They want to learn.
They've been promised something with us.
college education. And, you know, even the slight bit of social mobility that has existed as a
result of higher education is too much for the Trump administration. Yeah. It's too much for this right
wing. So Palestine is a class issue. Absolutely. No, it absolutely is, you know, as are all of the
kind of struggles we stand in solidarity with, you know, it's like, really, it is intersectional.
And we didn't need Trump to teach us that. But that's the lesson that.
keeps being delivered time and again.
And one of the things that's really struck me,
and this has been the case for the last 10 years, 11 years, long before Trump.
And I think one of the challenges we face today is not to over-determine the Trump administration
as the site of all of the catastrophes that we're in today.
And one of the things I've noted for the last 14 years is,
I don't have to teach students that history isn't about things always getting better.
that's not a lesson they need to know.
They understand that teleology and the fallacy of advancement is a lie.
They understand that because they live it.
As you say, you know, they're in debt, especially those of us who teach at public universities.
You know, most of our students are indebted.
A lot of them have two or three jobs.
They are housing insecure.
They're food insecure.
They don't have a clear vision of the future.
And if they protest genocide, they're labeled anti-Semitic, their universities crack down on them, they're doxed.
I mean, it's so outrageous, obviously, I don't need to tell you.
Their identification with Palestine is also about their own experiences with Greek-Russian.
Of course.
So I think that's the, that really is the momentum, you know, that we're witnessing is that kind of identification.
Yeah, absolutely.
I think it's important for listeners to know some of the contours of what has happened after October 7th.
And like you said, it's not a Trump thing. It started under Biden about how Palestine has been used in the academy.
I mean, as I said earlier, I have done an episode on this. So I will link that.
But also, you know, there is now evidence and data around how.
this issue has been weaponized. So the AAUP, the American Association of University Professors,
alongside the Middle East Studies Association, just put out a report on this exact question about how
Title VI investigations. So investigations of alleged discrimination, specifically about
anti-Semitism and nothing else. First of all, there's been a huge uptick in them and have been
used to target these universities. The vast majority of these cases has to do with faculty
extramural speech. So like these faculty members having an opinion,
about genocide outside the classroom. I mean, honestly, I always remember, I think Edward Said said, like, being a Palestinian in the academy is like being an outlaw. That's like how it feels. That's how it feels. Yeah, it's fugitive labor, for sure. Yeah. Definitely. And I think one of the findings has been also, I don't know if it's 95% of the cases have been shown to be fraudulent, yeah. To be totally fraudulent. So, yeah, it's a real policing of speech.
It's a real kind of weaponization of the charge of anti-Semitism.
And honestly, sort of one of the things I think that really happens, too,
is that students don't get the tools to actually recognize and understand actually existing anti-Semitism.
Right.
As it is being rehearsed in like these show trials that we saw in Congress and these,
in the rhetoric of many of the, you know,
know, people affiliated with the administration in the kinds of alliances that even the
Israeli state, right, has made with various right-wing anti-Semitic states. So it's like,
I think one of the things that it's kind of like watching a train wreck, just hitting one train
after another and just being like, what is this absurdity? You know, I myself was a
of being anti-Semitic for having a history of anti-Semitism.
So what surprises me is the way that people are allowing and facilitating this to happen,
you know, and the way that they're not able to recognize how high the stakes are,
what it means to be Palestinian in this moment, you know,
when you've been sitting watching for two years, your people being shredded and your
facing the reality of what the stakes are in this moment, which is the annihilation of
Palestine and the annihilation of Palestinians, your threshold for shock becomes very high.
Yeah.
And so, I mean, I'm sure it's the same for you.
I don't know if, like, what, it's like a constant trauma response, you know?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
They're, my emotional reactions are shut down.
and I'm in a state of being in the present, okay, we got through today, hopefully we'll get through
tomorrow. I don't, I kind of am prepared for the worst at all times. And, you know, it's a condition
of vigilance that I think people, when they continue to feed this kind of right-wing agenda of
making people stupid and eroding even the possibility of higher education, it's the kind of
condition that will be much more general, you know? Yeah. And all these ice rates at the same time,
you know, it's, I just saw, I haven't been able to listen to it, but a scholar who powerfully is
talking about the Mexico-Palestine border. Hmm. And the, and the links between ICE and the
IDF and the ways to think about these two things together and please share that with me I
haven't seen it I mean yeah as you said when we take away Palestine from the academy when we use
Palestine to attack the academy as imperfect as the academy is it is this larger attempt to take away
people's analytical tools and frameworks to understanding their reality to understanding how
the reality intersects with these other things because they don't want you to be able to solve
it. They don't want you to be able to mobilize. And then, of course, there's this, as I said,
this class dimension of wanting to keep people in their place. There are too many black and brown
people in the academy now. We can't have that kind of social mobility. I just want to emphasize
for the listeners why it's so important for Palestine to be researched and studied and things
like that is self-evident. I don't need to explain it. But why is it so important that Palestinians
are the ones who do that.
I mean, again, it feels self-evident, but I'll say it.
Like, Palestinians have agency,
and they are full human beings,
and they know best what questions are relevant,
and they have a unique perspective
on the issue of Palestine, as well as other issues.
And so not only are you engaging in the ratio of Palestinians
when you don't amplify that kind of knowledge production,
but you are making scholarship poorer
you are limiting what you know about this issue.
Yeah.
So what do you think, you know, kind of broadly speaking, students, scholars, sympathizers,
what do you think they should do in this moment?
I want to just go back to the point about why is it important to have?
Sure.
Palestinian voices, because when we say that, we're not doing it in an identitarian way, right?
Of course, yeah.
Anybody who wants to study Palestine should study Palestine.
In doing so, you should be centering the lessons that Palestinians have offered us.
First and foremost in this moment, the Palestinians of the Gaza Strip.
And in my own practice at the Journal of Palestine Studies, what I've tried to do in each of the editor's notes is really lift up all of the testimonies that we've received from Palestinians in Gaza, written and social media and all of these.
but also lift up the international voices of Palestinians like yourself
and the many, many, many people who are writing
and giving us tools to understand and analyze.
And the reason that's important is because the main problem that we face,
I believe, is the way that certain people are more susceptible
to being excluded from the category of the human.
Once you exclude people from the category of the human,
it's much easier to kill them and make them expendable.
And I think our work really in centering Palestinian voices rejects that logic, right?
Rejects the logic of are we human or not?
Are we going to evidence our humanity or not?
No way to tell our stories.
And I think that telling of the story changes the angle of vision.
If you're looking at what's happening in the Gaza Strip from the perspective
of people who are living it, you will see different things
than if you're looking at it from, you know, a drone
or, you know, a geopolitical lens.
So that's one thing.
I think another thing that's really important is, you know,
I mean, Mahmoud Darwish said this,
actually in an interview in Journal of Palestine Studies,
he said, you know, the Palestinians are talked about
because they're facing Israeli Jews,
because the Jewish question is the question of Europe.
Oh, that's right, yeah.
And I find that one of the things that continues to be an issue until now
is that what scholars and thinkers and analysts are adjudicating
is the question of Europe.
And the question of the sustainability of European values
and European notions and all of these things.
And I'm not interested in that.
I want to center the question of Palestine.
And what kind of other tools that might offer us.
So I think in a way linked to what the earlier conversation about a political economy of value of scholars, right?
There's a kind of also here a political economy of concepts.
And I believe that we have to really provincialize,
Europe. We have to provincialize Europe as the means and the ends of all things. Yeah. It is not
generalizable. No. Just ask different questions and look at it from a different perspective.
Yeah. In terms of what do I think students and scholars and all of us should do is it's going to
sound strange, but first and foremost, study, study, read, learn. Those are the critical tools that you
gain that will allow you to defend yourself in a world that is intent on making you stupid.
We all have to reject that. I think it's a moment where there's a temptation to slide into
sensationalism or to slide into circulating, especially on social media and that whole economy, right?
So I think we have to be vigilant. I think we have to be rigorous and I think we have to study.
And I think more than anything else, the lesson I keep coming back to is we have to take care of each other in the communities that we build.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
I think you begin arming yourself with the tools to understand this moment and think of ways to defend yourself in your community.
And you can't do that without being grounded in this knowledge that came before you.
Thank you. So listeners, please crack open a Journal of Palestine Studies. And of course, I'll link to all of this in the show notes. Shadyin, I could talk to you for hours. Thank you so much for your time. This has been really enriching.
Thank you so much for having me and for all the work that you do. Thank you so much. Listeners, I'm going to also put in the show notes a fundraising campaign for the Journal of Palestine Studies. So if you can, you have the capacity. That's
a surefire way to help resist these dynamics.
All right.
Thanks so much.
Take care.
A decade ago, I was on the trail of one of the country's most elusive serial killers.
But it wasn't until 2023 when he was finally caught.
The answers were there, hidden in plain sight.
So why did it take so long to catch him?
I'm Josh Zeman, and this is Monster,
hunting the Long Island serial killer,
the investigation into the most notorious killer in New York,
since the son of Sam, available now.
Listen for free on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
wherever you get your podcasts.
On an all-new episode of IHard Radio's Las Culturistas,
Emmy, Golden Globe, and Tony Award winner, Sarah Paulson,
spills on red carpet hacks.
We saw these pictures and you're like,
what is the story with the...
She gets real about the inspiration behind her roles.
Oh, no, there is no end to how people will behave.
And she puts host Matt Rogers and Bowen-Yag on notice.
I don't think so, honey.
I feel very, very triggered by this.
Open your free I-Heart Radio app.
Search Las Culturistas.
And listen to the full podcast now.
What up, y'all?
It's your boy, Kevin on stage.
I want to tell you about my new podcast called Not My Best Moment,
where I talk to artists, athletes, entertainers, creators, friends,
people I admire who had massive success about their massive failures.
What did they mess up on?
What is their heartbreak?
And what did they learn from it?
I got judged horribly.
The judges were like, you're trash.
I don't know how you got on the show.
Boo, somebody had tomatoes.
I'm kidding.
But if they had tomatoes, they would have thrown the tomatoes.
Let's be honest.
We've all had those moments we'd rather forget.
We bumped our head.
We made a mistake.
The deal fell through.
We're embarrassed.
We failed.
but this podcast is about that and how we made it through.
So when they sat me down, they were kind of like,
we got into the small talk, and they were just like,
so what do you got?
What? What ideas?
And I was like, oh, no.
What?
Check out Not My Best Moment with me, Kevin on stage,
on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcast, YouTube,
or wherever you get your podcast.
On this week's episode of the next chapter,
I, D.D.J.J. gets to sit down with Oprah Winfrey,
A media mogul philanthropist and global trailblazer.
My life, although it may look like an anomaly,
it has only been possible because I was obedient to the calls.
This episode dies deep into how Oprah turned pain into purpose
and what it really means to evolve with everybody watching.
Every decision I have ever made has come from sitting with the spirit,
and asking God, what would you have me do first?
Whether you're rebuilding, reimagining, or just trying to hold it together,
this one will speak directly to you.
Listen to the next chapter on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcast, episodes drop weekly.
This is It Could Happen here, Executive Dism,
order, our weekly newscast covering what's happening in the White House, The Crumbling
World, and what this means for you. I'm Garrison Davis. Today I'm joined by Mia Wong,
James Stout, and Robert Evans. This episode, we're covering the week of November 13th to
November 19th. The biggest news, I think, of this whole week,
JD Vance has been sentenced to two years in prison for threatening Donald Trump and
J.D. Vance. This is, of course, James Donald Vance, Jr. A different J.D. Vance.
A 67-year-old man from Grand Rapids, Michigan.
A second J.D. Vance has hit the discourse.
Who's also named Donald, which is phenomenal.
It's amazing stuff.
Who pleaded guilty to three criminal accounts based on the social media posts
about killing the president, the vice president, Elon Musk, and Trump Jr.
Jeez, yeah, not a good, don't a good call.
Garrison, I would quibble that that is a bigger story this week
because this is the week, of course, that Nikki Minaj addressed the United Nations.
nations. This is a week where years
happened. Yeah, Nikki
Minaj, if readers are familiar with her, it
will doubtless be because of her contributions
to discourse on her cousin's friend's testicles.
But this time she's
back, and she is talking
about the persecution. That's right, baby.
Yeah, that's what we do here.
She's talking about
the persecution of Christians in Nigeria,
just for listeners who are not aware
Nikki Minaj is from Trinidad.
Yeah. Not a worry of any
particular expertise or insight she has on a topic.
But, yeah, she did that this week.
Yep.
That's the United Nations.
Do we know how she decided that this was a problem she needed to get involved with?
She reposted a truth that Donald Trump had made.
Not a great.
And I believe they reached out on the basis of that.
There are some tremendous, like, statements calling her the greatest female recording artist in history.
Yeah, yeah, which sets us up nicely for a Nikki Minaj, Dolly, Parth.
I think I'd join on the side of Dolly Parton in that one.
It would be hard not to.
Yep.
So, yeah, I guess she reposted a thing about a truth that led to them reaching out,
and she volunteered her time to address the United Nations organization set up
after World War II to try and prevent genocide.
Yeah, outstanding.
The truth is so beautiful.
Yes.
Speaking of the truth
And the truth coming to light
We're talking about Jeffrey Epstein again, I guess
Yeah, the ongoing revelations based on
Yeah, this guy's post-death career
Has really been one for the books
Yeah, he really really rivals Michael Jackson
In more than one way
Yeah, or Tupac. I would say Tupac
No, it was when
when fucking John McAfee died
There were all these people being like,
Oh, he's got, you know, because McAfee had lied and said, I've got like an insurance folder that'll come out in the event of my death that'll, you know, reveal a bunch of top-level secrets.
And John McAfee didn't know shit.
He was a crazy old drug addict who killed his nephew and then fled to South America or Central America.
Anyway, whatever.
One of the Americas.
He fled to a different America than the one that he came from.
Anyway, but that's actually happening with Jeffrey Epstein.
We actually now have a lot of dirt on a lot of people.
Larry Summers just left the board of Open AI
because he was revealed as a rampant misogynist
and friend of a pedophile sex trafficker.
Not a good look.
He's also announced that after finishing his current class at Harvard,
he will be resigning from Harvard University.
Oh, what a loss for Harvard.
I don't know how they're going to recover.
Well, it's the biggest loss since President Gay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Look, Harvard, if you need someone to teach his class,
I'll do it. I don't know what his class is. I don't actually know what Larry does.
We know what his expertise is, but I feel like I can do a better job.
Yeah. Bring me in. We do know a little bit about what Larry does and that is the problem.
Yeah. Yeah, the sex crimes.
Right after recording executive disorder last week, not the most important, but certainly the
oddest email was uncovered as a part of that.
Big Documents Release.
This is an exchange from 2018 between Mark Epstein and Jeffrey Epstein, two brothers.
Let's start with Mark.
How are you doing?
A while back you mentioned that you were pre-diabetic.
Has anything changed with that?
What is your boy Donald up to now?
Jeffrey replies, all good.
Bannon with me.
Mark replies,
ask him if Putin
has the photos of
Trump blowing Bubba
You know
Yeah
I'm going to continue the exchange
Yeah
Jeffrey replies
And I thought I had to risk
Mark replies
You and your boy
Donnie can make a remake
of the movie
Get Hard
sent via tin can
and a string
And Jeffrey replied, you mean Donny T. And Mark replied, I'd rather be in Donnie D's shoes. That's the exchange. Also, what Epstein said was Suris, which is a Yiddish word that means like problems. I got problems. I got shit. I'm all I'm all fucked up, which he was.
He was not wrong about that. Look. Yep. So, Bubba, many people have.
speculated that this could be a reference to former President Bill Clinton, whose nickname was Bubba
and whose name is Bubba in some of these other emails or is referred to as Bubba in some of these
other emails.
Which is something that I've seen surprise a lot of people.
If you grew up in the 90s, you were aware that his nickname was Bubba.
But he has not been called Bubba in a very long time.
When he like lost all that weight and went vegan and like it kind of, he stopped seeming like
as much of a bubba as he did when he was the president the saturday night live uh made fun of in that
great macdonald sketch but yeah anyway continue gear i mean and i don't know how what what else there is
to say here uh you know photos have been recirculating of trump yes baba gump shrimp will the real bubba please
stand up photos have been recirculating of trump i would say groping uh bill clinton's penis yeah um yep yep
There's more there than you'd expect, right?
Yes.
Yeah.
But Bubba has referred to a few people,
including other people like in Epstein Circle, like a golfers and models.
But Bubba was also the name of Galane Maxwell's horse.
Oh, I'm just now hearing this and that's not.
I'm sorry.
And here's the thing.
I see the appeal to believing that this is the answer.
I simply don't believe Donald.
Trump ever had that kind of throat game.
I'm sorry.
I just don't, I just don't accept that.
This is by far the funniest possibility that he did like a joke photo shoot where he, like,
pretended to blow a horse.
I could see him doing that.
This is really understandable.
This is like, this is really doable.
Haven't we all been there?
So that is.
Just.
Yeah.
And, you know, take this.
however you will, like Mark Epstein has
denied that the Bubba referred to in the
email is a reference to Bill Clinton
while also admitting in this same
like interview to a news nation and a statement
that like, you know, Jeffrey certainly did
have dirt on the president and thought that he was
the only one that could sink both
candidates' career in
2016, both Hillary Clinton
and Donald Trump. Pretty good chance that's
true, actually. Yeah.
But he, for what it worth,
is saying it's not a reference to Clinton.
Who knows?
there's a real sort of
you know if you if you want to do
the sort of pop
Marxist lines there's a real sort of historical unity
of the ruling class moment when you
read these emails and
the people in them it's
like it's Bill Clinton
it's Bill Clinton's like the people around
Bill Clinton it's Ken Starr
and you know
you go back and you look at like you look
at like the actual like impeachment of Bill Clinton
right and you realize that every single
one of these people are all
friends with Jeffrey Epstein and are just kind of hanging out like yeah on like on the pedophile
island and it's just yeah it's it's something that like you you couldn't if like the most the most sort
of on the nose like I like completely didactic I'm pounding your head with a hammer like Marxist thing
from 1960 where they go yeah all of the presidents are hanging out on pedophile island like
conspiring behind your back and they're taking photos of them like grabbing each other's
dicks like you wouldn't believe but it's like no no no no this is just this is this is just the
historical unity of the ruling class is literally they're all friends with this pedophile
well it's it's just these are all wealthy powerful people and the only people that they
socialize with is each other you know the new york times came up with an out with an article this
week that was like the epstein emails or an insight into an old new york long departed or
that was an incredible headline and yeah i mean it was this was like the transition between all
of these people writing each other letters and all of these people just bitching publicly on the
internet openly and losing their minds like the the awkward interstiddle period was them all
emailing each other from their iPads right yeah so to that extent the new york times article is
right not the main takeaway from the geoffrey epstein emails i would say probably not worth an article
in the times but it's not wrong technically
Yeah, it's a fascinating thing to choose to color.
Yeah.
That poor horse.
Yeah, it's a little bit like a journalist showing up in Berlin in late 1945
and like going through like papers in the ruins of the Reichstag and being like, wow, this really reveals a lost Berlin.
I was like, I mean, yeah.
That's not really the point.
Any other comments on
on Bubba?
Did anyone ask guys
his brother about the horse?
I don't believe Mark has been asked about the horse.
Mark is in a,
not that I have a ton of sympathy for this guy,
but just recognizing things objectively.
He's in a tough position
because his brother was an incredibly famous
pedophile sex trafficker.
And he is
desperately trying not to get
disappeared by the
regime or he also knows what will come after the regime. So he doesn't want to set himself up
in a way where he gets in trouble from that either, right? Like, it's a legitimately complicated
situation he finds himself in that his brother just kind of left for him. And again, I don't
have a lot of sympathy for the man, but I can recognize it. Because he also said at the same time,
he was like, this definitely was not him referring to Donald Trump giving a blowjob to Bill
Clinton. He did also say that he believed that the Republicans were removing
the names of Republicans
from the Epstein Files
before release, right?
So he's,
he has been like hedging his bets
because, again,
he's in a lot of danger.
Yeah.
Like, he's in trouble.
This man,
this man is in trouble.
Yeah.
Yeah, I would not be granted interviews
that I was him.
I would be, uh...
I wouldn't say shit.
Yeah.
Like, literally under the ground.
Yeah, I would,
I would, for one thing,
not be in a country that extradite.
I would never set foot.
in a country with extradition treaties to the Western world again.
Yeah, the next strike in Venezuela will be Mark Epstein.
I would be living in Tehran right now.
Let's talk about Marjorie Trader Green.
Sure.
Why not?
Yeah, so Marjorie Taylor Green is part of the Resistance now.
Hashtag, welcome to the resistance.
Yeah, exactly.
It's very like Andor.
Sure.
It's like that point in Andor where the person who did nothing but help Emperor Palpatine
suddenly at the last minute was like, ah, you know what, this guy went a step too far for me.
Or, ah, actually, I hate Jews too much that actually, I think that's the reality.
I wasn't sure if there was an analog for anti-Semitism in the Star Wars universe that I was no way.
Well, you probably don't want to, you don't want to go there.
I've asked the wrong people.
I'm sorry.
We've got to stop this right now.
They're not paying us enough.
I've made a terrible mistake.
Do you have three hours?
James, in the early 2000s, George Lucas invented some names that are themselves hate crimes.
Just be remembering the names as a hate crime.
James, do you want to read about the Troidarians?
No.
No.
As far as I get into Star Wars, bigotry discourse is Gia Jai Jopinx, and after that I leave.
Well, it's from the same movie, but no.
So, yeah, Marjorie has been more combative against some of the, you know,
cultist mega right on a few issues.
One, she's extended her
already evidenced anti-Semitism
a la Jewish space lasers
towards foreign policy in this
America first Nick Fuentesi way
of being critical of Israel.
You see seeds of this because like
Marjor Taylor Green attended the Nick Fuentes
America First conferences like four years ago.
Like this side of it,
not a surprising turn for her,
her finally flipping
on Trump in terms of the
pedophile stuff, maybe a little bit surprising because she was the original, like,
Q and on-N-on candidate.
Yeah.
And Q-N-on's built on this, like, trying to justify in some ways Trump's proximity to Epstein
by building this grand narrative.
And she made a statement recently that she's no longer all in on the Q stuff, right?
Like, she has, she is, this is a pivot for her, but it's a pivot that's pretty consistent
with, you know, her anti-sitism.
And it makes sense.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It makes sense with the Israel foreign policy stuff.
It also makes sense in terms of Trump's made a lot more statements directly addressing this Epstein stuff, which kind of does call into question some of like the Q narratives, which for someone like Marjorie might actually get her to kind of reflect on some of like this Trump cultish status that she's had for a while.
This has frustrated Trump.
And, you know, Trump's also been frustrated with other members like Lauren Bobbert and other like Congress people who were.
pledging to vote in support of the release of the Epstein files. And this pressure was building a lot
last week during this like 20,000 document release and all this new news coverage. And as these, as more
and more Republicans began to deflect from Trump over the release of the Epstein files, Trump himself
flipped his rhetoric over this past weekend, still calling the debate over the files a Democrat
hoax. But truthing that the files should be released because we quote unquote have nothing too
hide. And he called on Republicans to vote in favor of the bill to release the Epstein
files, which they did on Tuesday in a 427 to one vote with Representative Clay Higgins,
a Republican from Louisiana, the only congressman to vote no. Hours later, Chuck Schumer
unanimously passed the measure through the Senate. Mike Johnson had previously expected the Senate
to amend the bill to, quote,
make sure we don't
to permanent damage
to the political system, unquote.
And after its passage
through the Senate,
Johnson seemed quite worried
that it went through the upper chambers
in its current form.
And I want to play this clip here
because it's kind of shocking
to hear him, hear him freak out.
And before we say this,
you owe it to yourself
as a person to go actually look
at this clip and watch his face
It is amazing.
It's so good.
I haven't seen this. I'm excited.
It'll be in the sources below.
Any reaction to Leader Thune?
You're seeing the bill without adding amendments or changing it?
I am deeply disappointed in this outcome.
I think I've been at the state dinner.
I don't know.
I was just told that Chuck Schumer rushed it to the floor and put it out there preemptively.
It needed amendments.
I just spoke to the president about that.
We'll see what happens.
So is he, do you think he made?
veto it? You say you spoke to the president?
I'm not saying that. Is he supportive of it in its current
form?
We both have concerns about it.
We'll see. I was standing with the
Crown Prince. We get involved. Are you frustrated
than the majority leader? Are you
upset with the majority leader?
Cool.
Nice.
What a normal
interaction that is.
Also worth noting the very end of that video, he says, I was
eating with the Crown Prince because he is, again,
walking out of a state dinner
with one Muhammad bin Salman
the
I don't even
list of war crimes here
the Sudanese child soldier
exterminator
etc etc
but no it's safe to say that
both Johnson and President Trump
have concerns
about the state of the bill
and Johnson seemed a little bit
wishy-washy on if the president would even sign this
or veto this
now it's not all
bad for the president. I, oh, I'd like to see
Donnie J wiggle his way out of this jam.
This bill that has passed does allow
Attorney General Pam Bondi to withhold or redact portions
of the files that could jeopardize active federal investigations
and personally determine if information in the files
should remain classified to protect national security.
Last weekend, Trump ordered Bondi to launch investigations
looking into connection between Epstein
and prominent Democratic politicians and donors.
Here's clip from a Wednesday, November 19th press conference.
Attorney General, do you mean that you will provide all the files by 30 days?
We will follow the law.
The law passed both chambers last evening.
It has not yet been signed.
But we will continue to follow the law again while protecting victims,
but also providing maximum transparency.
Madam Attorney General, the DOJ statement earlier this year saying that the files would not release
mentioned the fact that the review of the documents and the evidence did not suggest
that any additional investigation of third parties was warranted.
What changed since then that you launched this investigation?
Information that has come for information.
Information change.
information that new information additional information and again we will continue to follow the law
to investigate any leads if there are any victims we encourage all victims to come forward
and we will continue to provide maximum transparency under the law very normal very normal
response uh-huh yeah that's that doesn't sound sketchy sure i i have never at any point in
the last eight years 12 years however long we've been
in this hellscape, been a, been a piss tape believer, this, looking at these people's faces
is the closest I've ever been to being like, no, maybe that shit's real and maybe it's
in there, because there's clearly something in there that they are just, they're just
going through it.
Yeah, it's wild.
Yeah, some of these guys seem a little bit concerned.
Yeah, yeah, they, I wonder why.
I mean, surely there's no.
I mean, just imagine the workload.
ahead of them. They have to redact so much.
Yeah. They have to get so many of those markers.
I imagine how tired their wrists are going to be.
Yeah. It's like that feeling when you come back from a reporting trip and you're like,
shit, now I have to do the job. Yeah. Yeah. Yes, I'm familiar with that feeling.
Do you know what we have to do right now?
Ads? Is pivot to ads, yes. Yeah, let's go ahead and do that.
and we're back
now I would like to take some time
to discuss probably the second
most important news story of the whole week
I'll do it
sure which is totally not
a Hail Mary distraction to get away from the Epstein stuff
this is totally legitimate and totally newsworthy
on Monday November 17th
a piece in the prestigious outlet
the New York Post, opinion section,
provided earth-shattering
revelations.
Revelations care.
That's the word,
about the attempted Trump assassination,
claiming to have discovered evidence
that Thomas Crooks,
the shooter,
had two possible accounts
on deviant art.
Which...
Yeah, this really is the biggest story.
Which the Post,
New York Post, describes as,
quote, one of the biggest online hubs
for furry art and the furry community,
a furry is someone who has an interest
in anthropomorphized animal characters
often as a sexual fetish, unquote.
Every time.
Later reporting in the New York Post
claimed that one of these accounts
had only shared a single post,
quote, a repost of a towering,
muscular female bodybuilder,
and a slight man in his underwear, unquote.
And, quote, multiple searches
for muscular women.
and female bodybuilders
were found on Crook's supposed YouTube search history.
He's a real pervert then.
Excellent.
Yes, beautiful.
Oh, it's not, oh, Robert, that's not even the worst part.
The furry stuff, obviously problematic,
considering our past few furry mass shooters,
is maybe a trend here.
We should look into this.
But possibly the most damning piece of information
in the New York Post reporting
is that crooks, quote,
described himself with the pronouns,
they, them on the platform
Deviant Art, which is
one of the biggest tubs for furry art
and the furry community.
This became the big thing among the right.
Another trans shooter.
The Trump assassin was trans
the whole time, and we didn't even know.
The FBI covered up
the trans connection here.
It's all coming together.
More red string on the board.
The trans shooter narrative
is growing more and more evident by the day,
right? This is the way that this was framed.
across all of these all these commentators who's the president right now
how is this supposed to work
at the time they investigated it by them would have been president right or they
began their investigation the new york post did reach out to the current FBI for comment
they did not receive a response deep state the new york post's reporting like in these
in these opinion pieces
and I think later an article
they did.
Did later include references
to quote,
violently anti-Semitic comments
and racist remarks
about Hispanic immigrants
that Thomas Crooks
also made
including YouTube comments
from 2019.
Quote,
this is going to be blatantly racist
but I hope Trump
has these people,
the squad,
murdered.
Oh, great.
I always believed
being patriotic
was lighting up a bunch
of socialist Jews
like the ones that booed Trump
and blasting their useless brains out
with an AR.
I hope a quick, painful death
to all the deplorable immigrants
in anti-Trump Congresswoman.
Unquote.
Obviously,
the right-wing commentators
are not talking about this sort of stuff.
They're not talking about
Crux's actual politics
or political shifts
during the pandemic,
where he started getting kind of more Trump critical,
but still from a conservative perspective.
Instead,
the story is now, to quote, libs of TikTok,
Charlie Kirk killer, furry fetish,
Trump shooter, furry fetish,
Idaho firefighter killer, furry fetish.
What's going on?
Right-wing podcaster and disgraced BuzzFeed journalist Benny Johnson,
quote,
it has now been confirmed that attempted Trump assassin,
Thomas Crooks, used they-them pronouns,
had a deep interest in furries,
and was exploring gender identity,
add it to the list.
This list is then a list of,
both real and many not real, quote-unquote, trans mass shooters.
Another account, D.C. Drano, who was part of the White House photo op team during the initial
fake release of the fake Epstein files. Not that the files were fake, but like this fake media
presentation around releasing the already released and actually even more redacted
versions of already public files. D.C. Dr. D.D.O. was one of these guys who was, like,
paraded around as like a prop holding up these binders of files.
He posted, quote,
It is now confirmed.
The Deep State tried to cover up that Thomas Crooks
was a transgender extremist.
He used they-them pronouns and then shot President Trump.
We need a massive crackdown against violent trans extremism.
This sort of stuff is losing steam.
This sort of stuff is not spreading around the way that it has been previously.
It's very clear that this is a blatant distraction away from unflattering stories about Trump
in terms of the economy, and specifically Epstein.
And all of this, you know, you might be wondering why maybe no other outlets are picking this stuff up.
And that could be due to the dubious nature of the New York Post's sourcing on these claims.
But also the fact that DeviantArt automatically lists a user's pronouns as they, them, as the default setting if pronouns are not specified.
This is the setting that everyone gets.
You have to actively try to change it.
There is no indication Thomas Crooks specifically set pronouns to they them.
He is not a transgender extremist.
He, like many Gen Z people, is aware of furry art online.
This is very common.
This is a very common thing.
But the post had a few other things.
They tried to wrap this story around to give it some credibility,
including this post from the deviant art alleged to belong
to Thomas Crooks,
which is
a picture of
someone shooting
to someone else
in the head,
which the
York Post calls
another artwork
appear to feature
a shooting
against a backdrop
of the
trans flag
colors.
This is not
the trans flag
nor the trans flag
colors.
This is a
blue and
purple
background.
What?
Purple is not
in the trans flag
colors.
You can maybe
argue this is
magenta, maybe. But this is not a trans flag. This is not a LGBTQ pride flag. This isn't even
the bisexual flag, which does use these same colors. This is just like a sky blue and a magenta
purple backdrop, which they are trying to frame as further evidence of Thomas Crook's
transgender ties. But what is kind of interesting is as a part of the social media accounts
alleged to be linked to crooks that have appeared in new reporting from both the New York Post and
Tucker Carlson's own news outlet. But as a part of this reporting on crook's possible online
background included a collection of search results or like search history from April of 2019
to May of 2020, which lines up with stuff that me and Robert have been talking about for a while
in that this guy seemed to have the ideology
or non-ideology of a school shooter.
This is the actual through line
across this act of violence.
These searches include, quote,
crazy chemical reactions, deadliest mass shootings in the world,
people attacking pride parades,
cars running over protesters,
getting away with racism,
best places for a mass shooting,
pulse nightclub, pulse nightclub,
police body camera, mass shooting El Paso,
mass shooting, Trump Civil War,
Trump church shooting video
Guns versus protesters
Orlando shooting reaction
Why I'm missing handgun
firing an AR-15 as fast as possible
fertilizer bomb
How do you use a tourniquet
How to make napalm
Maltov cocktail
How to make Maltov cocktail
Mixing Gasoline with styrofoam
Mass shooting Canada
Oklahoma bombing
Sniper in Dallas shooting
Unquote
Man
Yeah
He was on real trouble
Hitting with his pistol, huh?
Yeah
Yeah
And his rifle
it turns out. Probably choking up too much
on the trigger, I'd guess. Yeah.
Many such cases. Yeah.
Yeah, but that's a pretty clear theme that you've established
there, Garrison. Yeah. Yeah.
Like, you see this in some way
being like a, not necessarily an actual precursor,
but in the same vein that
some of these like TCC people later
would, you know, start developing these past few years.
This just obsession with doing violence.
This obsession with mass killings,
with bombings. And some of it,
takes the form of, like, you know, what looks like political violence, like the Oklahoma
City bombing. But a lot of it is very nihilistic. That's all I have on the
explosive reporting from the New York Post. Great. Great. I don't know how to segue
from that list of Google searches to Tariff Talk, but you know what I've been searching for
is this music.
So this is a very, very, very light.
So this is actually a very, very light week on tariff news.
It is almost entirely composed of people arguing about whether you're going to get the tariff check, which, no, you're not.
You're not going to get a check from the government with tariff money.
It's just not happening.
So I thought I thought I'd take a second to pull out.
and look at some of the macro stuff
that's happening in the economy
and look at why it feels like a recession
even though there isn't one.
And the answer is that
you and me and everyone in this room
and probably most of the people
Sistically listening to this podcast
are effectively in a recession.
And the reason I can say this
is that there's pretty good numbers
from the Harvard economist Jason
Furman who points out that if you look at so okay so recession is is is three consecutive quarters
of negative GDP growth right and this is a not like a perfect economic indicator but you know
as Jason Furman points out 92% of GDP growth in the first half of this year is in a category
that's called information processing equipment and software and so okay what is that that is all
data center. It's all data center construction. It is 92% of all of our GDP growth.
Well, the good news is that, for example, Oracle didn't just make a big deal with open
AI to provide them with computing resources. And after making this $300 billion deal
has dropped $315 billion in valuation. That didn't happen, obviously. Like, these are,
things are good in an AI world. There's not a bunch of people pulling
their money out of Nvidia as fast
as they can. Oh yeah. We're getting
to that. Yeah, one of them again, Peter Thiel
pulling his money out right now
getting all this shit out.
Yeah, get your shit out. Fucking Michael
Burry is now shorting
the AI industry. I will say this.
The Michael
Burry short thing is literally
the only thing that I've ran into that
actually makes me be like
that Michael Burry versus the AI
industry is like really truly is the
great duel of the stoppable force in the
movable object.
Yeah.
Like, that's, we're, we're not dealing with, like, world renting titans here.
But, you know, but we are, we are going to get a sequel to the big short that's going to
really struggle to be entertaining.
Because with the big short, what was fun was these guys realizing how fucked the, this, like,
system based on, like, really bad, like, trenches of debt and how badly it was going to
fuck the economy.
And with AI, it's just going to be, like, literally everyone in the world, except for the
people in media and politics being like, this seems like a fucking grip.
I don't know, man.
This seems bad.
And them all being like, no, no, no, bro, trust me.
No, no, no.
And then it all goes to shit.
Yeah.
I'm going to do a full episode about this at some point.
There's a really good interview on a Bloomberg podcast called Odd Thoughts with
this guy and Paul Kodroski who points out that, well, A, he has a great line about calling
this like the super bubble, basically, where it's every single kind of speculative bubble
rolled into one because all these data centers are being financed with like the with the equivalent
of mortgage-backed securities. Well, yeah, these are these are subprime loans for tech companies,
right? Like that's what's financing all of this. Yeah. And then these buildings, right,
it's also a real estate bubble because all of these data centers are taking a ridiculous
amount of real estate. There's a tech bubble. And the single thing that, and again,
we're going to do a longer episode about this later, the single thing that's the most unhinged to me
about this, and it's, you know, even
excluding the fact that, you know,
all of these processors that they're using
in these data centers burn out after about a year and a half
because they're just running
them constantly. Is that
if you look at like the housing
collapse in 2008, right?
And you look at what was underlying
all of those bad assets.
There were houses there.
Right? At the end of the day, all of these banks
can go in and they can take your house. And that's
really bad, obviously.
But what is the underlying assets?
for all of these
tranches of all these
trances of debt,
the underlying
asset that you're supposed
to be taking,
you know,
that's supposed to be
the collateral
is compute power.
Yeah.
No.
No.
It seems fine.
This is not a real asset.
It's fine,
because people can live in
their computer power
and we all need to
live in a computer power.
So it's fine.
It's not like,
yeah.
Look,
the bad news
is things are going to be really bad
for a lot of people. Oh yeah, and they
already are. Probably most people
and they're going to get worse. The good
news is once we get
past, you know, if this
is the way the dot com bubble went, right?
Once we get past this crash
that's brought on by
you know, a mix of greed
and insanity and ignorance
and lies, then
we can finally get to the internet
changing society in only positive
ways, which is what happened after the
You know, we got Facebook, we got Google, we got Twitter, we got Instagram, we got all of these
great apps that have made our lives nothing but, but better, you know?
So I'm looking forward.
Grumble, getter.
God, how could I forget getter?
Wouldn't be furries if there wasn't deviant art with the devian art.
Exactly.
How would we know who was trying to get the president without deviant art?
And what their pronouns were.
and what their pronouns may have been.
Well, I do want to make a serious note about this,
because I've seen a lot of people who compare this
to the dot-com bubble, and this is so much worse,
because the dot-com bubble, and you look at the telecom bubble
afterwards, right?
There were actual assets there, right?
You know, like, the only way people talk about this is like,
there was pets.com, but there was real stuff, too.
Real pay.
And, you know, when a telecom bubble goes under, right,
there's still a whole bunch of, like,
fiber optic networks that they've set up that you could,
that, you know, people with a bunch of money afterwards can come scrape up,
and there's the material base of something here.
These data centers, there's nothing.
They're not practical if the, and this is the reason,
because our colleague Ed Zetron had a big scoop last week that's getting a shitload of attention
right now for good reason, which is that inference cost has been raising consistently
for Open AI, which is increasing their, like, it's fucking their margins and it's increasing
their losses, which is why they keep losing more money each quarter. And the idea behind why
people thought Open AI could be a good business is that these inference costs, which is basically
the cost that it takes to keep making the models better, right, that that was going to
decline once they hit a certain level, that like you're not going to need to, it's super
expensive to get the models to a point where they're good, but once they're good, then they get
to be really cheap. And that's not really true, based on the data that we have.
And they were lying about it, kind of.
You know, they were not in a way that was legally actionable.
They're not a publicly traded company.
They were not required to release this to the public.
It does seem like they were honest with their investors like Microsoft, right?
They were lying to us, right, to regular people.
In order to pretend this was a business that had a lot better of a shot of being successful in the way it needs to be.
The problem with AI, as a money thing, is not that there's no profit in this.
It's not that there's no use for any of these tools.
There are many uses, and there are many potential businesses.
It's that none of them equal trillion dollars, which is the minimum that they need to be profitable.
Right?
And these data centers are all based on the bet that, no, no, actually, this is a multi-trillion dollar industry, and we need this much compute, right?
And this is the greatest misallocation of capital in human history.
There has never been anything like this.
There has never been this much of the capital on earth for.
into nothing.
Because there's not even physical assets left, right?
The physical assets are burned out graphics cards.
Because a lot of these data centers aren't built and they don't last.
Yeah.
Right?
That's what we're going to do.
Like, yes, they have a building.
They have a building you can run power to, but the graphics cards don't last.
Yeah.
And at the end of this, right, you have a bunch of buildings that don't do anything
attached to, like, extremely expensive diesel generators.
And I am fraying, the one thing that makes you be able to,
like, I hope this goes down quickly, is that I am praying that this bubble goes down before
they actually start trying to build nuclear, like really, truly get off the ground, building a
bunch of nuclear reactors? Because can you imagine these guys who created a computer that can't
win at chess trying to build nuclear reactors? I think we should let them do it.
Agreed. Fuck it. Why not? Why not? I long for stalker.
No. I mean, it's what other, this is like the point that is meaningful here is that after the dot-com bubble
you were able to have a massive boom
that created a bunch of wealth.
It created wealth doing things
that were often super bad for society,
but it created a shitload of wealth
because real infrastructure
had been put in place
that actually enabled the whole country
to get connected.
It enabled the birth of like
the mobile computing revolution
or whatnot because a lot of groundwork
had been laid
that was really meaningful,
even though a number of the businesses
involved in it didn't work out.
And that's really not what we're seeing
because it's hard to imagine
And assuming there's not a multi-trillion dollar need for AI, assuming everyone isn't going
to do everything for the rest of their lives through AI agents and do all of their thinking
through chat GPT, unless that's the reality we're in, these are not good investments.
And the only thing I can compare it to in terms of what you were saying me about this being
like the worst allocation of capital in history, because I've been reading a lot about like
the nuclear arms race. And it was one of those things where you go from, we've dropped
tens of thousands of bombs over the course of five years to, if we were to accidentally launch
these 10 missiles, it would be more explosive power than has ever been detonated in the entire
history of human war added together up to the present moment, right?
Like that is the because of, and part of this was enabled by the actual like internet boom,
right? The one that brought about Web 2.0 in the social media era, right?
Like all of that wealth and all of the money that poured into these VCs who'd gotten on board
companies like Facebook, that had to be created to allow something this irrational. Because
20 years ago, if the technology had been there, there wouldn't have been the money to
enable this kind of insanity. Yeah. Well, and I think that the last thing, I mean, I guess there's
two more things that I want to say about this. One is, is that, you know, this is also part of the
cyclical economic crises that we've been looking at since the 70s, which is that one of the
ways you get these bubbles is that there are suddenly these unbelievably massive trillion dollar pool,
like trillions of dollars of pools of capital
that you're trying to find something
to invest in, right?
You have to reproduce it.
And this is one of the things that causes,
for example, the third world debt crisis
in the 70s is all of this capital
flows into all of these,
their world debt things.
It eventually, this is one of the things
that powers first,
the Japanese giant housing bubble
that they did that caused the Asian market collapse
in the 90s and then caused 2008,
is that there's all of these pools of capital,
they have to turn into more capital,
and they can't do it.
it. And when they can't do it, you get 2008, right? And they've been able to sort of hang on
for about a decade, a decade and a half-ish, roughly because there was so much money coming in
from this tech sector. But everyone outside of the tech sector, it sucks. It's bad. So this is
part of the reason why everything feels unhinged right now, right? Like, okay, there's obviously
kind of a problem with trying to track employment data just by seeing news of firings, because
companies just do firings because it makes their stocks go up because it makes investors think
they're being more efficient, which is nonsense. But it's why it feels like this is why you feel
broke and everyone is like talking about how the economy is growing. And it's like, well, yeah,
this really small sector of tech has accumulated an unfathomable amount of wealth and they are getting
very, very rich. And everyone else is fucked. And when this bubble collapse, when these people
take all of the money they got out of tech and have thrown it into the metaverse.
and AI.
Yeah.
When that blows up,
it is going to be cataclysmic
and we're getting closer to it.
Yeah.
Yeah, the only one of them
that will be left is Gabe Newell
sitting on his insane yacht.
Finally releasing Half-Life 3.
He could probably appoint himself
to cater for life after that.
Yeah, he'll be the only one with money left.
What else do you do?
All of the money is in Gabe Newell's pockets.
The only asset is steam.
We've had it replace the military now.
This is, basically, the plot of Yu-Gi-O.
You think I'm joking.
I've actually died.
No, I never paid attention to the Yu-Gi-O.
The plot of Yu-Gi-O is the card game becomes so profitable that the guy who runs the card game company fights a battle with all the entire military industrial complex and defeats them because he's making more money than they are.
So.
Okay.
This is the plot of Yu-Gi-O.
Yeah, I guess.
I think that sounds better than what we're doing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We can't get this far without mentoring tulip mania.
Yeah, yeah, sure.
The perfect historical comparison, right?
No one.
You can eat a tulip bulb if you really have to.
I think they're poisonous.
I don't think you can need a tulip bowl.
I don't know.
I shouldn't say that, but they're more edible than a graphics card.
Mia is telling every listener to go out and find a tulip bulb and eat it.
Putting this on my tombstone, more.
Listen, if you have eaten a tulip, and a graphics card, do a side by side.
Don't do this.
Don't do that.
If you have eaten a tulip, you can tag me her on blue sky.
I write, okay, send her a picture of your face post tulip if you've eaten one, but don't eat one on our account.
Talking of other things, not to do.
Yeah, all right, fuck it.
Here's an ad for tulips.
All right, we're back, and I am going to talk about a number of things.
I guess the first thing I should talk about is the sanctions and FTO's designation for various leftist groups in Europe.
there are four entities that the State Department has announced.
They've already been sanctioned, and I believe they'll be added to the FTO list,
either today or tomorrow as we're recording this.
So it will be on the foreign terrorist organization list by the time you hear this on Friday.
The four entities are called Antifa Ost, aka Hamabund, Hammergang,
the informal Anarchus Federation.
That's an Italian group.
They use the initials FAAI, also the, they use the initials.
use FRI, that is not the same as the FAA that you're familiar with from the Spanish Civil
War, if that's your thing. And then two Greek groups called armed proletarian justice
and revolutionary class self-defense. Notes on the names, guys, I guess I shouldn't, but I have
notes on the names. Yeah, yeah, Robert, they're European leftist groups. It's going to be
Yeah, yeah, of course. It's going to be as many syllables as they can possibly have. Yeah, it is
an alphabet soup. So a couple of notable things here. The US doesn't seem to have coordinated
with the states where these entities exist. For example, the German government, they prosecuted
people who they've accused of being members of Antifa Aust recently, I think it was in September,
and they claimed that the threat of violence for them has, quote, decreased significantly,
which is contradicting, right, the claim that these are violent groups. The State Department,
when it talks about Antifa Oz, talks about a series of,
of attacks in February of 2023. What's missing from the analysis of February
2020 is what was happening in February 23. It was an event in Hungary, which existed
to honor Nazis. I don't mean Nazis, like people who have a right-wing political
ideology, I mean like members of the NSDAP in Germany who fought in World War II at the time
when they were doing the Holocaust. The rally included several groups, which were already
sanctioned by U.S. allies, including Blood and Honor, Combat 18.
Jesus.
I'm not going to go into an in-depth history of either of those groups.
Their neo-Nazi groups, right?
The 18 is Adolf Hitler, 1-8.
These are the people who are, as far as I'm aware, the victims of that February
2023 violence, right?
Notably, though, Antifa Ost was sanctioned by Hungary earlier this year, right?
Hungary under Orban, fast moving towards an extremely right-wing.
I didn't think what political scientists like to call it an illiberal democracy, right?
This sucks to hear.
I mean, with this news, I feel like we might need to pull out of Victor Orban presents Hungary for comedy,
the upcoming Cool Zone headlined comedy festival.
Yeah, so many of our famous comedian friends have been planning to join us.
Yeah.
We are doing that show in reality.
odd, though.
Oh, that's still a lot?
Yeah, that's still a lot.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The other groups aren't explicitly anti-fascist, right?
Because this is getting framed as support of Trump's like anti-Antifa crackdown.
Yeah.
I was trying to find foreign terrorist organizations linked to Antifa.
But these other three groups are not explicitly like Antifa in name or scope, it seems.
No, exactly right.
So most of them are anarchist groups, right?
And just to like delve very briefly.
in two lines into things I have literally written a book about.
Anti-fascism is a left unity position derived from the common term position that it adopted
its Congress in 1935.
These groups do not call themselves anti-fascist, right?
There is a distinction between anarchism and anti-fascism, which can be seen very acutely
in the May 1937 events of the Spanish Civil War.
But these groups have neither claimed anti-fascism, nor as far as I'm aware, have any of them
killed anyone.
I believe that the Antifa Ost people being prosecuted, one of them is being prosecuted for attempted murder.
In other cases, they have been responsible for explosions or attempted bombings.
Normally to be designated in FTO, they would have to be a threat to either U.S. people or the United States as an entity, right?
There doesn't appear to be any evidence that these groups have any ties to anyone in the United States or present any immediate danger to the United States.
I don't quite know where they got these particular groups from.
It's so weird.
It's a completely baffling list of groups,
like even looking at Greek anarchist groups.
I mean, my guess is that someone in the Trump administration
has a friend in Orban's administration
and ask them, hey, who are some antifas we can go after
that you guys, like, you know Europe?
Yeah, the Greek anarchist groups specifically
are some of the more interesting inclusions here.
They're not the Greek anarchist groups
you would expect them to be going after.
It's very weird.
Yeah, like, they're not groups I was familiar with.
Like, admittedly, you know, I don't speak Greek.
I don't, I don't read Greek.
I don't pay that much attention to that part of the world.
But, like, there are other groups which are more notorious.
Like, it's very odd that they've come up with the Antifa Ostwan, I agree, Garrison.
I think the lineage is more obvious, yeah, that the other three, yeah, I'm not entirely clear on how they got to.
to those if any of, you know, contact us if you have ideas.
The other terrorist designation that happened this week, which is breaking as we record
on Wednesday the 19th of November, is that Greg Abbott has declared care, this
Center for American Islamic Relations and the Muslim Brotherhood as foreign terrorist
organizations.
Jesus.
Yeah.
Jesus Christ.
Texas doesn't appear to have an FTO list as far as I can tell.
What this seems to be is a designation under SB 17, which passed earlier this year, which relates to property law.
It would stop the Muslim Brotherhood or care as a national 501c3 renting or buying property in Texas.
I'm not sure the Muslim Brotherhood intended to rent or buy property in Texas.
And most of SB 17 deals with like nationals and entities linked to like China, Russia and North Korea.
It's trying to not have them by large chunks of Texas.
But it also does have this mechanism in it.
So, again, just as Muslim Brotherhood is a Sunni Islamist organization.
It has participated in violence, but not for some time.
It has its origins in Egypt.
It does a lot of like social programming care most people will be familiar with, right?
as care has already issued a response letter
and in their letter they said quote
your proclamation has no basis
in law or fact you do not have the authority
to utilize to you declare any Americans
or American institutions terrorist groups
nor is there any basis to level this smear
against our organization. It's probably
worth noting that there was a DOJ
investigation into epic
not that epic the one you're thinking
of probably but this is the El Paso
Islamic Center. That
investigation was closed right but this is
not the first time that they have
tempted to
it's just very clearly
in Islamophobia
out of Texas, right? Like that is what this
is. This is also just an ancient
sort of Obama era conspiracy where
all of these people were all convinced that
Obama was part of the Muslim Brotherhood and that
there was this whole network of Muslim Brotherhood operatives
that were like running the country
and really
sort of if you squint hard enough
it was like well there's a bunch of people from the
UAE who are kind of
involved in some stuff
but this is like one of their
they're kind of fusing this old school
like old old school
homophobic stuff with
their like
kind of very specific current
contemporary targets
by sort of running these two together
yeah me is right
like I think Ted Cruz has tried to
get their Muslim Brotherhood on the FTO list
like several times
yeah there's this old like
from like the golden age of right wing conspiracies
right like the Bohemian Grove era
there's this idea that yeah
They're on like a, it's like a 50 or 100-year plan to bring the U.S. under Sharia law.
Right.
It's, it's boomer stuff.
Yes, combined with now trying to explicitly link them to Hamas, right?
So, yeah, that is great.
That's not great.
I would disagree, James.
I think that's not great.
I'll be brave enough to say it.
Don't love it.
No, it is a, uh, it's an assault on the First Amendment.
Like the stuff.
The inclusion of care is, is like,
is absolutely outrageous.
Yeah, care is a very respectability for like a civil rights organization.
Like liberal civil rights organization.
They're the least threatening organization in the world.
Yeah.
No, like, and they have advocated for an end to the genocide of people in Palestine,
which is a perfectly reasonable and legal thing to advocate for.
They have not expressed support for political violence.
Yeah, care is like as protected by the First Amendment as things can be in this country.
it's this is bonkers
so yeah I guess
care is already presumably
preparing a court case
in other Texas
news a three panel
judge in Texas just struck
down Texas's newly
drawn congressional map in federal
court with Trump appointed
judge Jeffrey Brown finding that
quote substantial
evidence shows that Texas
racially gerrymandered the
2025 map unquote
The judge has required Texas use its previous 2021 map
for the upcoming midterm elections.
What's really funny here
is that before the elections in November
where the California redistricting measure was up for vote,
Newsom specifically removed language in that measure
that framed the California redistricting
as a triggering event,
as in if the Texas one passes,
then the California one can go into effect.
You specifically removed this.
Yeah, the trigger language wasn't there.
Which means that California now doesn't wiped out five Republican seats.
And Texas probably won't be able to do anything about it.
There's still a challenge.
The California GOP are also trying to challenge.
Yes, and this Texas case is set to be heard before the Supreme Court.
There's a few other redistricting measures, I think, in Louisiana and in North Carolina.
a few other states are trying to do this.
But there is a possible future
in which Texas is not allowed to racially gerrymander
and California is able to go forward with their redistricting
because it may not have been specifically violating
this racial gerrymandering aspect that Judge Jeffrey Brown found
was affecting the Texas maps intentionally.
The GOP claim is that California is quote favoring Hispanic voters
that's going, it's going to be a harder landing to stick, right,
given that there are Latino people in every square mile of California.
Like, it's, yeah, that's going to be a rougher one for them.
And specifically, the stuff that Judge Brown found is, like,
in the way that these districts were redrawn,
it was to totally exclude non-white voters in some of these districts.
All right, one for the train fans in the audience,
a section of railway that connects Warsaw to Lublin in southeast and Poland,
which then connects onto Ukraine
was destroyed by an explosion
earlier this week. Overhead
cables further down the track were
also damaged. This comes
as drone incursions into European airspace
continue. Donald Tusk, the Polish
Prime Minister, called the Axe Sabotage, and
it seems extremely likely that he
is correct about that, right?
I guess we haven't explicitly
covered this on ED very much,
but there have been dozens
of documented Russian operations
in Europe since the expanded invasion of Ukraine that began in 2021.
What's concerning to me about this is that Europe is responding to some of these by accusing
Russia of trying to, quote, destabilize policies by sending migrants there.
It's likely true that Russia is messing with migration flows.
I mean, it is demonstrably true in some cases, right?
responding to this by hardening borders, deploying troops to borders, is not the solution
to that problem.
Europe's iron border kills more people than any other border.
And hardening that border is only going to kill more people.
Like if you want to be the shining city on a hill, right?
If you want to be, I think that title is maybe up for grabs, if you want to be the place
that stands out as like a safe place for democracy, you don't do that by killing migrants.
And so Europe's response to this is extremely disappointing, right?
And I wanted to highlight that because I don't see that in the coverage.
Yes, Russia escalating, it's meddling in Europe, is extremely concerning.
But like, if we accept that Russia is a totalitarian state or going in that direction,
then we should also, therefore, accept that people are going to want to leave that
and many other states where they cannot have autonomy,
where they cannot live healthy and full lives, and we should welcome them.
talking of people leaving places where they cannot have autonomy and have full and happy lives.
Let's talk about immigration in the United States very quickly.
Border Patrol named Gregory Bovino have moved their internal enforcement,
I of Sauron, to Charlotte, North Carolina.
This seems in large part due to some racists on X.com, demanding that they do so.
I shouldn't say in large part, I guess, in some part.
There has been video already showing Bovino participating in detentions at a host.
depot car park. I've said two words there, which of course, one of my colleagues
are smirky, giggle at me, stand by both of them. So, yeah, it is in part, right, due to
X.com, the everything website being a haven for racism. But I think it's also worth
noting in 2018, Democrat sheriffs in five North Carolina counties ran on the platform of
not cooperating with ICE. All of these, I believe, were black sheriffs. And ICE
pushed back hard, right, including with a billboard campaign.
Last year, the North Carolina Republican state legislature overrode a veto to pass HB10,
which required agencies to cooperate with ICE and honor their detainers.
A detainer is basically when ICE is like, hey, you've arrested this person, we want you
to hold them for a bit longer, so we can come pick them up for ICE reasons.
Since then, Meckleburg County Sheriff McFadden has claimed that ICE has
failed to collect people on detainers
163 times.
So this would be,
they would normally have a 48-hour detainer, right?
They'd hold them 48 extra hours.
I should come get them.
When they are held on the detainer,
it is still the state that is responsible for them.
It is a state that is paying
for the cost of incarcerating that person.
It is a state that is still incarcerating that person, right?
This has led, I guess,
to Republicans claiming that McFadden
is ignoring his obligation under HB10
McFadden says he isn't, he is holding them for the duration of the retainer,
but then releasing them when no one comes to get them, right?
This has led to, like, CIS, right, the Centre for Immigration Studies,
and SPLC has designated it as a hate group.
CIS has listed Charlotte and Mecklenburg County on its map of, quote-unquote, sanctuary jurisdictions.
There's a link to the map if you want to look at it.
They actually cite the 2018 policy and don't even mention HB10,
so it's unclear to me if they haven't updated this map
or if they just believe that nothing has changed
because they believe that HP10 is being ignored.
I think that might be a lot of the reason why we're seeing this now.
Then finally, I want to talk about something local to Southern California
in Tomecular north of San Diego.
A 17-year-old boy was pulled over at gunpoint
by a man who was known to locals as an ICE agent.
The man does not appear to have been in his professional capacity at this time.
Neighbors were able to de-escalate the situation
and get Gerardo Rodriguez,
the man in question to stop pointing his gun at the teen.
L.A. Taco got video of this.
It is wild.
The guy is just in the middle of the road with a handgun
pointing at a truck that's driving down the street.
Rodriguez accuses the young man.
He's 17 years old and we're going to say his name, right?
He's a child of speeding in the neighborhood,
not generally something that warrants drawing a firearm.
Rodriguez was detained by the Riverside County Sheriff's Office.
I believe he's bonded out now, but this is an interesting development, right?
Elsewhere, like in Santa Ana, an agent pulled a gun on a community watch member.
Fullerton Police on the scene did not detain the person.
They also refused to assist, right?
They just kind of were present.
But this is one of the few cases I'm aware of of an ICE agent.
There was someone else arrested in LA, who I believe died.
I believe that was a Border Patrol agent
that person unfortunately passed away of an overdose.
But this is one of the first instances
I've seen of this, right?
Like a kind of a state federal
direct confrontation where this guy appears
to have been pseudo-claiming
that he was acting under his like authority
as an ice agent.
That's not entirely clear to me.
The young man's parents rushed at a scene
with the young man's passport,
but by that point, neighbors had already been able to de-escalate.
So, yeah, I'm going to keep an eye on this because I think it's interesting.
All right.
This week we have a fundraiser from Borderlands Relief Collective.
I know they're helping a lot of people who need a lot of help right now,
some folks whose roofs are really struggling to keep up with the recent rainstorms
that we've had in Southern California.
They have an Amazon wish list.
The URL is too long for me to read out to you.
So we will include it in the show notes.
If you'd like to help, you can click on that and buy something.
for someone. Thank you.
All right. Well, folks, this has been the news.
Goodbye.
We reported the news.
We reported the news.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of the universe.
It could happen here is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.
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