It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 218
Episode Date: February 7, 2026All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. - CZM Rewind: Dogwhistle Politics and Nazi Code Hunting - Panama 1989 to Venezuela 2026: What History Can Teac...h Us feat. Andrew - Panama 1989 to Venezuela 2026: What History Can Teach Us, Pt. 2 - What Must Be Done? The Battle Against Fascism - Executive Disorder: ICE Body Cams, Fulton Election Raid, Portland Protest 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: CZM Rewind: Dogwhistle Politics and Nazi Code Hunting https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/ https://files.libcom.org/files/[Mark_Fisher]_Capitalist_Realism_Is_There_no_Alte(BookZZ.org).pdf https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/immigration/trumps-immigration-record-far-high-arrests-low-deportations-rcna217752 https://michiganadvance.com/2025/04/09/ice-director-envisions-amazon-like-mass-deportation-system-prime-but-with-human-beings/ https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c20p36e62gyo https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/mexico-refuses-us-military-flight-deporting-migrants-sources-say-2025-01-25/ https://bsky.app/profile/bishonentype.bsky.social/post/3luq3qktltc2n Panama 1989 to Venezuela 2026: What History Can Teach Us feat. Andrew https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/venezuelas-interior-minister-says-100-people-died-us-attack-2026-01-08/ https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/history/omar-torrijos-ousts-arias-panama Emperors In the Jungle: The Hidden History of the U.S. in Panama by John Lindsay-Poland Executive Disorder: ICE Body Cams, Fulton Election Raid, Portland Protest https://oversight.house.gov/release/chairman-comer-announces-the-clintons-caved-will-appear-for-depositions/ https://sortor.us/release/lemon.pdf https://d3nkl3psvxxpe9.cloudfront.net/documents/econTabReport_DDIQ8jz.pdf https://www.wtnh.com/news/politics/ap-judge-rules-us-justice-department-filed-a-lawsuit-over-georgia-voter-data-in-the-wrong-city/#:~:text=Judge%20rules%20US%20Justice%20Department%20filed%20a,government%20had%20sued%20in%20the%20wrong%20city. https://www.washingtonpost.com/documents/e815ed47-fce4-4797-8dc7-bcbc9efa968d.pdf https://x.com/DNIGabbard/status/2018504435769520156?s=20 https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/02/georgia-fulton-county-fbi-election-raid https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.mad.282460/gov.uscourts.mad.282460.315.0_1.pdf https://www.state.gov/secretary-of-state-marco-rubio-and-guyanese-president-irfaan-ali-at-a-joint-press-availability https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/dec/09/rumeysa-ozturk-tufts-student-resume-teaching-visa https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/23/politics/court-documents-student-israel-op-ed https://www.patreon.com/posts/whats-next-for-146454395?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.dcd.283214/gov.uscourts.dcd.283214.124.0_1.pdf https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.dcd.283200/gov.uscourts.dcd.283200.52.0.pdf https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FnY2z7eb5efGlHrb2AYBtfqMVDJSUfIu/view https://www.startribune.com/another-wave-of-departures-in-minnesotas-us-attorneys-office/601575569 https://www.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/2024-03/24_0307_priv_pia-ice-066a-pia-update.pdf https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/immigration/bovino-frustrated-directive-conduct-targeted-operations-chicago-rcna257069 https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2022/05/31/2022-11810/advancing-effective-accountable-policing-and-criminal-justice-practices-to-enhance-public-trust-and https://bidenwhitehouse.archives.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/05/25/fact-sheet-president-biden-to-sign-historic-executive-order-to-advance-effective-accountable-policing-and-strengthen-public-safety/ https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2022/05/31/2022-11810/advancing-effective-accountable-policing-and-criminal-justice-practices-to-enhance-public-trust-and https://www.propublica.org/article/alex-pretti-shooting-cbp-agents-identified-jesus-ochoa-raymundo-gutierrez https://sdf-press.com/archives/47816 https://x.com/vvanwilgenburg/status/2017320999629254878?s=20 https://x.com/vvanwilgenburg/status/2019098549640917124?s=20 https://t.co/aMIp9uMx04 https://wladimirvanwilgenburg.substack.com/p/kurdish-regions-will-be-organizedSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Oh, Media.
Hey, everybody.
Robert Evans here, and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode.
So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want.
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This is, it could happen here, a show about things falling apart.
I'm Garrison Davis.
This episode, I'm joined by Mia Wong.
Mia, I have some upsetting news.
Oh, no.
Which is, frankly, one of the best ways to start this episode.
And one of the best ways to start this show.
So I'm pretty sure that I found this account called, let's see, at Hill, Hitler.
And I think he's posting some things that is a,
little bit fascist. Oh, wow. I have decoded some of at Hell Hitler's communicates,
and I have uncovered a secret, a secret Nazi code. Wow. This is an incredibly unexpected
revelation from Haled Hitler. He has posted some pictures in like, what I would assume is some kind
of military uniform that looks like, I don't know, it's, it's some kind of like Germanic military
uniform. But I've noticed that there's some ruins on this uniform that look very, very,
similar to the Odle Rune. So I'm thinking, because of the Rune, this guy might be a Nazi.
Thank you for your work, Harrison. We can never have determined this. That's right. You can find
me at Ocent Defender online. No, no. That said people to Ossent Defender. That does it for us
today, and it could happen here. Now, so this episode, we're going to talk about something that's
been slowly frustrating me the past few weeks, and that is the misapplication of dog whistles.
And let's just get right into it.
People have been noticing patterns, noticing trends in official communications from the DHS
Gov online accounts, which now is the main way the government sends out communications,
unfortunately, especially on X the Everything app.
But this extends outside of X, the Everything app.
This extends outside of Blue Sky, the Internet in general.
this is about how we understand the messaging of fascists and understand how rhetoric and
anti-fascist education works and ways that I think it's currently being misapplied. So bear with me,
this is going to be kind of an odd episode, but I think it's worth it because I don't want us falling
into the same traps that we maybe fell into eight years ago. So let's start by talking about some
communications posted on the internet by at DHSgov.
A picture of a painting titled American Progress by John Gast
captioned, a heritage to be proud of, comma, a homeland worth defending.
So, on the surface, you know, maybe a slightly hashtag problematic sentiment here with a hashtag
problematic painting, or at the very least, a painting depicting the genocide.
of Native Americans and indigenous people,
specifically with like a white supremacist outlook,
with this enlarged white woman bathed in a white cloak,
bringing forth the tide of quote-unquote progress
as indigenous people are forced to flee from the edge of the painting.
It's fun because this is a painting. We literally,
when they had to explain manifest destiny like colonialism good,
this is the painting that was in my textbook
in high school history class.
It is like the er, the er colonialism good,
genocide good painting.
Genocide good.
That's what the painting is.
But what I have found through some hashtag research,
there might be a hidden code in this communication from the DHS.
Already an agency that only has the best interests
and of really all people who strive for human rights, the DHS.
So if you count all of the words in the tweet,
guess how many words there are in this tweet, Mia?
Fifteen?
No, so close.
So close.
Oh, 14.
14 words in this tweet.
Which may remind you of the 14 words,
the Nazi signifier,
which I should probably just to explain.
Surely most people listening to this is familiar with the 14 words,
since it seems everybody thinks they are an armchair expert on fascist rhetoric.
But the 14 words, we must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.
This became a popular hashtag dog whistle, especially in the past, I would say, 10, 15 years,
usually by implanting 14s, and usually 1488s with 88, meaning Hal Hitler, because
H is the eighth letter of the alphabet. This became a common Nazi tag. You could see this in graffiti,
you see this embedded into posts, see this in like Nazi artwork. And going back to this DHS post,
we can not only count 14 words in this tweet, this is actually a 1488 because,
two of the H's in this post are capitalized unusually.
And that means howl Hitler.
Wow.
Because H is the eighth letter.
Oh, but wait, actually, looking at this post again,
there's actually other words in this tweet that are also unusually capitalized.
But don't worry, don't worry.
This is still a dog whistle because those other words that are capitalized in the first sentence
are the letters A and D, which, if you convert those into numbers, are one and four.
So it's actually another 14.
Oh, wow.
We're doing numerology.
We're doing Jamatria.
We've become Q&O.
We're so back.
So if you cannot tell by my thinly veiled sarcasm in that last section, I think this methodology
is a little bit silly.
What are we doing?
What are we doing here?
We're converting capitalized letters in the first half of a tweet into numbers and then
rearranging the order of those letters to get a 14-8-8-8-year-old.
It's literally Gibotria.
And then also counting the total words in the whole tweet while still disregarding the capitalizations
in the last four words for another 14.
What are we doing?
How is this the piece of evidence that sinks, sinks the Trump administration and finally
proves that they're fascist?
You can just look at all of the fascist policies the Trump administration is enacting.
Instead of doing numerology on tweets, people are thinking, ha ha ha ha.
I have decoded the secret Nazi message with A.H.H.D. 18814. Nice try, Groypers. Meanwhile, you can just look at the actual text of the post. You can look at the painting. Both of those things have an inherent fascist quality. It's literally defending the concept of ethnic genocide, of manifest destiny. While the administration, the DHS, is currently
furthering ethno nationalist policies.
They are doing this.
This is Homeland Security, right?
I don't know if people realize that ICE is a part of Homeland Security, but like, this is
the agency that is literally rounding people up and sending them to camps.
We have camps in multiple countries now.
But I say they're being round up and sent to camps.
It's genuinely unclear whether what I'm talking about is the fucking concentration camp in Florida.
Seekot in El Salvador.
Yeah.
I mean, I think people have now escaped, so I can't technically call
the Honduras wanted death camp, but like, again, they're setting people to South Sudan. They're
like, they're just doing this. Like, what are we doing here? So, this episode, I want to focus on
how people are misusing anti-fascist education, or I would argue they're misusing anti-fascist
education, and kind of missing the forest for a cardboard cutout of trees. Yeah. Not even trees,
kind of something that could be a tree if you look at it from one angle, but maybe isn't actually.
a real tree? And you don't need to sound like a Da Vinci Code conspiracy theorist to point out the
obvious. Like, dog whistles don't matter if the regular whistle is already fascist. If they're just
saying things openly and furthermore doing it. Doing things. Yeah. What purpose does a dog whistle
have? What are we doing here? And this is something that we're going to discuss. I'm not just
saying this and closing the episode. We are going to get into these. Yeah. And
I think part of what's happening here, everybody is so cooked by the paranoid style of American
politics. Everyone is so eager to decode the hidden messages that we're missing what's right
in front of us. QAnon has a total victory. Q&OND does not really exist in the way that it
did in 2018, that the Q&ON cult and conspiracy theory as like a singular cultish
project is kind of no more. But QAnon has a cultural victory over the entire United States and not
just on the right wing, not just on MAGA. So much of American politics now is litigating who is
and is not a pedophile, who is and is not trafficking children, who can notice which events are
staged, who can notice hidden codes, who can decode anonymous messages on the internet. And this is
what, what, like, everything is. And like the real turning point, I think,
for the right wing was probably the 2020 election
in like a massive fracture from reality
in which they think that election was legitimately stolen.
And obviously there was many events leading up to that,
which contributed to this.
And I think one of the biggest fracture points for liberals
was the attempted assassination of Donald Trump,
with people creating whole new alternate realities
that that event was staged.
And because that door was opened,
now I am seeing such a massive flood
of things that I would label as blue-in-on conspiracy theories,
which is kind of a non-conspiracy theory,
which is kind of a nonsense term,
but it gets the point across.
And I'm going to do a whole piece
on BluAnon very soon.
I've been collecting Bluon
and Conspiracy theories for a while.
But I wanted to do something specifically
about this 1488 and like secret codes thing
because it's so evocative of like, you know,
Q drops.
And it's evocative of, you know,
searching for Masonic codes,
something that American conspiracy theorists
have been doing for generations.
And we're to talk about that more
and read a little bit of an essay on that topic after this ad break.
And I will let you know there's going to be two messages in the ad break that if you decode,
you win a special prize at the end of the episode.
So make sure you listen to every single second of the ad in case you miss the code.
Okay, we are back.
Speaking of the paranoid style in American politics,
I want to quote a few sections to kind of frame what I'm talking about here.
This was an essay written in the 60s by Richard
Ververhrer Hofstetter.
Richard Hofstetter.
One of the first like modern pieces on American conspiracy culture and politics.
I'm going to, I have three paragraphs here that I selected as being relevant to the current, the current topic at hand.
Quote, there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right.
wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of
heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. Nothing really prevents
a sound program or demand from being advocated in the paranoid style. Style has more to do with the
way in which ideas are believed than with the truth or falsity of their contact, unquote. And I like
that section specifically because 1488 is a real dog whistle. We can see this used.
There's aspects of people who are trying to search for this and trying to search for patterns
in the communications of admittedly fascistic government agency that I find sympathetic.
Like I can understand because, yeah, that is a real dog whistle. I'm going to continue the quote.
The paranoid spokesman sees the fate of conspiracy in apocalyptic terms. He traffics in the birth
and death of whole worlds, whole political orders, whole systems of human values.
He is always manning the barricades of civilization.
He constantly lives at a turning point.
Like religious millinerianists, he expresses the anxiety of those who are living through the
last days, and he is sometimes disposed to set a date for the apocalypse.
As a member of the avant-garde who is capable of perceiving the conspiracy before it is
fully obvious to an as-of-yet-unaroused public, the paranoid is a militant leader.
Demand for total triumph leads to the formulation of hopelessly unrealistic goals.
And since these goals are not even remotely attainable, failure constantly heightens the
paranoid's sense of frustration, unquote. Hoffsetter is talking about something that me and
Robert specifically have discussed a lot on this show before, how everyone in America
wants to have access
to secret information.
Everyone
wants to have
the exclusive piece
of secret intel
that will solve everything.
And having that
informational exclusivity
in a world of information
saturation,
right, of a vortex,
of like meaningless noise,
it's such a romantic idea
that I alone
have the info or the clue
to piece this together
and it's my duty
to inform the masses.
It's a very romantic notion.
And it's also one that is exactly perfectly anti-suited for the moment we live in,
which is actually just a moment where everything that is happening is just stunningly literal.
Like, it's all out of the open.
Like, what is happening with the Trump administration?
Okay, in 2020, there is a massive uprising to attempt to fundamentally change,
like, the structurally racist nature of the United States to deal with its fucking class inequality.
to deal with the structural violence of the state,
this was reacted to by a massive fascist movement
that spent half a decade gaining power
and then finally took power
in the form of like a bunch of pissed off
petite bourgeois fucking car dealers
and like literally a billionaire real estate mogul
backed by the richest tech company guy in the world.
Right? And they came together to build fascism.
This is the most straightforward,
like if this is a consensus.
of how a fascist takeover works
that is so thuddingly literal
that it defies narrativization
because it's just there.
There's no subtlety to it.
They're just saying it.
They just want to do it and they're doing it.
But everyone is convinced
that there's like some kind of secret hidden conspiracy
in it. It's like, no, they're just doing
the thing that they're saying. Yeah.
You can argue that we have a
Groyper occupied government
not because of counting words in posts,
but because of not only who they're bringing on for Doge,
but literally ICE and DHS, as of today,
which I'm recording this on Wednesday,
I think because this comes out Wednesday night,
are copying like Patriot Front-style tactics
of loading up ICE agents in U-Haul-style rentable trucks
to hunt down people to assault and kidnap.
Like, they're just copying the Patriot Front playbook here.
The ICE director said that he wants an Amazon-like mass deportation system,
calling it quote unquote Amazon Prime but with human beings.
They're saying this.
You can listen to the actual words.
I'm going to read another quote here from the paranoid style of American politics essay.
Quote, a final characteristic of the paranoid style is related to the quality of its pedantry.
One of the impressive things about paranoid literature is the contrast between its fantasized conclusions
and the almost touching concern with factuality in very.
shows. It produces heroic strivings for evidence to prove that the unbelievable is the only
thing that can be believed. Respectable paranoid literature not only starts from certain moral
commitments that can indeed be justified, but also carefully and all but obsessively accumulates
quote-unquote evidence. The paranoid seems to have little expectation for actually
convincing a hostile world, but he can accumulate evidence in order to protect his cherries.
convictions from it, unquote. And I think that gets into the psychological mechanisms on why people
are doing this Nazi code hunting. It's actually a form of like self-coping, looking at the horrific
state of the federal government, looking at the brazenness in which ICE is operating. And this is a
self-preservation mechanism. Someone on blue sky that I was talking to about this was like arguing,
like, ice doesn't need to dog whistle. They have no reason to. Like dog whistling is for trying to like
sneakily get racists or fascists into power while signaling to a nationalistic base that they
are like one of them, right? But these guys are already in power. And the base already knows that
they're in power. There's no point in dog whistling. They're just using ICE to establish an
ethno state. They're using explicit ethno state rhetoric in a post from this morning, which has
one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten words. Not fourteen, ten words. Wow.
DHS said, quote, serve your country.
Defend your culture.
No undergraduate degree required.
Defend your culture.
It's not about locking up criminal migrants.
It's about defending a culture from its destruction through ethnic demographic shifts.
They're not trying to obscure what they're doing in the slightest.
No.
And I want to return to something else that the Hofstetter said in that in that second paragraph that you read about how, like, one of the central conceits is that, like, you know,
there's this giant conspiracy that's being unleashed and the American public doesn't know
anything about it. And like, yeah, you can, you know, it is distressing to a large extent,
the extent to which people just don't know what the government is doing. But also, like,
if you look at any polling at all about anything that people are doing, everyone hates it.
There isn't like a secret thing that you can say to convince people that they're, that all these
people are Nazis because, like, that's not even a particularly useful project because everyone
fucking hates them already, like trying to fight this in the realm of sort of,
the accumulation of the evidence of conspiracy instead of in the realm of like,
hi, I'm your neighbor, you also fucking hate this. Let's go fucking, like, do this your
people are doing in LA and like follow these fucking ice fans around. Right. That is stuff
that people are doing, but it doesn't have the kind of like instant emotional gratification
and register of trying to like accumulate hordes of secret knowledge. So people do it less,
even though it's less effective.
In my discussion of this online on various cursed social media sites,
I've gotten a lot of pushback to my pushback of these tactics.
And what I see as a sort of like abuse of anti-fascist education, right?
Because people like, you know, Robert Evans, myself, you know, Molly Conger,
spent the past eight years trying to actually, you know, educate people about, like,
Nazi rhetoric, like in like Nazi signals and dog whistles, right?
and as an attempt to hopefully prevent them
from expanding their power.
And we may have succeeded in education,
but we may have failed in the prevention.
Yeah.
Of them seizing power.
And that also makes me kind of question
the effectiveness of certain tactics.
And it's now very odd to see things
that we've argued for visibility around
to kind of be used in ways that don't really make sense.
And it's kind of like trying to,
to tame a monster that you've partially created.
And it's so frustrating to me because, I mean,
one person who I was lightly arguing about this online
was saying, like, this is not numerology.
And we don't have to be just okay
with a clear attempt to normalize white nationalist rhetoric.
And like, first of all, like, codes aren't rhetoric.
Codes are codes.
And the textual fascist sentence is the rhetoric.
what they're actually, like, saying, which has, like, proto-fascist or fascistic aspects, that is
the rhetoric. And they're doing it. Is there somebody out there in 2025 who's going to finally
realize that DHS has an agency, has fascistic underpinnings via a chronically online Twitter
user explaining that if you count words and turn certain capitalize letters into numbers,
it makes a secret Nazi message? Is there one person who's going to become convinced to this?
No. That's not the purpose.
So trying to conceptualize this as, like, we have to, we have to make sure we call out
the use of Nazi rhetoric.
That doesn't apply to this specific thing that we're talking about.
Yeah.
And also, like, I think, you know, like, I, I think we've sort of kind of just, to some extent,
we've just failed on the normalization front.
Because again, like, it's the president of the United States.
Yeah.
This is, this is the official account of the Department of Homeland Security.
It has already become normalized because they have power.
The only way to denormalize it is not actually to do media.
critique, it's to, like, actually oppose them.
But that's scary.
That's scary, Mia.
Do you know it's easy?
Posting on X the Everything app.
Yeah.
This is how this kind of conspiratorial worldview
actually empowers the state
because the central conceit of the conspiratorial worldview
is that there is a nearly all-powerful agency
that controls an apparatus that enables it to basically control
any events that it wants, right?
This is why you can stage things.
This is why it can rig elections.
This is why it can, like,
I don't know, like it can just like magically like
disappear anyone, it can replace them with anyone,
it can stage any protest movement it wants to, right?
And I think you've seen this a lot in the American case
where like I see people who are like genuinely well-meaning leftists
who are convinced that if you do anything to resist the American state,
you will immediately be killed because the American state is all powerful and irresistible.
And that's just fascist propaganda.
Yeah, you're falling victim to the panoptic off.
Yeah, but it's fascist propaganda that fits into the narrow,
structure of conspiracy.
And because the state is dangerous, right, and can hurt you, it's very, very easy to, you know,
accumulate structures of evidence that support the emotional sort of core of this thing that
is just literally fascist propaganda.
People are resisting the state every day, right?
Why is ICE fucking doing patriot prayer tactics and fucking, like, hiding people in, like,
fucking U-Hauls to jump out and grab people?
It's because when they tried to fucking mass, we stomp them, right?
And when they drive around in their cars and you can see them through the window,
everyone follows them.
People can follow them around and alert their community members on where ICE is.
Like, again, motherfuckers and fucking Lulu Levin shit are like screaming at ICE agents where they
try to arrest people.
Like, yeah, that's the actual condition we're in.
And like, regular people.
And that's why I find some people who would be, you know, self-described as like anti-fascists
or self-described as leftists almost falling into this trap, like, more so than others.
And it's a little bit evident of something that like I've described as like the forever 2016,
how we're all kind of stuck in the mindset of this 2016, 2017, 2018 era.
And we have this unwillingness to realize that that's not the political situation on the ground anymore.
We are actually not in Charlottesville.
This is a different situation.
This is 2025.
And one other like defense of this, you know, code hunting that I've seen people say is,
quote, Nazis love playing games like this, so it's important that we call it out.
And another person saying, quote, this is a fun, a little game for their group chats while they kill and disappear people, unquote.
And like, first of all, this is not a game.
This is actual people's lives who are being deported, who are being sent to foreign prison camps.
These are not games.
And I think that view of like anti-fascist education risks repeating like the OK symbol debacle.
where dog whistles end up being created or spread further due to this gamified version of like Easter egg anti-fascism.
It's kind of like the Barbara Streisand effect, where you end up almost accidentally making them start doing the thing, which Nazis always have that like frustrating impulse because they're the little bitch boy ideology, I think, as Ratlimit put it, one of one of my favorite posters.
And like, I'm not saying that Nazi signposting should be ignored, but I think we should be thoughtful and careful of how we do it to recap the OK symbol thing that was invented as like a fake dog whistle to try to trick leftists into convincing like the media and then having the media try to convince regular people that anyone who uses like the OK hand symbol is secretly a fascist. And this scheme worked. And eventually the OK symbol became an actual symbol used for fascists to an
each other through this ironic detachment
because it was being talked
about in the news as a secret Nazi symbol
even though this whole thing was invented as like
a joke online.
And I'm afraid I've
started to already see a similar thing
happen with the 14 words dog whistle
with an increased use
of the 14 words and invoking
the 14 words among far right accounts
specifically because of
this whole debacle with the
DHS Gov account
and their heritage to be proud
of homeland worth defending American Progress, like, ethno-nationalist posting.
And I truly cannot say, one way or another, if that American Progress Post had a intentionally
embedded 14 words dog whistle inside. I can't tell you that. And the point I'm trying to make is
that it kind of doesn't matter, but the way we talk about dog whistles does matter.
And as frustrating as it is that sometimes this feels like we're just living in the meme where the Nazi starts shaving his head because everyone's calling him a Nazi.
That is how Nazis work sometimes.
And I don't want to play into this attention spectacle that they so badly want.
But you know what I do want right now?
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To briefly take a small tangent here, I think there is something very important about, like,
the fact that we're all stuck in 2016, which was sort of like the peak of irony, right, as a social affect,
has left us really unprepared for now where everything is just sort of like, you know,
they're just doing it and saying it, right?
Yeah.
And it's not this sort of like irony-pilled-deniability shit.
They just do it.
And people are just not prepared for that.
They're able to wage this war kind of on both fronts.
And I think they are still pushing this.
I'm going to quote from a friend of the pod, rat limit, one of my favorite mutes.
Quote, prediction, the Nazi salute will become common within two years.
Right-wingers will half-ass it for plausible deniability, memeify the backlash, and then start
fully doing it, quote-unquote, as a joke to quote-unquote troll the libs for being hysterical
enough to think that they were doing it in the first place.
fascism is a little bitch ideology
because it's too timid to enact its cruelty
until it can frame its cruelty
as retaliation against others
for anticipating it.
And this has been proven right faster
than I think what Rat Limit predicted.
There's this current trend on X the Everything Act
where white girl aspiring influencers
are doing Nazi-style salutes
in trying to memeify the backlash
with several posts going viral
of these like aspiring influencers,
either at the pool or cooking
or doing laundry or walking your dog
while having your arm in a Elon Musk,
my heart goes out to you,
Nazi salute-style fashion.
Yeah.
And I think focusing media attention
on someone like Musk doing a Nazi salute
makes sense, right?
He's like an actual person affiliated with the government.
But making a whole media blitz
about random blue-check Twitter girls,
maybe not so much.
Maybe that doesn't have any actual value if a random, like a random Twitter poster from Missouri is trying to garner backlash by doing a Heil Hitler salute in their kitchen next to their Instapot.
I keep coming back to the thing that I wrote about the original Nazi salute and about the ways that everyone, you know, like one of the functions of capitalism is that everyone has been trained to experience the world and think in the image of action instead of like actually.
existing things. That's what I want to talk about next. Yeah. Yeah. Let's do this. Let's do this.
Yeah. Go for, go for it. No, I think part of this focus on, on, on, on, like, these hidden codes and even
just like these, like, messages online is a liberal opposition to the aesthetics of deportation,
but not necessarily the act itself. Yeah. It's carrying out deportations in a mode that seems not
in line with, like, neoliberal governing. And that's, I think, what a bunch of the backlash being
focused on the aesthetics of the Trump administration, like how they film like gaudy
ASMR videos that they post from the White House account of deportations and use military planes,
those are aesthetic differences. And those differences may be important. And they're bad, right?
I'm not saying these things are good. Those things are still bad. But when that gets focused
on slightly more than just the pure act of deportation itself, that I think is evident of being
trapped in this like capitalist realism being trapped in this like like this neoliberal yeah the society
of the spectacle exactly right let's like in june i arrested 30 000 people and did 18,000 deportations
in may it was 24,000 arrests and 18,000 deportations since February the trump admin has averaged
about 14,700 deportations of month the highest number of deportations ever was in 2013 under Obama
averaging 36,000 a month.
The Biden admin averaged almost 13,000.
When the Trump administration started using military planes for deportations back in January,
mainly as an aesthetic choice, that triggered backlash and rejections from Mexico and Colombia.
Mexico refused to allow U.S. military aircraft carrying deported migrants to land in their country.
Columbia also barred two military planes full of migrants, but later caved as Trump threatened
punitive tariffs.
And you can see the same thing about deploying military to the border, something that Biden also
did, but has a larger aesthetic backlash under Trump.
Do you have something you want to say on this image aspect?
I have some quotes from Fisher.
And that's kind of all I have left.
Yeah, I mean, it is very fitting of our styles of politics that you're going to Fisher here
and I'm going to Benjamin.
Benjamin is quoted in these sections that Fisher is pulling from as well.
Yep, yep.
except I'm going to the source
I'm not going through the
fucking CRU bullshit
like Bob Marxist
bourgeois running dog
but no but like you know
one of the things that Walter Benjamin
who people genuinely really should read
he's one of the great
original theorists of fascism
and he fucking died
trying to flee the Nazis
and one of his arguments was that
you know one of the cores of
fascism is the replacement of politics with aesthetics, right?
That aesthetics would allow you to, you know, feel representation instead of do the action.
And this is an analysis that has been sort of like folded through a whole bunch of different
analyses of how capitalism functions, right?
This is one of the three lines of the society is spectacle.
And it's this real issue that we're dealing with now because, again, kind of in a sense,
what has happened to everything, right? And you can argue to some extent that, like, our
channel being called Cool Zone Media is sort of this, is that all politics from every side has been
completely reduced to aesthetics. And completely reducing it to aesthetics allows, like,
allows the fascist mode of politics to simply draw in a bunch of people who can sort of just now
passively experience living through the sort of, through this sort of collection of images and
this emotional aesthetic. Yeah. And it also is doing the same thing to us.
But the thing is, they have the fucking state, and we don't, right?
And so if you don't fucking exit, if you don't exit the sort of mirror world of aesthetic
of sort of like, of fucking living in images, right?
And, you know, go do the actual shit that DeBoer is talking about in the society of spectacle
where he won all your friends form workers councils and fucking start taking all of the shit
back from all of the people who are taking it from you.
You're just going to live in the fascist nightmare forever.
I mean, you could look at the Union resistance to ICE deportations specifically in
LA with Russian workers.
that's literally doing that.
And like I would argue like now,
it's not so much that fascism is politics as aesthetics,
but especially now it is an aestheticized politics.
And you can even see that insofar as its focuses on, you know,
like race and like ethnic purity, like blood and soil.
That's why they're posting American progress,
driving out the indigenous people
with the Aryan white lady carrying the torch of progress.
It is an aestheticized politics on like a very pure level.
And again,
to quote from my goat, uh, the anti-goat.
Quote, Mark Fisher in Catholicism, quote,
ultra-authoritarianism and capital are by no means incompatible.
Internment camps and franchise coffee bars coexist.
Neol liberals, the capitalist realists par excellence,
have celebrated the destruction of public space,
but contrary to their official hopes,
there is no withering away of the state,
only a stripping back of the state to its core, military, and police functions.
unquote. This is very similar to something that me and Mia talked about right as Trump got
elected in terms of the state becoming more removed but hostile. Yeah. Although I see, again,
I disagree with officials here because the neolibals understood what they were doing to begin with.
They were never trying to with her the state away. That was just the lies that they told the fucking
basses. Like, sure. I mean, that's what, contrary to their official hopes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
And it's like, you know, quote, such a blight can only be eased by an intervention that can be,
no more anticipated than was the onset of the curse in the first place.
Action is pointless, only senseless hope makes sense.
Superstition and religion, the first resort to the helpless, proliferate.
Unquote.
This is part of what I conceptualize as this code hunting is almost a form of this hopeless superstition.
To continue, quote,
the catastrophe is neither wading down the road, nor has it already happened.
Rather, it is being lived through.
There is no punctual moment of disaster.
the world doesn't end with a bang, it winks out, unravels, gradually falls apart.
What caused the catastrophe to occur, who knows its cause lies long in the past,
so absolutely detached from the present as to seem like the caprice of a maligned being,
a negative miracle, a maladation which no penance can ameliorate.
The turn from belief to aesthetics, from engagement to spectatorship,
is held to be one of the virtues of capitalist realism, unquote.
And yeah, that's what Mia is talking about with Gita Bore and society of the spectacle.
That's the trap that I think a lot of people are falling into right now.
And though it's arguable that living in a liberal contradiction may be preferable to fascist
authoritarianism, that still does it mean. It's like good, right? That's not what we're arguing here.
Fisher then quotes French philosopher Alon Badoo, quote, to justify their conservatism,
the partisans of the established order cannot really call it ideal or why.
So instead, they've decided to say that all of the rest is horrible. Sure, they say,
we may not live in a condition of perfect goodness, but we are lucky that we don't live in a condition
of evil. Our democracy is not perfect, but it's better than bloody dictatorships. Capitalism is
unjust, but it's not criminal like Stalinism. We let millions of Africans die of AIDS, but we don't
make racist nationalist declarations like Lemosovich. We kill Iraqis with our airplanes, but we don't
cut their throats with machetes like they do in Rwanda, unquote.
And already parts of this are slightly outdated.
Oh, yeah, no, because we're doing this shit now.
But this is the thing, both are tragedies where millions people die, right?
One of them is through the aesthetics of neoliberalism.
The other one is through aesthetics of racist, nationalistic declarations, which the Trump
administration is currently playing with.
That is what they've decided to do.
Yeah.
And so the reaction to it is on this aesthetic note, not necessarily.
on this pure actual humanistic opposition to deportations as a process that is inhumane,
that we should not allow at all. Yeah, I see the logic of this all the fucking time talking to people.
We'll be like, okay, like, no deportations. And then you get a whole bunch of people being like,
well, but what about criminals? It's like, some deportation. What are you? This is the structural
logic of the original like deportation blitz from Trump. Creating a class of undesirables that you can
then always add to and press the border on like what Carl Schmitt talks about. This is the structural
logic of fascism. But everyone
thinks about deportations this way now
and they're mad that Trump is
doing it and not Biden, but
you know, until people actually break through
the sort of
peer opposition to the aesthetics and actually
start, you know, having
a kind of totalizing opposition
to the system that is doing this,
we're just going to be stuck here.
And this is, I think, one of the limits of
using anti-fascism
as this like aesthetic code hunting
is because a few days,
ago. The THS posted a Woody Guthrie song, his song, America the Beautiful, with the DHS posting,
The Promise of America is worth protecting the future of our homeland is worth defending.
Notably, everyone in this video is all white people, which this sentiment is the same thing as the 14
words, except it has 15 words. So therefore, not a Nazi dog whistle. We're safe, guys, we're good.
I counted the words. There's 15 of them. So you can disregard what the actual
text is saying. And I think that is the prime, uh, the prime contradiction in which I am growing
increasingly frustrated. So that's most of what I have to say about the limits of Nazi code hunting
and the aesthetics of superstition and the paranoid style in American politics.
Mia, do you have any, any final wise, wise notes?
The time for Nazi code hunting, if there ever was one, has passed. It is now time.
to end the episode right here.
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Canadian women are looking for more.
More to themselves, their businesses, their elected leaders, and the world are at them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast.
I'm Jennifer Stewart.
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And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women.
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all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
Listen to the Honest Talk podcast on IHeart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Welcome to the A building.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm in Malmelaq Lamoma.
It's 1969.
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr.
had both been assassinated.
And Black America was out of breaking point.
Writing and protests broke out on an unprecedented scale.
In Atlanta, Georgia, at Martin's Almermata, Morehouse College,
the students had their own protest.
It featured two prominent figures in black history,
Martin Luther King Sr. and a young student, Samuel L. Jackson.
To be in what we really thought was a revolution.
I mean, people would die.
In 1968, the murder of Dr. King, which traumatized everyone.
The FBI had a role in the murder of a Black Panther leader in Chicago.
This story is about protest.
It echoes in today's world far more than it should, and it will blow your mind.
Listen to the A-building on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the unpurposed podcast.
On a recent episode, I sat down with Nick Jonas, singer, songwriter, actor,
and global superstar.
The thing I would say to my younger self is congratulations.
You get to marry Priyanka Chopra Jonas.
And also, you know, your daughter is incredible.
That's beautiful, man.
Yeah.
Thank you.
That's so beautiful.
I can see that got you a little.
Yeah, for sure.
Our daughter, she came to the world under sort of very intense circumstances,
which I'd not really talked about ever.
Growing up on Disney in front of a million.
How did that shape?
your sense of self.
I went blank.
I hit a bad note,
then I couldn't kind of recover.
And I built up this idea
that music and being musician
was my whole identity.
I had to sort of relearn who I was
if you took this thing away.
Who am I?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty
on the Iheart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is Ryder Strong,
and I have a new podcast called The Red Weather.
It was many and many a year ago
in a kingdom by the sea.
In 1995, my neighbor and a trainer disappeared from a commune.
It was hard to wrap your head around.
It was nature and trees and praying and drugs.
So no, I am not your guru.
And back then, I lied to my parents, I lied to police, I lied to everybody.
There were years right where I could not say your name.
I've decided to go back to my hometown in Northern California, interview my friends, family, talk to police, journalists, whomever I can to try to find out what actually happened.
Isn't it a little bit weird that they obsess over hippies in the woods and not the obvious boyfriend?
They have had this case for 30 years.
I'll teach you sons of a bitch to come around her in my wife.
Boom, boom.
This is the red weather.
Listen to the red weather on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So, in case you've been living under a rock, to ring in the new year, the United States regime decided to invade Venezuela and kidnap president.
Maduro and his wife Celia Flores to put them on trial in the United States.
Thus far, the time of recording, there are 100 reported killed by America's invasion,
and Maduro's vice president del Se Rodriguez is now acting president of Venezuela,
while Maduro has been arraigned in New York.
There's not a lot yet known about how things played out, precisely,
so I don't plan on tell them too deeply into my speculations.
But many have been drawn attention to the similarities between this recent,
historical moment and another notorious U.S. invasion of a nearby Latin American country,
Panama, back in 1989.
Hello and welcome to get up in here.
I'm Andrew Sage, and I'm here with...
Speak James, a person who's been to Panama.
I'm excited about this one.
I saw some good museums when I was in Panama.
I survived, though I haven't been to any museums.
I did visit Panama at one point.
Nice.
Many years ago.
Yeah.
This is before I was politically conscious.
Yeah.
Yeah, I was even more politically conscious after spending some time in Panama.
Yeah, I could imagine.
After reading about what happened, yeah, I could see why you would be.
Yeah, right.
Like, obviously, people, we were informed people.
They're not aware of the history of the US and Panama over two episodes.
But having just come from watching people who across the Darien Gap being detained,
imprisoned and deported from Panama with US funding and then going and seeing at the museum
with all this history the idea that they'd come back to full circle to like the US effectively
using Panama as an externalization of its own border like the US sent its Homeland Security
secretary to the inauguration of the current Panamanian president like it was really
just I know not great
like it didn't make me happy.
Yeah, I mean, there's a long history of that kind of collaboration between those governments.
Yeah.
For better and for worse.
And so that's really what we're going to look into today, you know, the history of U.S. intervention in Panama.
So we can hopefully understand why comparisons are being drawn to the U.S. invasion of Venezuela here in 2026.
Yeah.
So in case you didn't know, just some basic facts about Panama, it's a country on the isthmus connecting Central America
to South America, border in Costa Rica and Colombia.
It has a population of just over 4 million people,
and it is best known, of course, for its canal,
which is a real feat of human engineering
with an unfortunate tragedy behind it
that links the Pacific Ocean
to the Atlantic Ocean via the Caribbean Sea.
This canal is one of the principal reasons
why the US has so long been invested
in the fate of this little Spanish-speaking country.
So you see, we have to go all the,
way back to 1821, where as a member of the newly minted Republic of Grand Columbia, the country
gained independence from the crumbling Spanish Empire.
But after that Republic of Grand Columbia dissolved in 1831, Panama remained part of Colombia until
with US backing, it seceded in 1903.
Now, Panama had actually tried to gain its independence from Columbia before then in 1830, 1831 and 1840.
But among many other reasons, despite being part of Colombia, it didn't have any roads connecting it to the rest of Colombia, due to the Darien cap.
Yeah.
Could you tell me a bit more about that part of the world?
Because I know you have a lot of intimate knowledge of it.
Yeah, absolutely.
There's still no roads go through the Darien, actually.
It's extremely mountainous and extremely jungally.
and it has some very large and powerful rivers, right?
You know, I've spent time in the Darien myself.
When you talk to indigenous people who live in Darien now,
I remember speaking to a guy, Senor Bonil, was his name,
and he said to me, like, how could we be unkind to immigrants?
Many of us are migrants, too.
We go to Panama for education.
I mean, the Panamanian Border Patrol slash military are there in small numbers,
but, like, essentially, you are outside of the state in this area, right?
certainly in terms of provision of services, it's very little.
And that's because largely it is geographically very difficult to access to get there
just to sort of paint people a picture.
I took a plane, then I drove all the way to the paved road until that ended,
and then I hitched a ride on a truck all the way on the unpaved road until that ended,
and then I hit to ride in a dugout canoe.
It was literally a log that someone hollowed out,
and I took that for about five hours, and then I walked for a while.
and like that that was how I got to where I stayed.
It's still extremely difficult for people to cross.
And I guess like, you know, I like to read James Scott,
I think about the way he thought about the art of not being governed, right?
And it's still one of those areas that it's hard for the state to extract tribute from.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
I mean, it's impressive to me that despite these challenges,
thousands of people manage to traverse through the Darian Gap every year.
Yeah.
I mean, people wouldn't do it if they didn't think that,
what they were going to leave behind was worse,
but it is one of the most harrowing journeys,
one of the most difficult journeys a person can make.
Like you're shimming along cliff edges on, you know,
a few inches of rock.
And if you fall, you will die.
You're crossing a river,
a river that was chest high for me.
I'm six foot three.
And people are carrying toddlers, babies.
Someone gave birth in the jungle while I was there.
It's unimaginable.
And people die every day.
I saw that myself.
Like, it's an incredibly dangerous and difficult journey,
but people take it because they want a better chance at life, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And so you can imagine if it's so difficult to traverse even now,
how much more difficult it would have been back then
with even less infrastructure between the regions of Panama and Columbia.
Yeah.
So at that point in time, Panama was mainly conducting trade, which was a state at the time,
was mainly conducting trade with its Caribbean neighbors rather than Colombia's capital.
You know, they were very geographically isolated from the rest of Colombia.
But despite that fact, Panama only succeeded in gaining its independence with the help of the US
as American ambitions and local elite ambitions aligned for development of the canal.
Now, all of this in what follows was recounted in Emperors in the Jungle,
the Hidden History of the US in Panama by John Lindsay, Poland,
which I picked up to my library, and it was really a fantastic book that served as my main
resource for this research.
In Lindsay Poland's words, Panama was a long-standing laboratory of U.S. imperial power.
And some of the things I found out about in this book I never heard of anywhere, and it really shook
me that these kinds of things were happening, you know, at this crossroads of continents.
So I've been saying the U.S. involvement in the country even preceded its independence with 11
American interventions taking place in just the pre-independent state of Panama between 1856 and 1902.
And their rationale for bringing in their military usually involved, you know, claims of protecting
in American interests, particularly during
intersectionary or revolutionary activity in the country.
And of course, because it's America,
they always had a heavily racialized approach to the region.
You know, they saw the Colombian army as ignorant mongrels,
and they saw the Panama isthmus civilians as savage and animal-like.
Especially as Americans and American capital were involved in the construction of the
Panama Canal Railway, which was built between 1850,
in 1855 to facilitate
the Californian gold rush. You see,
America was eye on Panama for
a long time because they saw it as
an appealing site for a trans-ismos
canal, the next big
project in international trade.
And aside from their direct interventions,
they were signing treaties concerning
Panama even before Panama was
independent. While it was
expanding its territory through the conquest
of Mexico, the U.S. signed
the Bidlac Treaty with Columbia
in 1846 to guarantee
Colombian control over Panama in exchange for free access to any future canal.
As we all know, America always keeps its promises.
So only four years later, in 1850, the U.S. and England signed the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty,
which ensured their joint cooperation in any future canal.
You notice I said the U.S. and England signed that treaty?
Yeah.
Because Colombia was not involved at all.
Yeah.
Are you familiar with the Scottish attempt to colonize Adarian?
No, that didn't come up.
I may have missed that.
I think it's previous to the dates you're covering,
but Scotland attempted to colonize Adirian in a thing called the Darien scheme.
Basically, much of the Scottish bourgeoisie pulled their capital to do this, right?
and the idea that it would be a Scottish colony.
Obviously, at that time, colonialism was seen as the route to national security and independence.
Prestige.
Yeah.
And they wanted to keep up with the English who were busy colonizing and pillaging much of the world.
So they attempted to set up a colony in one of the least hospitable places on the planet.
Unsuccessfully, people got malaria.
When I was there, I was told that every type of malaria is present in the gap just because you have such a
global population of people, right?
That the mosquitoes are biting someone from East Africa,
then they're biting you,
then they're buying someone from West Africa, South America, Nepal.
You know, their mosquitoes is getting a global buffet.
So back then, obviously, still malaria.
It's like a mosquito convention.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's like a mosquito-vector disease, gold mine.
The Scottish bourgeoisie significantly lost to such an extent
that, like, we can point to this scheme of one of the reasons
that Scotland continues to be colonized by England, right?
Damn.
Yeah, yeah, it's wild.
I think you would probably learn about it now.
If you're going to school in Scotland or you've been to school in Scotland
or you've been to school in Scotland, you learned about it.
I'd love to hear from you.
But, yeah, the Darien scheme was this kind of idea of a Scottish empire that ended up
completely backfiring.
Yeah, I just looked it up as the late 1690s to set up a colony called New Caledonia.
Yeah.
I mean, and that was their first attempt at setting up a colony.
I mean, way to pick them.
Yeah, yeah, right.
Like, throw a door at the map and you couldn't land at a place that is less like Scotland.
It does rain a lot, other than that.
Yeah, I mean, that's like trying to set up your first colony and like Antarctica or something.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, I don't know how, whether they just felt like it looks like no one else is hanging around there.
And obviously at that point in time, they weren't concerned with indigenous people, right?
Like, they felt like there was no other state projecting its force there or like what.
I don't understand how they, or because they, I think I read somewhere that there,
there have been several attempts to build a canal through the Dalian.
I think it's actually slightly narrower there.
So whether they were early on in that and just sort of, well, we'll establish ourselves here
and then as we'll build a canal a bit later.
Yeah, and well, because it didn't quite work out.
Yeah, it didn't go that way for them, sadly.
So the US and England, they signed this treaty to ensure joint cooperation in a future canal.
And then during the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln advanced a proposal to establish a colony of emancipated and deported black Americans in southwestern Panama.
Because, you know, he didn't believe black and white people could live together.
Right, yeah.
This proposal was scrapped due to Colombian, Central American, and Black American opposition.
but it's interesting to think about there being almost a Liberia in the Western
hemisphere, you know, because the Liberian project was an attempt at doing similarly.
Yeah, that is wild to think about.
And so after quite a few of their pre-Panamanian independence military interventions,
it's quite a mouthful, thank you, past Andrew,
the US was itching to build the canal that they always wanted.
They were fiend in for a gateway to the Pacific, and they did not like that when France tried to build their own canal through Panama from 1879 to 1889, that they didn't have, you know, enough of us saying it.
Because why the hell is France and America's backyard, as far as they're concerned?
Yeah, right.
The Monroe Doctrine was established in 1823, so it had to be activated then and there.
And, of course, they didn't just want a canal for Mukentile or geopolitical reasons.
Remember, they had just conquered several states in Mexico and reached the Pacific, sea to
shine in sea, as I like to say.
And luckily for them, there were still quite a lot of Native Americans and Mexicans still
living in the Western plains and West Coast.
Plus, you had a lot of Asian immigration to the West Coast as well.
And the leaders of the Americas didn't exactly appreciate that.
You know, they wanted Northern European stock to populate the West Coast.
and coast, unpolluted by having to share a railroad with black and brown panamanians.
Yeah.
So you have to get a canal so the whites don't have to step foot off their boats and mingle with the locals.
You know, because then they could stay on their boats.
They could go through.
They never have to breathe the same air as the local inhabitants of Panama.
Yeah.
And so after wrapping up their war with Spain, having newly minted colonies in the Philippines, Guam and Hawaii,
they really, really wanted a maritime shortcut to continue their great empire-building ambitions.
Because they see having to spend 67 days to reach from San Francisco to Cuba,
they didn't like that.
You know, going all the way around the Patagonian Horn and all that, that's not fun.
So, the US created an opportunity for itself after Colombia's civil war between the liberals and the conservatives
that, you know,
raised between 1890 to 1902.
Here's what happened.
In Panama City,
most of the white elites
tried to stay out of the conflict.
But in the rural interior,
there was a different story
as the liberals found support
among the mestizo peasants.
In Panama, the Civil War
was less focused on parties,
whether you're a liberal or conservative.
It started off like that,
but became a mass uprising
against the distant,
conservative government in Bogota. So after several major battles, liberal forces had taken control
of almost all of Panama's interior. And that's when the US decided to step in. They used the
Bidlach Treaty of 1846 as justification to bring in their military to protect transit across Panama,
in particular the real way. Thus, the Liberals were unable to finish their victory and had to sign
a peace agreement. And in the following months, liberal forces regrouped and once again took control of nearly all
of Panama, except Cologne and Panama City. And once again, the US got involved and blocked
liberal entry into those cities. The US made it impossible for the liberals to win. So they surrendered
and signed one last beach treaty in November 1902, ending the Civil War. And all that for what?
Because more than 60% of Panama's cattle was wiped out, agriculture had collapsed, the armies on both
sides committed atrocities, you know, thousands of civilians fled into the mountains, entire towns
were emptied as people who were escaping conscription and violence. Have you ever read the book
100 years of solitude? When I was like in or just out of high school I did, yeah. Okay, I read it
last year. So when I was doing this research, it was like top of my mind. Yeah, yeah. Because
you know, part of that book covers that Colombian Civil War. Yeah, I should read it again. It was pretty
good. I had some very weird stuff. It was pretty good. Yeah, yeah. It's good to, I'm trying to read more
fiction right now. It helps me. Yeah. Even though it was fiction, I think it paints a really grim picture of that
civil war. Yeah. And so I could have, in reading this, I could have pictured what was taken place,
because the book was so with it. Yeah, yeah. You know, rural Panama was absolutely devastated.
And yet, the transit zone was, of course, untouched. The real road and the poor. And the poor
the commerce, Captain going.
And with the liberal peasantry defeated by the conservatives in the U.S.,
the conservative elites in Panama City were best positioned to negotiate for their own ambitions.
With the war over, President Roosevelt was looking to finally negotiate for Panama Canal rights.
And if he couldn't get a deal with the French Canal Company that was right to sell,
or the government of Columbia, he had permission from Congress to pursue a canal in Nicaragua.
instead.
Interesting.
The French company was definitely ready to offload their investment because, you know,
there were multiple attempts to set up a canal.
The French had their attempt and they were ready to get it off of their hands, right?
But the Colombian government rejected America's He-Hiran Treaty, which offered what they
considered an inadequate $10 million in exchange for sweeping canal rights.
So America made them an offer they couldn't refuse.
What happened next was that Roosevelt and a French shareholder named Felipe Punao Veria
struck up a little side deal of their own.
And the U.S. Navy got orders to prevent Colombia from crushing any uprising on the Isthmus.
And with their circumstances being what they were on the ground in Panama, without Colombian intervention due to the U.S. blockade,
it didn't take long for Panamanian forces to declare independence finally in 1903.
The Bidlock Treaty the US had signed with Colombia
was supposed to protect Colombia's control over Panama
and ensure free transit throughout the Isthmus.
And the US did basically the complete opposite.
You know, that's what makes them such an excellent partner
on the global stage.
You can always count on them to uphold, you know,
the highest standards of moral and diplomatic decency.
So before you know it,
America was recognizing a newly,
independent Panama and drafting up a treaty with Bunal-Varria, who the new Panama government had given
permission to negotiate a deal. But I'm thinking that they may not have known that Bunal-Varia
had already practically signed them away. They didn't like the fact that they would behold on to a treaty
that no Panamanian had signed, but the US made sure that the Panamanian government understood
that if they didn't like the treaty, the Navy could always just let the Colombian army come in to
nipped their independence in the bud.
You know, it's like, oh, you don't like working with us?
Well, you know, it'd be a real shame if the Columbia Navy came back in to the picture.
So the new canal treaty gave the US far more than they had even expected to get from the deal.
They claimed permanent control over a 10 mile wide canal zone, inherited the French canal works
and the railroad, and secured the right to seize land anywhere in Panama if they deemed it
necessary for the canal's defense, operation, or sanitation, and trust and believe they would
use our privilege to seize land 19 different times between 1908 and 1931, cumulatively hundreds
of square miles, thousands of acres, often without notice or compensation, and always justified
as necessary for canal defense. The canal zone was removed from Panamanian courts altogether,
and the U.S. was authorized to police Panama City and Cologne and build military garrisons.
Panama's new constitution made it an effective U.S. protectorate.
Article 136 explicitly allowed the United States to intervene militarily anywhere in Panama to restore public peace and constitutional order.
Civilization, as Roosevelt argued, was the urgent mandate for all these actions toward building the canal.
Construction officially began in 1904 in a Panama exhausted by civil war,
haunted by the French failure and politically dependent on Washington.
So you said you had been to the Canal zone and the museums and stuff.
Yeah.
Can you tell me a bit about what you know about the canal's construction?
They were very good at this part.
I remember this part very well.
They had accounts from the workers, you know,
people who was in some cases, like, essentially forced labor, right?
They had accounts of what their lives were like.
They had, like, sort of the ephemera of their lives, which is always in, like, you know,
like in museums, it helps to create a picture, right?
They're like the sort of the things that they were fed, the shitty shoes that they got given,
pictures of the, like, sleeping situations and accounts from doctors, right?
Because a lot of people became unwell because they were exposed to all these conditions and
diseases that they hadn't been exposed to before.
So they did a good job, I felt, of like, painting how horrendous life was for people who were digging out the Panama Canal.
Yeah.
They had a two-tier system, right?
I think it was the gold ticket.
Yes.
Yep.
They were explaining how life was so much more difficult, the lower down that system you found yourself.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The whole construction of this feat of engineering was, you know, rife with suffering.
Yeah.
And that suffering often came, like, in a very racialized way.
Yes.
As you mentioned, there was a gold role and a silver role.
That's it, yeah.
So even prior to canal construction, Panama is already a very racially divided society.
You had the white elites in the capital.
You had the mestizo peasants.
You had poor, black and mulatto communities.
And you also had the indigenous peoples who were not even counted in official census counts.
Oh, wow.
And among the canal workforce in particular, it was quite a lot of black laborers who were either descendants,
people emancipated from slavery in 1852 or migrants from the British Caribbean who were drawn to
Panama during the railroad construction project and the French Canal construction project.
And so the US took this social landscape and made it worse by introducing racial hierarchy with the
gold role and the silver rule that determined your pay, your housing, your medical care and even
how you were buried. You know, the American workers, the white American workers in the canal's
construction occupied the gold role and the Caribbean labourers were pushed onto the silver
row. They had to perform the most dangerous work under the worst conditions. And so during the US
construction phase alone, roughly 5,600 workers died from disease and accidents, and the overwhelming
majority were the Caribbean labourers. Sadly, their deaths were treated as expendable losses,
is an engineering project framed as a triumph of civilization. The canal construction finally concluded
in 1914.
And so after its independence, during the canal construction and afterwards, Panama faced
eight further U.S. military interventions, including the famous 1989 invasion, which we'll get
to in the next episode.
But take a guess as to what their rationale was for these interventions.
Are they protecting a business interest, U.S. capital?
Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding.
Protecting U.S. citizens and property.
Maintaining control and stability.
preserving U.S. strategic and political interests, all that usual stuff.
Yeah.
Particularly whenever Panamanians were struggling for their rights against the elites, the U.S. would get involved.
Yeah.
The U.S. supervised elections.
They oversaw the police force.
They vetoed public spending whenever it wanted.
And the U.S. bases lined the canal with thousands of troops explicitly for the purpose of maintaining quiet and protecting property in Panama.
Panama's whole political history in the 20th century was basically shaped and dictated by U.S. interests.
In 1904, when General Istiban Huerta threatened revolt, the U.S. officials pressured Panama's president to fire him and dissolve the army entirely.
In 1910, when Vice President Carlos Mendoza, a liberal mulatto married to a black woman, seemed likely to win the presidency,
the U.S. chief of mission, Richard Marsh, threatened occupation if he were elected,
so Mendoza withdrew his candidacy.
During World War I, the garrison commander used occupation to impose moral reforms
by shutting down saloons and prostitution and publicly denouncing Panamanian cities as dens of fice.
And in the countryside, ostensibly to protect American landowners,
U.S. troops drunkenly abused, stole, and burned homes for two whole years until they finally withdrew.
At in 1925, the U.S. came into Panama City to crush a renter strike.
Panama also became a regional launch pad for the U.S. Empire.
The Marines that were stationed there were repeatedly deployed in Nicaragua, Mexico, and beyond.
For the U.S. Empire, the costs could always be externalized to Panama.
Panama was an imperial laboratory for the US to test ideas and weapons they felt were risky to test at home.
During World War II, they tested various chemical weapons in Panama on nature and people with minimal disclosure and almost no regard for long-term environmental and human consequences.
Jesus.
They also left behind unexploded munitions.
That is horrible.
Yeah, it gets worse.
Okay, great.
In the 1950s and 60s, U.S. officials, U.S. officials,
seriously proposed using nuclear explosions
to carve a new sea level canal through Panama.
So you've heard about this.
Yeah, and New Kingdom Darien was one of the little strategies
that they thought about.
And I think they thought about again
when the bicentennial of the United States
that had up been 1976,
one of the things they wanted to do is complete the Pan American Highway.
Have it run all the way up from the northern tip of Alaska,
I think goes from Canada, actually,
all the way down to Argentina,
I think they were like, yeah,
can we just nuke the Darien
and we'll just join them up and it'll be fine?
Yeah, yeah.
But they were really gung-ho about nukes
at that point in time in history, you know?
Yeah.
The Panama Canal, in case you don't know,
those of you listeners at home,
the Panama Canal is not a sea level canal.
It actually, it climbs a mountain, loki.
You know, so it has several steps.
where it's like the water is released and there's like a floated mechanism and it's it's kind of
inconvenient because usually there's traffic backed up of boats waiting for their chance to get
into the canal and so the idea of sea level canal is you know it'd be so much more convenient if you
didn't have to wait for all those mechanisms to you know drain and fill and all those different things
yeah but nuking the canal to create a new sea level canal is probably not the best idea no it's yeah it's wild to
think of it.
Back then, I guess they'd get newts relatively recently.
They were like, okay, what can we do with these?
Yeah, yeah.
What else can we?
Now you'll see, when you're in Panama City, you see boats like sort of hanging out
around the canal.
Yeah.
It's waiting to enter those locks.
And, I mean, obviously the consequences of the nuclear area can now be disastrous.
Entire regions would have been irradiated.
Populations would have been displaced.
Equal systems put up dewatered.
And yet, these serious.
with a straight face
consider this plan.
Because, you know, who cares
about the people outside the Imperial Center?
Sure, yeah.
Like, what are the Embara people
and the Kuna people
who live down there?
Like, what do they matter to them, right?
Yeah.
And this is after they've dropped a nuke.
It's not like they're like postulating here.
Yeah, it's not like they don't know what nukes do.
Yeah, like they've seen this happen in Japan, right?
We're like a decade since.
They know that it's still killing people.
Yeah.
There are places and canals and structures that have been irrigated, caves, dog, and stuff using dynamite, you know, T&T, you know, basic munitions and explosive devices.
And that's one thing, right?
I don't know what it's like more of that.
There's like, let's just go as big as we can go.
Right.
It's not understanding the fundamental difference, right?
Like, nuclear blast is of an entirely different nature to.
I mean, it could have very.
easily end up effect in the US as well. Right. Yeah. You know, the air currents could have carried
the fallout into the southern US, into the west coast, you know, into other countries in the region
as well. Yeah. I visited one of the places that the United States nuked after World War II,
right, in the Republic of the Marshall Islands. And yeah, they completely failed to account for
even prevailing winds, right? Like, uh, the fallout directly engulfed.
small Japanese fishing vessel that was just happened to be up because they didn't tell anyone, right?
And then they just dropped a nuclear bomb.
They told some people, obviously, they evacuated people are living on the island.
But they dropped a nuclear bomb.
And then we're just like, oh, wow, it's blown off over there.
Did the result in people being severely irradiated.
You know, it's like a bunch of scientists, you know, Ben, Ben, in their necks some furiously scribble on some notes.
Fascinating.
People have attempted to go back to their island because at one point they were told that they could.
And they absolutely, like, it wasn't safe for them, but like the coconuts and the crabs and the fish and the reefs are still irradiated.
They're still not safe for them.
People still have one of the highest rates of stillbirth in the world.
Yeah.
The stories they tell about miscarrying pregnancies are heartbreaking.
Yeah.
Because they didn't know what was going on, right?
The human and environmental impact is awful.
Yeah, it's terrible.
And so it's a resistance from Panamanians, from scientists, and from a growing global environmental movement to put an end to this proposal.
Now, as is the nature of interventions, after a certain point, they start a way in because, you know, the intervening power has created the setup that they find preferential, you know?
So while they're setting up, they may have to intervene on a repeated occasions, but once you know,
Once they get to a certain point where their control over that area is crystallized, they don't
have to intervene as explicitly as often.
So direct US interventions waned as time went on, but the tensions continue to build in Panama
for independence from the US.
And these tensions flared in January 1964, which would get the ball rolling for a new treaty between
the countries that would replace the previous Hay-Banau-Varia treaty.
So since that 1903 treaty, Panamanians wanted a country.
revisited and revised.
Remember, they didn't want to agree to it in the first place.
They were kind of coerced into its terms.
Both the US's proposal to create a new sea level canal with or without nukes,
which would require cooperation with the Panamanians.
They would be forced to take those Panamanian demands into consideration.
And so as a concession to Panamanian nationalism,
US President John F. Kennedy and Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson developed a policy
they would fly the Panamanian flag alongside the American flag,
oh la la,
in certain parts of the Canal Zone.
And then JFK was assassinated in November 1963.
And then in January of the following year,
Balboa High School, which was an American school in the Canal Zone,
refused to fly either flag.
So on January 9, 1964,
American students decided to raise the American flag,
for freedom or whatever.
And Panamanian students from Panama's National Institute marched to the school to raise their own flag.
And then there's a scuffle.
And then the Panamanian flag is torn.
And then that scuffle becomes a riot where 24 Panamanian civilians and four U.S. soldiers were killed in the fighting.
Yeah.
And hundreds of Panamanian civilians were injured by the American crackdown.
That Panamanian flag is in the museum, the Panama Canal Museum.
The one that got torn?
Yeah.
Oh, that's impressive. I have to go and see that then.
Yeah, yeah, it's really, it's a good museum.
So that's a real big piece of history because that whole riot led to everything else.
Yeah, no, that is like it's a pivotal, like, artifact of their national history.
Yeah, it's like for want of a nail, the horse was lost.
It's like for want of a ripped flag.
Yeah.
Pan Aminian independence was lost.
Yeah.
Yeah, obviously there's no oil boil down to that, but it's such a unique artifact of history.
Yeah, I know.
it's cool to be like this pivotal moment, like this thing was present.
Yeah.
Sometimes when I'm in Spain, I'll kick around antiques markets and find like a newspaper,
just seeing that this newspaper was on the street the same day, right,
that the Spanish military was defeated in Barcelona.
You can see sometimes people like sheltering behind newspaper stands, right?
It's an exchange fire with the soldiers and thing.
Like, oh, this thing was present at this pivotal moment.
Yeah, yeah.
It was there for that piece of history, that moment's in time.
Yeah, I like to acquire those things when I can.
Something I would like to acquire, though, is a bit of rubble or something from one of their other actions that day.
The protesters also burned several American buildings, including tire plans, airlines, and the US Information Agency.
I'm wondering if that piece of history is also in the museums.
Yeah, I think those buildings are still around, like some of those canals, some of the canal company buildings are still around because you can know.
you can see them when you're driving around.
And so in response to that whole riot situation,
the Panamanian president, Roberto Chiari,
cut diplomatic relations with the US
and demanded a renegotiation of the treaty.
A few months later in April, 1964,
diplomatic ties were re-established
in an effort to resolve the conflict between the countries.
These negotiations would be ongoing for years afterwards.
In fact, one of the reasons the idea of the nuclear excavation,
was considered in the first place
was that it didn't require
as much Panamanian labor cooperation
as a typical Canal project would.
And because tensions were so tense with Panama,
they were like, let's circumvent them
and just open it up ourselves.
But when the nuclear canal project collapsed
and with mounting pressure from the Panamanians,
the stage was set for the US to pull back
its more direct and open meddling
in the country at least for the while.
JFK's vice president, Lyndon Johnson,
won the presidency in November 1964,
and as the anniversary of the riots approached,
he resolved to figure out that new treaty
explore sea-nevel canal preparations
and settle things with the contingency of Americans in office
who sought to preserve America's perpetual ownership of the canal zone,
including the famous white supremacist,
arched conservative, Strom Thurman.
If you know anything about Strom Thurman,
you know that pork found in kitchen.
You know, the fact that this guy was against Panamanians,
and control over the canal, it's not surprised.
And this is the guy who set a country record for filibustering against the Civil Rights Act.
Yeah, yeah.
I think it was beaten recently by Cory Booker, who set a world record for filibustering about
not very much.
Yeah, I think I heard about that.
Yeah, he talked about Don Trump for well, and then he finished up and went and voted for a
bunch of Trump appointees.
It's like the Democratic Party response is like, you stop that, you meanie, and then they
just do whatever.
Whatever Trump wants anyway.
Yeah, you're not allowed to.
Do you know you're not allowed to do that?
You're breaking the rules.
That's against the rules.
Yeah, they summoned the Reddit moderators, is the democratic response.
But yeah, if there was a cause during the time he was in office and it would have made the world better, you can probably count on strong being against it.
Yeah, yeah, pretty much.
Yeah.
And so the Americans, they managed to script together a treaty in 1967, but the power.
Panamanians didn't ratify it.
And in the following year, 1968,
Panama was overtaken by a military coup.
Dun, dun, done.
So if you want to know what will happen with the treaty,
with Panama's political future,
and how all of this does or does not relate to current conditions in Venezuela,
because I know I have that thread still dangling.
Yeah.
Stay tuned for the next episode.
This has been it could happen here.
I'm Andrew Sage.
I'm here with James Stout.
And as always, all power to all the people.
Peace.
Canadian women are looking for more.
More to themselves, their businesses, their elected leaders, and the world are out of them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast.
I'm Jennifer Stewart.
And I'm Catherine Clark.
And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women.
Entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, politicians, and newsmakers, all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
to the Honest Talk podcast on I Heart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Welcome to the A building. I'm Hans Charles. I'm in Alec Lamoma. It's 1969. Malcolm X and
Martin Luther King Jr. had both been assassinated and black America was out of breaking point.
Writing and protests broke out on an unprecedented scale. In Atlanta, Georgia at Martin's
Almemada, Morehouse College, the students had their own protest. It featured two prominent
figures in black history, Martin Luther King's senior, and a young student, Samuel L. Jackson.
To be in what we really thought was a revolution. I mean, people would die.
1968, the murder of Dr. King, which traumatized everyone.
The FBI had a role in the murder of a Black Panther leader in Chicago.
This story is about protest. It echoes in today's world far more than it should, and it will
blow your mind.
Listen to the A-building on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the on-purpose podcast.
On a recent episode, I sat down with Nick Jonas, singer, songwriter, actor, and global superstar.
The thing I would say to my younger self is congratulations.
You get to marry Priyanka Chopra Jonas.
And also, you know, your daughter is incredible.
That's beautiful, man.
Yeah.
Yeah, thank you.
That's so beautiful.
I can see that got you a little.
Yeah, for sure.
Our daughter, she came to the world under sort of very intense circumstances,
which I'd not really talked about ever.
Growing up on Disney in front of million,
how did that shape your sense of self?
I went blank.
I hit a bad note, and then I couldn't kind of recover.
And I built up this idea that music and being musician was my whole identity.
I had to sort of relearn who I was if you took this thing away.
Who am I?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is Ryder Strong, and I have a new podcast called The Red Weather.
It was many and many a year ago in a kingdom by the sea.
In 1995, my neighbor and a trainer disappeared from a commune.
It was hard to wrap your head around.
It was nature and trees and praying and drugs.
So no, I am not your guru.
And back then, I lied to my parents.
I lied to police.
I lied to everybody.
There were years right in where I could not say your name.
I've decided to go back to my hometown in Northern California,
interview my friends, family, talk to police, journalists,
whomever I can to try to find out what actually happened.
Isn't it a little bit weird that they obsess over hippies in the woods
and not the obvious boyfriend?
They have had this case for 30 years.
I'll teach you sons of a bitch to come around here in my wife.
Boom, boom.
This is The Red Weather.
Listen to the Red Weather on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The year was 1968, and a military coup had just rocked the Islamian country of Panama.
Welcome to Khappen here.
I'm Andrew Sage, joined again by...
James, it's me again. I'm excited to talk about Panama.
Nearly Mr. Q.
Yeah, I did.
I was forgotten who I was for a second.
Yeah, and this is the follow-up to last episode on the history of U.S. involvement in Panama.
So you can go back and give that one of listen if you haven't already.
But in these times of Trump Row doctrine,
I want to take us back to this particular moment in our hemisphere's history
to highlight the parallels with today.
In short, what we talked about last time was how Panama became a testing ground for U.S. Empire.
long before during and after the construction of the Panama Canal.
The US had repeated military interventions justified as protecting transit or American interests,
and Washington ultimately backed Panama's break from Columbia in 1903,
secure canal rights on Washington's terms.
This independence came with, you know, a cost, a caveat,
a lopsided treaty that turned Panama into a U.S. protectorate
and granted the US
public control over the canal zone
and the rest of the country, effectively.
The canal's construction itself
was an engineering feat
built on racial hierarchy
and throughout the rest of the 20th century,
the US continued to demonstrate
its control over Panama's politics,
the attempts of its people to exercise their autonomy,
to exercise their rights.
The US, of course, engaged in the testing of chemical weapons,
in the seizing of land,
and the use of the treatment of the terms,
country as a regional military launch pad. And yet, Palamians continue to resist, continue to
challenge US control, and continue to demand treaty reform. And so following the 1964 riots,
there was an opportunity to negotiate a new treaty. But after the first attempt was rejected by Panama
in 1967, a military coup would rock the country in 1968. I feast together's timeline thanks to my
main resource for these episodes, Emperors in the Jungle, the Hidden History of the
in Panama by John Lindsay Poland.
But he doesn't go into too much depth on the military coup specifically.
For that, I had to look to an EPSCO Knowledge Advantage article by Carl Henry Marco,
titled Uma Torrijos ousts areas in Panama.
What I learned from that was there was a coalition of National Guard officers that ousted
President Arnulfo Arias, who was himself trying to consolidate control over the military,
so they would support his future elections by removing those officers he thought he could control.
So there were apparently racial tensions mixed into the school as officers in the National Guard
had increasingly come from mestizo backgrounds as opposed to white backgrounds,
which had traditionally supported the civilian predominantly white oligarchy.
So a coalition of officers tried to change this.
At first they were led by a guy named Major Boris Martinez, who seized power and ousted areas.
But before anyone thought for a moment that things were finally going to radically change in the country, within months student protests were crushed by the National Guard, with arrests and beatings making it clear that military rule and not democracy was there to stay.
But not long after Martinez took control, he was himself ousted by a lieutenant colonel and the junta's chief of staff in 1969.
That man was Omar Torrijos Herrera, a mestizo officer with middle-class roots who sought to challenge the oligarchy somewhat.
Fun fact, though, Lindsay Poland mentions that Toriho served as a spy for the U.S. military intelligence from 1955 to 1969,
informing the Americans about everything from labor unrest and student activities to political issues and Soviet-Chinese penetration.
Torihoz was one of the soldiers who helped suppress the unrest in 19th.
In 20164, in fact.
Oh, wow.
But in power, publicly, he styled his military rule as reformist.
He pushed through land reforms that opened up estates, long monopolized by elites,
and promised change for rural Panama.
But although these reforms were popular, very few poor Panamanians actually benefited.
Meanwhile, he overhauled banking laws in the country,
such that Panama quickly became a hub for offshore banking and money laundering.
Yeah.
but it can't be said that he didn't do anything positive for the country,
because he was the one who managed to establish a new treaty with the US.
The US was facing international pressure at this point for their continued ownership of the canal,
especially thanks to a 1973 United Nations Security Council session hosted by Toriho's in Panama City.
In 1977, Torihoz negotiated with Jimmy Carter and secured the treaties that promised that canals return to Panamanian control.
The Torihoz-Carter treaties, which agreed to transfer the canal from the United States to Panama on December 31st, 1999,
with the surrounding territory of the canal zone returned first in 1979,
and the U.S. military being allowed to remain in the country until 1999.
But despite this major win, Tori-Hos knew his rule was under pressure, so he announced a controlled return to civilian government.
He created a political party dominated by the National Guard.
he stepped back from the presidency,
he installed a civilian figurehead
named Ariste de Sroyo, and he promised elections by 1984.
But then his private plane crashed in 1981.
It's just funny how frequently that happened back in those days.
Yeah, small aircraft.
Just randomly, these political leaders are constantly dying in plane crashes.
Yeah, he's sad.
And so the democratic reforms didn't happen.
Instead, Puriho's intelligence.
chief emerged as the new military dictator of Panama. His name was Manuel Noriega.
Now, as Lindsay Poland talks about in the book, Noriega was another informant for the US in the mid-1950s.
But his career in the military wasn't going anywhere because he had a history of alcoholism and
beaten women, until Toriho's handpicked him as his intelligence chief. Manuel Noriega came
up inside a Panamanian National Guard that had been shaped, trained, and closely supervised by
the U.S. during the Cold War. He was educated at Peru's National Military Academy,
trained at the School of the Americas, took courses in intelligence and counterintelligence
in 1967, and trained in psychological warfare at Fort Benning. By the late 1960s, he'd
also become a regular informant for U.S. intelligence. You know, he took more than just a few
courses. He was very much embedded with the Americans. And so with Tori Host dead,
Noriega seized the opportunity to take power. Initially, the US was pretty much okay with this.
Noriega had previously been a CIA asset providing intelligence and governments and
militaries across the region, including Cuba. He had helped suppress leftist movements,
facilitated US regional operations and maintained stability around the canal. And for that,
he was well compensated, more than $1 million from the CIA.
Wow.
Plus at least another $162,000 from the U.S. Army and the Defense Intelligence Agency.
By the early 1970s, U.S. agencies already knew that Noriega was deeply involved in drug trafficking.
In 1972, the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs even considered assassinating him,
but he was just too useful for him to go so soon.
Yeah.
So throughout the Carter years, evidence of his criminal activity was building up and was also suppressed
because Washington needed Panamanian cooperation to secure ratification of the Canal treaties.
But under Reagan, the evidence became impossible to ignore.
As intelligence reports from 1983 and 1985, documented meetings between Noriega and cartel figures,
permissions to manufacture cocaine in Panama, and offers to mediate disputes between the traffickers.
I love them mediation, but the best.
Yeah, yeah.
He was like, hey, guys, this isn't you.
Let's not resort to violence.
Come on.
Let's have us sit down and talk about this.
He was committed to like a non-carseral solution, you know.
It's great to see.
Yeah.
And they concede to protect him even with that smoking gun.
They were like, yeah, Noriega is still our guy.
They had hoped that he would cooperate with contraoperations.
against Nicaragua's Sandinista government, though, but in what was, I suppose, his first strike,
he refused to cooperate with that on that operation.
He also maintained relations with both Nicaragua and Cuba.
And meanwhile, under his leadership, the Panamanian Defense Forces expanded their role in both arms and drug smuggling networks,
much of it feed indirectly into the U.S. drug market.
So Noriega and the U.S. had to break up in the mid-year-old.
to late 80s.
And this was also thanks to U.S. domestic politics.
You see, in 1986, the Iran-Contra scandal saw key figures who had shielded Noriecker
previously be removed from their positions.
At the same time, the crack cocaine panic took over U.S. politics.
Again, a very racialized situation.
Yeah.
Congress had passed sweeping anti-drug laws with mandatory minimum sentences, and the media
was framing this whole drug problem as a foreign racial black threat.
Yeah.
Noriega, being a Panamanian dictator, ended up being a very useful prop villain of sorts
for the burgeoning war on drugs.
So in February 1988, US grand juries in Miami and Tampa indicted Noriega for drug trafficking
linked to activities from 1982 to 1984.
sanctions followed within weeks supposedly to force him out, but they didn't.
The sanctions caused shortages, economic collapse, and suffering among ordinary Panamanians.
Yet Noriega stayed in power.
He used the crisis to justify emergency measures and nationalist rhetoric.
As is usually the response I realize with U.S. inflicted sanctions.
They end up creating almost a support base for the administration and power.
because, you know, you're trying to make the people suffer.
And instead, people end up standing with their government,
even if they have critiques of that government.
Yeah, right, because they don't want to become another, like, vassal state.
And especially in Panama, right?
Like, they've already been there once.
Or, like, look at what's happening right now in Iran, right?
Yeah.
Homania's literally, like, he's literally tweeting
that the people protesting are Donald Trump supporters.
Yeah, yeah.
And the thing is, they're always going to be all types of people in any protests.
And I wish when people realize that.
Yeah.
You know, people tend to take like one or two figures or one or two pictures in any particular
protest and see, oh, look, they're doing this.
That means the entire protest is like this.
It's like no protests tend to, I think, invite a variety of positions, perspectives, actors into the free.
Yeah.
By their nature, they're large gatherings of people, right?
They're not going to be a monolith.
People will always seek to either represent protests in one way or represent themselves
controlling a protest when they have.
not done so, but for the most part, they're very heterogeneous. Yeah, the monolithizing of protests,
including in this case with Iran, I think it's a very clear example of how useful that is for
every side of a conflict. Yes. Because, you know, the protests can be treated as a monolith by
Khomeini and by the Iranian government, you know, to serve there and say these are enemies from within,
you know, these are these are Zionists backed and the thing. And then of course, the Israelis could
also try and take a claim on this and say, yeah, this is our people. And, you know, I'm sure they're
probably massad agents on the ground as they are in most protest situations. Not necessarily
mass agents, but intelligence service agents in general from agencies around the world. Sure. Yeah.
But, you know, you could always pick and choose and create your own framing based on which aspects of the
truth you want to focus on. But that's why I think our solidarity has to remain with people. Yeah.
And not with states.
Yes, yeah, it seems to be the fundamental issue affecting much of the internet left in the United States is that their solidarity appears to only be to states and not to people, right?
We see that in Iran or Venezuela or Russia or anywhere else, really, like this sort of internet tanky leftism likes to talk about.
Yeah. So we saw that kind of upswing of nationalistic fervor following those U.S. sanctions.
And the political situation in Panama was deteriorating rapidly.
Noriega annulled the results of the May 1989 elections after his chosen candidates were
decisively defeated.
Protests followed.
The Panaman and Defence Forces crushed them and the images of his opposition figures
being beaten by his military saturated US televisions to reinforce the racialized image
of the savage Panamania.
Because many of the soldiers that were doing the beating were,
black and brown, and the opposition figure in question was white. So they were able to clip that
and create a whole narrative around it that served their interests. Now, in October of 1989,
a coup attempt by Panamanian officers failed and the officers were executed. In the US, meanwhile,
a criticism of President George H. W. Bush had intensified with editorials and senators accusing him
of weakness for his failure to act decisively against Noriega.
And oh boy, call a man weak
to go on and prove his
Prove his manhood.
Yeah.
You know, so further motivation for what came next
was Noriega's nomination of
Thomas Duque as the first
Panaman administrator of the Panama Canal
Commission. Bush did not
like that pick.
And if the US invaded,
then they could pick who they preferred.
So there was another motivation.
Yeah.
The invasion was also motivated by a desire to
showcase the Pentagon's
post-cold war mission. You know, the Cold War was waning at that point, particularly with the fall of the
Berlin War a May a month before, and so a new threat, a new boogeyman was needed to justify
U.S. military action in Latin America, this time in the form of the drug war story. And then, on December 16,
a U.S. Marine intelligence unit ran a roadblock near Pan-Malayan military headquarters.
Panamanian soldiers opened fire, killing Lieutenant Robert Paz. Another U.S.
soldier and his wife were detained, and while the soldier was beaten, the wife was threatened with
rape. Within 24 hours, Bush ordered a full-scale invasion. On December 20, 1989, the United States
launched its 20th military intervention in Panama since 1856, and by far the most violent.
It was the worst destruction Panama had seen since Colombia's thousand days war. 18,000 people lost
their homes. At least 516
Panamanians were killed by official
Pentagon counts. Internal army estimates, however,
put civilian deaths closer to 1,000.
Jeez.
And many believed that the true number
was even higher.
Entire neighborhoods were destroyed.
El Torrio, a poor,
mostly black and mestizo community built
originally for canal workers, was
bombed and burned to the ground.
San Miguelito was also hit
and across the country,
Thousands were detained in prison camps.
Damage exceeded $1 billion on top of losses from nearly two years of sanctions.
The U.S. used overwhelming force, including stealth bombers, airborne assault, and heavy firepower in densely populated areas,
against a Panamanian force of only about 3,000 trained soldiers.
Noriega was captured, flown to the United States, tried, and imprisoned.
And as Lindsay Poland writes, quote,
the names of the 25 U.S. soldiers killed during the invasion
rolled across TV screens around the world.
Yet a register of Panamanians killed during the invasion
has never been published, even in Latin America.
End quote.
Jeez.
When Noriega sought refuge in the Vatican embassy for a while,
I understand that they played like U-2 music nonstop
to force him to capitulate.
The pit what?
Yeah.
Yeah, they used YouTube and maybe some other stuff too.
I'm pretty sure of my age here.
This is before my time.
This was the band that was forced onto all the iPods and stuff, right?
Yes, that's right.
Yeah, yeah.
And perhaps a parallel operation.
Maybe again they were just going to...
Maybe that was a CIA of...
Yeah, Bono, the guy who talks a big game and then never pays his taxes in Ireland.
also part of the invasion of Panama.
He had a critical role in US intervention.
Yeah, wait until I find it.
I bet there was some band I like as well, but the YouTube is a one that sticks in my mind.
Oh, the humanity.
There has to be a war crime, right?
War crime.
So in all seriousness, though, Noriega was not a good guy by any stretch of the imagination.
And I don't know why people feel this compulsion to try and rehabilitative.
figures that have been targeted by U.S. imperialist aggression,
you know, you can condemn U.S. imperialist aggression without carrying water for their image, right?
Yeah.
Now, L'Odiago was not a good guy, but he was not unusual.
I think if anything, you can point out the hypocrisy of the United States in this, you know, selective
outreach.
Yeah.
Because at the very same moment, far worse atrocities would be an inflicted.
by leaders across the region, carried out by regimes firmly integrated in Washington's
good races. In Guatemala, for example, security forces kidnapped, tortured, and raped Diana
Ortiz, an American nun before she managed to escape. But there's no evidence that this triggered
outrage in Washington or calls for military intervention. And then in El Salvador,
Thriller forces launched an offensive on San Salvador, and the army responded by murdering six Jesuit priests.
The same forces went on to arrest, torture, and intimidate international aid workers and church busnel,
but none of this was treated as grounds for invasion, regime change, or emergency action.
The U.S. only removed Noriega because he wasn't convenient to their ends anymore,
and the aftermath of that invasion was utter devastation.
Panama was left without a functioned government until the U.S. military stepped in to fill the vacuum.
After two or three days, American forces formally took over the administration of the country under the Pentagon Plan called Operation Blind Logic.
U.S. officers were signed to supervise 22 Panamaan ministries and state agencies effectively running the country for months.
At the same time, the military crippled what remained of Panama's civilian administration by season roughly 15,000.
boxes of government documents.
The invasion permanently reshaped Panama's political reality,
dividing it between those absorbed into Noriega's nationalist rhetoric
and those who had welcomed foreign intervention.
It also sends a clear message to every political actor
that Panama's sovereignty was conditional on their cooperation with the U.S.
Meanwhile in the U.S., there was failure murmur against their government's claimed right
to invade Panama, remove its government, dismantled its military,
and inflict costs on Panama's poor, black and mestizo communities.
The US kind of moved on from Panama after the invasion.
I mean, they continued to meddle and intervene,
but they had basically gotten what they wanted at that point,
which was the removal of someone who was not going to cooperate with them anymore.
Unless you believe that they disrupted the drug trade with the arrest of Doriega,
Panama continued to function as a transit point for cocaine
and a center for money laundering at basically the same scale
as before.
So finally, what exactly is the connection with Venezuela, if any?
James, you want to go first?
Yeah, I mean, there's a very obvious parallel in that they have deposed a leader
that you don't need to go carry water for the guy they deposed.
You can say something is bad without, like, the person who happened to does not
therefore become a perfect angel.
Things cannot be binary.
That's okay.
But, like, it is wild that we look to what happened in Panama and were like,
You know what?
We can do better than that.
We don't even have to declare a war.
We don't even have to do an invasion, right?
We can just kidnap a guy.
I mean, they did do an invasion.
They kind of bombed a bunch of people and stuff too.
Yes, they did, yeah.
They did an airborne invasion, I guess, would be the way to describe it.
Like, in a sense, right?
Like, I'm happy that they didn't sort of go through the streets of Caracas with bombs and artillery and mortars.
Yeah, they then do.
squashed earth this time.
But at the same time, like, we have now, like, I've literally
have spoken to several people in Venezuela in the last 24 hours, right?
And they are in that situation now of not knowing, right?
Like, who is the relevant authority?
The US, in this case, doesn't seem to have replaced the regime.
They've just in, again, a parallel to what we saw in Panama,
just installed another person, right?
Not even necessarily installed another person because, I mean...
Let it trickle down and see how it rides.
Rodriguez was already in power.
Yeah, like, I guess maybe they looked at Rodriguez and were like,
because she's previously worked with like, I guess the analogy would be the Chamber of Commerce,
maybe something like that, like Venezuelan business interests.
Maybe they were just like, yeah, well, maybe we can force her to be compliant with what we want.
Like, the only shit getting liberated is the oil in Venezuela, right?
And it's actually not very good oil.
Yeah.
The same happened in Panama, right?
The U.S. didn't go to liberate people that went to liberate the canal.
It's so disappointing to see people still look at foreign policy in binary terms.
And like you said before, I think one of the things that the Venezuelan people I'm speaking to express deep, deep frustration with is that when they take a risk, right, and go online and share their frustrations with both Chavismo and with the United States invading their country, they are told by Western leftists that they must be either CIA agents or British.
tend Venezuelans, like Americans posing as Venezuelans.
Yeah, or like cussanos or whatever.
Yeah, like there is this, I mean, in the case of Venezuela, right, if you thought it was great,
you could have gone.
You had two decades to go.
I went when I was in undergraduate, right, to see it, to study it, to understand it.
It was formative in the way that my politics are now, which is politics that doesn't see
human liberation coming from the state.
It's not to say that there's nothing positive happening in Venezuela in terms of experiments with, you know, communal initiatives and, you know, cooperative economic projects.
Despite the U.S. sanctions, despite what they are enduring, Venezuelan people have, you know, managed to innovate and manage to create, you know, these kinds of projects where they can exercise their autonomy, exercise, their voice and their self-determination.
Yeah.
I think, of course, that there's a level of, I think,
cooptation or attempts by the government of Venezuela to use those projects or to integrate
those projects into their apparatus or to gain legitimacy through those projects.
Yeah.
But as always, the situation on the ground is very complex and people are going to have
different perspectives and feelings on the levels of government's involvement in their,
communes and whatnot, I think the best outcome for Venezuela's would have been, of course, primarily
the lifting of U.S. sanctions.
Yeah.
And, you know, secondarily, their own self-directed liberation from the imposition of the
government on their projects.
But, you know, there are those who have those projects who support the government in Falthland
who get received funding and that kind of thing.
So it's complex.
Like you say, right, that these things aren't binaries.
It's not like always good, always bad.
But as you said, right, like our solidarity should be with the Venezuelan people.
They should be the ones who get to decide who rules Venezuela.
Yeah.
I mean, even if I disagree with that.
Yeah.
I still think I'd ultimately up to them.
We should want a world in which, yet, they can choose, even if they don't choose what we want.
Otherwise, it's just another kind of colonial project, right?
And I think that colonial impulse.
And, like, let's also be honest.
there is a racialized component to the way that the American left talks to people in the global south, right?
And I think, like, we should not overlook that that they think people aren't capable of either they don't know what's best for them and they need to be told by someone else or that they're not capable of understanding.
Like, people in Venezuela are extremely aware of the consequences of U.S. intervention.
I lived with people who were tortured in Chile when I lived in Venezuela.
many people came from fleeing Pineschet right to Venezuela.
It was a place that previously accepted migrants before migrants ended up leaving in large numbers as they have now.
People are extremely aware of what U.S. intervention means.
They're much better educated than most Americans on affairs in South and Central America.
They know the game that is being played here.
And I would just like to see people afford them the same humanity that they afford people in this.
country, it shouldn't be that difficult, but it genuinely seems to be.
Yeah, I think too, there's an element where, you know, them with their knowledge may make
calculations, may make decisions that you with that same knowledge wouldn't make.
You know, because there's internal disagreement too.
There are people who have the same knowledge and they come to different conclusions about that,
about the best course of action and about the best trade-offs that they should be making about how
they navigate the conditions they've been placed in.
Yeah.
And I think there's,
there's room for those conversations to be had without,
you know,
erasing that diversity of perspectives and fever of that simple binary that keep coming back to.
Yeah,
definitely.
Like,
there's no need for that condescension.
Like,
if we can give criticisms from a place of solidarity,
one of the things that I learned when I was on Rojava,
like not everything that happens there is something that I think,
is perfect or good, right? And there are a lot of people there, including internationalists,
right? Like, there's an anarchist group, Tecoshin Anasist, who are an anarchist group within the
revolution. And like, the revolution itself is not purely anarchist, right? But they exist to
give criticism from a place of solidarity and both groups wanting the other group to get better,
right, to have what they want, to succeed. Which is how our relations with these other,
like, I guess liberation struggles in Venezuela would be a reasonable term.
to use, right? Like, our relationship with them should be that, like, we care about you.
And we hopefully both care about these things, right, about human liberation, about people
being able to live with dignity and respect. And we can disagree, but we're ultimately disagree
from a place of solidarity and support, not of condescension, which is what I see far too much,
I think, when I'm on the internet. Exactly. Exactly. So, you know, Nordiegel,
and Maduro are not interchangeable.
Panama, 1989 is not Venezuela in 2006.
The political systems, regional dynamics, and global context are different.
But the stories told to justify U.S. intervention are pretty familiar.
In Panama, the invasion was framed as a moral necessity to stop drugs, restore democracy,
and defend American lives.
And this is in spite of the fact the U.S. collaborated with that very same regime for years,
before hacked. Interestingly, in Venezuela's case, the justifications were also pretty similar at first,
stopping drugs, restoring democracy, defending American lives. And just like with Panama,
they faced sanctions, diplomatic isolation, and economic pressure. But after the invasion of Venezuela,
Trump just dropped the pretense entirely. He just came out and said it, yeah, we want their oil.
So what? What is the international community going to do about it?
The laws do not apply to us.
In fact, we are going to withdraw from all of those international agreements that, you know, threaten our interests.
You could look this up.
The U.S. literally put this into, what was it?
It's an executive order, right?
There's executive order, right?
Yeah.
To the withdrawing from all of these international agreements that don't align with what they want.
And so in both the case of Panama and the case of Venezuela, American interests supersede all else.
American laws somehow apply to the entire world, while the world's laws never apply to America.
Yep.
And the actual people on the ground in both cases don't matter at all.
And also another parallel, the domestic American narrative of racialized fare and drug war hysteria can be found in both invasions.
And just like Panama left the media consciousness after the invasion, as though the problems were solved,
I wouldn't be surprised if we see a similar situation play out after they get what they want out of Venezuela.
Suddenly, all the issues of Venezuela have would no longer be in the picture because America got what they wanted.
Of course, it's a development story, so it remains to be seen.
That's all I have for today.
History does not repeat, but it's good to know because I find it often rhymes.
All power to all the people.
Peace.
Canadian women are looking for more.
More out of themselves, their businesses, their elected leaders, and the world are out of them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast.
I'm Jennifer Stewart.
And I'm Catherine Clark.
And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women.
Entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, politicians, and newsmakers, all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
Listen to the Honest Talk podcast on IHart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Welcome to the A building.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm Minnick Lamouba.
It's 1969.
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr.
had both been assassinated.
And Black America was out of breaking point.
Writing and protests broke out on an unprecedented scale.
In Atlanta, Georgia, at Martin's Almermata,
Morehouse College, the students had their own protest.
It featured two prominent figures in black history,
Martin Luther King Sr., and a young student, Samuel L. Jackson.
to be in what we really thought was a revolution.
I mean, people would die.
1968, the murder of Dr. King, which traumatized everyone.
The FBI had a role in the murder of a Black Panther leader in Chicago.
This story is about protest.
It echoes in today's world far more than it should, and it will blow your mind.
Listen to the A-building on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the on-purpose podcast.
On a recent episode, I sat down with Nick Jonas, singer, songwriter, actor, and global superstar.
The thing I would say to my younger self is congratulations.
You get to marry Priyanka Chopra Jonas.
And also, you know, your daughter is incredible.
That's beautiful, man.
Yeah.
Thank you.
That's so beautiful.
I can see that got you a little.
Yeah, for sure.
Our daughter, she came to the world under sort of very intense circumstances,
which I'd not really talked about ever.
Growing up on Disney in front of a million, how did that shape your sense of self?
I went blank, I hit a bad note, and then I couldn't kind of recover.
And I had built up this idea that music and being musician was my whole identity.
I had to sort of relearn who I was if you took this thing away.
Who am I?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chatee.
on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is Ryder Strong, and I have a new podcast called The Red Weather.
It was many and many a year ago in a kingdom by the sea.
In 1995, my neighbor and a trainer disappeared from a commune.
It was hard to wrap your head around.
It was nature and trees and praying and drugs.
So no, I am not your guru.
And back then, I lied to my parents.
I lied to police. I lied to everybody.
There were years right where I could not say your name.
I've decided to go back to my hometown in Northern California,
interview my friends, family, talk to police, journalists,
whomever I can to try to find out what actually happened.
Isn't it a little bit weird that they obsess over hippies in the woods
and not the obvious boyfriend?
They have had this case for 30 years.
I'll teach you sons of a bitch to come around here in my wife.
Boom, boom. This is the red weather.
Listen to the red weather on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, everyone, Robert here.
The episode you're about to listen to is a keynote speech I gave at a symposium on combating authoritarianism and preserving democracy for the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles, California.
So you'll get to hear the speech that I gave them about what's necessary in order to deal with this new authoritarian wave over.
undertaking the country. And then there's a Q&A with me afterwards where I sit down with
Anne Burroughs, who's the president and CEO of the Japanese American National Museum.
She's also an internationally recognized leader in human rights and social justice.
She's a chair on the board of directors for Amnesty International.
She was jailed as a political prisoner for fighting apartheid and her native South Africa.
She's a pretty cool person. So that is the episode you're about to listen to.
Our next keynote is going to ask us some difficult truths.
Authoritarianism, as has so often been said, rarely announces itself all at once.
It takes root quietly in policies that silence dissent, in narratives that divide,
and in systems that normalize repression until it feels ordinary.
and when we get to that ordinary point, it's complicity.
So I know that our next keynote is going to challenge us.
We can trust that he will be provocative.
We can trust that he will say some very strong things
and it will be fantastic.
So without blabbering anymore, I am going to welcome Robert Evans, who is a journalist and author
and the host of the enormously popular and influential podcasts behind the bastards,
and it couldn't happen here.
He's also the author of A Brief History of Vice and After the Revolution.
He has that rare ability to connect history, power, and lived experience,
and he will certainly talk to you about his lived experience in the trenches of Portland.
And he'll dirten a way that's unsettling.
As I said, he's going to challenge us.
He's going to be provocative.
But that's why we've asked him to provide this keynote.
So, Robert, please come on up.
It's your moment.
Thank you so much for that.
And thank you all for being here.
I'm going to try to follow that up as best I can once the teleprompter is ready here.
So a couple of days before I sat down to write the speech that I'm delivering now,
a friend came to me and asked if I had advice on which kind of gas mask she should purchase
for her four-year-old daughter.
As was noted earlier, we live in Portland, Oregon.
And while my friend wasn't planning to attend any protests,
certainly not with her daughter in tow,
she was keeping up with developments in Minnesota.
Where ICE officers had just shot a man, they described as Venezuelan,
in the leg, and then tear-gassed a neighborhood.
One resident tried to get his family, which included small children and a newborn out of the area.
But they were gassed in their car.
And then for good measure, ICE officers hurled flashbangs into the vehicle.
His six-month-old infant stopped breathing, and he had to beg repeatedly before officers would let an ambulance in to resuscitate his baby.
The child was fine now.
So, my friend was right to fear that her little girl might get gassed for nothing more than existing in the wrong neighborhood.
Questions like this aren't theoretical to thousands of American parents right now,
and they aren't theoretical to me.
I was tear-gast more than 100 times in 2020,
and I spent a fair amount of time pulling children and other civilians out of cars
that had the bad luck to exist on the same city block as a man with a badge and a grenade launcher.
And so it bugs me just a little when I see Governor Walls tell protesters to stay peaceful
and not take the bait.
In fact, I'm left asking, what do we think the bait is here?
As best as I configure it, armed and armored police officers, blind-firing chemical weapons at civilians, is bait.
While any response from those civilians beyond packing up and going home is taking said bait,
throwing back tear gas containers or anything else is somehow an escalation.
So is standing against a riot line with a gas mask and a homemade shield to stop your neighbor from getting deported.
any act of resistance big or small is all the justification federal agents need to deploy more of the violence they were already using.
It's a neat little rhetorical game that liberals have let themselves become trapped inside.
Playing that game lets them avoid answering one supremely ugly question.
If your enemy controls the police and the military and they've promised to destroy you, what does fighting back even mean?
Up until the present moment, the answer given by prominent liberals has generally been
you fight by voting or by making your voice heard or something similar.
I have a good friend who tried to make her voice heard in 2020.
She is now in early menopause in her 20s after being rendered sterile by chronic tear gas exposure.
None of the officers who poisoned her or thousands of other Portlanders ever saw a day behind bars.
That would be wrong.
They enjoy qualified immunity.
They're doing an important job.
One, every person can agree needs to be done.
The year, my friend, was gassed repeatedly.
The highest-paid Portland police officer was a man who had been caught and briefly punished
for maintaining a shrine to the dead men of the Waffen SS on city property.
The Portland Police Union, the first police union in the country, sued for him to be reinstated
and to ensure that he faced no punishment for this and was brought back with full pay and benefits.
So when you hear stories of Homeland Security hiding Nazi songs and their recruiting ads for ICE,
remember, it's not just an ICE problem.
And yet, some liberals and progressives will tell me, state and local police aren't the enemy.
ICE is just an aberrant agency, and surely there's some democratic cheat code we can use
to get the good guys in blue to help us take them down.
So much of the unchecked authoritarian nightmare currently rampant.
through our streets is the product of a system that views policing as sacred, officers as
infallible, and protest as inherently suspicious and dangerous. This is the standard line,
even within the halls of power in the Democratic Party, and it is part of why regular young people
in this country hate elected Democrats. The people out, thank you, the people out in Minneapolis,
battling riot lines and sub-zero weather, no, there's no help coming. The people,
cavalry does not exist. And so they've had to build their own architecture of resistance,
often on the fly. Since immigrants and other people being targeted by ICE can't safely shop,
local businesses like rectangle, spelled like wreck as in a car wreck, pizza, have raised tens of
thousands of dollars to buy and distribute food and other necessities. Gathering and handing out
donated groceries feel safe, peaceful, and legal. But that's not how ICE treats it.
rectangle's fundraising campaign earned them a visit from armed ice agents who, per the account of co-owner
Brianna Evans, no relation, stormed up on our door to try to get in.
Thankfully, members of the neighborhood had been standing guard.
They were able to raise a significant force of locals to swarm and chase off ice,
who tried to gas the neighborhood as they were leaving, only to have their munitions kicked back at them.
This is one small example of the kind of networks of aid and resistance that are evolving on the ground right now as I speak.
Another example that arose in the wake of René Good's murder is Ice Watch, an informally organized network that activates members of the community when ICE shows up in their area.
The logic behind Ice Watch is that these federal agents will be less likely to engage in extreme acts of violence while surrounded by crowds of citizens following them and trying to wear them down with shame.
This is a good tactic, and we here might rightly consider it a nonviolent tactic, but the federal government does not,
Remember, Renee Good was shot and killed for participating in exactly this kind of activism.
Through mouthpieces, like Stephen Miller, the Trump administration has made their stance very clear.
Anyone impeding the actions of law enforcement is a terrorist.
Waving a sign or filming an ICE agent makes you just as much a terrorist as someone who breaks a window or throws a rock.
You cannot be so well-behaved and appropriate in your resistance that this government will not consider you of that.
And yet, again and again, I see no spine or backbone from the men setting themselves up as the
future of resistance to Trump. Gavin Newsom can't even stick to his own guns in his own podcast on
whether or not ICE is terrorizing Americans. Senator Cory Booker's big recent suggestion was more
training for ICE agents, as if the men brutalizing our neighbors aren't doing exactly what they
trained to do. About a year after Joe Biden's inauguration.
I found myself up in the woods of rural Washington, an hour or so outside of Seattle doing firearm
training with a group of leftists I'd met during the 2020 protest, and I know that kind of thing
makes a lot of people here uncomfortable, and I'm afraid a number of things about our shared future
might make you uncomfortable. During a break in the activity, I sat down for a smoke with a guy
who'd spent the last several years teaching himself to be an armor or someone who repairs and
maintains firearms. As he'd gained skill with this, he'd started to take his
grade school-aged daughter out shooting. He didn't like that he felt like he had to do this,
but as he informed me, I don't know that she won't have to fight for her right to be treated
like a human being. Hearing that, I thought back to a woman I'd met a few years earlier, in the
badlands of rural Syria. She'd been held as a slave by ISIS militants for two years,
forced into the kind of life that I hope is unimaginable to anyone sitting in this room.
One night, as the Kurdish-dominated militias of the SDF advanced on ISIS positions, she managed to escape.
After a harrowing journey on foot, she found her way to the SDF's lines, where the first person she saw was a fighter from an all-female unit holding an AK-47.
She made the decision to join up herself that very moment.
She wanted training and a gun of her own, because then she informed me, no man could ever own her again.
Now, politics isn't supposed to work that way in the United States.
states, people should not need to use weapons to defend their most basic civil rights.
But can you look at the mobs of armed men breaking into homes and businesses in Minneapolis
and elsewhere, many sporting Nazi tattoos to go along with their badges, and tell me,
definitively, that we're going to get through this without a fight?
At the end of the Second World War, as the dead were counted, decries of never again,
an attempt was made to create a rules-based international order, built around the bones of the
last failed attempt to do so at the end of the First World War. And as we stand here in 2026,
potentially looking at a U.S. invasion of Greenland, watching military helicopters circle American
cities while secret police snatch victims from their families and haul them off to camps and
deportation facilities, we must admit that this second attempt to create a rules-based international
order is failing as well. We and our predecessors failed at building and maintaining a system that
would stop all of this from happening again.
There are many answers to the question of how this happened.
The fact that the United States, from the jump,
refused to be bound by the same rules we hoped lesser nations would follow
was certainly part of the reason why.
Our insistence that no foreign court ever judge American politicians or American soldiers
was as narcissistic as it was insane.
The creation of the Department of Homeland Security,
the ongoing militarization of the border and border patrol,
the granting of qualified immunity to police across the country,
these were all further steps on our national road to perdition.
Citizens United are refusal to punish Facebook executives
over the Cambridge Analytica scandal,
and our failure to charge the people responsible for January 6th with treason
are all further steps on that road.
I could talk about what led us here for hours.
But all that matters is this.
We, the United States, are not special.
Our long, democratic traditions, great wealth and high opinion
of ourselves have not protected us. The enemy is at the gates. Now, I don't mean to act as if all
is lost, or as if the only path forward is bloody internecine war, because I don't believe that.
The cause of rationality of basic human decency still has a lot going for it. The vast
majority of Americans hate this president just as they despise the Republican Party and the vicious,
cruel, and soulless monster the conservative project has proved to be. Poll after poll shows this,
but we also see it in videos of grandfathers kicking tear gas cans back at ice agents in Minneapolis.
The bad guys are outnumbered. We can't forget this, and they certainly won't.
But the bad guys also have guns, and the legal right to use them however they want,
whenever they want, on whoever they want. Just because they might lose an election doesn't mean
they're handing in their badges or their weapons. So, how do you plan to make them?
One thing that gives me a sense of hope, as I look around the country, is that increasing
numbers of liberals and progressives seem to be waking up to the idea that this is an existential
fight. Perhaps the most hopeful thing I've seen recently is that in Minneapolis, a coalition
of labor unions and community organizations have come together to call for a limited general
strike that just so happens to be today, January 23, 2026. That's right. For a single day,
there will be no work, no school, no shopping. Now, this is a demonstrative act when you might
compare to the flexing of a muscle. No one involved thinks that one day of striking is going to be
enough, but nothing less than a general strike has the potential to force concessions,
even capitulation from the regime, and you have to start somewhere. This is another example of
an act of peaceful protest that will be considered anything but peaceful as soon as the regime
feels threatened. And people on the ground in Minneapolis know this. Whenever I talk to activists,
whether they live in Los Angeles, in Portland, Atlanta, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, I see the same
thing I saw in people in 2020. A grim but very accurate assessment of what this fight is going to cost
them. They are going to lose eyes and maybe limbs to riot munitions. They and their friends will be
arrested, beaten, possibly tortured, and imprisoned. All of these things are happening right now to
regular people who have done nothing more than speak up and lend aid and comfort to their afflicted
neighbors. They are willing to risk their lives because they know the hour is late.
I have not seen anything that approaches this level of commitment from the liberal intelligentsia
from most elected Democratic officials or from the party itself. J.B. Pritzker calls out,
accurately, our present situation as being like the early years of the Third Reich. And yet,
like every Democrat in power, he falls short of elucidating absolutely.
beyond peaceful protest. And if I can get only one point across to you, let it be this.
As far as the regime is concerned, there is no such thing. All dissent is violent. You attending the
symposium as an act of terrorism, and they will punish you for it once they get through the people
they see as more immediate threats. There's a book I come back to again and again when trying
to puzzle out my own path forward in these unsettling times. It's titled They Thought They Were Free,
and the author was a Jewish-American progressive journalist and educator named Milton Meyer.
Not long after World War II in the early 1950s,
he moved to a small German village to get and know and interview
a number of ordinary citizens about their involvement with the Nazi party.
Meyer called these men and women the little Nazis
to contrast them from the big Nazis like Himmler and Heidrich and Gehring.
These were not people who had been movers and shakers in the party,
nor had most of them been particularly active or early members.
They were regular people who had latched on to Nazism late,
but supported it enthusiastically because of the benefits it gave them.
They thought they were free is a chilling read for a number of reasons.
But there's no competition for the most frightening passage in the whole work.
For Meyer didn't only interview little Nazis.
He sat down with people we might call little anti-fascists.
These were Germans who never bought into Nazism.
They hated it from the Germans.
jump, they even fought it for a time. But they were never central organizers or members of the
resistance, and when it became clear that the Third Reich had taken power, they faded into the
woodwork to try and stay alive. Meyer sat down with one of these people, a friend of his who worked as a
chemical engineer, and asked him one day, tell me now, how was the world lost? Here's how his response
started. The world was lost one day in 1935, here in Germany. It was I who lost it, and I will tell
you how. I was employed in a defense plant, a war plant, of course, but they were always called
defense plants. That was the year of the national defense law, the law of total conscription.
Under the law, I was required to take an oath of fidelity. I said I would not. I opposed it
in conscience. I was given 24 hours to think it over, and those 24 hours, I lost the world.
Now, this man, this friend of Myers, knew that refusing to give the oath wouldn't cost him his
freedom. But it would cost him his job and make it impossible for him to get another.
No one would hire a Bolshevik, and although he'd never been a Bolshevik, once the fascists take over,
everyone who isn't a fascist becomes the worst thing they ever called their enemies.
Today, I guess it would be far-left extremists or Antifa terrorists.
Anyway, Meyer's friend explained that he thought he couldn't risk being tired with that brush,
not because he wanted to escape with his family and get a job elsewhere, but because he genuinely
wanted to stay in Germany and fight the good fight. He had many German Jewish colleagues and other
dissident friends he wanted to be able to help, and he calculated, quote, if I took the oath and
held my job, I might be of help somehow, as things went on. If I refused to take the oath,
I would certainly be useless to my friends. Even if I remained in the country, I myself would be in
their situation. And so he decided to take the pledge, making a decision I think many of us would
have made, telling himself simply that by saying the words, I swear to God, he was ensuring no human
being or government could override his conscience. And he was as good as his word. Through the war years,
Meyer's friend helped save many lives, using his apartment as a safe house for people fleeing the Third Reich.
That's incredibly admirable, I think we can all agree, but Meyer's friend felt nothing but shame for his
actions. He said later, of the day he took the oath, that day the world was lost, and it was I
who lost it. Now Meyer was confused by this, saying what I'd imagine most of us would say in his position.
Well, by taking the oath, you were able to save many lives. You were just one man, and the Third Reich
was already in power. What more could you have done? Here was his friend's response. Of course,
I must explain. First of all, there is the problem of the lesser evil. Taking the oath was not so
evil as being unable to help my friends later on would have been. But the evil of the oath was certain and
immediate, and the helping of my friends was in the future and therefore uncertain, I had to commit a
positive evil there and then, in the hope of a possible good later on. The good outweighed the
evil, but the good was only a hope, the evil, a fact. He went on to insist that if he had refused to
take the oath of fidelity, he could have saved the people later killed by the Nazi regime, and Meyer
responded logically. You don't truly believe that your lone refusal could have overthrown the Reich
in 1935, and his friend said, no, of course not. But then went on to elaborate. There I was,
in 1935, a perfect example of the kind of person who, with all his advantages in birth and
education and in position, rules or might easily rule in any country. If I had refused to take
the oath in 1935, it would have meant that thousands and thousands like me all over Germany
were refusing to take it. Their refusal would have heartened millions. Thus, the regime would
have been overthrown, or indeed would never have come to power in the first place.
The fact that I was not prepared to resist in 1935 meant that all the thousands, hundreds of thousands, like me in Germany, were also unprepared.
Each one of these hundreds of thousands was like me, a man of great influence or of great potential influence.
Thus, the world was lost.
Now, Meyer still doesn't believe his friend, because he's bogged down in the historical details, the nitty-gritty of the rise of fascism.
His friend, who lived through that, is instead focused on the greater moral and historic truths behind it.
These hundred lives I saved, he told Meyer, or a thousand, or ten as you will, what do they represent?
A little something out of the whole terrible evil, when if my faith had been strong enough in 1935,
I could have prevented the whole evil.
Now, the faith he's expressing isn't a religious belief per se, but rather faith that right and wrong exist,
and that when people step into our communities, hell-bent on harming others, they should be stopped by any means necessary.
So Meyer asks him, can you imagine anything your society might have
done to sustain your faith to ensure you and other Germans like you would have been prepared to
resist. Meyer's friend realizes he's speaking about education, the very American idea that ideologies
like fascism thrive in ignorance and can be banished by the light. He insisted Meyer was barking up the
wrong tree. My education did not help me, he said, and I had a broader and better education than
most men have or ever will have. All it did in the end was enable me to rationalize my failure of faith
more easily that I might have done if I had been ignorant. And so it was, I think, among educated men
generally in that time in Germany. Their resistance was no greater than other men's.
And that's my challenge today, to everyone at this symposium, and in fact, to myself,
we all have the benefit of an education where all the kind of people who sit down in nice rooms
to discuss the issues. It is incumbent on us to look out at the people struggling in Chicago,
in Minneapolis, and Los Angeles, in Portland, in Philadelphia, and everywhere else,
and ask ourselves, how can I support them and how can I go further?
The answer to that question is going to be a little different for everyone here,
but none of us can afford to hold on to our old ideas of what counts as acceptable
and unacceptable protest.
We're all going to have to become more comfortable with taking on risk,
because the boundaries between what is legal and illegal are going to change on a daily basis.
As we prepare for what comes next, we could all do a lot worse than to take the advice
of New Hampshire Episcopal Bishop Rob Hirschfeld,
who during a vigil for Renee Good told his clergy,
get your affairs in order.
Make sure you have your wills written,
because it may be that now is no longer the time for statements,
but for us with our bodies to stand between the powers of this world
and the most vulnerable.
Thank you, Robert, for that amazing speech,
inspiring, sobering, challenging, confronting,
all of those things.
It sort of almost feels...
I don't want to describe it because in describing it, I feel that it may reduce it to anecdote.
It was so powerful.
But, you know, I was so struck by your reference to Milton Mayer's account of the man who took the oath
and who later said, that day the world was lost and it was I who lost it.
And I think that when liberals today, all of us, you know, we tell ourselves that we're choosing
the lesser evil. We're staying quiet or we're sort of staying within the bounds of, you know,
particular reaction. I often ask myself the question, you know, what are we giving away in the
process? You know, what compels people to cross from accommodation into moral risk? And is there
a moment ahead where mass refusal could alter that trajectory? Or has that window already begun
to close? You know, I think of my own, my own experience.
you know, some people in the room know that I was a political prisoner in South Africa.
And, you know, I made a very conscious decision at a certain point, and it was a moral decision
to get involved in the anti-partate struggle, knowing what the costs were.
But I would love to hear from you about what it is you think that compels people, as I said earlier on,
to cross from accommodation into moral risk.
I think that's a fascinating and an incredibly important question.
And it's one I don't have a perfect.
answer to because there's a degree of mystery. I've been a number of times with a crowd who you've
seen it kind of come across their eyes and like confrontations with local police or with federal
Asians that we have them outnumbered and sometimes we have them outnumbered and their ammo just
ran dry. And you see everybody in the crowd make a decision in that moment to kind of stay where
they are, to not see what could come next, right, to not take a step forward. Because they all have
lives because we have a functional enough society because people have kids to get back to and
jobs to get back to and nobody wants to play act at an October revolution in between the middle of
their work week. And one of the things that is a potential moment of change is when that
the certainty of, well, I have a life, right, and my friends have lives. And we all have something
to get back to. When you have a large enough chunk of the populace who doesn't feel that way,
who feels like, well, they've taken what I would go back to. They've taken any sense of
security I have. There's no longer a point in me holding back because the state is not holding back,
and I don't have anything to go back to. That's one of the things that causes mass and sudden
flips. And you asked a little earlier, do I think the window is closing? And I think kind of
somewhat paradoxically, the window starts closing as soon as it opens, but it can never
close all the way, because there's not a lot of them. This is true in every country with
every state police force compared to the size of the populace. And so there's always a potential
when enough people get angry and enough people get radicalized that a system, even with the
amount of violence behind it that ours has, can be toppled. That said, the longer we let this
go on, the more they have wrapped their fingers around every aspect of policing and justice in
this country, the more ability they have given their officers to utilize violence, to use
to utilize advanced weaponry to utilize drones and things like stingrays and whatnot against protesters.
And so in that way, the window within which people can react and feel like they have a decent chance of getting away or of succeeding closes because the force deployed against them gets larger,
which makes it a lot scarier and makes people less likely to take those risks.
So what does fighting back actually mean?
I mean, that's really, you know, that's a really, I think that that's a really important.
question because, you know, as you spoke about in your, you know, in your remarks, and we know so well
that, you know, when the government or whatever controls the police, they control the military,
you know, and if that has identified you as being, you know, quote, unquote, a terrorist,
regardless of, you know, what the circumstances might be? What does fighting back actually mean?
You know, what does that resistance encompass? And we know that it can take many, many forms.
So I sort of want to push you a little bit more.
You know, what does fighting back actually mean?
But what for you feels morally defensible?
And what genuinely troubles you?
Yeah.
I guess to start with, if the question is,
what does fighting back look like in terms of what is an escalation
from the ways in which we're currently fighting back
that is still within the bounds of what most people on our side of the aisle
would call like peaceful and morally justified,
even if it's not legal, right?
Well, one thing that comes to mind is a general strike. And in fact, the only thing that comes to mind that I think actually has serious weight, the weight to uproot a security state as powerful and established as ours is, the way to uproot a regime that has entrenched as ours is, is a general strike. It's almost the only leverage that we have, which is why I'm happy to see them starting to explore doing it as a real thing in Minneapolis. You get this thing online and Twitter on blue sky, whatever, where people will periodically be like, we're doing a general strike next week.
Nobody go to work or shop.
And it's like, that's not how it works.
You've got to, you have to have the backing of unions.
You have to have, you have to have a lot of infrastructure set up to try and figure out how
we're going to feed people.
How are we going to keep people's lights on as much as possible?
How are we going to provide people with the necessities during what will probably be
an extended period of time out of work?
And a time in which, if you're talking about a real general strike, a lot of the pillars
that uphold daily life and our daily comforts will start to fail if it's an actual
functional general strike. And so you have to have systems built up for that. And it's one of the things
people don't often think about when they're hearing these kind of big hitch ideas for resistance campaigns.
One of my favorite examples of this, just in terms of like the difference between here's the idea
and here's the things we have to do to execute it. In Liberia, kind of at the end of the last really
big period they had of like these kind of warring warlords, there was a massive protest campaign.
by women in Liberia.
I mean, it was basically pulled right out of Liz Estrada.
It was, we are not going to have sex with our husbands.
Like, we're not going to do it.
And it was a mass resistance campaign.
This has been written about, I know it sounds like Liz Estrada, but it's a real thing
that happened.
And when they were considering how are we going to actually do this, they had to consider
some really ugly realities, including the reality of rape.
And so a factor behind the scenes in figuring out how to organize this was, how are we
going to create networks to smuggle women out.
of dangerous homes and keep them safe for the length of this protest campaign, right? And when you're
talking about what's going to be necessary for a general strike, it's a ton of illegalism, right? You know,
everything from people shoplifting food to stop people from starving, but to the very fact that
carrying out and participating in a general strike, if one gains any momentum, will be declared
illegal by the regime. They will try to crack down. They will arrest ringleaders. They will put
people in black sites. These are realities that have to be accounted for in the
underlying planning, and I'm hopeful about the potential for something like that in 2028.
Now, when it comes to the stuff that really scares me, one of the things that scares me is what
happens if we cross the point into which there is no longer any hope or talk of peaceful
resistance, right? And you have to consider this when you have a large number of armed men saying,
we just need to kill all of the people who are on the other side of this thing, which we have in
this country right now. There's a lot of them. They have weapons.
many of them are in the police, some of them are in the military. These are realities of our present
situation. And that's scary to me because when you cross that line, there's no longer any
question of right or wrong. It's just a matter of like what can survive the onslaught. And that's, I think,
the thing to try to avoid at all costs, because any sort of mass internecing conflict in the United
States, among the Americans it'll kill is many people outside of the country because global food systems
and global medicines supply systems will collapse, right?
So we're talking about having governors call out the National Guard
against federal police forces.
When I think about both the necessity of that,
because you have to try to resist.
And you have to try to make it clear,
is there anyone backing up the people from this federal agency?
Is there anyone at a state level?
Is there any kind of resistance that the state is going to respect?
You have to ask that question,
but some of the answers to it can take us to really terrifying places.
And I don't think we can avoid asking the question anymore.
I don't think we're going to avoid a point at which some governor tries something like that
because ICE is going to continue grabbing, right?
They're going to continue pushing what they can do in blue cities.
They're not going to, this is not the extent of the shit they're going to try.
Sorry.
No.
You know, and I think it's also particularly terrifying.
We think of what the budgets are behind, you know, that enables this.
And, you know, the budgets that are now.
about to be voted. I mean, we're not just, we're talking about billions and billions.
And it's just extraordinary. So, you know, I mean, again, going back to my experience in
South Africa and, you know, this idea of a general strike, you know, what was ultimately the most
effective weapon against the apartheid regime was mass mobilizing, mass organizing, mass organizing
across the country, mass marches that actually, that quite literally made, it was a specific
campaign to make the country ungovernable. And it was on. And it was on.
on every level. It was consumer boycotts. It was mass marches. It was, you know, marches
specifically targeted at the apartheid laws that broke the back of the apartheid laws. And it was that
aided by incredible pressure from outside, from outside sanctions. Of course, things are very different now.
Yeah. But, you know, this does take me to, to another question, something that I've thought a lot
about is, you know, after this whole crisis, after this is over, you know, what are the consequences?
What about accountability? You know,
when we get to the other side of this, which we will.
We will get to the other side of this.
You know, what should that accountability look like?
Is it an American Truth and Reconciliation campaign?
You know, we had a truth and reconciliation campaign in South Africa,
and it was extraordinarily healing,
but there was no restitution, and at the end of the day, there was no justice.
So what was a sort of transformational, societal,
transformational aspect of that?
Should we think about an American truth and reconciliation?
campaign? Is it something closer to Nuremberg? You know, who are going to be seen as the architects
of this authoritarian movement? Who going to be seen as the architects of this anti-authoritarian
movement? You know, how do we as a democratic country or democratic society? How willing are we to
go to pursue those consequences? I mean, we've just seen how hollow that can be. You know,
after January 6th, you know, how Trump has pardoned the insurrectionists.
I'd love to hear your thoughts on that.
And I know we've only got three minutes left before I get hold off the stage.
Well, I mean, I guess I have two answers to that.
The first would be what do I think is likely to happen and then what should happen.
In terms of what's likely to happen, I guess the likeliest thing is that if we have a
Truth and Reconciliation Commission, it's something that we kind of half-ass and it falls
way too short.
And there's not any kind of criminal restitution for the people who are breaking laws and
hurting and killing people right now.
I would say that's a likely possibility, just given the way in which this country has handled
similar things in the past and the ways in which other countries have handled similar things in the past.
Let's not forget the Nuremberg, for all of the things about it that were good,
was also a failure in a lot of ways, right?
The vast majority of the Nazis who participated directly, physically in the Holocaust,
did not see any kind of criminal consequences.
So when it comes to what I think we should have,
I think we do need something along the lines of a Nuremberg.
And I think that if you want to talk about the people politically who are committing crimes right now and who should be on trial,
I think we can all come up with a lot of very similar names.
And I'm very supportive of trying and bringing this regime to justice for its current illegal behavior and past illegal behavior.
That said, I think it's going to be also a failure if we do not extend any attempt at criminal consequences,
at retribution, at justice, I guess would be the better term, to a group of people who have
underlined all of the negative societal changes that are happening right now, which is the people
who run all of the major social media corporations in the world, all of whom are deeply
complicit in not just our authoritarian slide, but in direct violence. Facebook knew for a fact
that the military of Myanmar was using their website to spread propaganda to help further
in ethnic cleansing. And they made the choice basically to sit with that because it made the
money, you know, and that sort of thing should be seen as just as illegal as a bunch of ICE
agents without a warrant busting into somebody's house with guns, you know? So that's where I stand.
I'm on a, we didn't go nearly far enough after the Civil War either kind of kick right now,
but we don't need to go into that. We've come to the end of our time, unfortunately.
You know, I could continue. I've got, you know, seven, seven questions that I would have loved to
have asked you. But we don't have time. But,
You know, Robert, I can't thank you enough for coming, for being with us, for sharing your thoughts
and, you know, traveling all the way from Portland.
And, you know, I'm so sorry about the hundred times that you've been to your guest.
You know, I've been to a guest many, many times in my life, but it's definitely not a hundred.
There's a lot of people who got to your guest more than me in Portland.
Well, and elsewhere.
Thank you. Thank you so much. And thank you all for bearing with us.
Canadian women are looking for more.
More out of themselves, their businesses, their elected leaders, and the world are out of them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast.
I'm Jennifer Stewart.
And I'm Catherine Clark.
And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women.
Entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, politicians, and newsmakers, all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
Listen to the Honest Talk podcast on IHeart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcast.
Welcome to the A building.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm Inalick Lamouba.
It's 1969.
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr.
had both been assassinated.
And Black America was out of breaking point.
Writing and protests broke out on an unprecedented scale.
In Atlanta, Georgia, at Martin's Al-Mermata, Moore House College, the students had their own protest.
It featured two prominent figures in black history, Martin Luther King Sr., and a young student, Samuel L.
Jackson. To be in what we really thought was a revolution. I mean, people would die.
1968, the murder of Dr. King, which traumatized everyone. The FBI had a role in the murder of a Black Panther leader in Chicago.
This story is about protest. It echoes in today's world far more than it should, and it will blow your mind.
Listen to the A-building on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you're
you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the
on-purpose podcast. On a recent
episode, I sat down with Nick Jonas,
singer, songwriter, actor,
and global superstar. The thing I would
say to my younger self
is congratulations, so you get to marry
Priyanka Chopra Jonas.
And also, you know, your daughter's
incredible. That's beautiful, man.
Yeah, thank you. That's so beautiful.
I can see that got you a little.
Yeah, for sure.
Our daughter, she came to the world under sort of very intense circumstances,
which I'd not really talked about ever.
Growing up on Disney in front of a million, how did that shape your sense of self?
I went blank, I hit a bad note, and then I couldn't kind of recover.
And I had built up this idea that music and being musician was my whole identity.
I had to sort of relearn who I was if you took this thing away.
Who am I?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chatee.
on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is Ryder Strong, and I have a new podcast called The Red Weather.
It was many and many a year ago in a kingdom by the sea.
In 1995, my neighbor and a trainer disappeared from a commune.
It was hard to wrap your head around.
It was nature and trees and praying and drugs.
So no, I am not your guru.
And back then, I lied to my parents.
I lied to police. I lied to everybody.
There were years right where I could not say your name.
I've decided to go back to my hometown in Northern California,
interview my friends, family, talk to police, journalists,
whomever I can to try to find out what actually happened.
Isn't it a little bit weird that they obsess over hippies in the woods
and not the obvious boyfriend?
They have had this case for 30 years.
I'll teach you sons of a bitch to come around here in my wife.
Boom, boom. This is the red weather.
Listen to the red weather
On the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is It Could Happen here at Executive Disorder,
our weekly newscast covering what's happening in the White House,
The Crumbling World, and What It Means for you.
I'm Garrison Davis, I'm joined by James Stout, Robert Evans,
and maybe Sophie Lichtenen.
Yep.
This episode, we are covering the week of January 28th to February 4th.
Very exciting events happening this weekend.
And as we know, the Super Bowl and even more importantly, the Turning Point USA halftime show, streaming on Daily Wire Plus, America's Real Voice, National News Desk, and TBN. I don't know what that is.
Wait, pause. Pause. It's behind a payroll.
You know, unclear. Well, probably not, because it's going to be also, it's also going to be on YouTube, X everything app, and Rumble.
I was going to ask it. It was going to be, oh, don't worry, James. They're one step ahead of you.
And we can see all of our favorite acts.
We have Kid Rock, Bradley Gilbert, Lee Bryce and Gabby Barrett, all of my favorite performers.
Gare, I haven't seen Kid Rock since you and I watched Kid Rock together at the RNC.
It's been too long.
It's been too long.
It's been way too long.
I'm excited for Lee Bryce, obviously.
As the biggest Bryce head on the pod, Bryce is going to be huge.
Gabby Barrett will be a nice, you know, a nice little spice on top.
Yeah, and this guy's name is, it's not Bradley.
It's fucking, it's Brantley.
Sorry, Brantley, Gilbert.
My apologies to all the big Brantley fans out there, my bad.
Hell of a name.
Obviously, the most famous Noah Brantley.
That's not a real name.
That's just not a real name.
Yeah, it isn't spelled with L-E-I-G-H, so we do have to give him that.
If it was Brant-L-L-L-L-E-H, I would be doing some terrorism right now.
I'd be right.
Gunn in my hand.
Yeah, I would be unable to stop myself.
You guys, I just Googled Lee Bryce, and the first picture that pops up is incredible,
and I'm going to put it in the chat.
Please do.
Is it in the work chat or the Zoom chat?
That's the first picture that pops up.
It's incredible.
Oh, he looks tough.
Wow.
Is he in Band of Brothers?
His jaw is fantastic.
Oh, my God.
That's an incredible first photo.
Yeah, his expression, isn't, though?
He's really letting himself down with the face.
Yeah, his face says, I really.
am racist. It's like, this doesn't look happy to be there. So obviously after about six months
of planning, Turning Point was able to put together just the finest, the finest acts in all the show
business for their, for their all-American halftime show. All the big names. Really, what everyone's
itching. Itching to listen. They could not even get Nicky Minaj, which is like so humiliating. Like,
come on, guys. Yeah. Didn't she do a dance with the Treasury Secretary yesterday or something?
Yes. Who was that guy or those two?
people that were at the R&C
that they kept showing doing that rap video
I like kind of blocked it out. Oh yeah.
There's those conservative rap guys.
Yeah. For Gatio Blow is it?
Forgotio Blow is one of the conservative
rap guys. Yes. Yeah.
I will admit I don't have a deep knowledge in this area.
I saw him at the RNC. I was walking
behind him on my way to the beer store.
That's my point. Incredible. He's an amazing looking man.
Yeah. That's a unique dude.
That's your risky Google of the day.
God really broke the mold with him.
So we will report on how the turning point halftime show went next week for the next
ED because you know that I'm going to be turned into Rumble to watch this.
Yeah, it's going to be.
We're going to need a minute-by-minute breakdown of this bad boy.
I'll be taking extensive notes.
I hope they'll be.
able to record it and watch it again later for posterity.
I feel like this is going to go down like Live Aid, you know,
as the greatest moments in live music.
It is interesting that they are showing it on National News Desk.
Fox News did not decide to air the All-American halftime show.
So instead you have to tune into TBN, whatever that is,
and National News Desk.
So let's get to some actual news, though.
Sure.
Real news.
Okay, so Portland, Oregon has been the site of some
recent noteworthy ice protests on Saturday the 31st of January. There was a large
union march on the ice building on McAdam Street in Portland, Oregon. This was like basically
every union in Portland. It was the largest union march that we've had here in like 20 years,
somewhere along those lines. About five to 10,000 people showed up. Oh, wow. When I heard it was 10K,
because I wound up there.
I hadn't even planning to go,
but I showed up with a friend.
And as we were kind of watching the crowd pass,
a buddy of ours came up
who knows one of the people
who organized the march
and was like, yeah,
they're expecting like 10,000 people.
And I was like,
there's no way they're going to get 10,000 fucking people out here.
And then as the crowd went past me
for like 20 straight minutes,
and I was like, yeah, that might be 10,000 people.
That really is quite a lot of motherfucking people.
It was an extremely diverse crowd,
which I mean in the age sense, primarily.
It's Portland.
So not in the, in any other sense of the word.
Yeah, those protests tend to have, you know, older folks, teenagers, families, teachers.
A lot of older folks, a lot of little kids, kids who were like eight to 12 years old.
Because it was just people were like, the basic round of March was doing a circle around the ice facility.
And then there was like sound equipment and music set up on a nearby park.
So I think, I don't believe the plan was an extended confrontation with ice, which is what made what came next so surprising, which is that we start walking towards where the route of March is heading.
We're kind of in like the middle of the crowd, probably, and we see a cloud.
And it's like 3.30 in the afternoon.
So the people I'm with who have all been through their share of Portland protests are like, that can't be tear gas.
It's not even 4 p.m.
And this is the liberal march.
there's no way they've gassed it already.
Like, I saw the front of the march.
It was a bunch of people in their 50s.
Like, they're not forcing the issue with ice, I don't think.
But apparently, per the claims made by ice,
when the crowd reached the ice building,
people began throwing water bottles.
So obviously, that's a situation that can't be allowed to continue.
So they gasped the absolute fuck out of the march.
And they gassed it so much that the cloud of gas spread
to cover pretty much the entire march, including the people who were nowhere near the front of
the barge yet. So as we're walking towards it, we become aware about halfway towards getting to it that, like,
okay, that's not smoke. That is, in fact, gas. Some of us had masks. I did not. So I'm like,
well, I'm going to have a bad time. This is straight up not going to be fun. And the problem with
it was, because of where they gassed us, there were kind of two streets of buildings on either side.
So you basically got, you're in like a valley almost. You've got steep.
canyon walls kind of on either side of you.
And there was no wind that day.
So you've just got this thick cloud of gas smoke and 10,000 people frammed in between
two pillars of buildings.
So it was a very bad time.
A lot of kids got gasped.
I saw a number of children in significant distress.
Like little kids, a lot of old people wound up in significant distress.
It was straight up a bad time.
and it continued for the next day.
There was another march the next day that started at City Hall.
This kind of galvanized people in Portland to specifically take up the charge of protesting for the city to basically not renew or cancel ICE's contract to use the building that they're based out of.
So there was a large march on Sunday.
I showed up as the march reached the ICE area because I didn't want to walk across town.
And sure enough, we get there and maybe an hour or so after.
the crowd arrives. There's like a thousand or so people, and it's still a very young crowd. This is not
mostly people who have been doing the protest thing in Portland for a long time. Like I saw a lot of
girls who couldn't have been older than 16 or 17 out on Sunday. And they gassed again. And I couldn't
tell you, they were letting people like right up to the front of the ice building, which they had gased
folks for throwing water bottles kind of near the day before. So there's never any consistency with these
sort of things. And eventually they just decided to gas the shit out of everybody again to come and
snatch people. And that's kind of the story is people in Portland are really pissed again because
they gasped the big Lib March. All of the unions are really angry. All of the nurses are really
angry. The city government's angry. The mayor of Portland, Keith Wilson made a statement that all
of the ice agents should quit their jobs, should resign. I don't know that I think that they're
actually going to kick ice out of its building. Now, to be fair, I don't think that ice is really
getting much done in that building because it's locked down completely.
They are using facilities up in Washington for the actual immigration stuff for the most part.
So it's become, I think it's largely a symbol.
Yeah, a symbolic kind of deal.
So we'll see.
I don't know what's going to happen next, but yeah, that's the update from here.
The tear gas air is spicy and bad for our health.
Yeah.
I mean, it always bums me out to see really young people.
Like, kids get tear gassed, especially like teenage girls because there's data and not nearly as much as there should be because the government really doesn't like studying this on how tear gas affects particularly like reproductive health.
And it's bad.
There's evidence from places like Gaza that it can cause miscarriages.
There's documentation of miscarriages in at least three different countries as a result of tear gas use.
Although, again, it's not the kind of documentation you'd want for a medical thing because you can't really isolate out other factors that may have been happening.
at the same time because you're trying to figure out what this and other things are doing to
people's bodies in a place like Gaza where you have no kind of like clinical control. But outside
of that there's evidence of missed periods that it can like delay or cause unusually painful periods.
Send people into early menopause. Jeez. Yeah, there's some evidence for that. It's kind of a,
when I brought this up online, someone got very angry at me because they're like, well, it's not
proven. I think there's enough data to tell people, especially if you've got a uterus,
wear a mask when you go protest.
Yeah, I think also like how are we going to obtain proof in this scenario?
Right. What are they going to do?
Yeah, it's not very easy for us to do. We can't really do it in a sort of double-blind trial, right?
Somebody brought up like, if it was bad for reproductive health, then all of the women in the military,
because you get tear gassed as part of military training, then that would have shown up before.
And it hasn't. And I immediately found in about three seconds, the largest, like, study done so far on the
effect of tear gas that specifically noted, yeah, they did some studies on hair, tear gas affects
people in the 60s, they didn't look at women, weren't interested.
Didn't care, not at all a priority.
Completely ignored it.
Shocked, shocked her here this.
So anyway, just like wear a respirator.
A half-face respirator, you know, is cheaper.
I would recommend a full face because tear gas sucks on your eyes.
They're not crazy expensive.
You don't have to get a nice gas mask.
Just get a respirator.
It's better than nothing.
Yeah, I like my respirator.
Yep.
So, firstly, just a couple of small things that we wanted to note that we might come back to covering later.
First, the US has now admitted that it has a small contingent of troops on the ground in Nigeria.
I wrote on my newsletter about US drone strikes in Nigeria, what they're doing there,
and who they're targeting with those drone strikes alongside the long-running issues with civilian casualties,
with airborne raids in Nigeria on my newsletter so people want to read that they can.
And secondly, I wanted to mention that Judge Anna Reyes has stayed Secretary Nome's decision
that would have rendered 350,000 Haitians without legal status when she was going to let
the temporary protected status expire.
I have explained TPS several times on E.D and in my first Darien series, so I'm not going
to go into detail about it here, but if you'd like to listen to those, you can find out more about it.
Last thing before our first ad break, Bill and Hillary Clinton have agreed to testify before Congress as a part of the Epstein investigation.
A vote to hold the Clinton's criminal contempt of Congress was scheduled for this week before they finally agreed to be deposed at two hearings in late February.
And the Clintons have now called for these hearings to be public.
This follows a slew of new Epstein documents that were released by the DOJ.
last week, which Robert, you'll be covering on Behind the Bastards soon?
Yes, yes.
We will be talking about the things revealed in the new Epstein file releases, the three million
or so documents that just came out.
Yes, we'll be talking about that on Behind the Bastards.
Not next week, but the week after.
Yeah, probably like the week after or something like that.
There's a lot of good stuff in there, a lot of Brock Pierce in this set of releases.
If you've been curious as to what the guy who invented Tether, the cryptocurrency Tether.
was up to with Jeffrey Epstein.
As a spoiler, it was molesting people.
Jesus Christ.
Oh, yeah.
Well, allegedly, we don't know that it was molesting.
They were described as girls, repeatedly described as girls,
in the emails between Brock Pierce, the Mighty Ducks guy and Jeffrey Epstein.
Yeah.
But that could mean anything, you know?
That could mean anything.
You'd be talking about the Elon Musk emails in there?
There's some Elon stuff in there.
It's nothing definitive.
The downside of it is Elon has a leg to stand on when he's like, I never went to the island.
That said, you can interpret the emails one of two ways, because I saw an Elon Musk fan site, be like, see?
He was clearly just trying to blow him off.
That's not how I interpret Elon's emails to Epstein.
I think he really wanted to go to that fuck island.
What night will the wildest potty be or something?
Yeah, he was like, I want to know where the, but he was also talking about like the whole island area, right?
like where the wildest parties are that he wanted.
So he does have some plausible deniability,
but he was lying about not being in touch with Epstein.
And also, uh,
J.K. Rowling, in touch with Epstein.
Oh, shit.
I didn't know that.
Saved him.
Yes, saved him seats for the opening of her play.
Oh.
I'm the Harry Potter play on Broadway.
Got Jeffrey Epstein a seat.
Oh, God.
Just when you thought she could be a worse fucking person.
Incredible.
Yeah.
What a turd.
What a third.
What a disgrace to our national,
we have lots of those, I guess, but yeah.
I can't believe this one person has ruined the reputation of Britain.
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland,
previously unblemished in centuries of history.
Jesus Christ.
Until the Turf Wizard Lady came along.
Yeah, the first bad English person.
Anyway, so, yeah, on February 26th,
Hillary will be testifying, and on the 27th Bill will be testifying
in hearings that should be televised live to the public.
Interesting.
Okay.
Let's go on break.
All right, we're back and I have fantastic news.
Look what I found.
Look what I found, you guys.
Deep in my archives of misery.
Luckily, podcasting is a visual medium.
Oh, no.
It's audio.
Okay, what are we imagine?
Oh, God.
All right, I think, I think,
I think that's enough for got you.
Wow.
Do we need any more?
No.
I know.
Whatever.
No, we don't.
Okay.
All right.
Sorry.
Oh, God.
The fact that video is playing on a background of a large police badge.
Really?
We're voting Donald Trump, baby.
So bad.
So bad.
I cannot tell you how disappointed I am that I will not be hearing them perform on Super Bowl Sunday.
You can see just the disappointment in my face right now.
This Wednesday morning, February 4th,
Tom Homan announced that they're pulling 700 federal agents out of Minneapolis,
though 2000 will remain in the city.
That's so many agents.
Yeah.
That's so, that even 700 sounded like.
There's still a lot of ICE and Border Patrol on the ground.
Wow.
2000 was a surge that they did earlier.
year, that was when they really kind of flooded it with ice agents. So in 2000 is still,
in 2000, it's still a massive amount of ICE's overall capacity. These aren't all ice agents,
right? Like, they deputize ATF and marshals and other things. But a lot of Border Patrol guys here.
Yeah. I don't know if that's who the 700, who there was drawing are.
It's a mix. It's not, I don't think they're from just one agency. Okay. Yeah, there are a lot of Border
Patrol. You see that a lot, right? Like, the Border Patrol agents clearly love this, right?
They're getting per DM, they're getting travel pay.
They make more money than they do on the border,
and they don't have to drive around in the middle of nowhere.
They call it going on safari.
Homan has cited an increase in cooperation by Minnesota authorities.
He was talking about handing over detained people
who would be deportable, I think.
But I have not seen a similar statement from state authorities in Minnesota,
at least at a time.
So, like, take that with a pinch of assault, right?
A lot of what we see coming out of the term DHS just straight up isn't true.
They have been talking about trying to, like, increase the cooperation with ICE detainers
in the local, like, prisons and jails.
Yeah.
And I think that would be what this cooperation would be.
It would be, like, either cooperating with ICE detainers or even alerting ICE if they thought
someone was deportable.
An interesting thing of note as well is earlier this week, the military troops that were placed
on like standby have been unplaced on standby. So not looking like those guys in Alaska or
North Carolina will be deploying to Minneapolis. In some other Minneapolis related news,
Don Lemon, friend of the pod, was arrested Thursday, January 29. And now faces civil rights charges
for allegedly violating the Face Act, which prohibits interfering with reproductive health services
or people exercising religious freedom at a place of worship.
On January 18th, Lemon reported on a protest at City's Church in St. Paul,
where one of the pastors is also the head of the local ICE field office.
The magistrate judge and an appeals court previously dismissed the charges against Lemon
before the case was brought before a grand jury in Minnesota.
Six activists and one other journalists are also facing charges.
We reported on this protest after it happened,
and yeah, yeah, the DOJ has been.
trying to pin pin lemon on this for the past few weeks.
Yeah.
Probably not a great side, just for, you know, general First Amendment activity.
No, no.
It's a pretty, pretty bleak side, actually.
As frustrating as it is to start waving the Jimmy Kimmel, Don Lemon flag, you know,
that's the situation we're in.
Yeah, it's not good.
The journalists there arrested was head of their National Association of Black Journalists,
wasn't she?
Georgia Fort is her name.
Yes.
Yes.
do want to say actually that like when we talk about protections for journalists uh like journalists yes
can often be the people who are first targeted for like things that violate freedom of speech right like
when governments are going to violate freedom of speech they can go off to journalists first but like
when someone is recording ice operations they are doing citizen journalism they are protected by exactly
the same rights that we have as journalists who are doing this as our full-time job there isn't a special
First Amendment for us. And so when the Border Patrol agents killed Alex Prettie, they killed someone
who was at that time engaged in journalism too. And I'm happy to see journalistic bodies standing
up, not just for people who are employed as full-time journalists who have put all of our rights
to document and record. Yeah, all of the legal observers who are filming ICE as well that are
being targeted with intimidation, being pulled over. Yeah, having guns pointed out of them,
etc. Yeah. Do you want to talk about the Senate funding?
for ice? Oh, do I? So the partial government shut down, which did start last week, was ended
on Tuesday after the DHS bill was stripped out of the now $1.2 trillion annual funding package.
DHS's funding will lapse on Friday the 13th in negotiation.
Why not? While negotiations continue on a DHS
funding bill. Congressional Democrats are pushing for agency reforms like judicial warrants and no
masked agents, while Republicans are signaling minor concessions like having Border Patrol and
ice wear body cameras. Yeah. Should we talk a little bit more about body cameras?
You know what? My favorite topic. Let's talk about body cameras again. I love to talk about a
body worn camera. Time is a flat circle. Yeah. Okay. So, Christine Noam this week announced that
ICE agents in Minnesota were going to wear body-worn cameras going forward.
And I've been kind of disappointed in a lot of the reporting on this.
What is, I think, missing is that there was a 2022 executive order, right, signed by Biden,
that ordered federal law enforcement to use body-worn cameras.
Funding for them was included in the 2021 fiscal year appropriations bill.
Nome has said they will grow the program as funds become available,
but those funds have been available for some time, right?
A 2024 document, ICE document that talked about their pilot program study, they said, quote,
full implementation is expected by September 30th, 2025.
Eagle-eared lists will notice that it's in the past.
However, in 2025, ICE began rolling this back.
They issued a directive which continued only implementing the body-worn camera program in the certain pilot program cities.
The Trump administration in its second term has called Congress to cut funding for body-worn cameras by 75 percent.
and reduce the staffing of the body-worn camera program from 22 people to just three.
They have also cut oversight offices within DHS, like OIDO.
OIDO is like the niches level of DHS, understand that when you know of OIDO.
I think Biden created it.
I've actually, I've seen them once.
It's the Office of the Immigration Detention Ombudsman.
They came to the outdoor detention sites in Hacumba,
which seems to be something of a concession.
that the Biden administration at a time denied people were detained in those sites.
It had 100 plus employees at start of the Trump administration.
It also has three now, according to Reuters.
This most recent bill, as Garrison said, does include funding and a mandate for their use.
A federal judge in Chicago had already ordered agents there to wear cameras in November of last year.
I should note that I also looked up the ICE body-worn camera policy, and it theoretically,
now, insofar of any of these policies are being followed, right?
prohibits them for using body-worn cameras for the, quote,
sole purpose of recording people engaged in First Amendment protected activities.
So they can just use their phones for that, I guess.
That's what they've been doing.
I mean, yeah, this is like part of the frustration around this bill is you do have
Schumer pushing for certain things, like not wearing masks and not doing the roving raids.
We'll also emphasize, you know, they want the masks off and the cameras on,
as if that's going to affect the behavior of agents on the ground.
Meanwhile, during the killing of Renee Good, the officer that shot and killed her was filming the whole thing on his phone.
He was filming her on his own cell phone.
So obviously having a camera on the agent is not going to prevent them from killing someone.
Because they think it's good what they're doing.
They don't think it's bad.
You have to understand that.
Both the agents who shot Alex Preti actually had body-worn cameras.
they're actually CBP agents.
So a CBP or BP, I should say, right, Customs and Border Protection.
One of them is CPB, one of them is BP.
That's correct, yeah.
They're both CBP agents, but within CBP, you have BP and OFO.
Okay.
They get really mad if you get this wrong.
They would send an email.
Okay.
Literally, I got an email once for the subject line.
Come on, man.
So they were both Customs and Border Protection agents.
generally border patrol. Border Patrol is part of Customs of Border Protection, right,
the other part of the Office of Field Operations. Border Patrol ceased using their cameras
early in the Trump administration, citing an issue with the Bluetooth used by the cameras
that could make them detectable. This is a thing that can happen. It is possible there's a GitHub
script for this. Whether that justifies stopping using them is an entirely different question.
Both the agents in the pretee shooting were wearing body cam, but we have not seen
out footage. The two agents have been identified by ProPublica as Border Patrol agent
Jesus Jesse Ochoa and Customs and Border Protection Office of Field Operations Officer
Remondo Gutierrez. Ochoa joined in 2018, Gutierrez joined in 2014. Gutierrez is part of the
Office of Field Operation Special Response Team. That is generally a team with training
and weapons and tactics who would serve high risk warrants, do
raids. Like a SWAT style. Yeah, it's another word for SWAT, I think, because SWAT became somewhat, you know, they decided they wanted a different word for it. Sure.
ProPublica got an interview with the show's ex-wife, who said, quote, by the time a couple split in 2021, he had become a gun enthusiast with about 25 rifles, pistols, and shotguns.
And so much as that matters, I guess, that was the only interview they could get about them. Both of the men are from South Texas.
To circle back to the funding bill for DHS and these potential reforms being pushed for at, you know, multiple levels of the Democratic establishment, you know, Schumer being a little bit lighter. And obviously people like AOC and Talibh, pushing for more extreme measures like abolishing the agency of ICE, which is unlikely to happen in this funding bill as the Republicans control Congress. But still, there is a spectrum of beliefs among the party at the moment.
to get a look at what average regular registered Democrats believe.
There's a new poll from UGov that came out this week, based on data from late January, early February, that have 79% of Democrats saying they support Abolishing Ice.
Abolishing Ice is also up eight points with independence, and more people overall support Abolishing Ice at 46% to 44% opposing.
So just to finish up on our immigration cover each of the week, we also saw Judge Cobb in the D.C. District Court grant a tentative restraining order that prevents DHS from denying Congress people the right for inspect immigration detention facilities without notice.
Previously, DHS had been asserting that they had a seven-day period of notice that they had to give before they could inspect detention facilities.
The judge has found that that's not justified.
another eight attorneys have left or announced intentions to leave the US Attorney's Office in Minnesota.
They are now operating at less than half the capacity of assistant USA attorneys that they had in the early Biden administration.
They've also lost several non-attorney staff and the Star Tribune reports that this is due to concerns about selective prosecution and the exclusion and the exclusion of state and local investigators from the good and pretty cases.
In court yesterday, one federal prosecutor said, and I'm quoting for the transcript here,
This system sucks.
This job sucks.
Another quotation,
I'm here just trying to make sure that the agency
understand how important it is to comply with all the court orders,
which they have not done in the past or currently.
I am here as a bridge and a liaison between the one that in jail,
because if I walk out,
sometimes I wish you would just hold me in contempt, Your Honor,
so that I have a full 24 hours of sleep.
Yikes.
This is a person on the ragged edge.
Yeah, that is someone who is breaking as a human being.
You can look up her caseload and it is legitimately insane.
Yeah.
And it has only got bigger since the start of the year.
You can see why people are quitting this job,
even if they don't have a moral issue with it
because it's an inhumane amount of work.
And again, like, I'm not coming at this
from a point of a lot of sympathy, but it's funny.
Yeah, yeah, it's funny.
It's just funny.
It's funny to see them so obviously frustrated
that their agencies are just not complying
with what they ask them to.
Actually, I was reading the transcript.
today. The judge in the case was like, look, you can tell me the agencies are not complying,
but like, if I have a problem in the restaurant, I don't walk in there and try and find
the exact person who's baking the bread. I talk to the restaurant, and the restaurant sorts it out.
You are part of the executive branch. This is on you. It was a good little, little court exchange.
And then finally, NBC has obtained a leaked email from Greg Bevino showing tensions between himself
and Todd Lyons. Lyons is the acting director of immigration and customer enforcement.
Lyons attempted to prevent Bovino from engaging in widespread sweeps
in which agents kind of roam around, check papers on anyone they think might not be a citizen,
and encouraged him to do targeted operations instead.
And then Mr. Bovino said in the email, quote,
Mr. Lyons said he was in charge, and I corrected him saying I report to Corey Lewandowski.
Garrison's just made a face for those.
Yeah, and if you want to hear more about our dear buddy Greg,
Robert and I recorded an episode with Jack O'Brien for Behind the Bastards that's dropping next Thursday.
Oh, sick.
All about Greg Bavino.
Yeah.
Greg's been on a bit of a tour on his way back to California.
Yeah, he's a road trip on it.
He went to Mount Rushmore to record like a Moto video, and then he was spotted drinking
a glass of red wine in Las Vegas.
Yeah.
It seems like they made him road trip.
Like a weirdo.
Who's drinking, you're drinking the house wine at a casino in Vegas.
It's come the fuck on, Greg.
Grow up, Greg.
Yeah.
Have a fucking cocktail.
Jesus Christ.
I think he's back in Imperial now, but it was, it seems that they made him take a road trip home.
He didn't fly him back.
Wouldn't spring for the plane trip.
Yeah.
He's quite remarkable.
Incredible.
Gestapo.
Unbelievable.
All right, we are back.
Last Wednesday, January 28th, the FBI executed a raid on the,
Fulton County Election Office outside of Atlanta, Georgia, as a part of an investigation into
Trump's claim that the 2020 election was rigged against him.
The special agent in charge of the FBI Atlanta Field Office resigned a week before the
warrant was served. This search warrant was signed by a United States magistrate judge and it
instructed investigators to seize, quote, all records relating to violations of Title 52,
U.S. Code 20701 and 20511.
With these violations occurring, quote, after October 12, 2020, unquote.
The former statute here, 20701, relates to retaining and preserving election records for 22 months after an election,
and the latter, 20511, relates to voter fraud or threats, intimidation, and coercion against
voters. The records that were to be seized are listed on the warrant as, quote, all physical ballots from the 2020
general election in Fulton County, all tabulator tapes for every voting machine, all ballot images produced
during the original ballot count, all voter rolls from the 2020 general election in Fulton County,
from absentee early and in-person voting, and any electronically stored information relevant to
those items above. The Fulton County Commissioner Moe Ivory said that federal officials took 700
boxes of ballots. And curiously, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard appeared at the
site of the search and had a phone call with Trump after the raid concluded. Gabbard sent a letter to
Congress on Monday claiming, quote, my presence was requested by the president and executed under my
broad statutory authority to coordinate, integrate, and analyze intelligence relating to
election security, including counterintelligence, foreign, and other malign influences and cybersecurity,
unquote.
She also wrote on X the Everything app, quote, the office of the director of national intelligence has
and will continue to take action under my statutory authorities to secure our nation and ensure
the integrity of our elections.
I will include here that four days before January 6th, 2021, Trump told Georgia's top election official to quote-unquote find enough votes to overturn the election.
Here's a recording of that phone call.
All I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes.
The Trump administration has made multiple unsuccessful attempts to gain access to the 2020 Georgia ballots through civil suits.
Now they have just turned to executing a search warrant through the FBI.
On February 1st, Mike Johnson was asked about potential election meddling in Georgia.
Here is this exchange from NBC News.
What do you say to that allegation that President Trump is going to meddle in the 2026 midterm elections,
that that's what he's doing in Georgia.
I find it comical that one of the senators from Georgia is talking about schemes in elections.
Remember, Georgia was example A of that in the 2020 election.
There were two statewide recounts in Georgia, Mr. Speaker.
They sent mail-out ballots to everyone.
Everyone knows all of the problems that occurred in Georgia.
It was very controversial and remains so to this day because of all the things that happened there.
Again, we're not going to relitigate that, but what we have to focus on is going forward
to ensure that there are not questions about the election.
And that's why Republicans are working at the federal and the state levels to clean those things up,
to clean up voter rolls, to make sure illegals are not voting, for example.
That's what the Save Act is about.
And we have to continue that.
And the president is keeping a proper focus on it.
This investigation is to ensure that all the questions about the elections in Fulton County are investigated properly so that people have confidence in the system again.
That's very important.
But there are really no questions about election integrity from 2020 that have not been asked.
answered. Even the Republican-led governor has pointed out it's been years and no one has ever
come forward under oath with evidence of fraud in Georgia. But let me ask you. Pretty absurd stuff.
Yeah. Yeah, we're not going to relitigate it as we relitigate it. Yeah. Yeah. And just giving no
evidence just being like, oh, it's very controversial. Everyone knows. Like, such a weasily answer.
Yeah. Republican Governor Brian Kemp has been very clear that there was absolutely no
fraud happening in Georgia during 2020. And if there was any attempt to meddle with the election,
it is this phone call that Trump made to the Georgia Secretary of State asking to find a
certain number of votes. That itself should have resulted in Trump going to prison. Like,
South Korea style, like, you're done. You're finished. You can't do that. Yeah, that is like the
most transparent election interference. The way that Trump's court case in Fulton County related to his
attempts to meddle in the 2020 election is just a complete disaster due to corruption within
the Fulton County court system itself. One of the worst things to happen during this like Biden era
is the mishandling of the court cases around Trump's attempts to overturn the election.
And especially like looking at what what South Korea did after their president tried to take
over the country a year or two ago is like, oh yeah, that's very clearly what we should have done
with this guy. Yeah, people, people could have done better. And Mike Johnson just keeps making really
concerning statements on the news about, about quote-unquote nationalizing elections.
My follow up on elections, the president says that he wants Republicans to nationalize elections.
Do you agree with him? And do you have confidence in how elections are conducted right now heading into
the midterm? We have thoughtful debate about our election system, every election cycle and sometimes
in between. We know it's in our system. The states have been in charge of administering their elections.
What you're hearing from the president is his frustration about the lack of some of the blue states,
of enforcing these things.
Mike Johnson goes on to discuss
possible fraud in California
specifically, though admits
that he has no evidence of
said fraud. One more clip.
In some of the states, like in California, for example,
I mean, they hold the elections open
for weeks after election day. That's just one
thing that bothers so many people.
We had three House Republican candidates
who were ahead on election day
in the last election cycle. And every
time a new trotch of ballots came in,
they just magically whittled away until they're
leads were lost. And no
series of ballots that were counted
after election day were our
candidates ahead on any of those counts.
It just looks on its face
to be fraudulent. Can I prove that?
No, because it happened so far upstream.
But we need more confidence
in the American people in the election system.
Absurd. Yeah. Completely
bonkers.
Sir, I fear that more ballots have been counted
and results have changed.
Yeah, that's what elections are.
You cannot place a vote in California after Election Day.
No.
But they do count mail-in ballots that have been postmarked on or before Election Day, which is what he's referencing, but he's purposely misconstruiting it to make it sound way more, way more nefarious than what it actually is.
If you've placed a mail-in vote on or before Election Day in California, that vote will be counted.
That is how the elections in California work, not this magically keeping the election open for weeks.
afterwards,
three people can continue to vote.
That's not,
that's not true.
It's giving like a very specific
sports reference
where the announcer's like,
and the team with the most points
won the game.
That's literally what he's doing.
He's like,
as the votes were counted,
the results changed.
They changed and someone won
who is not what I wanted to happen.
Yeah.
Shocker.
Can I prove there's fraud?
No,
but will I continue to say there's fraud?
Yes.
Mike Johnson.
It had been reported that they were trying to leverage the ice raids in Minnesota
against getting electoral information from Minnesota as well.
Yes.
So, like, this is not just his fascination with Georgia.
Like, this is all deeply concerning as we go into, like, midterm year.
But we will find out soon.
Oh, yeah, especially as Congress is the entity that is supposed to be there
to help to ensure that states run the elections fairly
in that we do not have a nationalized voting system.
And the fact that the Speaker of the House seems to be.
Unaware.
Citing with the executive branch with this idea of it, of nationalizing elections,
or at least trying to like manufacture consent for Trump's claim there.
Very, very worrying.
I now want to update a story we talked about almost a year ago,
based on some new information that has come out in January.
A judge has unsealed a State Department memo from March 2025
that confirms that Ramesa OzTurk's visa was revoked
and the government sought to deport her on the basis of Ozturk
co-authoring an op-ed in the student newspaper at Tufts University.
This memo admits that DHS could not provide any evidence
that OzTurk ever engaged in any anti-Semitic activity
was involved in students for justice in Palestine,
or has ever expressed support for terrorism,
as claimed by government officials last year.
Tricia McLaughlin told CNN at the time of Ozturk's arrest
that DHS and ICE investigations had found that Ozturk had, quote,
engaged in activities in support of Hamas,
a foreign terrorist organization that relishes the killing of Americans, unquote.
On the contrary, this newly unsealed memo,
from the State Department reads, quote, while Ozturk has been involved with actions protesting
Tufts relationship with Israel, DHS, ICE, or Homeland Security Investigations has not, however,
provided any evidence showing that Ozturk has engaged in any anti-Semitic activity or made
any public statements indicating support for a terrorist organization or anti-Semitism generally, unquote.
The memo goes on to state that, though a previous DHS report, quote, implies a connection between
Oz Turk and the now banned Tufts Students for Justice in Palestine. The report presents no evidence
other than Os Turk's membership in graduate students for Palestine, which supported proposals
to Tufts, which were also supported by Tufts students for justice in Palestine. Nor has DHS-I
or HSI shown any evidence that Oz Turk was involved in any of the activities which resulted
in students for justice in Palestine being suspended from Tufts, unquote. The Bureau of Consular Affairs
visa office identified no reporting specific to Ozturk on U.S.S. government interagency
databases, according to this memo. And interagency vetting partners did not provide any response
to Ozturk's 2024 visa application, quote, indicating the existence of derogatory
terrorism-related information. I'll read the final quote here from this memo, quote,
DHS did not identify any alternative grounds for removability that would be applicable to
Oz Turk, including the ground for removability for aliens who have provided material support
to a foreign terrorist organization or terrorist activity and has not indicated whether it plans
to consider termination of Oz Turks' CVS-Rex registration. Although information provided by
DHS Homeland Security Investigations and ICE does not establish any potential ineligibility for
You may in your discretion and in accordance with department policy in 9FAM 403.1.1-5B approve revocation of her F-1 visa
effectively immediately based on the totality of the circumstances presented indicating that revocation may be warranted, unquote.
The only evidence held against her in the memo is that she wrote an op-ed.
You still can revoke her visa if you want to.
Yeah, yeah, and that is pretty much the way of student visas especially work, right?
Like you just hear at the pleasure of US politics, essentially.
The fact that this memo openly says they do not have evidence to support the claims
that she's involved in anti-Semitic activity on campus, supports Hamas in any way,
the fact that you have the government saying that in these internal documents,
while externally people like Tricia McLaughlin and Rubio,
say otherwise. It's such a naked display of the sort of rhetoric that these people are using.
Secretary Rubio claimed at a press conference on March 27th, 2025, quote,
we revoked her visa. It's an F1 visa, I believe. We revoked it, and here's why. If you apply for a visa
to enter the United States and be a student, and you tell us that the reason why you're coming
to the United States is not just because you want to write op-eds, but because you want to participate
in movements that are involved in doing things like vandalizing universities, harassing students,
taking over buildings, creating a ruckus, we're not going to give you a visa. If you lie to us
and get a visa and then enter the United States, and with that visa participate in that sort of
activity, we're going to take away your visa, unquote. I mean, she didn't tell them that she was
engaged in that kind of activity. She wasn't. That's just not what happened. Yeah. And DHS
admits itself that she was not involved in the activity, the protest activity that resulted in
students for justice in Palestine being banned from campus, which included vandalism.
But DHS says that they do not have evidence that she was involved in that in any way,
nor had any direct association with that group.
In December, a federal judge allowed Ozturk to continue her research and teaching at Tufts
University on the basis that she's likely to succeed on the claim that her visa termination
was, quote, arbitrary and capricious, contrary to law and in violation of the First Amendment.
The court case related to her removal proceedings will still continue.
Yeah, pretty bleak.
That was, that was, yeah, wow.
I guess talking of bleak, should I finish up with a summary of the situation in Syria?
Yeah, give us a Syria update.
Yeah, okay, so the AANES has reached a settlement with the STG,
the AANES, the autonomous administration of north and east Syria,
aka Rojava, and the SDG being the Syrian transitional government.
that will result in the withdrawal of troops from the points of contact,
as well as the withdrawal of SDF troops from Komishlo and Hesoka,
and the entry of the Syrian Ministry of the Interior.
There are about 90 Ministry of Interior people going into Komishlo and 100 in Hesig.
These are essentially like Syrian feds, I guess, right?
Integration of the SDF will occur as brigades of the Syrian army deployed in Derik.
If you're looking at a map, it's probably going to say Al-Malekiah,
Delhi being the Kurdish name, Kamishlo, Hesika and Kobani. These forces will be largely Kurdish,
but they will also include As Syrian and Arab elements, as the SDF always has. I imagine there
will probably be Armenians as well. They're nearly always are, certainly in the SDF since the beginning there have been.
The agreement also included the integration of the Achaish into the Syrian Ministry of the Interior,
the government takeover of oil fields and borders, and a recognition of Kurdish education credentials across the country.
The AANES will appoint a governor in Hesica and the security chief will be appointed by Damascus.
The SDF will also appoint a deputy defense minister in Damascus.
The SDG appointed Marwan al-Ala Ali to overseas security.
He previously did this for HDS in Idlib, Hayakaria al-Sham.
That's the group that was formally listed as a foreign terrorist organization in the U.S. has gone on to take over Syria and become the government in Damascus.
and he sort of oversaw their purge of Hurasaldin,
which is like an al-Qaeda associated group in Idlib.
Shortly after the deal was signed,
the Syrian traditional government began accusing journalists
who entered via Samalka, as I have done,
and Robert has done, of having entered Syria illegally,
which great, I guess.
Turkey has continued to prevent aid coming to Kobani,
where water and power remain cut off.
Pretty bleak situation in Russia.
I'm glad that there is not more killing and not more dying, but also sad to see some of the things that so many people fought and died for being lost, especially this idea of brotherhood of peoples, which I think was integral to the Rojava revolution and the women's revolution, which, like, it will be very hard to sustain in the context of a state led by HTS.
Pretty upsetting stuff.
I know that they can still use your support.
Sorry, we'll put a fundraising link for Haversaw at the bottom of this.
Yeah, good time to be alive.
Yeah, great, great stuff happening in the world.
Yeah.
If you would like to email us, you can email us using a proton mail address to email our
proton mail address, which is cool zone tips at proton.me.
Mia's not here, but she would say, put a trans girl on your couch.
So I'll say it for put a trans girl on your couch.
Mm-hmm.
We reported the news.
We, the news.
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, poolzonemedia.com, or check us out on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
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Thanks for listening.
America is in crisis.
And at Morehouse College, the students make their move.
These students, including a young Samuel L. Jackson,
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It's the true story of protests and rebellion
in black American history that you'll never forget.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm Minnick Lamumba.
Listen to the A-building on the I-Heart Radio app,
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Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the on-purpose podcast.
On a recent episode, I sat down with Nick Jonas, singer, songwriter, actor, and global superstar.
I went blank. I hit a bad note, and I couldn't kind of recover.
And I built up this idea that music and being musician was my whole identity.
I had to sort of relearn who I was if you took this thing away.
Who am I?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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It was nature and trees and praying and drugs.
So no, I am not your guru.
Back then, I lied to everybody.
They have had this case for 30 years.
I'm going back to my hometown to uncover the truth.
Listen to the red weather on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Roald Doll, he thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG. But did you know he was a spy? In the new podcast,
The Secret World of Roll Doll, I'll tell you that story, and much, much more. What? You probably
won't believe it either. Was this before he wrote his stories? It must have been. Okay, I don't
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on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This isn't IHeart,
Podcasts. Guaranteed human.
